With the defeated
Abyssinian army
gradually
withdrawing from
Somalia, with the
mutually advanced
disintegration of
Sudan, Abyssinia
(fallaciously
re-baptized
´Ethiopia´), Somalia
and Yemen, and with
the paranoid
Abyssinian dictator
Zenawi struggling to
survive, another
phase of the war
between Eritrea and
Abyssinia seems
nigh.
The war would be
triggered mainly by
the need of the
Abyssinian dictator
Zenawi to
demonstrate his
ability to bring to
his ailing tyranny
some sort of
nationalistic
success that will
help him gain the
sympathies of the
regime´s Ethio-fascist,
chauvinist and
criminal elements,
the Amhara and
Tigray Monophysitic
Abyssinian minority
(18% of the total
population) that has
always controlled
the Abyssinian
anachronistic,
colonial and rogue
state.
The Amhara Threat
Against Zenawi
The danger for the
paranoid, rogue
tyrant Zenawi is
great; worse than
him, worse than any
other African
dictator, worse than
Stalin and worse
than Hitler, the
evil Amhara leaders
of Kinijit and
Ginbot – 7 have been
hyperactive in order
to convince the
colonial lobbying of
America and Europe
that they can "do
the job better".
The evil, inhuman
and murderous Amhara
political
establishment has
never ´excused´
their Tigray
counterpart´s rise
to power. Invaded by
the most inhuman
form of hatred and
hysteria and
possessed by an
abysmal desire for
evil, totalitarian
power, they played
their comedy of
resistance against a
person, namely the
tyrant Meles Zenawi,
and even went to the
jail in order to
diffuse the idea
that the Amharas
have been persecuted
by the Tigray
dictator.
This is all a
shameful aberration
and a theatrical
performance geared
to confuse the
non-insiders.
Amharas: Indivisible
and Beneficiary Part
of Zenawi´s Regime
If the Amharas were
persecuted at the
times of the Zenawi
administration, the
tyrannical
Abyssinian state´s
army, police, secret
services, and public
administration would
not be manned by
Amharas in their
majority.
If the Amharas were
persecuted at the
times of the Zenawi
administration,
certainly Amharic
would not be the
official language –
tyrannically imposed
by the Zenawi
administration – of
the following
regions: Benishangul
– Gumuz, Diredawa,
Southern Nations,
Gambella, and the
so-called Addis
Ababa (in reality
Finfinnee, which
should not form a
separate region from
Oromia, as it is the
capital of Oromia).
A
War: the Only
Means for Zenawi to
Survive
The problem is
precisely that
Zenawi needs a war
and a victory in the
war, in order to
oppose the
accusations of the
Amhara criminal
Ethio-fascists, who
want to return to
power only to impose
a far worse system
of tyranny than
Zenawi´s, denying
the existence of all
the subjugated
nations of Abyssinia
and thus heralding a
new, worse circle of
genocides; Zenawi
has therefore to
´deliver´.
In a country that
falls apart only
because of the
spread of Internet,
in a tyranny where
life has absolutely
no value, the only
way for the dictator
to survive against
the Amhara
allegations (that he
is undemocratic and
that he is
destroying the
supposedly unitary
character of the
country – which is a
racist Amhara lie)
is to make a
victorious war. In
the aftermath of the
Abyssinian defeat in
Somalia, and with
thousands of coffins
having been sent
back home from
Somalia, Zenawi has
to present a certain
success.
With Ogaden in
chaos, and with the
OLF successfully
staging attacks
against the criminal
tribal pseudo-army
of the state, Zenawi
has only one choice
– to attack Eritrea,
which has long been
the target of the
Amhara Ethio-fascists.
W
hat will be the
result of a
successful war
against Eritrea?
Zenawi will be able
to convince the
´deep´ state (the
military, the
paramilitary, the
administrative
machine, and the
influential ´debteraw´
– monks and
religious leaders)
that he is able to
carry on; an
invasion of Assab
would thus be
presented as a great
victory, due to
which Abyssinia will
not be a landlocked
state anymore.
An Amhara
Military Coup
Against Zenawi
Possible
With the ´deep
state´ unhappy,
Zenawi risks facing
a military coup at
any moment; carried
out by Amhara
Ethiofascist
generals, the coup
would simply be a
return to Amhara
totalitarianism and
racism, despite the
extreme
pro-democracy
rhetoric that is
expected to be
unleashed from the
filthy mouths of the
Amhara gangsters –
generals.
