Foreign Ministry spokesman tells News Media its troops
redeployed on the Sudanese side of the border with Ethiopia.
Sudan has denied claims by Ethiopia of occupying its territory, in the latest dispute over the contested al-Fashqa area.
Sudanese Foreign Ministry spokesman Mansour Boulad said on
Wednesday the Sudanese army had redeployed its forces in the border area with
Ethiopia, and did not go beyond the Sudanese territory.
In an exclusive interview with media on
Wednesday, Boulad said claims by Ethiopian Foreign Ministry spokesman Dina
Mufti of Sudan occupying Ethiopian lands “are not true”.
“Our choice so far is that we must deal with the situation
according to the mechanisms of good neighbourliness and cooperation between the
two countries, but if Ethiopia does the opposite, we will have another position
according to the circumstances,” he said.
The exact boundary of al-Fashqa – where the northwest of
Ethiopia’s Amhara region meets Sudan’s breadbasket Gadarif state – is rarely
delineated on the ground.
According to the colonial-era treaties of 1902 and 1907, the
international boundary runs to the east.
This means that the land belongs to Sudan – but Ethiopians
had settled in the area and were cultivating there and paying their taxes to
Ethiopian authorities.
In 2008, the two governments settled on a compromise, which
resulted in Ethiopia acknowledged the legal boundary, but Sudan allowing the
Ethiopians to continue living there undisturbed.
Ethiopia committed to ‘peaceful resolution’
In late December, Sudanese soldiers reportedly moved up to
40km (25 miles) into Ethiopian-held territories, including the contested
fertile agricultural region of al-Fashqa.
Ethiopia says Sudan took advantage of its forces being
distracted by the Tigray conflict to occupy Ethiopian land and loot properties.
It then launched a diplomatic effort to get Sudanese forces
out of the territories to promote a return to the normal mechanisms of dialogue
to resolve the century-long border dispute.
“Ethiopia is committed to a peaceful resolution of the
border differences with Sudan,” Dina Mufti said in a press statement on
Tuesday.
Any possibility of mediation would require Sudan to pull its
forces to positions prior to late December, when Ethiopia first signalled a
breach of its borders, he added.
“We have had mechanisms, technical and political
committees,” he said, adding that the two countries need to get back to those
resolution mechanisms through dialogue.
Asked how long Ethiopia would maintain a diplomatic stance
while Sudan remains in the contested territories, Mufti said: “We will cross
that river when we come to it.”
Sudanese military leaders have not shown any sign of heeding
Ethiopia’s call, though, and reiterate they reclaimed their own territories.
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