Can Ethiopia and Eritrea Keep the Peace, or Will History Repeat Itself? (Stratfor)
Highlights
Despite
clear signs that peace has benefited both countries' security and
investment profiles, Ethiopia and Eritrea’s new agreement risks
faltering amid ongoing trade difficulties and currency imbalances.
Ethiopian
investors will likely be shut out from owning property or opening up
large businesses in Eritrea, which has shown no signs of moving toward a
political liberalization since the detente.
Continued
animosity between Eritrea’s leadership and Ethiopia’s northern Tigray
region could threaten the long-term prospects for the renewed
relationship.
After
a costly war in 1998 and two subsequent decades of animosity, Eritrea
and Ethiopia formally agreed to settle their differences with a historic
truce in September 2018. The former enemies have since basked in the
peace, with their improved relations opening the door for increased
trade and investment and new transport routes. But trade and security
problems loom on the horizon — carrying the risk of once again souring
relations between the Horn of Africa neighbors.
Peace and Prosperity
If Ethiopia and Eritrea can manage to solve their lingering issues, both countries and their respective economies would clearly benefit
from international investors taking an interest in the fast-growing
region that has suddenly become more stable. Improving relations have
already begun to unlock new investment opportunities for Ethiopia, in particular.
The supply routes to Eritrea laid out in the peace deal have given the
landlocked country — which has typically relied on Djibouti for about 95
percent of its imports and exports — a way to further diversify its
ports around the Horn of Africa. And other countries have started to
take notice, as evidenced by Italy's recent agreement to fund a
feasibility study for a 724-kilometer (450-mile) railway that would run
between the Eritrean port of Massawa and Ethiopia's capital, Addis
Ababa.
However, while Eritrea has tried to use the new ties to
bolster its international image, its reputation as a repressive state
precedes it. The country's domestic operations have changed little since
the signing of the detente. Despite hopes among Eritreans that the
peace deal would spark internal reforms, Eritrea's opaque and
authoritarian system of government — centered around the personality of
its reclusive president, Isaias Afwerki — will likely stay intact for
the foreseeable future, complicating foreign investment in the meantime.
That said, while Eritrea might not reap direct financial gains in the
near term, the deal with Ethiopia has provided it with a significant
security boon by seemingly removing the menace of its much larger
neighbor and spurring the removal of costly U.N. sanctions in November 2018.
A Tumultuous History
But
despite the hopes created by a tentative era of Eritrean-Ethiopian
harmony, wounds from their contentious history linger, threatening the
prospect of lasting peace.
From the 1960s until the 1990s, Eritrea was under the rule of Ethiopia’s tyrannical Dergue regime
after being annexed by Ethiopia’s monarchy in the years following World
War II. Angered by Addis Ababa’s heavy-handed policies in its newest
province, Afwerki and his Eritrean People’s Liberation Force (EPLF) led a
long and ultimately successful insurgency with the help of the Tigray
People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), an armed liberation movement from
Ethiopia's northern Tigray region.
During the war, relations
between the two liberation groups initially seemed strong. Yet the
ideological differences between the TPLF movement (which ruled over
Ethiopia up until 2017) and Afwerki's Marxist rebel organization (which
continues to preside over Eritrea to this day) became apparent in the
years following Eritrea's independence, once they were faced with the
day-to-day of running their governments.
Eritrea also began
taking advantage of the two countries' then-currency union, which had
been intended to serve as the basis of their full economic integration.
Asmara started selling Ethiopian goods abroad in U.S. dollars after
buying them in their shared local currency. This created a foreign
currency shortage in Ethiopia, much to the irritation of Addis Ababa.
When Asmara introduced its new currency, the nakfa, in 1997, Ethiopia
would not allow it to be traded it at an equal equivalency to its
currency, the birr. Though seemingly inconsequential at the time, this
currency spat marked the start of the deterioration in their relations,
ultimately leading to the outbreak of war in 1998 and the two decades of
hostility that followed.
New Deal, Same Problems
With
the peace deal, crossings on their shared border have reopened, bringing
signs that the countries' trade history is repeating, at least to some
degree. Eritreans have been traveling to northern Ethiopian cities to
buy fuel using Ethiopia's local currency — taking advantage of the
border towns' lack of regulations. This has exacerbated the current
foreign currency shortages in Ethiopia since it imports its fuel using
U.S. dollars. Additionally, there have been reports that Eritreans are
buying goods in these same towns by exchanging nakfas for birrs at an
equal rate, even though black market prices show the nakfa is trading at
57 or 58 to the dollar, while a dollar trades for about 28 birrs.
