CAIRO, Egypt
The leaders of Egypt, Somalia and Eritrea – countries which all have strained relations with Ethiopia – have been meeting in the Eritrean capital, Asmara.
An Eritrean statement wrapping
up the summit made reference to "respect for the sovereignty... and
territorial integrity of the countries in the region".
This could be taken as a
pointed reference to landlocked Ethiopia's ambitions for access to a sea port,
but the country was not specifically mentioned.
A recent diplomatic
disagreement has pushed Somalia into closer ties with Egypt and Eritrea, both
of which have long-standing disputes with Ethiopia.
There have been fears that the
growing tension could spill over into some sort of conflict.
“This is an axis against
[Ethiopian capital] Addis Ababa,” Hassan Khannenje, director of the Horn
International Institute for Strategic Studies, told our reporter.
“I think it’s an attempt to
bring the hate together in trying to increase pressure against Addis Ababa.”
But Somalia's Information
Minister Daud Aweis denied this saying that the meeting was only about
co-operation between the three countries.
"We are not determined to
instigate anything against Addis Ababa," he told Focus on Africa.
"Addis Ababa is our
neighbour we have been co-operating together for a long time, although later on
their leadership came up with a factor of instability in the region. But still
we stand for peace and we don’t think that such a meeting in Asmara has
anything to do with Ethiopia."
A photograph released by
Eritrea in the wake of the meeting shows President Isaias Afwerki clasping
hands with his counterparts from Egypt, Abdul Fattah al-Sisi, and Somalia,
Hassan Sheikh Mohamud.
A statement said the three men
had "agreed to... enhance the Somali state institutions to confront
various internal and external challenges and to enable the Somali National
Federal Army to confront terrorism in all is forms".
This was Sisi’s first visit to
Asmara, while the Somali president had already been three times this year.
Ethiopia has for years been a
staunch backer of the government in Mogadishu in its fight against
al-Qaeda-linked militant group al-Shabab.
But Somalia is furious that
Ethiopia signed a preliminary deal at the beginning of this year with the
self-declared republic of Somaliland to lease a section of its coastline.
Somalia sees Somaliland as part of its territory.
Meanwhile, Addis Ababa and
Cairo have been at loggerheads for more than a decade over Ethiopia's
construction of a vast hydroelectric dam on the River Nile. Egypt sees this as
a possible threat to the volume of water flowing down the river, which it relies
on.
Last month, an
Egyptian ship delivered a significant consignment of military equipment to
Somalia. This came after two Egyptian military planes landed in the Somalia
capital with arms and ammunition in August.
In 2018, it was hoped that the
fractious relations between Ethiopia and Eritrea, which followed the bloody
border war two decades earlier, were over.
It was then that Ethiopia’s
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed signed a “declaration of peace and friendship” with
Eritrea.
The agreement won him the
Nobel Peace Prize the following year.
But ties between the Horn of
Africa neighbours again deteriorated following the end of the two-year civil
war in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region, which borders Eritrea.
Asmara had been an ally of the
Ethiopian government in that conflict but has been lukewarm about the accord
that ended the fighting in November 2022.
Relations were further
aggravated by Abiy’s pronouncement last year that his country wanted to secure
access to a port on the Red Sea.
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