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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Africa
Ethiopian-Eritrean war draws in neighbouring states
By Jean Shaoul
18 June 1999
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For the last two weeks, Ethiopian and Eritrean troops have
been engaged in some of the bloodiest fighting of the year-long
border war between the two neighbouring countries. Eritrea claims
to have killed, wounded or captured 18,000 Ethiopians, while Ethiopia
has spoken of 8,000 Eritreans being "put out of action"
as they fight for control of high ground in the Horn of Africa.
Africa's forgotten war has become the largest "conventional"
war in the world. It has involved more than half a million troops,
hundreds of tanks and artillery pieces, and modern fighter aircraft.
The entire 1,000-kilometre border has become a potential battlefield.
At one point last March, 50,000 Ethiopians made a suicidal attempt
to break the Eritrean lines by running across mined no-man's land
through constant artillery, tank mortar and machine gun fire.
Eyewitness accounts of battles have spoken of scenes of thousands
of dead Ethiopian soldiers strewn around, evoking the carnage
of World War I. In most modern wars, for every soldier killed
three are wounded. In this war, where even a modicum of medical
facilities is lacking, the ratio is more like one to one. Tens
of thousands of soldiers have died on three fronts along the border.
The fighting has erupted in fits and starts. There have been
several fruitless international attempts to broker a deal. Both
sides accepted an Organisation of African Unity (OAU) peace plan,
but each has interpreted the details of the proposed withdrawal
differently. Ethiopia says Eritrea must withdraw from all disputed
territory. Eritrea says the withdrawal only applies to the Badme
region.
With no diplomatic solution in sight, the expectations are
that there will be further large-scale battles before the rainy
season starts in July.
The two neighbours first went to war last year. Yet for many
years since the late 1970s, the presidents of the two countries
were close personal friends and had fought side by side in a guerrilla
war against Mengistu Haile-Mariam, then president of Ethiopia,
which had incorporated the province of Eritrea into Ethiopia in
1962. They had agreed that Eritrea would become independent.
In 1993, two years after Mengistu's Moscow-backed regime was
overthrown, Eritrea duly became independent after a war lasting
nearly 30 years, but without a properly drawn up settlement. The
ownership of many things, including long sections of the borders,
was never agreed.
The two countries became client states of the US, with America
one of only a handful of states to establish an embassy in Eritrea.
The capital Massawa occupies a strategic position immediately
opposite Saudi Arabia on the Red Sea, commanding the route to
and from the Suez Canal. Ethiopia thus became the biggest sub-Saharan
recipient of US aid. But the economic paths of Ethiopia and Eritrea
soon began to diverge. Ethiopia, a large landlocked country of
58 million people, reduced essentially to an agricultural economy,
sought a protected market for its coffee and cotton. Eritrea,
a country of 3.5 million people with off-shore oil reserves, sought
to become the region's Singapore, attracting inward investment
to make processed goods for export.
In desperate need of revenues and fearing that it would become
a pool of cheap labour for Eritrean industry and face competition
from its goods, Ethiopia imposed tariffs.
The establishment of the state of Eritrea in its turn gave
rise to the need for state revenues that could only be extracted
from trade across national borders. Consequently, Eritrea, dependent
for its livelihood on its income from its two ports on the Red
Sea, Massawa and Assab, introduced its own currency, the nakfa,
and demanded a one-to-one conversion with the Ethiopian birr.
This would have placed landlocked Ethiopia at an enormous disadvantage,
since all Ethiopian goods have to go through Eritrea to reach
international markets.
Ethiopia demanded that trade between the two should be carried
out in hard currency. This wrecked trading relations between the
two countries. Eritrea expelled Ethiopian officials from its ports
and Ethiopia retaliated by expelling several thousand Eritreans
from its northwest province and diverting trade from Eritrea to
Djibouti.
Within four years of an amicable independence, the economic
disputes between the two countries became a full-scale war. Border
disputes broke out in Badme, a remote but fertile area said to
contain gold and industrial minerals, sparking off this tragic
and futile war. It has brought economic ruin to two of the poorest
countries in the world, as they spent millions rearming.
Whereas only a few years ago, the US dollar bought two Ethiopian
birr, it now buys eight. This has had a devastating impact
on the standard of living, with a widening gap between the rich
and poor and the displacement of hundreds of thousands of people.
Real GDP per capita is US$960 for Eritrea and US$427 for Ethiopia.
Average annual income in Ethiopia declined from $165 in 1990 to
$153 in 1993, while daily calorific consumption is 1,600. Less
than 25 percent of the population have access to clean drinking
water, 19 percent to sanitation, 46 percent to health services
and only 35 percent of adults are literate.
The war threatens the territorial integrity of the Ethiopian
state as Eritrea has provided support for Ethiopia's own separatist
movements: the Oromo Liberation Front based in northern Kenya,
the Ogaden National Liberation Front and the Islamist al-Itahad,
based in Somalia.
The war has now spilled over into neighbouring Somalia, a country
that has largely disintegrated in the wake of the political machinations
of the various imperialist powers during the colonial and Cold
War eras. The IMF interventions in the 1980s wrecked Somalia's
pastoral economy and led to the civil wars and famine that have
bedevilled the country ever since.
There is no effective national governmentit has been
stateless since the civil war of the 1990s and the US invasion
in 1992-93. The self-styled Somaliland Republic in the north declared
independence in 1991. The rest of the country is controlled by
a patchwork of 11 rival clan-based factions and their associated
militias.
In their search for allies, Ethiopia and Eritrea have stepped
up their support for opposing factions in Somalia. Eritrea has
sent arms to Hussein Aideed, nominally the president of Somalia
and son of the previous president, who also enjoys the support
of the Ethiopian separatists. The Ethiopian government is providing
anti-Aideed factions with tanks, heavy weapons and other military
equipment.
Ethiopia has occupied the south central town of Baidoa in Somalia,
while its Somali ally, the Rhanwein Resistance Army, has gone
in pursuit of the seriously diminished militia of Aideed and his
Ethiopian rebel ally, the Oromo Liberation Front. The purpose
of this invasion is to create a buffer zone and block Eritrean
efforts to open a second front in the border war between the two
states.
The war flames are fanning even further afield. Unrest has
been reported on the Kenyan-Ethiopian border in the last week,
when two Oromo Liberation Front "rivals" were killed
and 13 others captured during an operation in northern Kenya by
security forces that seized arms and ammunition.
Ethiopia has established a link with Sudan, to whom it was
formerly opposed, hoping to build an alliance with Eritrean dissidents
including Islamist groups. Eritrea likewise has made up with Sudan
and forged links with Libya. Thus the US's latest protégés,
hailed as the new renaissance men of Africa, have both formed
alliances with America's chief bogeymen.
Meanwhile, the plight of the broad mass of the population intensifies.
Ethiopia has appealed for some 400,000 tonnes of emergency food
aid for the next six months to feed nearly 5 million people hit
by the failure of the short rains. Thus far, the international
community has promised less than one quarter of the requested
aid.
In Somalia, the security situation is so bad that the UN's
World Food Program was forced to divert two ships bringing food
aid to the country before they could discharge their cargo.
See Also:
Africa starvation warning from
UN Food and Agriculture Organisation
[11 May 1999]
War resumes between Ethiopia
and Eritrea
[20 February 1999]
Historical
and social issues behind the Eritrean-Ethiopian border war
[11 June 1998]
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