The chances of a
military coup
against Zenawi, to
bring ´democracy´
back to Abyssinia,
are by now high. The
conflict between two
groups of Amhara
military and
paramilitary
(pro-royalist and
pro-communist) has
caused some
confusion and delay,
as it is reflected
in the existing
political formations
(Kinijit is full of
communist
collaborators and
ministers of the
murderous dictator
Haile Mengistu,
whereas the Ginbot-7
Ethio-fascist
criminal elements
are connected with
the disreputable
remnants of the lewd
and barbaric
Abyssinian
monarchy).
Urgent Eritrean
Diplomatic Activity
Needed
Eritrean President
Afwerki´s Letter to
the UN Secretary
General is therefore
a document of the
utmost gravity, as
it may be the final
official document
before a new war
phase explodes.
By using the term
"clarion call",
President Afwerki
sent the ball back
to the UN Security
Council; it´s up to
the international
body now to take the
measures needed to
thwart another war
that will certainly
plunge East Africa
to a far worse
crisis than any
previous.
The UN Security
Council, with Turkey
as non permanent
member, and the
Organization of the
Islamic Conference
are the diplomatic
fields where the
Eritrean diplomacy
has to focus now;
Eritrea has the task
to prepare "the
Black Book of
Ethiopia", an
extensive if not
comprehensive list
of crimes
perpetrated against
Islam by the
perfidious, racist,
and Anti-Islamic
state of "Ethiopia".
"The Black Book of
Ethiopia" must be
submitted to an
extraordinary
meeting of the
Organization of the
Islamic Conference
whereby all members
should agree to
suspend in unison
their diplomatic
ties with the evil,
anti-Islamic state,
and provide Eritrea
with all the
necessary means to
utterly destroy
Abyssinia.
A coordination with
the tyrannized Afars,
Ogadenis, Hadiyas
and Oromos, as well
as with the
oppressed Amhara and
Tigray Muslims of
Abyssinia will be
essential in this
regard.
I re-publish
integrally President
Isaias Afwerki's
Letter to the UN
Secretary General,
and in addition, the
Final border report
on Ethiopia-Eritrea
dispute sent to
Security Council,
which was the reason
of the Eritrean
President´s
demarche.
President Isaias
Afwerki's Letter to
the UN Secretary
General
http://hornofafrica.de/index.php?id=18&tx_ttnews[tt_news]=1132&tx_ttnews[backPid]=12&cHash=d97a5048c4
I would further like
to express our
gratitude for Your
Excellency´s
instructions,
effected on 2
October this month,
to circulate to all
UN Security Council
Members the Report
of Sir Elihu
Lauterpacht, the
President of the
Eritrea Ethiopia
Boundary Commission,
of 25 September
2008, and to file it
in the official
records of the
United Nations. The
full report is
annexed as a
reminder.
Your Excellency Ban
Ki-Moon
Secretary General
The United Nations
New York
May I kindly request
Your Excellency to
ensure that this
letter is put on the
record of the United
Nations and
circulated to all UN
Security Council
Member States.
I would further like
to express our
gratitude for Your
Excellency´s
instructions,
effected on 2
October this month,
to circulate to all
UN Security Council
Members the Report
of Sir Elihu
Lauterpacht, the
President of the
Eritrea Ethiopia
Boundary Commission,
of 25 September
2008, and to file it
in the official
records of the
United Nations. The
full report is
annexed as a
reminder.
It must be
underlined that the
message of President
Lauterpacht
highlights the
fundamental legal
issue and
substantive matters
on all the seven
points invoked.
In the second point,
the Report
ascertains that the
EEBC´s Delimitation
Decision of 13 April
2002 as well as its
Determinations of 27
November 2006 are
binding on the two
parties.
In the third point,
the Report
underlines that
after the refusal of
Ethiopia to nominate
a replacement for
its (deceased)
Commissioner, "the
Secretary General
has not exercised
his power of
appointment pursuant
to Article 4(4) of
the Algiers
Agreement of 12
December 2000". The
implications of this
statement must be
evident to Your
Excellency.
As a fourth point,
the EEBC not only
ascertains that it
has deposited, in
the UN registrar,
copies of its maps
as the last act of
the conclusion of
its legal mandate
but it further
underlines the
failure of Ethiopia
to meet its
financial
obligations to the
EEBC in violation of
Article 4(17) of the
Algiers Agreement.
In the fifth point,
President
Lauterpacht´s Report
explains the legal
rationale and
significance of its
letter of 18 June
2008 to the Parties.
