UN Security Council lifts sanctions on Eritrea
Removal of penalties follows historic peace accord with Ethiopia, warming of ties with Djibouti
By Michael Hernandez
WASHINGTON
The UN Security Council voted unanimously Wednesday to lift international sanctions on Eritrea following a historic peace accord with Ethiopia.
Targeted sanctions, asset freezes and a travel ban on senior officials, as well as an arms embargo, were imposed beginning in 2009 as part of Security Council resolution 1907, which cited Eritrea's alleged support for al-Shabaab militants in Somalia and the country's refusal to settle a border dispute with Djibouti. Asmara denied supporting al-Shabaab.
The penalties were strengthened in 2011 amid Eritrea's continued intransigence, and "its actions undermining peace and reconciliation in Somalia and the Horn of Africa region."
All were lifted as a result of the council's action.
The council's decision to lift the penalties was prompted by a warming in regional ties in the Horn of Africa, highlighted by Ethiopia and Eritrea's signing in September of a peace agreement that fully restored ties between the neighbors.
Eritrea seceded from Ethiopia in 1993, and from 1998 to 2000 the two countries fought a bloody war in which
Eritrea's ties with Djibouti are also warming following years of contention over their shared land border.
*Betul Yuruk contributed to this report from the United Nations