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Minister says Badme will remain in Eritrea

[Eritrea] Aerial view of Badme where the war flared up. IRIN
Disputed Badme
The town of Badme "has been Eritrean and will remain so", Eritrea's acting Information Minister Ali Abdu Ahmed stated in an open letter to the British Broadcasting Corporation released on Tuesday. The letter accused the BBC's World Service of broadcasting information that was "downright dangerous and unprofessional". In particular, Eritrea took issue with an "erroneous and far-fetched statement" by the BBC that "tens of thousands died in the two-and a half-year [border] war that started when Eritrean forces occupied Ethiopian administered Badme on May 1998". The minister pointed to the April 2002 border ruling issued by an independent boundary commission which "asserts that Badme is in Eritrea" and therefore Eritrean forces could not have invaded their own territory. The Eritrea=Ethiopian Boundary Commission recently accused Ethiopia of seeming to undermine the peace process by seeking "variations" to the delimited border line. Ethiopian officials, including Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, have recently indicated they may not accept the ruling if Badme - where the border conflict flared up - is awarded to Eritrea. The minister's letter also took issue with the line of questioning by BBC reporter Robin White in a recent interview with Meles. White asked the Ethiopian premier if he regretted "not having marched on Asmara or at least having taken the port of Assab when you could have done?", comments described by Ali Abdu as "equally far-fetched and off the wall". He said it was "high time" the BBC "does its research".

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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