Ethiopia rules out conflict with Eritrea over Red Sea access - Iqraa news

Ethiopian PM Abiy Ahmed vows peaceful approach via dialogue amid recent fears about possible war between the neighbours.

Ethiopia’s prime minister says his country will not seek conflict with longtime rival Eritrea over access to the Red Sea, amid recent fears about possible war between the neighbours.

“Ethiopia does not have any intention of engaging in conflict with Eritrea for the purpose of gaining access to the sea,” Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said on Thursday, according to a post by his office on X .

Although access to the Red Sea was an existential matter for landlocked Ethiopia, Abiy’s government wanted to address it peacefully via dialogue, he added.

Fears of war emerged in recent weeks after Eritrea ordered a nationwide military mobilisation, according to a human rights group, and Ethiopia deployed troops towards the border, diplomatic sources and officials told the Reuters news agency.

Abiy’s ambitions to gain access to the sea have angered Eritrea, which has accused it of eyeing the port of Assab.

“Eritrea is perplexed by Ethiopia’s misguided and outdated ambitions for maritime access and naval base ‘through diplomacy or military force’,” Eritrea’s Information Minister Yemane Gebremeskel said on Tuesday, echoing remarks made by the country’s foreign minister to international diplomats.

Advertisement

In a post on X, Yemane urged the international community “to pressure Ethiopia to respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of its neighbours”.

He also described Eritrea’s alleged “preparations for war against Ethiopia” as “false accusations”.

 

Tensions in Tigray

Renewed clashes between two of Africa’s largest armies would end a historic rapprochement for which Abiy won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019, and risk a humanitarian disaster in a region already grappling with fallout from the war in Sudan.

During the 2020-2022 civil war between the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) and Ethiopia’s central government, Eritrean forces crossed the border to fight in support of Ethiopia.

But the peace deal signed in Pretoria, South Africa in November 2022 drove a new wedge between Ethiopia and Eritrea, which was not party to the negotiations.

Since then, the TPLF – which runs Tigray’s post-war interim administration with the blessing of Ethiopia’s federal government – has split, with both factions seeking control of the post-war interim administration of the region.

The current interim administration has accused the dissident faction of collaborating with Eritrea, while the dissidents in turn say their rivals have failed to protect Tigrayan interests. Each side denies the other’s allegations.

Abiy told parliament on Thursday the term of the Tigray interim administration had been extended for one year, with some amendments. He did not elaborate on whether the changes would include new leadership appointments, a key demand of the dissident faction.

Advertisement

“In line with the Pretoria agreement, the interim administration will continue until the next election,” he said, referring to a general election due in 2026.

Get the latest news delivered to your inbox

Follow us on social media networks

PREV Australia thrash Indonesia in AFC World Cup qualifiers - Iqraa news
NEXT In Yemen’s Sanaa, fear and defiance after US bombs - Iqraa news