The Borneo Post

AU calls for calm as DjiboutiEr­itrea border tensions mount

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NAIROBI: The African Union on Saturday urged Djibouti and Eritrea to show “restraint” as tensions intensifie­d over a disputed border territory after the withdrawal of Qatari peacekeepe­rs from a buffer zone.

Djibouti has accused Eritrea of occupying the territory in the Doumeira region following the departure of the Qatari troops, threatenin­g the revival of a longstandi­ng and at times violent dispute.

In 2008, Eritrea sent its troops into the area, north of the city of Djibouti and strategica­lly located at the entry to the Red Sea, leading to clashes between the two sides.

Tensions had also flared between the two countries over the zone in 1996 and 1999.

AU commission chairperso­n Moussa Faki Mahamat called for “calm, restraint” and said the union would send a “fact-finding mission to the Djibouti-Eritrea border”.

The Qatari pullout comes as the Gulf emirate is locked in a bitter dispute with Saudi Arabia and its allies over alleged ties to Islamist extremists, a charge it denies.

Both Djibouti and Eritrea have good relations with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, and have taken their side in the Gulf row.

Djibouti is a strategic ally for global powers, hosting French and US military bases with a Chinese one under constructi­on, while Eritrea is widely regarded as a pariah state.

Djibouti’s large port is also a trade conduit for Ethiopia, Eritrea’s bitter enemy.

Diplomatic sources said Saturday that the UN Security Council would meet Monday afternoon in New York to discuss the crisis, in a closed- door meeting requested by Ethiopia. — AFP

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