Deconstructing UNSC Resolution 1907 -
The Smart Sanction on the Eritrean Regime [Part I]

19 February, 2010 | By Seyoum Tesfaye

    By The resurrection of the
    ghost of John Foster Dulles by
    the talking point mangers within
    PFDJ in the middle of an
    intense national political
    discourse about resolution 1907
    is intended to divert attention
    away from PFDJ's failed
    leadership and stifle all forms
    critical analysis about the
sanction. In short, project "deflect and confuse" is being whipped up for
domestic and Diaspora consumption.

The Eritrean Diaspora has been targeted for intense propaganda campaign
– a cocktail made up of fear, innuendo, recycled history with no relevance
to the immediate sanction and hyper nationalism. Based on the level of
franticness and unbridled distortion being manufactured to misconstrue
the actual meaning and target of the Smart Sanction (Resolution 1907)
one can easily come to the conclusion that PFDJ´s ruling clique has been
hit with a solid brick and is fighting for its shrinking political life.

The truth is the magnified hype might rally the dwindling PFDJ Diaspora
base and keep them busy for few months and add few dollars to the
PFDJ´s treasury but it will not alter the course of the sanction. To bring
back the conversation to the realm of rationality we have to deconstruct
the actual sanction and see if sober minds can prevail, at the end of the
day, and a much more sophisticated grasp of the sanction and its
implication will resonate in our Diaspora community. With little work
sanity will prevail and all Eritreans will understand the true cause and
meaning of resolution 1907.

The first reality in the deconstruction process is to affirm the bitter fact
that there is only one way the sanction can be lifted: The Eritrean regime
has to comply without any precondition or equivocation. There is no
wiggling room.

The second phase is to really take a closer look at the actual decision and
make the document more relevant to our discussion and create an
opportunity for us to get acquainted or reacquainted with the background
information and findings that helped the UNSC come to the decision to
sanction the Eritrean regime.

We have to start from the later point and return to the first one in the end
of our deconstruction.

On the basis of the UN Department of Public Information –News and
media Division- 23 December 2009 - statement the sanction was imposed
because:

"Gravely concerned about findings that Eritrea had provided support to
armed groups undermining peace and reconciliation in Somalia and that it
had not withdrawn its forces following clashes with Djibouti in June
2008, the Security Council today imposed an arms embargo on that
country, in addition to travel restrictions on and a freeze on the assets of
its political and military leaders."

Has the Eritrean regime been providing support to the armed groups in
Somalia including to the Al -Shabaab?

On April 24, 2008 the Monitoring Group on Somalia reported to the UN
Security Council the following (section 77 to 84):

"77. The role of the Government of Eritrea in providing support to ICU
and the Shabaab was covered extensively by the Monitoring Group in its
previous reports (S/2005/625, paras. 36-42; S/2006/229, paras. 15-21;
S/2006/913, paras. 15-55; S/2007/436, paras. 11-22). During the current
mandate, the Monitoring Group received information that the Government
of Eritrea continues to provide support to groups that oppose the
Transitional Federal Government in the form of arms and military training
to fighters of the Shabaab and arms to a warlord, as follows. Arms to the
Shabaab

78. The Monitoring Group received information that on or about 2
January 2008, an arms shipment originating from Eritrea arrived in
Mogadishu. The shipment was transported by road via the Eritrean-
Djiboutian border into Zone 5, Ethiopia, and crossed the Somali border
near Beletweyne (Hiraan region), before reaching Mogadishu through
Buulo Burto (Hiraan region).

79. The arms shipment was hidden under a transport of potatoes and bags
of coffee, and consisted of the following: 13 bags of coffee with
dismantled RPG-7s; 9 bags of coffee with hand grenades; 4 bags of
coffee with anti-tank mines; 12 bags of coffee with three different types
of detonators; 2 bags of coffee with pistols; 20 bags of coffee with
mortar shells, 27 AK-47 assault rifles, 15 PKM machine guns, 9 RPG-2s,
19 small mortars, 14 FAL assault rifles, 13 rifle-fired grenades for the
FAL, 4 M-16s and explosives.

Training of Shabaab fighters

80. The Monitoring Group received information that, towards the end of
2007, about 120 fighters of the Shabaab travelled to Eritrea for the
purpose of attending military training at a military base located near the
Ethiopian border. The fighters were reportedly of Somali, Oromo,
Zanzibari, Comorian, Afghani and Pakistani origin and trained in the use
and assembling of weapons and explosives, in making improvised
explosive devices, and in assassination techniques, guerrilla warfare
tactics, tactical planning, sharpshooting and self-defence.

81. After the initial training, the fighters travelled to different locations,
including an island off the coast of Massawa, Eritrea, for practical training
in the use of explosives and other weapons. Upon completion of the
training, the fighters regrouped in Assab, Eritrea, in preparation for
transport to Somalia.

