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Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 18 Oct 2023, 15:14
by Zmeselo



Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

-Ethiopia has called for talks with neighbors on harbor access
-Somalia to retain control of strategic assets, minister says



A tanker ship anchored in the Red Sea. Photographer: Mohammed Huwais/AFP/Getty Images

By Simon Marks

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... =undefined

17 oktober 2023

Somalia rejected an appeal from Ethiopia to enter into negotiations with a view to granting it access to a Red Sea port.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed last week warned that his country’s lack of access to a harbor is a potential source of future conflict and called for efforts to address the issue in order to safeguard regional stability. Ethiopia lost its direct access to the sea in 1993 when Eritrea gained independence after a three-decade war.
Access to a Red Sea port is a crucial issue for Ethiopia. Without direct access to the sea, the country faces challenges in terms of trade and transportation. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has highlighted the potential risks and conflicts that could arise from this lack of access. Efforts to find a solution and ensure regional stability are necessary to address this issue.

In 1993, Ethiopia lost its direct access to the sea when Eritrea gained independence after a long and devastating war. This historical event has had significant implications for Ethiopia’s trade and transportation capabilities. The loss of access to a Red Sea port has been a longstanding issue, and the recent rejection of Ethiopia’s appeal by Somalia further complicates the situation.

It is crucial for regional stability and cooperation that efforts are made to find a resolution to this issue. The lack of access to a Red Sea port not only affects Ethiopia but also has broader implications for the region. Negotiations and diplomatic efforts will be key in addressing this complex and sensitive matter.




Re: Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 18 Oct 2023, 15:29
by Zmeselo


Ethiopia and the Red Sea

Mostafa Ahmady

https://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsConten ... d-Sea.aspx

Tuesday 17 Oct 2023

Ethiopia is bullying neighbouring countries in the Horn of Africa region in order to realise its ambition of having port access to the Red Sea, writes Mostafa Ahmady

From a “project” Ethiopia has repeatedly asserted it “solely” owns and dubs as “sovereign,” there is now the question of putting it up for auction.
Take 30 per cent or 20 per cent of the shares in the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD),
said Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed in a televised speech he gave before the members of the Ethiopian Parliament.

In his speech, Ahmed was suggesting that
those who have access to the Red Sea should take some shares in the GERD.
in exchange for a “breathing gate” on the Red Sea, as he put it, in a transcript carried by the Ethiopian Addis Standard.

Ahmed knows full well that Asmara does not have any “shares” in the colossal project. So, was he bringing back to life a proposal first launched by late Ethiopian prime minister Meles Zenawi? In the early days of launching the GERD in mid-2011, Zenawi suggested that both downstream Sudan and Egypt contribute some 50 per cent of the financing for the GERD, as he claimed that their two peoples would be the beneficiaries of the dam. They should contribute some 50 per cent of the financing in exchange for a “joint operation,” a proposal that Cairo, busy with the implications of the 25 January Revolution, did not take seriously enough.

Egypt speaks of the Nile as an existential issue for its roughly 110 million people, adding that it has an inalienable right to the Nile waters. Ahmed also uttered words like “existential” and
historical rights on the Red Sea
when he was making remarks about the need of 150 million Ethiopians, the number he projects the landlocked Horn of African nation to have by 2030, for their own “gate” on the strategic Red Sea.

He considers that Ethiopia has yet to assume the place it deserves as an African “superpower” because Addis Ababa does not have a port of its own on this strategic waterway.

Like other economies in the region, Ethiopia is feeling the heat of the present global economic crisis, caused mainly, but not entirely, by the Covid-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war. Based on data from the Ethiopian Statistics Service, essential food items on a year-on-year basis had soared in price by July 2023 by 48.1 per cent. This may be partially attributed to the surging shipping costs of imports, particularly fertilisers, necessary for Ethiopian farmers. An Ethiopian port on the Red Sea would cut the cost of these drastically, helping the nation to save some 20 to 30 per cent of its revenues.

