PRESS RELEASE
The UN Security Council has today passed a shameful resolution imposing
sanctions against Eritrea. The unjustifiable measures imposed on Eritrea
include: an arms embargo; the inspection and seizure by Member States
in their territory of such cargo to and from
Eritrea; and, the imposition of a travel ban, and the freezing of assets
of, Eritreas political and military leadership who may be blacklisted
by a Committee.
As Eritrea has strongly emphasized in the past weeks, this brazen act
is neither based on fact nor on the provisions of international law.
It constitutes a travesty of justice and amplifies the dangers inherent
in a unipolar world.
The fact of the matter is this resolution was originally conceived and
feverishly executed by the United States. Britain, and especially Uganda,
were co-opted as sponsors of the resolution for purposes of deceitful
packaging. The US Mission to the UN further tried to invoke a resolution
of the African Union to disguise the real culprit. But in the end, this
cover did not work. As it happened, the US Ambassador to the UN was
ultimately forced to come out of the closet and cajole UN Member States
to adopt the resolution willy-nilly.
Setting aside the misguided policies of the US Administration in the
Horn of Africa region and the loathsome personal agenda of the US Ambassador
to the UN who could not hide her obsession to punish Eritrea
and break its arrogance, what are the accusations leveled
against Eritrea? How do these accusations square with the provisions
of the UN Charter? Does the heavy-handed process pursued in this case
conform to the modalities and precedents of the UN Security Council
in imposing sanctions
against a Member State?
1. It must be stressed that the accusations against Eritrea for involvement
in Somalia have never been substantiated or verified. Many Member States
objected to the draft resolution in the early days precisely for these
reasons though they acquiesced to US pressure
later. The Somalia Monitoring Group had previously accused Eritrea for
supplying arms to those opposing the TFG. This clause was
later dropped quietly and the revised version indicts Eritrea for providing
political, financial, and logistical support to armed
groups engaged in undermining peace and reconciliation in Somalia.
As pointed out earlier, these allegations were, again, not explained
or substantiated. Indeed, how can Eritrea provide logistical support
to armed groups in Somalia when it does not have a contiguous border
with that country? The allegation of financial support is equally
tenuous. Eritrea has neither the political will nor the financial clout
to bankroll armed groups in Somalia. As for the accusations of political
support, it is well-known that Eritrea has not recognized the TFG for
cogent and well-thought out reasons. This was also the
case with the externally established previous TFGs installed in Mogadishu
without the consent of the Somali people. Eritreas impartial and
balanced position emanates from its profound desire to contribute to
a durable and sustainable solution to the crisis in
Somalia. These political considerations aside, the fundamental legal
issue at hand is whether this matter of purely sovereign national jurisdiction
can be misconstrued as a subject of UN Security Council concern. Is
it the mandate of the Security Council to punish any Member State on
account of the political views it holds or the diplomatic choices it
makes? Has the Security Council ever imposed sanctions against one or
more countries because they have not recognized Kosovo, Abkhazia, or
South Ossetia? Does controversy on matters of this nature empower the
UN Security Council to take punitive measures against a defenseless
country arbitrarily?
2. The resolution refers to the decision of the 13th Assembly
of the African Union in Sirte, calling on the Council to impose sanctions
against Eritrea. Again, this assertion is replete with distortions
and half-truths. As underlined earlier, the resolution was co-sponsored
by Uganda in its individual capacity. It was not tabled, but on the
contrary, vehemently opposed by Libya which is the current Chair of
the AU and a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council. More importantly,
the UN Security Councils function is not to rubber-stamp resolutions
adopted by a regional organization when invoking Chapter VII of the
UN Charter to impose sanctions against a Member State but to do so independently
and only on the basis of incontrovertible facts and law.
3. In a feat of unprecedented cynicism, the UN Security Council Resolution
recommends other punitive measures against Eritrea on account of the
U.S. fabricated border dispute with Djibouti. For seven
long years now since the Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission
gave its final and binding Award on the border dispute between Eritrea
and Ethiopia in April 2002, the Security Council has refused to shoulder
its responsibilities to ensure the respect of the arbitration decision
in accordance with the provisions of the Algiers
Peace Treaty that was largely drafted and explicitly guaranteed by this
same body. This has encouraged Ethiopia to violate its treaty obligations,
the UN Charter and international law to continue its occupation of Badme
and other sovereign Eritrean lands. This same
Security Council is now singing to a different tune, simply because
it is played by Washington, to threaten Eritrea with punitive measure
for a non-existent border conflict.
Security Council Resolution 1907(2009) is thus not based on law and
incontrovertible facts. The United States has simply employed its preponderant
influence to ram through unjustifiable sanctions against a small country.
What is shameful is that the United States has been allowed to use the
platform and authority of the United Nations to
perpetrate injustices against the people and Government of Eritrea;
for the second time in recent history. What is shameful is that other
major powers in the UN Security Council cannot go beyond expressing
their disappointment, mostly in private meetings, to check the excesses
of Washington. What is shameful is that the United States can turn the
tables and victimize an innocent nation for the very crimes that it
is responsible for in the first place. Because the truth is, the United
States is mostly responsible for the mayhem and suffering that is bedeviling
Somalia today. Indeed, it is common knowledge that as intractable as
the Somali crisis is, there were real hopes of a turnaround for the
better in 2006.
For reasons that defy reason, the Bush Administration then acted to
roll back those
promising developments to instigate and support Ethiopias invasion
of Somalia. That single debacle claimed the lives of thousands of innocent
Somalis, made half a million people homeless and aggravated the humanitarian
crisis in Somalia to unprecedented levels. But then, the Security Council
is not taking action on the basis of justice and
legality. It is taking action on the basis of the existing power balance
in a largely unipolar world. This does not bode well for international
justice and peace. This is why today is a shameful day for the United
Nations.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Asmara
23 December 2009