The
euphoria of the summer peace deal has masked the unfairness of some of
the deals being conducted on the ground, although some Ethiopian
economists have begun to raise concerns. And as the afterglow of the
detente begins to fade, it’s likely that this currency problem will
emerge as a bigger issue and require Addis Ababa to weigh in. While it's
natural that the two sides would have some friction points given their
competing economic interests, there are several factors that could
exacerbate tensions if both sides do not seek to settle their
differences using clearly established mechanisms.
For
example, the reclusive Eritrean president is known to view his country
as a vulnerable, insecure nation that could be taken over — either
financially or by military force. Combined with the EPLF’s Marxist
ideology, this means that Asmara will likely push back against any
demand by Addis Ababa to allow Ethiopian investors to own property or
open up large businesses in Eritrea. Asmara could also seek to fight
back against a perceived wave of Ethiopian influence that will come in
the form of soft power. (Many Eritreans watch Ethiopian films, listen to
Ethiopian music and even prefer Ethiopian news.)
The Trouble With the Tigray
However,
even if the two countries are able to address trade disagreements and
quell Eritrea's fears of a takeover, Afwerki's contentious history with
Ethiopia's Tigray elites remains a pain point. Afwerki has ruled Eritrea
since independence in 1993 and was in power when relations between
their countries were anything but peaceful. As a result, he still
carries old wounds from the countries' tumultuous history, possibly
making him more skeptical of lasting amity with Ethiopia — especially
when it comes to the Tigray.
The TPLF was the dominant political
and military force in Ethiopia after the defeat of the Dergue regime in
the early 1990s. And until recently, the minority ethnic group had remained the preeminent force in the country.
However, even if the two countries are able to address trade
disagreements and quell Eritrea's fears of a takeover, Afwerki's
contentious history with Ethiopia's Tigray elites remains a pain point.
Afwerki made it clear that he was willing to conduct a peace agreement only after the arrival of current Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed,
who has begun dismantling the TPLF's two-decade reign in Addis Ababa.
But despite this tentative warming to Ethiopia's new leadership, there
are signs that the conflict between the Tigray region of Ethiopia and
Eritrea is far from over. Since Ahmed, who hails from the Oromo region,
took power, the TPLF elites have retreated to the Tigray capital of
Mekele where they remain firmly in control, stirring trouble right
underneath Eritrea's border.
Afwerki reportedly still believes
that the Tigrayans attempted to assassinate him in the early 1990s when
an Ethiopian plane he was on nearly crashed — and a recent incident has
only exacerbated the president's unease with his country's immediate
Ethiopian neighbors.
In December 2018, Eritrea's energy minister,
Brig. Gen. Sebhat Ephrem, narrowly survived an attack by unknown armed
assailants at his home in Asmara. Shortly thereafter, Eritrean
authorities unilaterally closed the border crossing with Ethiopia near
the city of Zalambessa in the Tigray region. Neither country has issued
an official statement explaining the circumstances of the attack, but
rumors have circulated that the TPLF was actively plotting to instigate a
coup or protests against Afwerki's government. And while there has been
no evidence to support these claims, the border in Tigray remains
closed, and a new border crossing in a different region has since been
opened.
Should animosity between Eritrea’s leadership and the
Tigray region along much of its border persist or worsen, there's a
chance it could sour relations between the countries once again. That
said, there are signs that the two sides are invested in maintaining
improved relations, incentivized by the economic and security benefits
of the new deal. But for the rapprochement to survive, they must address
answers to outstanding questions in the economic and security realms in
order to deepen the peace and prevent a setback as in 1998.
AP(አ ፖ ) comments:
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, UAE and USA are immposing Ethiopia-Eritrea Peace Deal on Ethiopia to safeguard their own interests.Eitrea is anti-Ethiopia and is preparing for war by using it's stooges in Ethiopia, who seem to be happy for TPLF to be removed. Eritrea is waging hate politics against Tigray. Eritrea was a district of Tigray and should be given to Tigray. TPLF has to prepare itself for war. It should overthrow Isayas Afeworki and bring him to justice. TPLF should reorganise and take control of the central power in Ethiopia after overthrowing Issayas Afeworki's regime. Other options of peace and development are a coverup to dismantle Ethiopia and create a stooge government in Addis Ababa that fulfills the interest of Egypt and Eritrea..
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