While the Ethiopian prime minister spoke of the “carrot” in his address, he did not forget to mention the “stick.” Talking mainly to Ethiopia’s immediate neighbours of Somalia, Djibouti, Kenya, Eritrea and South Sudan, and indirectly to others whom it might concern, Ahmed said that while Ethiopia provides them with fresh water, they (Ethiopia’s neighbouring countries with ports on the Red Sea) say that
we will share yours [resources], but do not ask [to share] ours.
Ahmed reminded the “takers,” as he described those countries dependent on water resources from the Ethiopian plateau, that no one gives a
single litre of water
to his country, but that if they
want to live together in peace, we both have to maintain a balance.
In other words, it is necessary if “peace” is to continue in the Horn of Africa region that all “resources” are shared “equitably.”

Moreover, he went on to speak of “fighting,” not necessarily now, but maybe in the future.
If you say ‘because we are 120 million people, because we have the power? Because [we have] the army, and [we have] the air force?… If you say these things, that is not what we should do,
Ahmed said, elaborating on a “peaceful” dialogue on how to access the Red Sea. Or perhaps he was warning of the “dire” implications that the inability of Ethiopia to access the Red Sea could have?

It was not clear to whom Ahmed was sending his message. But it looked like an attempt to bully “small” nations in the Horn of Africa region, specifically the self-declared state of Somaliland. In his speech, he referred to “history” when he was speaking about Somaliland. In the 13th century, he said, Ethiopia used to enjoy the services of the Zeila Port under the Ifat Sultanate that flourished in Central Ethiopia for two centuries.

In 2019, Somaliland reversed an agreement with Ethiopia that would have granted the latter 19 per cent of the shares in the Berbera Port, citing a failure by Addis Ababa to comply with its financial contributions on time. The agreement, which engaged the governments of Somaliland and Ethiopia along with the Emirati DP World Company, would have seen Ethiopia develop a 260-km road from Berbera to the Ethiopian border. However, Addis Ababa fell short of the agreement.

In March 2023, Somaliland accused Ethiopia of “flaring up” a territorial dispute in Las Anod on the border of the Ethiopian Somali region that engaged troops loyal to the Somaliland authorities and those affiliated to the semi-autonomous region of Puntland. Both countries, in addition to Somalia, claim Las Anod as their own.

Moreover, Eritrea has not kept the pledge it made when it normalised ties with Addis Ababa in 2018 under the present Ethiopian government. The plan was to allow Ethiopia to access the Eritrean ports of Massawa and Assab, both of which Ethiopia freely used until 1997 after Eritrea’s separation in 1993. While Ahmed sought help from the Eritreans in his war against the Tigrayans, veteran Eritrean leader Isaias Afwerki stepped in for his own benefit and not for that of Ahmed.

Despite the signing of the Pretoria Agreement in November 2022 to end hostilities between the Ethiopian government and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), Eritrea has not pulled out its troops from the areas it occupied during the war. Afwerki has already accomplished his part of the job by creating a buffer zone along the border with Tigray, but when it came to the use of Eritrean ports, he gave the Ethiopians short shrift. Addis Ababa’s repeated calls on Asmara to pull out its troops have fallen on deaf ears. On the contrary, Eritrea is consolidating its positions in the areas it has occupied since the war.

The inability to push the Eritreans out may be why Ahmed is trying to lure Asmara into joining a “confederation” with Ethiopia. He has gone as far as to suggest a land swap that would allow Ethiopia to access the Red Sea, particularly as he has also spoken of what he called the “common characteristics” that bind the peoples speaking the Tigrinya language, namely the Tigrayans in Ethiopia and the Eritreans themselves.

Will the Eritreans mull over the Ethiopian proposal and seal a deal that would bury the hatchet between the two peoples? Above all, is Addis Ababa serious about doing whatever it takes to access the Red Sea, something that Ahmed has connected to Ethiopia’s “very existence”?

* The writer is a former press attaché in Ethiopia and an expert on African and international affairs.

