(KHARTOUM) - The technical committee tasked with redrawing
the border between Sudan and Ethiopia said it would complete its work on the
ground during this year.
A
road leading to Ethiopia-Sudan border (Photo Jamminglobal.com)
In November 2014, Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Hailemariam
Desalegn and Sudan’s President Omer al-Bashir instructed their foreign
ministers to set up a date for resuming borders demarcation after it had
stopped following the death of Ethiopia’s former Prime Minister, Meles Zenawi.
The head of the technical committee Abdalla al-Sadig told
the semi-official Sudan Media Center (SMC) that the border demarcation between
Sudan and Ethiopia doesn’t face any problems.
He pointed out that the length of the border with Ethiopia
is about 725 km, saying the process of demarcation is proceeding properly.
Farmers from two sides of the border between Sudan and
Ethiopia used to dispute the ownership of land in the Al-Fashaga area located
in the south-eastern part of Sudan’s eastern state of Gedaref.
Al-Fashaga covers an area of about 250 square kilometers and
it has about 600.000 acres of fertile lands. Also there are river systems
flowing across the area including Atbara, Setait and Baslam rivers.
On Saturday, Sudan’s foreign minister Ibrahim Ghandour told
the Qatar-based Aljazeera TV that Sudan and Ethiopia are working together to
curb the activities of Ethiopian gangs inside Sudanese territory.
He stressed that Al-Fashaga is a Sudanese territory, saying
the government allowed Ethiopia farmers to cultivate its land as part of the
cooperation between the two countries.
“However, Ethiopia is committed and acknowledges that
[Al-Fashaga] is a Sudanese territory,” he said.
Ghandour pointed to joint meetings between the two countries
at the level of the presidency to discuss borders issues.
Sudan’s Gadarif and Blue Nile states border Ethiopia’s
Amhara region. The borders between Sudan and Ethiopia were drawn by the British
and Italian colonisers in 1908.
The two governments have agreed in the past to redraw the
borders, and to promote joint projects between people from both sides for the
benefit of local population.
However, the Ethiopian opposition accuses the ruling party
of abandoning Ethiopian territory to Sudan.
DISPUTE OVER HALAYEB
Regarding the dispute with Egypt over Halayeb triangle,
al-Sadig said Khartoum has documents clearly proving that the area is a
Sudanese territory.
He pointed that Sudan has not engaged in meetings with the
Egyptian side on Halayeb, saying the issue could be referred to international
arbitration as was the case during the dispute between Egypt and Israel over
Taba area.
“We don’t oppose [referral of the case to the] international
arbitration to resolve the issue particularly as Sudan has maps as well as legal
and historical documents proving that Halayeb and Shalateen are part of the
Sudanese territory,” he said.
The Halayeb triangle overlooks the Red Sea and has been a
contentious issue between Egypt and Sudan since 1958, shortly after Sudan
gained independence from British-Egyptian rule.
The contested border area has been under de facto Egyptian
administration since the mid-1990s, but both countries have jockeyed for its
control for over a century.
Egypt brushed aside Sudan’s repeated calls for referring the dispute to international arbitration.
Egypt brushed aside Sudan’s repeated calls for referring the dispute to international arbitration.
Earlier this month, Sudan’s foreign minister Ibrahim
Ghandour told a group of Egyptian politicians in Cairo that the dispute over
Halayeb area can’t be resolved by “imposing a fait accompli” but through
dialogue or by referring the case to the concerned international institutions.
(ST)
Source: Sudan Tribute
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