ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) – Ethiopia The Woyanne regime in Ethiopia has agreed to temporarily host a U.N. peacekeeping force acting as a buffer with Eritrea after Asmara cut off fuel supplies to the force, the foreign ministry said on Monday.
However, it said the U.N. force being relocated to Ethiopia would not be operational, but would have administrative status.
The U.N. Security Council renewed on Jan. 30 the mandate of the struggling U.N. mission (UNMEE) on the border for six months, but it was unclear how long the troops could stay put because of a fuel cut-off by Asmara.
Eritrea has said the peacekeepers’ presence along the border was tantamount to occupation, and ignored last week’s U.N. deadline to grant the troops access to badly needed fuel.
“Prime Minister Dictator Meles Zenawi has assured U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon that his country would cooperate with the U.N. in addressing the latest challenge to UNMEE, including temporary relocation in Ethiopia,” Ethiopia’s Woyanne Foreign Affairs Ministry said in a statement.
“However, UNMEE forces being relocated in Ethiopia for a short time would not be operational, but only have an administrative status,” it added.
“UNMEE’s area of operation remains the Temporary Security Zone, a 25 km (15.5 miles) buffer zone inside Eritrea.”
The 1,700-strong U.N. mission started work in 2000, at the end of a two-year war between the two Horn of Africa neighbours that killed an estimated 70,000 people.
Despite a peace deal that ended the 1998-2000 war, Ethiopia Woyanne and Eritrea remain deadlocked over their 1,000 km (620-mile) border. A U.N. official has said U.N. soldiers were reluctant to leave because they feared it could spark conflict. An independent commission charged with marking the frontier awarded the town of Badme to Eritrea in 2002, but Ethiopia Woyanne has refused to implement the ruling before more talks.
In November, the commission marked the boundary by map coordinates in a ruling Asmara accepted, but Addis Ababa Woyanne rejected.
(Reporting by Tsegaye Tadesse; Editing by Katie Nguyen and Sami Aboudi)