United Nations (United States) (AFP) - The UN Security Council on Wednesday lifted sanctions on Eritrea following a landmark peace deal with Ethiopia and a thaw with Djibouti that have buoyed hopes for positive change in the Horn of Africa.
The council
unanimously adopted a British-drafted resolution lifting the arms embargo, all
travel bans, asset freezes and targeted sanctions against Eritrea.
Eritrea and
Ethiopia hailed the decision as a boost for regional stability, four months
after the two countries signed a peace deal that ended two decades of hostility
and led to friendlier relations with Djibouti.
Addressing
the council after the vote, Eritrea's Charge D'affaires Amanuel Giorgio said
his government had long considered the sanctions "unwarranted" and
declared: "the long overdue call for justice is finally answered."
Eritrea
"is determined to redouble its own efforts and work closely with its
neighbors to build a region at peace with itself," said Giorgio.
Ethiopian
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said in a statement that "the lifting of
sanctions will have far-reaching effects in improving the stability of the Horn
of Africa" and normalizing relations.
The council
slapped sanctions on Eritrea in 2009 for its alleged support of Al-Shabaab
insurgents in Somalia, a claim Asmara has long denied.
The
resolution acknowledged that UN monitors have "not found conclusive
evidence that Eritrea supports Al-Shabaab" and declared that the sanctions
and arms embargo ended with the adoption of the measure.
"The
current developments will have, definitely, ripple effects in terms of economic
progress, prosperity as well as human rights," Ethiopian Ambassador Taye
Atske Selassie told reporters.
UN
officials have reported serious abuses by the Eritrean government that have
triggered a major exodus of Eritreans from their country.
UN keeps
eye on Djibouti
Ethiopia
and Somalia strongly supported calls to end sanctions, and negotiations over
the past two weeks focused on addressing concerns about Djibouti.
The
resolution calls on Eritrea and Djibouti to press on with efforts to settle a
2008 border dispute and asks Asmara to release information concerning
Djiboutian soldiers missing in clashes a decade ago.
At France's
request, the council will hear a report every six months on Eritrea's efforts
to normalize relations with Djibouti, where France, the United States and China
all have military bases.
Djibouti is
asking the United Nations to help broker a final settlement with Eritrea to
agree on land and maritime boundaries and resolve a dispute over the Doumeira
Island, Ambassador Mohamed Siad Doualeh told the council.
The fate of
13 remaining Djiboutian prisoners in Eritrean custody must be addressed, he
added.
Eritrea
gained its independence from Ethiopia in the early 1990s, and war broke out
later that decade over a border dispute.
A 2002
UN-backed boundary demarcation was meant to settle the dispute for good, but
Ethiopia refused to abide by it.
A
turnaround began in June when Ethiopia announced it would hand back to Eritrea
disputed areas including the flashpoint town of Badme, where the first shots of
the border war were fired.

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