In the sixth point,
the Report
underscores the
importance of
Eritrea´s response
of 1 July 2008 while
confirming
Ethiopia´s failure
to give any
response.
In the seventh
point, the Report
asserts that after
the completion of
ongoing
administrative tasks
related to the
termination of its
mandate, the EEBC
will effectively
consider itself as "functus
officio".
Mr. Secretary
General,
Your Excellencies:
Members of the UN
Security Council
This historic
message, at this
crucial juncture, is
a "clarion call" to
the UN Security
Council. This is a
legal and moral
message to the
Security Council to
shoulder its
responsibilities and
ensure the eviction
of Ethiopia from
Eritrea´s sovereign
territories that is
occupying in
violation of the
rule of law, the
Charter of the
United Nations as
well as the final
and binding
decisions of the
EEBC as stipulated
in the Algiers Peace
Agreement.
Mr. Secretary
General
Your Excellencies:
Members of the UN
Security Council
It is against this
backdrop that the US
Administration has
chosen a
"propitious" time to
contrive and
orchestrate a
seemingly new and
diversionary scheme
under the rubric of
a "border conflict".
This was effected
through the
"submission" that
the President of
Djibouti was made to
lodge, anew, to the
UN Security Council
yesterday. This
appalling scheme has
further been
accompanied by
outright
intimidation and
saber rattling
against Eritrea.
Eritrea´s position
on the whole episode
has been clarified
repeatedly and does
not merit repetition
here.
Mr. Secretary
General
Your Excellencies:
Members of the UN
Security Council
Eritrea will not
abandon its request
for Justice and
legality; its
adherence to the
rule of law; and,
its compliance with
the Agreement it has
signed under
deceitful schemes
and threats. Eritrea
will not indeed
succumb to
intimidation. Nor
will it be dragged
into a non-existent
conflict.
In the event, I urge
the UN Security
Council not to shrug
its responsibilities
but to ensure the
eviction of
Ethiopia´s
occupation from our
sovereign
territories;
including the new
occupation of our
land at Mount Musa
Ali since May this
year.
Sincerely
Isaias Afwerki
Final border report
on Ethiopia-Eritrea
dispute sent to
Security Council
(http://www.biddho.com/content/view/974/29/lang,english/)
13 October 2008 –
Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon has
transmitted to the
Security Council the
last report issued
by the independent
commission on
Ethiopia and
Eritrea´s common
boundary.
In 2002, the
Eritrea-Ethiopia
Boundary Commission
handed down a final
and binding decision
awarding Badme, the
town that triggered
fierce fighting
between the
neighbouring Horn of
Africa nations, to
Eritrea. But the two
countries have since
been at an impasse
on that demarcation.
The report notes
that the body´s
mandate has been
fulfilled and that
all administrative
issues connected to
its termination have
wrapped up.
The Commission has
given both sides a
deadline of 26
November 2007 in
which to place
pillars on the
boundary.
In a letter sent to
the two countries in
June, it wrote that
"as there has been
no communication
from the parties,
the Commission must
now reach the
conclusion that… no
further activity on
its part is called
for, and that it
should therefore
take the few final
steps involved in
winding up its
operations,"
including returning
resources to the
United Nations.
The final report
said that it
received a response
from Asmara, but
none from Addis
Ababa.
In July, the
Security Council
voted unanimously
voted to terminate
the UN peacekeeping
mission in Ethiopia
and Eritrea, known
as UNMEE, after
restrictions placed
on the peacekeeping
operation by the
latter country
undermined its
ability to carry out
its mandate.
As such, Mr. Ban
said in his recent
letter to the
15-member body that
he will no longer
provide regular
reports on the
situation between
the two nations.
United Nations
S/2008/630
Security Council
Distr.: General
3 October 2008
Original: English
Letter Dated 2
October 2008 from
the Secretary
General Addressed to
the President of the
Security Council
As you are aware,
with the termination
of the mandate of
the United Nations
Mission in Ethiopia
and Eritrea as of 31
July 2008, I will no
longer provide
reports to the
Security Council on
the situation
between the two
countries on a
regular basis.
However, I have
recently received a
final report of the
Eritrea-Ethiopia
Boundary Commission,
which the Registrar
of the Commission
felt would be useful
to circulate as a
document of the
Security Council.
I would be grateful
if you could bring
the attached report
to the attention of
the members of the
Security Council.
