INDEPENDENT NEWS

Border tension between Ethiopia, Eritrea continues

Published: Mon 9 Jan 2006 11:43 AM
Border tension between Ethiopia and Eritrea continues, UN says
The United Nations Mission in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE) has reported that the military situation in the Temporary Security Zone (TSZ) separating the two countries continues to be “tense and potentially volatile,” about a month after Eritrea demanded the pullout of UN personnel of certain nationalities.
Troop movements have been noticed on both the Ethiopian and Eritrean sides, an UNMEE spokesman told a press briefing in the region on Thursday. The two countries fought a bitter war between 1998 and 2000 over a border dispute which remains unresolved to this day.
Eritrea's ban on UNMEE helicopters, which the Security Council and Secretary-General have vehemently opposed, remains in place, while UNMEE patrols face restrictions on their movements.
Nonetheless, UNMEE carried out 760 ground patrols in the past week, and peacekeepers are still providing medical help and supplies of bulk water to the local population in the TSZ and adjacent areas.
UNMEE adds that the Eritrean authorities didn’t respond to a request to evacuate by air an Indian soldier who had suffered serious burn injuries.
This is the seventh such occasion when a casualty had to be evacuated by road over long distances due to the lack of aerial medical evacuation facilities, the mission said.
Jean Marie Guehenno, the Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, will brief the UN Security Council on the situation in Ethiopia and Eritrea on Monday, 9 January.
The Secretary-General, in a recent report to the Council, offered a number of options for coping with the current stalemate, ranging from redeployment to total withdrawal of UNMEE.

Next in World

Ceasefire The Only Way To End Killing And Injuring Of Children In Gaza: UNICEF
By: UN News
US-Japan-Philippines Trilateral Summit Makes The Philippines A Battlefield For US-China Conflict
By: ICHRP
Environmental Journalist Alexander Kaufman Receives East-West Center’s Inaugural Melvin M.S. Goo Writing Fellowship
By: East West Center
Octopus Farm Must Be Stopped, Say Campaigners, As New Documents Reveal Plans Were Reckless And Threatened Environment
By: Compassion in World Farming
Shipwreck Tragedy Off Djibouti Coast, Drone Attacks Continue At Ukraine Nuclear Plant, Madagascar Cyclone Update
By: UN News
Sudan: Aid Lifeline Reaches Darfur Region In Bid To Avert ‘Hunger Catastrophe’
By: UN News
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media