82. The group of fighters split in Assab and used different routes and
means of transport to reach Somalia. One group went by road along the
Eritrean-Djiboutian border into Zone 5, in Ethiopia, before entering
Somalia. Another group went by dhow to Somaliland, Somalia, and used
road transport to reach Mogadishu. Another group was transported by
dhow to Bossaso, Somalia, where some travelled by road to Mogadishu,
while others remained in Bossaso to prepare attacks against the local
authorities of Puntland and the Somali Transitional Federal Government.
Finally, the remainder of the militia was transported by plane to the
Galgaduud region, Somalia. Those who arrived in Mogadishu on 16, 17
and 18 February 2008 participated in attacks against the Ethiopian military
and the military forces of the Transitional Federal Government.

Arms to Barre Hiraale, warlord

83. The Monitoring Group received information that on 2 February 2008,
Barre Hiraale, a warlord operating in the Gedo and Jubba regions, Somalia,
and who has an alliance of convenience with the Shabaab in an attempt to
control Kismayo, received an arms shipment from Eritrea. The arms
shipment was transported by dhow through Somaliland to Kismayo,
Somalia, with the final destination of Bardheere, in the Gedo region. The
arms shipment consisted of a large quantity of a variety of ammunition,
about 180 AK-47s, about 45 PKMs, RPG-2/7s, mortars, Zu-23s, DShKs,
dhuunshilke, pistols and B-10s.

84. The Monitoring Group sent a letter dated 7 March 2008 to the
Government of Eritrea, requesting further details concerning the foregoing
information. In its reply dated 20 March 2008, the Government of Eritrea
informed the Monitoring Group, specifically with regard to the
information contained in this report that it "has not provided any arms to
the Shabaab, nor has there been any arms shipment originating from
Eritrea for the Shabaab"; that it "has not provided military training to
Shabab fighters"; and that such accusation is a sheer fabrication. The
Government of Eritrea further stated that it "has not provided arms to
Barre Hiraale, who until recently was the Defence Minister of the Federal
Transitional Government of Somalia" (see annex I).

The purpose and the need to quote extensively form the Monitoring
Group´s report is to demonstrate how detailed and meticulous the
monitoring has been and that the UN, through the Somalia Monitoring
Group, has been presenting detailed reports on role of the Eritrean regime
consecutively from 2005 to 2008. The UN has done its homework. The
regime´s answer to this kind of damming accusation was to state that it
was a "sheer fabrication" thus continuing to underestimate the UN´s
responsibility and aggregate ability to punish rogue regimes that are
determined to destabilize an entire region.

Since one of the two reasons why Resolution 1907 was adopted by the
UNSC was due to the Eritrean regimes "role in Somalia" it is obvious that
this kind of negative activity was eventually to force the UN to reach a
drastic conclusion. The arms embargo imposed on December 23, 2009
was in a way inevitable to all but the hard- headed leadership of the rouge
regime in Asmara. The stonewalling did not work. The crocodile tears by
the regime and its Diaspora agents cannot put the genie back into the
bottle.

UN´s Department of Public Information statement states:

"The Council demanded that all States, in particular Eritrea, cease arming,
training and equipping armed groups and their members, including Al-
Shabaab, which aimed to destabilize the region or incite violence and civil
strife in Djibouti. It further demanded that Eritrea cease facilitating travel
and other forms of financial support to individuals or entities designated
by the Committee established pursuant to resolution 751 (1992) regarding
Somalia and other sanctions committees, in particular the Committee
established pursuant to resolution 1267 (1999) regarding Al-Qaida and the
Taliban."

Reading between the lines, one can see that Resolution 1907 is now
plugged in to all other previous resolutions that deal with a much broader
issue of international terrorism. To the simpletons of PFDJ they feel by
concocting the usual dosage of singing, flag weaving and boisterous
rhetoric they can cut down the UNSC to size. They want to save their
favorite tyrant through yesterday´s slogans and table pounding speech.
Isaias and his clique put the noose on their own neck. With Al-Shabaab
affirming its unflinching loyalty to Al-Qaida the umbilical cord will
eventually reach Asmara. Eritrea and the people of Eritrea have nothing to
do with this kind of madness. They are victims of PFDJ´s internal
terrorism.

The arms embargo –the first aspect of the sanction is based on factual
deliberation and after years of "asking" the regime to correct its ways.
Make time to read the extensive Monitoring Group report and you will
wonder why the UN took so long to come to this conclusion. The
followers of Isaias Afeworki have no one to blame but their political boss.
If they have the nerve they should ask him why he keeps playing with the
fate of the people of Eritrea and the Sate of Eritrea.
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