(Signed) Ban Ki-moon
Twenty-seventh
Report of the
Eritrea-Ethiopia
Boundary Commission
1. This is the
twenty-seventh and
final report of the
Eritrea-Ethiopia
Boundary Commission,
covering the period
from 1 January to 25
August 2008. The
previous report
covered the period
from 27 September to
31 December 27
(S/2008/40, annex
II).
2. In its previous
report, the
Commission recalled
the terms of
paragraph 22 of its
Statement of 27
November 2006 ("the
Statement") and
noted that, its
meeting with the
parties of 6 and 7
September 2007
notwithstanding, no
progress had been
made towards the
construction of
boundary pillars in
the manner foreseen
in the Statement.
Noting the positions
of the parties as
expressed in letters
of the Government of
Eritrea dated 19 and
29 November 2007 and
the letter of the
Government of
Ethiopia dated 29
November 2007, the
Commission
reaffirmed the
considerations of
fact and the
statements of law
set out in its
Statement, and
emphasized that the
Delimitation
Decision of April
2002 and the
Statement of 27
November 2006
remained binding on
the parties.
3. The Commission
notes that, pursuant
to articles 4 (4)
and 4 (6) of the
Algiers Agreement,
Ethiopia had until 4
January 2008 in
which it might
appoint a substitute
Commissioner for Sir
Arthur Watts KCMG
QC. Ethiopia
informed the
Commission that it
did not consider it
necessary to appoint
a replacement. The
Secretary-General of
the United Nations
has not exercised
his power of
appointment pursuant
to article 4 (4) of
the Algiers
Agreement of 12
December 2000.
4. As noted in its
previous report, the
Commission considers
that it has
fulfilled the
mandate given to it.
The Commission notes
that the following
administrative
matters connected
with the termination
of its mandate have
now been concluded:
(a) On 17 January
2008, a copy of the
maps illustrating
the points
identified in the
annex to the 27
November 2006
Statement was
deposited with the
Secretary-General of
the United Nations.
Another copy for
public reference has
been retained in the
office of the United
Nations
Cartographer.
(b) As the
Commission noted in
its previous report,
Ethiopia continues
to be in arrears of
its share of the
Commission´s
expenses, in breach
of Article 4 (17) of
the Algiers
Agreement. A final
financial account
shall be transmitted
to the parties and
the remaining funds
held on deposit
shall be returned to
the United Nations
Trust Fund.
5. On 18 June 2008
the Commission sent
a letter to the
parties stating
that:
"It is now over six
months since the
expiry of the period
which the Commission
indicated in its
Statement of 27
November 2006 and
during which the
Commission had hoped
that the parties
would either
themselves proceed
to the placing of
pillars on the
ground or allow the
Commission to do so.
As there has been no
communication from
the parties, the
Commission must now
reach the conclusion
that the boundary
stands demarcated in
accordance with the
coordinates annexed
to that Statement,
that no further
activity on its part
is called for, and
that it should
therefore take the
few final steps
involved in winding
up its operations,
These include the
return of physical
assets to the United
Nations and the
preparation of final
accounts.
6. On 1 July 2008,
Eritrea responded to
the Commission´s
letter, stating:
"The meeting that
the Eritrea-Ethiopia
Boundary Commission
convened with the
parties in The Hague
on 6 September 2007
to move the process
forward was not
successful because
Ethiopia was still
not prepared to
accommodate the
requirements that
the Commission
stipulated. While
Ethiopia´s refusal
to comply with the
Commission´s
delimitation and
demarcation
decisions is
unfortunate, it in
no way undermines
the final and
binding nature of
the Commission´s
conclusions.
"When Ethiopia
refused to come into
compliance within
the specified one
year period, the
Secretary of the
Boundary Commission
dispatched to the
parties 45 maps, on
a scale of 1:25,000,
containing the
demarcation of the
boundary by
coordinates.
"Eritrea considers
that the mandate of
the Boundary
Commission has been
fulfilled as of that
time. In this
spirit, Eritrea has
and continues to
press the United
Nations Security
Council to exercise
its legal authority
of enforcing the
delimitation and
demarcation
determinations of
the Commission.
"Eritrea wishes at
this point to
reiterate its
gratitude for the
Commission in
fulfilling its
mandate under these
difficult
conditions."
7. A copy of
Eritrea´s letter of
1 July 2008 is
annexed to the
present report.
Ethiopia did not
respond to the
Commission´s 18 June
2008 letter within
the above time
period.
8. Since the
Commission has now
concluded all
administrative
matters connected
with the termination
of its mandate, it
now considers itself
functus officio.
