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USIS Washington File

16 May 2000

U.S. Drafts Ethiopia-Eritrean Arms Embargo

(Wants Security Council vote quickly) (530)
By Judy Aita
Washington File United Nations Correspondent
United Nations -- The United States has presented to the U.N. Security
Council a draft resolution that would establish an arms embargo
against Ethiopia and Eritrea in an attempt to end their border war.
U.S. Ambassador Nancy Soderberg told journalists after a closed
council meeting May 15 that the U.S. delegation "has introduced a
resolution which would impose an arms embargo immediately on Eritrea
and Ethiopia and a diplomatic (embargo) on Ethiopia until it agrees to
a cessation of hostilities.
"We believe the arms embargo would be helpful over time to degrade the
capacity to continue this war," Soderberg added. "We also believe that
we should have diplomatic sanctions on the party that refuses to agree
to a cessation" of hostilities."
On May 12, the Security Council passed another resolution demanding
that the two countries stop fighting or face unspecified U.N. actions
within 72 hours. Eritrea has accepted the resolution, but Ethiopia has
not.
The United States and Great Britain are pushing for an immediate vote
on the draft resolution.
Russia meanwhile has proposed a resolution that differs widely from
the U.S. draft and diplomats were to meet early May 16 to try to bring
the draft resolutions into agreement.
Nevertheless, Soderberg said May 15 that the U.S. delegation is
"pushing for a vote tomorrow (on its resolution). We are deeply
concerned about the cost of human life to this conflict and we want to
see it brought to an end as soon as possible."
Imposing an arms embargo would send "a very strong signal initially
and over time we hope it would degrade their ability to carry on this
war which has cost almost as many lives as America lost in Vietnam,"
she said.
The U.S. draft strongly condemns the continuing fighting between
Eritrea and Ethiopia and demands that all fighting and use of force
cease now. It also demands that both parties withdraw their forces
from direct contact with each other and that they speedily reconvene
substantive peace talks under OAU auspices without preconditions.
It further urges that all states halt the sale or supply of any arms,
personnel, training, weapons, ammunition, vehicles, paramilitary
equipment or spare parts by their nationals or from their territories
to both Ethiopia and Eritrea. And it declares that all states shall
prevent the entry into or transit through their territories of senior
Ethiopian government officials named by a sanctions committee
established by the council to oversee the sanctions regime.
"The human toll in this war is extremely dramatic," the ambassador
said. Obviously both Ethiopia and Eritrea have enough weapons to fight
for now, "but we hope over time (the embargo) would have an impact."
British Ambassador Jeremy Greenstock said that the council seeks a
"response from the government of Ethiopia that it wants peace and a
cease-fire in order to have those talks in the best possible framework
without preconditions."
"If that happens it will be a very good step for Africa and for the
Ethiopian and Eritrean people," Greenstock said.
(The Washington File is a product of the Office of International
Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
http://usinfo.state.gov)



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