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Reverend Tesfamariam Baraki
26 Grant Circle NW
Washington, D.C. 20011
United States of America
Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission
Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, CBE QC
H.E. Prince Bola Adesumbo Ajibola
Professor W. Michael Reisman
Judge Stephen M. Schwebel
Sir Arthur Watts, KCMG QC
Permanent Court of Arbitration
Peace Palace
2517 KJ, The Hague, The Netherlands
March 22, 2002
Dear Mr. President & Members of the Boundary Commission:
Re: The future of the people of Irob on the border of Eritrea &
Ethiopia
I am an American Catholic priest of Ethiopian Irob origin. For seventeen years I
have served communities of Ethiopian and Eritrean refugees as well as other
immigrants in the United States. I have served both Ethiopian and Eritrean
communities, primarily in the Washington, D.C. area, regardless of their origin
and to this day, maintain close personal and professional relationships with
both Ethiopians and Eritreans. I visit my homeland occasionally and try to
provide financial, religious, moral, and at times, psychological assistance to
family members and others in Irobland.
I have closely followed the Ethiopian and Eritrean border war conflict since its
inception in May 1998. I came back only a few days ago from my last visit where
I witnessed their sad condition. A condition they find themselves in since
Eritrean troops invaded their territory in June 1998 and committed unspeakable
injury to them.
Following the cessation of hostilities and the signing of the Algiers Agreement
in December 2000, both governments agreed to the establishment of a zone that
would be monitored by United Nations peacekeepers. This arrangement has
brought at least temporary peace to the region and has enabled the Irob people
and all the others in the border region to begin reconstructing their lives.
Respected Commissioners, I must
inform you that there is great fear among the people of Irob that the Commission
does not fully understand their history, their lineage, their affinity as well
as their national identity. There is even more fear that the people of Irob and
their territory will be turned over to Eritrea by this Commission. As judges
encumbered with the heavy and serious responsibility of deciding the fate of a
people once and for all, I beg you to take your time to read the statement that
I have attached. If you are in any way inclined to give to Eritrea Irobland or
any portion of Irobland's territory, I beg you to reconsider your decision—to
do so, at the very least until you visit the area and meet the people of
Irobland yourselves. Even if it means having to postpone your decision for
another month.
I appeal to your sense of justice and fairness to respect Irob's desire to live
in freedom and remain within Ethiopia, where they have always lived, worked and
practiced their religion without hindrance.
Respectfully,
(Signed)Reverend Tesfamariam Baraki
An Irob-Ethiopian-American Cleric and
Catholic Chaplain at Howard University Hospital
Washington, D.C
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A Statement On Behalf Of The Irobland On The Upcoming Border
Demarcation Ruling Between Eritrea and Ethiopia
By The Rev. Tesfamariam Baraki
An Irob-Ethio-American Priest
Washington, D.C.
March, 2002
Blessed are the Peacemakers!
I am an American citizen and native of the Irob tribe, and I was born in Dowhan
(Alitiena) in 1946. I have just returned from visiting the Irobland in
the northeastern part of Tigray State in Ethiopia. As an Irob descendant, I’m
greatly concerned with the rest of the Irob people in the homeland and in the
Diaspora about the upcoming decision and verdict by the Boundary Commission
of the UN at The Hague on the delimitation and demarcation of borders between
Ethiopia and Eritrea in April 2002. The Irob Community and I are terribly
worried about the possible unjust and unfavorable adjudication against Ethiopia
and about the possible consequence it may entail and trigger on the already
victimized Irobs.
Irobland
is a “disputed” area both by Eritrea and Ethiopia. As matter of fact,
Eritrea invaded and occupied the Irobland in June 1998 claiming as her
own territory in dispute. However, there is no historical evidence that
substantiates or supports the Eritrean claim on the Irobland or the Irob people.
The Irobland is divided in three administrative districts, known
as Adgadi-Areh, Bocnaiti-Areh, and Hassaballa. The
administrative center of these three regions had been Alitiena
for years until the TPLF Government of the Tigray State decided to move it
to Dowhan about four years ago. In other words, the
disputed Irobland has been always integral-territory of Ethiopia,
even before the creation of Eritrea by the Italians in the nineteenth century.
Therefore, the Irobland has never been part of Eritrea.
