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Ethiopia warns of action against Eritrea |  |
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Reuters
Aaron Maashon
March 20, 2011
Ethiopia warned on Saturday it would take “all measures
necessary” against Eritrea, in a rare threat of direct action
against a neighbour it routinely accuses of supporting rebel groups.
Ethiopia and Eritrea have often traded tough rhetoric since a
1998-2000 border war killed some 80,000 people, but Ethiopian Prime
Minister Meles Zenawi has up to now ruled out confrontation.
“What we are saying is that we will not sit idle and watch
Eritrea challenge our sovereignty and our development efforts,”
foreign ministry spokesman Dina Mufti told Reuters.
Ethiopia claims Eritrea is trying to destabilise the Horn of
African nation by backing rebels, while also supporting Islamist
militants in Somalia. The Ethiopian government usually says it is
content to keep security tight at home to deter attacks.
Eritrea fiercely denies the charges and accuses Western nations
of siding with Ethiopia over the unresolved border row.
Dina accused Eritrea of attempting to carry out attacks inside
Ethiopia during an African Union summit in February and said Addis
Ababa was asking the international community to pressure Asmara into
“refraining” from such moves.
“If they (international community) don’t heed, then we will take
all measures necessary to defend ourselves,” he said.
CHANGE POLICIES OR GOVERNMENT
Prime Minister Meles told local media earlier this week that his
administration should “either work towards changing Eritrea’s
policies or its government”.
“This could be done diplomatically, politically or through other
means,” he said.
Eritrean authorities were not immediately available for comment
on the apparent hardening of Ethiopia’s stance.
The Red Sea state was part of Ethiopia until 1991 when rebel
forces led by President Isaias Afewerki fought their way to
secession following a 30-year liberation war.
Meles and Isaias were allies when they led separate rebel groups
fighting former Ethiopian dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam, but they
have been foes ever since the border war.
Eritrea is one of the world’s most secretive nations. Analysts
and rights groups accuse Isaias of subjecting his opponents to
arbitrary detentions and torture.
Eritrea was also hit with U.N. sanctions in 2009 over charges it
provided funds and weapons to Islamist insurgents in Somalia — an
accusation it denies
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