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BBC International Version, Saturday, 16 February 2008, 03:51 GMT:
The United Nations has condemned Eritrea, accusing it of preventing hundreds of peacekeepers from crossing from Eritrea into Ethiopia.
The UN ordered its regional force to withdraw to Ethiopia after the Eritrean government cut off its fuel supplies.
But the UN says only six vehicles have been allowed to leave, some troops have been threatened at gunpoint and now their rations have been stopped. Eritrea denied blocking their departure saying its supplies had simply run out.
More at the link.
Things are heading south on the Eritrea-Ethiopia frontier. After the UN ordered its Peacekeeping Force out of the TMZ separating Eritrean and Ethiopian forces after Eritrea cut off food and fuel supplies to the UN, the Eritreans are now refusing to let the UN troops out of the TMZ altogether. There are around a quarter of a million troops massed on
each side of the TMZ; with something approaching half a million troops preparing for a possible war, and the UN having called it quits and trying to get out before a war may break out, the situation is deteriorating by the day. Ethiopia says that it will allow the UN Force to evacuate the TMZ by passing into Ethiopian territory, a simple, but shrewd diplomatic move.
The Eritrean Government considers the UN mission to have beeen a complete failure in resolving the border dispute with Ethiopia, particularly over Badme, which is recognized as rightfully belonging to Eritrea, but is still occupied by Ethiopia. Other, more minor such districts are likewise illegally occupied either by Eritrea or Ethiopia, though they are formally recognized as rightfully belonging to the other.