Eritrea’s claim and invasion of the Irobland
in 1998 was not justifiable or right then or now. Eritrea had been Italian
Colony since 19th century, but the Irobland (as an
integral-part of Ethiopia) had never been colonized or administered whether by
the Italians or later by the British rule during the ten years of British
protectorate of Eritrea after the Italians were expelled from Eritrea by the
Emperor Haile-Sellassie with the help of British during the World War II. Then,
why did Eritrea claim and invade the Irobland that never ever belonged
historically, administratively, or politically to her whether before the
colonization, during the colonization, or after the colonization era of Eritrea
by Italy? And what was the justification for Eritrea to invade unjustly and
occupy by force the Irobland in 1998, claiming as her own territory, which had
never been from the start? Eritrea must take full responsibility for the unjust
invasion and destruction caused in human lives and property in Irobland.
I was able to witness in person the
socio-economical and psychological effect of the 1998 Eritrean invasion and
two-year-occupation on the Irob people. I had to agonize in hearing the saddest
stories and memories of my elderly mother of mid-80s and other elderly women of
similar experience who were abused verbally as well as physically by the
invading forces, who expelled them from their hamlets and villages, after
confiscating their livestock and other belongings. In fact, my elderly mother,
who lost everything during the invasion and occupation, had to seek a refuge in
the mountains of Awo area in the southern Irob for about a year; then she was
forced to flee to Adigrat town, and from there to Mekelle along with her young
grandchildren to escape the war. In the process, she and her grandchildren had
to face all the risks of the displaced people without shelter, food, or any
support system available to them in those places. Though, my mother and her
grandchildren were considered among those luckiest ones for being able to obtain
refuge in safer places like Mekelle away from routine shelling and dangerous
landmine-infested war-zones in the Irob area. Most of the unlucky displaced
Irobs, instead, had to live for two years with poisonous reptiles in caves,
under trees, and under plastic tents in remote mountains without adequate food,
water, or health care attention. Those Irobs under Eritrea’s occupation in the
northern region of the Irobland, including the abducted priests and nuns of the
Diocese of Adigrat in the Irob areas, had to suffer for two years all kinds of
mental and physical tortures and lack of freedom of movement from village to
village and the right to gather for worship and receive religious services in
accordance with their faith.
Now my elderly mother refuses to return back to
her village after all those saddest experiences and memories. In 1998 and 1999,
my mother and my older brother lost over 70 goats, 20 cattle, and number of
beehives to the invading forces of Eritrea in Dowhan village. My mother’s
house was totally vandalized and sacked. Similar stories go on with other people
of the same destiny during those two years of Eritrean occupation of the Irob
land. As a result, the bitterness and resentment towards the unjustifiable and
inexcusable invasion and occupation of the Irobland and the Irob people
by Eritrea is felt deep and seems to remain that way.
I also witnessed with my own eyes with deep
sadness and unbelievable shock the deliberate and heinous destruction by Eritrea
of the border town, Zallambessa, including an Orthodox church and a
Catholic church, Catholic schools, clinics, priests’ residences, and a former
convent of the Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Africa, which I knew very well.
I was deeply affected to discover the destruction of my youngest brother’s new
house in the town, which was completed just before the Eritreans invaded. Now,
the wreckage of Zallambessa town is a living monument of evil, hate, aggression,
and bitter memories for the entire world to see.
By vocation, I am a clergyman and religious,
and I hate and condemn any form of racial bigotry and violence against humanity
in anywhere in the world, including in my native land. It is immoral and
unethical for any human being to condone or reward aggression and evil that
terrorizes humanity like that in the Irob land and Zallambessa. Justice must be
fair and swift for the victimized peoples of the Irob and Zallambessa
areas. And the people of the Irob land in northeastern Tigray, Ethiopia,
need a swift justice and compensation for the Eritrean invasion and forced
occupation as well as the destruction of their properties and confiscation of
their livestock and other possessions estimated in tens of millions of dollars
during 1998 and 1999. The Irob peasantry and farmers who inhabit in remote
mountains and lowlands of the Irob Region lack national and international
advocacy regarding their human rights and due compensations for the war crimes
committed against them by Eritrea. Over 80 innocent Irob farmers from the
Irob area had been abducted in 1998 by the Eritrean military. Their
condition and whereabouts are still unknown. Before any peace and
compensation or border settlings, the international community must rectify their
situation, at least on humanitarian grounds. Without putting these issues into
serious consideration, the peace effort between Ethiopia and Eritrea brokered by
the OAU and UN is deemed to fail or will be incomplete.