Re: Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 18 Oct 2023, 15:34
by Zmeselo

Re: Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 18 Oct 2023, 16:16
by Somaliman
Abiy can go fu.ck himself with his GERD - we don't want GERD or anything else from Ethiopia.

In addition, this clown must be out of his mind. How on earth could he dare to talk to anyone from a position of power, when Eritrea has been rescuing his ar.se to date!

"There is significant potential in all of Somalia for renewable and alternative sources of energy, such as wind ... "

https://energycatalyst.ukri.org/wp-cont ... omalia.pdf

Re: Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 19 Oct 2023, 03:51
by Zmeselo
ETHIOPIA-SOMALILAND, FALLOUT

In 2019, Somaliland revoked a deal with Ethiopia that would have given it 19% ownership of the Berbera Port. This decision, was due to Addis Ababa's delay in meeting its financial obligations.

The initial agreement, involving the governments of Somaliland, Ethiopia, and the Emirati firm DP World, proposed a 260-km road construction from Berbera to the Ethiopian border. However, Ethiopia did not uphold its end of the deal.

Had Somaliland not established a strategic alliance with the UAE, it might have faced the threat of incursion from an expansionist Ethiopia ... if the irresponsible remarks by PM Abiy (nicknamed "Aqua Man") are any indication.

In March 2023, Somaliland accused Ethiopia for a “flaring up” a territorial dispute in Las Anod on the border of the Ethiopian Somali region that engaged troops loyal to the Somaliland authorities and those affiliated with the semi-autonomous region of Puntland.

Re: Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 19 Oct 2023, 03:59
by Zack
nothing good comes from ethiopia these days , Ethiopia has no claim over any sea not Somalia sea not Eritrea sea not Djibouti sea they just have to deal with it


dr zackovich

Re: Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 19 Oct 2023, 04:59
by Temt
Zack wrote:
19 Oct 2023, 03:59
nothing good comes from ethiopia these days , Ethiopia has no claim over any sea not Somalia sea not Eritrea sea not Djibouti sea they just have to deal with it


dr zackovich
That is true. Their leaders and some Ethiopian hallucinators seem to have some serious psychological disease of wanting to grab what is legally not theirs!

Re: Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 19 Oct 2023, 05:28
by Somaliman
The clown's days are numbered.

Where's the old Afar b.itch, Sinlady, who used to parrot that this clown would outplay Isaias!

Re: Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 19 Oct 2023, 06:03
by Zmeselo

The Ethiopian Prime Minister’s claim that, due to being landlocked, his country must forcibly secure sea access directly violates the UN charter, international law, and the principles of peaceful state coexistence. Every nation possesses unique strengths, whether in population, natural resources, or geopolitical importance.

Premier Abiy should understand that threats won't intimidate Ethiopia's neighbors, and emotional rhetoric won't bridge the geographical realities facing his citizens.

Rather than posturing, he ought to study the best practices of the 43 other peaceful landlocked countries and adopt strategies that not only benefit his nation but also uphold global peace and regional cooperation.
Abdirashid Hashi

It is interesting to note that rebuttal and pushback are surfacing from public figures and citizens of HOA states. Abiy Ahmed's reckless claims, bereft of diplomacy and able statesmanship, are perceived as a threat instead of commanding trust and confidence. Testimony to his treacherous and delusional designs.
Neamin Zeleke

Re: Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 19 Oct 2023, 06:46
by BigBreak
Somaliland and Somalia are two different countries. Ethiopia would do well to accept this reality

Re: Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 19 Oct 2023, 07:13
by Zack
no they are the same country untill Somaliland is recognized by the international community Somalia and Somaliland are the same country
by the way i believe ethiopia said that ethiopia would be the last country to recognize Somaliland , they cant recognize it other wise they have to let go and recgonize Somali region and maybe even oromia


dr Zackovich

Re: Somalia Rebuffs Ethiopia’s Bid to Gain Direct Access to Red Sea Port

Posted: 19 Oct 2023, 08:03
by Zmeselo
Seeking an outlet to the sea, in CHINA! :lol: