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H.E. KOFI ANAN
SECRETARY GENERAL
UN
Dear sir ,
A few months ago , the political prospects for Africa
looked so bright . The continent witnessed a wave of
Democratization, the emergence of new leaders determined to achieve
a new start, and an international resolve to help Africa help itself
.
That new Dawn is currently being overshadowed by
civil Wars , bilateral confrontations which are escalating the
conflicts into a continental conflagration .
The Ethiopian - Eritrean conflict is bringing two
culturally related neighbours into fratricidal struggles . That
conflict is potentially poised to mirror the polarizations of the
great lakes district , the Gulf , and the Middle East.
International mediation efforts have helped prevent
the escalation of the war, and have so far achieved a five months
cessation of hostilities . However , that period has also allowed
the two warring parties to prepare for war , and ensure that if
hostilities are resumed , they will be more violent and pervasive
than the May border war .
There is an iceberg character to this conflict: What
is hidden beneath the surface far out-weighs the visible aspects :
A)
The two leaderships
have been so close allies during the period of their common struggle
against the Mengistu Dictatorship , that when they proceeded to
create two successor states they left many important issues pending.
They have by - passed the need for a comprehensive Peace Agreement.
B)
Particularly menancing
was the lack of an explicit programme to deal with economic
relations between the two Sovereign States .
C)
The self - images of
the two successor states have escaped reconciliation :
Ethiopia had to cope with its imperial
inheritance , while Eritrea had to assert the rights of the New
Birth .
4th)The border
conflict simply became the embodiment of these contradictions .
5th)Consequently
, the handling of the conflict as a simple border skirmish between
two ordinary neighbouring States has back-fried and led to the
present impasse which unless it is effectively addressed will make
renewed violent conflict inevitable with all the menancing
consequences .
The peoples of the Sudan have a great affinity for
their Ethiopian and Eritrean neighbours . During their liberation
struggles, the people of Ethiopia and Eritrea have found the Sudan a
welcoming host . As the peoples of the Sudan today struggle to
realize the terms for a just peace and to restore their Democratic
Rights , they have received warm welcome. As representatives of the
peoples of Sudan , our interest does not stop there . We look up to
a future when our three peoples effect a degree of integration which
effectively serves their mutual Developmental and Security interests
.
Indeed , we seek to extend that vision to all the
territories of the Nile Basin , and the Red Sea Basin .
The National Democratic Alliance which represents the
most important political forces in the Northern and Suouthern Sudan
is greatly troubled by this conflict.
The NDA formed a Good-Will Mission resolved to make
direct contact with the leadership in the two States , to avail them
with a conduit of indirect contact , to reactivate the peace
initiatives , to underline the wider consequences of war , and to
seek to discover the common ground between the two parties .
We believe that our Good-Will M** -Treaties which are
readily available in the two countries archives , and British,
Italian and Russian Archives. They both agree upon the demarcation
of the entire border area by a technically competent body to be
appointed by the U.N. They both agree that in the event of
contraversy, the matter should be settled by arbitration .
Eventually , all outstanding issues should be addressed through a
comprehensive Peace Agreement .
Tht only issue which is now blocking the way to that
terminus , is the deployment of troops in the border area . Over
this issue , the declared positions of the two sides are
irreconcilable .
Agreement could be reached through the concerted
efforts of the peace makers to maintain an indirect dialogue between
the two parties , and hopefully , to facilitate their mutual
agreement upon a third scenario . That third scenario could resolve
the present impasse within a comprehensive package deal for the
resolution of the border dispute and so pave the way for direct
bilateral negotiations to discuss and sign a Peace Agreement .
Several ideas have been mooted as possibilities for the third
scenario . Among them , I count the following two :
1- To carry
out a general mutual disengagement of the two countries armed
forces in two stages :
A- First stage
, to redeploy the present forces away from the border area where
fighting took place on the 6th
of May 1998 . A partial restoration of the status -quo ante .
B- Second stage
to involve the rest of the border area .
2-
Alternatively , to make some mutually acceptable transition
arrangement for the area where fighting recently took place.
Otherwise to leave the border status quo as it is now , and to
instruct the U.N. technical body to delineate the entire border area
on the basis of Colonial Treaties . The two countries will then
comply with the findings and their troops will be deployed
accordingly . Then the same technical body could proceed to
demarcate the border on the ground .
The peace making process is already gathering
momentum . The U.S Government is sending a high ranking envoy to the
two capitals in the last week of September .
The three African heades of State who have been
delegated by the African Summit are due to meet on the first week of
October .
It will help the Peace momentum , and ensure the
Peace sway, if the Secretary General of the U.N. were to schedule a
visit to the area in mid - October . By that time the Peace
initiatives would have reached high gear . Also , by that time ,
preparations for the resumption of hostilities would have reached
their zenith .
Even before visiting the area , the Secretary General
could appeal to both sides to commit themselves to the following
Good-Will declaration :
To stop hostile measures aimed at the other side .
To refrain from war making rhetoric . To give the
Peace efforts maximum opportunity . To refrain from the initiation
of hostilities as long as the peace efforts continue .
We should leave no stone unturned to prevent a
resumption of hostilities. We believe that a compromise formula is
possible . We believe that the leadership in both countries is far
sighted enough to be willing to pay some price to avoid war. We
believe that the peoples of the two countries have had enough of
wars and are keen to avoid their horrors . Regional , and
international efforts should be redoubled to help them. The U.N . in
your person should take that cause to heart and be instrumental in
building Peace in the threatend Horn of Africa .
I am yours
Al-sadig Al- mahdi
The former Prime
minister of Sudan
And the Chairman of NDA Good - Will
Mission
Asmara
- 28.9.1998
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