The UN and the OAU are very eager to bring
peace between Eritrea and Ethiopia. Their effort is commendable. For this
purpose the UN Peacekeepers are doing their job in the Temporary Security Zone
on the borders between the two countries in conflict.
“Blessed are those who work for peace, for
they shall be called children of God” (Mt. 5, 9). But the question is,
will the United Nations secure a lasting peace in the Irobland of Ethiopia? For
how long will the UN Security Council’s peacekeeping forces stay and guarantee
a lasting peace for the Irob area and for other areas in the border region? Will
mere delimitation and demarcation of borders between the two countries in
conflict bring about or warrant a durable solution and peaceful stability? Will
all the affected peoples, from both countries in the border areas, accept
positively the UN verdict to be imposed on them against their political will? All
Irobs are worried about the outcome in The Hague and the establishment of peace
in the area. The rumors and fear of the Irob people are that the United
Nations’ Court in Hague may end up awarding parts of Irobland to
Eritrea as a compromise of peace settlement. In such a case, the Irobs
are afraid that the long awaited peace may not be a reality for them.
Even though they have been victimized by
Eritrea’s invasion and aggression in 1998, the Irob people still are
interested in living in peace and harmony with their neighbors in Eritrea. They
are eager to re-establish normal relations, particularly, with the Eritreans in
the immediate border areas. However, they ask that the international
community will award them a fair justice and compensation for the damages
inflicted upon them by Eritrea. Indeed, the consequences of the war are
that the two peoples, who have so much in common and have enjoyed for years
close ties because of their blood relations, intermarriages, cultures, and
religion, now live in a such animosity and conflict. Eritrean invasion and
occupation of the Irobland and other parts of Ethiopia certainly has
created a hostile environment and harmful relation between the Irobs and
brotherly people of Eritrea. This is true especially in the border areas where
they are forced to turn against each other as bitter enemies.
Incidentally, I have a sister married to an
Eritrean in Monoixoito village. After ten years of my visit to my family in
Tigray, Ethiopia, I have not been able to cross into Eritrea and visit with my
sister and her family. Sadder still, though, is the fact that her oldest son has
conscripted into Eritrean army to fight against his own people, including his
own grandmother, uncles, cousins, nieces, and many other relatives as well, just
in the name of nationalism and border claims. As a matter of fact, this kind of
situation that worries us that may happen in the future, if parts of the Irobland
are awarded unjustly to Eritrea by the UN.
That is why the Irob people are so nervous and
concerned about the upcoming outcome of the verdict in The Hague about the Irob
area. That could totally change the atmosphere of peace in the region adversely
or favorably, depending which direction will go the adjudication of the UN’s
Boundary Commission to take place around mid of April 2002, according to the
latest rescheduling from the UN Security Council.
In conclusion, as a personal remark, I strongly
believe that if the UN Security Council is interested in attaining
a meaningful and lasting peace between Eritrea and Ethiopia, instead of focusing
too much on how to delimit and demarcate those disputed borders, should
concentrate on how to create a healthy and conducive atmosphere for
reconciliation between the peoples of the two countries. After all,
Eritreans and Ethiopians especially along the border areas are not aliens to
each other: They are same brotherly people, that is, through intermarriages,
blood relations, traditions, cultures, and languages. Therefore, I honestly
doubt that without a true and honest spirit of mutual reconciliation of the two
countries and peoples, the demarcation of the borders will not make much
difference in bringing about a lasting peace and stability between the two
countries or the peoples of Eritrea and Ethiopia. Probably the UN and OAU could
assist the two countries toward payments of compensations and rehabilitations
for the damages caused by the destructive war in the two countries since they
may not be able to afford to pay for the damages by themselves.
If it is desired to achieve a lasting peace and
stability between Eritrea and Ethiopia, then, reconciliation effort should be
seriously considered and be given a priority. There is great opportunity to
explore and support the latest and the ongoing efforts and endeavors of the
Religious Leaders of both Eritrea and Ethiopia towards a mutual reconciliation
of the two peoples of the two countries. I truly believe that only that kind of
initiative and process of reconciliation can lead toward a permanent peace and
stability between Ethiopia and Eritrea and their respective peoples.
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