Reference Text
Time Left10:00
Ethiopia
s
decision
this
month
to
implement
an
earlier
peace
agreement
with
neighbouring
Eritrea
brokered
by
the
African
Union
brings
hope,
despite
the
problems
that
loom
ahead.
The
agreement
signed
by
the
two
countries
in
Algiers
in
December
2000
was
intended
to
bring
an
end
to
a
conflict
triggered
by
Eritrea,
but
the
pact
was
never
fully
implemented.
The
two
neighbours
remained
deadlocked
in
a
conflict
that
has
over
time
claimed
more
than
50,000
lives
over
a
dispute
concerning
the
border
town
of
Badme.
A
boundaries
delimitation
commission
had
awarded
the
area
to
Eritrea
in
2002,
but
Ethiopia
refused
to
cede
control.
The
presence
of
Ethiopian
troops
served
to
prolong
the
confrontation,
as
Eritrea
mobilised
its
own
forces
under
its
autocratic
leader,
President
Isaias
Afwerki.
The
conflict
gave
the
dictator
a
pretext
to
expand
a
large
conscription
programme,
in
the
process
enslaving
thousands
of
young
men
and
women
and
triggering
a
mass
exodus
to
European
countries.
Desperate
Eritrean
migrants
were
among
the
hundreds
who
drowned
off
Italy
s
Lampedusa
island
in
2013.
Ethiopia
s
decision
to
honour
the
terms
of
the
peace
accord
is
credited
to
its
popular
and
young
Prime
Minister,
Abiy
Ahmed,
who
assumed
office
this
April.
The
rapprochement
is
part
of
a
string
of
democratic
reforms
he
has
unveiled
including
lifting
the
state
of
emergency,
releasing
thousands
of
political
prisoners,
and
removing
some
Opposition
parties
from
the
list
of
terrorist
groups.
But
there
are
already
rumblings
in
the
ruling
Ethiopian
People
s
Revolutionary
Democratic
Front,
between
the
country
s
ethnic
Oromo
majority
and
the
politically
dominant
Tigrayan
minority.
The
choice
of
Mr.
Ahmed,
an
Oromo,
as
Prime
Minister
was
aimed
at
restoring
stability
in
the
light
of
growing
unrest
in
the
community
for
greater
political
representation.
Unless
managed
tactfully,
these
internal
tensions
within
the
governing
coalition
could
impede
the
peace
process.
For
Eritrea,
a
lasting
settlement
to
the
prolonged
conflict
on
the
Horn
of
Africa
will
constitute
a
major
milestone,
one
that
has
come
25
years
after
it
gained
independence
from
Ethiopia
in
1993,
following
a
prolonged
guerrilla
war.
All
the
same,
the
end
of
hostilities
could
mean
a
diminishing
role
for
the
military
and
a
loosening
of
President
Afwerki
s
grip
over
the
state
apparatus.
The
former
rebel
leader
has
resisted
holding
general
elections
since
independence
and
has
not
honoured
the
1997
constitution.
Restoration
of
peace
and
democracy
is
an
urgent
priority
in
both
countries,
which
are
among
the
poorest
in
the
world.
Greater
transparency
and
political
accountability
at
home
are
also
prerequisites
for
stability
across
the
borders.
Ethiopia
and
Eritrea
are
strategically
located,
both
as
gateways
for
global
trade
and
for
counter
terrorism
operations.
Peace
will
allow
landlocked
Ethiopia
to
access
Eritrean
ports,
and
tie