(Signed)
Sir Elihu
Lauterpacht CBE QC
25 August 2008
Annex
Letter Dated 1 July
2008 from Eritrea to
the Eritrea –
Ethiopia Boundary
Commission
Thank you very much
for your letter of
18 June 2008
concerning the
Boundary
Commission´s winding
up of its
operations.
As emphasized in my
letter to you of 29
November 2007,
Eritrea has
consistently
supported the work
of the Commission
and has from the
outset recognized
(as required by the
Algiers Agreement of
12 December 2000)
the Commission´s
delimitation and
demarcation
decisions as
authoritative. As
stated in article 4,
paragraph 15: "The
parties agree that
the delimitation and
demarcation
determinations of
the Commission shall
be final and
binding."
Eritrea remains
committed to this
principle and to all
of the "delimitation
and demarcation
determinations" to
which this paragraph
refers. As my letter
of 29 November 2007
clearly states, this
includes not only
the Commission´s
delimitation and
demarcation
decisions in general
but also the
Commission´s
coordinates:
Eritrea acknowledges
as both final and
valid the
coordinates that the
Commission has
specified and
believes that these
coordinates are as
binding as other
Commission
decisions.
In its communication
to the parties on 27
November 2006, the
Commission notified
the parties that it
"cannot remain in
existence
indefinitely". The
Commission had
further noted:
"If, by the end of
that period
[November 2007], the
parties have not by
themselves reached
the necessary
agreement and
proceeded
significantly to
implement it, or
have not requested
and enabled the
Commission to resume
its activity, the
Commission hereby
determines that the
boundary will
automatically stand
as demarcated by the
boundary points
listed in the annex
hereto and that the
mandate of the
Commission can then
be regarded as
fulfilled."
The meeting that the
Eritrea-Ethiopia
Boundary Commission
convened with the
parties in The Hague
on 6 September 2007
to move the process
forward was not
successful because
Ethiopia was still
not prepared to
accommodate the
requirements that
the Commission
stipulated. While
Ethiopia´s refusal
to comply with the
Commission´s
delimitation and
demarcation
decisions is
unfortunate, it in
no way undermines
the final and
binding nature of
the Commission´s
conclusions.
When Ethiopia
refused to come into
compliance within
the specified
one-year period, the
Secretary of the
Boundary Commission
dispatched to the
parties 45 maps, on
a scale of 1:25,000,
containing the
demarcation of the
boundary by
coordinates.
Eritrea considers
that the mandate of
the Boundary
Commission has been
fulfilled as of that
time. In this
spirit, Eritrea has
and continues to
press the United
Nations Security
Council to exercise
its legal authority
of enforcing the
delimitation and
demarcation
determinations of
the Commission
(letter dated 18
June 2008 from
President Isaias
Afwerki to the
President of the
Security Council
attached (see
(Signed)
Professor Lea
Brilmayer
Legal Adviser to the
Office of the
President
Asmara, Eritrea
Enclosure
Letter Dated 18 June
2008 from the
President of Eritrea
to the President of
the Security Council
I have noted the
contents of your
letter dated 10 June
2008, which states
that "the Security
Council is
considering the
terms of a future
United Nations
engagement,
including through a
possible further
United Nations
presence in Ethiopia
and Eritrea".
As has been
clarified on a
number of occasions
(S/2008/287,
S/2008/200,
S/2008/68,
S/2008/54, among
others) the
Temporary Security
Zone that was
established by the
Algiers Agreement
has fulfilled its
purpose, namely, to
serve as a temporary
buffer zone until
the border between
the two countries
could be demarcated.
The Ethiopia-Eritrea
Boundary Commission
has completed its
task by demarcating
its final and
binding award
thereby effectively
ending the mandate
of the United
Nations Mission in
Ethiopia and Eritrea
and its oversight of
the Temporary
Security Zone. In
the event, Eritrea
strongly believes
the key to regional
peace and stability
is the unconditional
and immediate
withdrawal of
Ethiopian troops
from sovereign
Eritrean territory.
Indeed, article 4.15
of the Algiers
Agreement states:
"The Parties agree
that the
delimitation and
demarcation
determinations of
the Commission shall
be final and
binding. Each party
shall respect the
border so
determined, as well
as the territorial
integrity and
sovereignty of the
other party".
Needless to
emphasize, the
United Nations
cannot have legal
authority to
legitimize
occupation under the
rubric of
engagement. Going
forward from this
point requires
exclusive focus on
the provision cited
above.
(Signed)
Isaias Afwerki