U.N. Council to put sanctions on Eritrea – diplomats

By By Louis Charbonneau
| December 17, 2009



NEW YORK – U.N. Security Council members have agreed to impose an arms embargo on Eritrea this month, as well as travel bans and asset freezes for government and military leaders aiding Somali insurgents, diplomats said.

The United States and other council members accuse Eritrea of supplying Islamist rebels with money and weapons in their fight to topple the fragile U.N.-backed transitional government in Somalia, a virtually lawless Horn of Africa nation.

Western diplomats on the 15-nation Security Council said most members of the panel have agreed to support a Ugandan-drafted resolution to punish Eritrea and that they hoped to approve it by next week.

Reuters obtained the latest draft resolution on Wednesday.

In addition to imposing sanctions on Eritrea, the resolution orders Asmara to end all support to “to armed groups and their members, including al Shabaab,” which is battling to oust Somali President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, the diplomats said they were not expecting a unanimous vote, as Libya has made clear it would vote against the resolution. But they said they were ready to make further revisions to secure Tripoli’s vote.

Russia and China, which are generally reluctant to back sanctions, came around after it became clear the overwhelming majority of African Union members support taking the action against Somalia’s neighbour, diplomats said.

“We’ve got a balanced resolution that is tough, which imposes sanctions on Eritrea and the key elements in Eritrea who are supporting the Somali rebels,” a diplomat said. “I think we’ll get 14 votes.”

LIBYAN OPPOSITION

Western Security Council members had originally expected negotiations on the resolution to run into next year. But diplomats said an agreement had emerged after Russia and China took an “unusually cooperative” stance on the resolution.

They said the opposition of Libya, currently the chair of the African Union, was somewhat puzzling since the AU officially supports the idea of U.N. sanctions against Asmara.

The measures spelled out in the latest draft resolution are essentially the same as in the original text circulated to Security Council members last month.

They include a ban on sales of “arms and related materiel of all types” to Asmara, as well as arms sales by Eritrea. They also authorise U.N. member states to inspect cargo and seize any banned items being transported to or from Eritrea.

Once the resolution is passed, the council’s Somalia sanctions committee will have to designate which individuals and firms will face U.N. travel bans and asset freezes.

Some Somali rebels took refuge in Eritrea after being ousted from the Somali capital Mogadishu when Ethiopian troops entered Somalia in 2006.

The Security Council, African Union and United States have all warned Asmara against destabilizing Somalia. Eritrea denies supporting al Shabaab and says there is no justification for imposing the sanctions.

A U.N. arms monitoring body, which was set up to record violations of a 1992 arms embargo on Somalia, has said Asmara was flying and shipping munitions to Somali rebels, as well as providing them with logistical support.

Somalia has been mired in chaos for nearly two decades and there is little sign the latest attempt to establish a central government is proving any more successful than the 14 previous efforts since a dictator was ousted in 1991.

(Editing by Paul Simao)


Eritrea frees 27 Christians – Diplomat

By Jeremy Clarke
| December 17, 2009


* Eritrea says no arrests religiously motivated

* Rights group says thousands still behind bars

NAIROBI (Reuters) – A group of mostly elderly Christian women said to have been arrested last week for practising a religion not endorsed by the Eritrean government have been released in the capital, a diplomat said on Wednesday.

The women were members of the Faith Mission Church, an evangelical church with a Methodist background that was forced underground when the government required all religious groups to register in 2002, according to a U.S.-based rights group.

Eritrean officials have made no official response to the reports but Information Minister Ali Abdu told Reuters last week he was not aware of any such arrests, adding that they would not have been religiously motivated in any case.

“The 27 women were released today after being held in an Asmara police station since Saturday. We don’t know if any charges were laid,” an Asmara-based diplomat told Reuters. “They were given water, and family members came with food.”

The diplomat said their release was welcome news for families because concern for the women’s health was growing — all were in their forties or older, one was in her seventies, and a number had health concerns that required medicine.

There had been confusion as to how many women had been put behind bars with reports of between 25 and 30.

Eritrea is accused by rights organisations of harassing religious groups who have not been officially registered and approved by the government.

Three Christian churches are registered: Eritrean Orthodox, Roman Catholic and the Lutheran Evangelical Church of Eritrea.

The government is suspicious of what it calls radical forms of Islam, along with numerous smaller Protestant churches, Baha’is and Jehovah’s Witnesses.

Washington-based International Christian Concern said more than 3,000 Christians were being held prisoner in the country, sometimes in underground dungeons or old metal shipping containers. It said several had died behind bars.

President Isaias Afwerki told Reuters in an interview earlier this year that he was protecting the rights of orthodox religions by rejecting those who would “re-invent them”. (Editing by Giles Elgood)


Eritrean players say death awaits them if deported

By Tom Odula, AP Writer
| December 17, 2009


NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)—The 12 Eritrean national team players who defected during
a tournament in Kenya last week say they cannot return home because they will be
killed.

The players say they swore an oath to the Eritrean government before leaving
the country that they would not defect, a senior Kenyan government official said
on Wednesday. The official spoke to The Associated Press on condition of
anonymity because the information wasn’t authorized for release.

The official said the 12 have applied for an asylum seeker’s pass, the first
stage in determining whether they deserve refugee status. The process could take
up to three months.

The 12 failed to board a plane from Nairobi with the rest of Eritrea’s squad
on Saturday after having competed in the Senior Challenge Cup.

Some of the 12 players entered a government office Wednesday to apply for
refugee status. They were dressed in the official Eritrean football team
tracksuits, with the country’s name emblazoned on the back.

Nicholas Musonye, the secretary general of the Council for East and Central
Africa Football Associations, said this is the third time Eritrean players have
gone missing in events organized by the council, with up to a dozen disappearing
during a tournaments that were held in Tanzania in 2006-07.

President Isaias Afwerki, a former rebel leader, led Eritrea to independence
from Ethiopia in 1993 but has since turned dictator. Strict government controls
on the economy, media and religion in the nation of more than 5 million people
have forced thousands to flee.


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