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Eritrea reportedly accepts plan for cease-fire in war with Ethiopia

June 9, 2000
Web posted at: 6:22 p.m. EDT (2222 GMT)

ALGIERS, Algeria (CNN) -- Diplomatic sources said Friday that a proposal from the Organization of African Unity that would lead to a cessation of hostilities between Ethiopia and Eritrea has been accepted by the Eritreans.

The proposal calls for a U.N. mission to be dispatched to the region and for Ethiopian soldiers to withdraw from territories they are occupying, provided the Ethiopians are given security guarantees.

"This is a step forward," said a U.S. official involved in the discussions. "There are more steps to be taken. But if the Ethiopians accept what the Eritreans have accepted, this could finally lead to a cessation of hostilities."

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Diplomatic sources said they hoped the Ethiopians would accept the proposal and that there are indications they might. The sources said they have had "good, productive discussions with both sides."

The discussions are being held in Algiers, Algeria under the auspices of the OAU, a coalition of African nations of which the Algerian president Abdelaziz Bouteflika is the chairman.

Ethiopia to respond on Saturday

Diplomatic sources said the Ethiopians were expected to respond to the proposal Saturday.

Ethiopia and Eritrea have been at war since 1998 when a border dispute arose after countries' leaders disagreed over the introduction of a separate Eritrean currency -- called the Nafka -- which Ethiopia refused to accept as legal tender.

Some Ethiopians see this war as a playing out on a large scale of the recently developed personal enmity between the country's leaders.

A spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said an estimated 350,000 people had been affected by the region's drought, and that the war had increased the number of people in need of immediate assistance.

Annan has urged an immediate and mutual halt in fighting.

Hostilities erupted in the past three weeks, displacing tens of thousands of people and resulting in thousands of casualties on both sides.

Eritrea claimed on Friday that Ethiopia had launched a major offensive near the Red Sea port of Assab late on Thursday. Fighting between the two sides continued into Friday.

Eritrea said that it repulsed the attack and that other fronts in the war were quiet on Friday.

Correspondent Charlayne Hunter-Gault and Reporter Carol Pineau contributed to this story.



RELATED STORIES:
Eritrea says Ethiopians placed in camps for protection
June 7, 2000
Eritrea claims recapture of key town from Ethiopia
June 6, 2000
War between Ethiopia and Eritrea resumes on all fronts
June 5, 2000
Eritrean president wants Ethiopia out of undisputed land
June 4, 2000
Ethiopia, Eritrea fight over Red Sea port
June 3, 2000
Talks resume to end war between Eritrea and Ethiopia
June 2, 2000
Ethiopia seeks 'international guarantees' before withdrawal from Eritrea
June 1, 2000

RELATED SITES:
Organization of African Unity (OAU)
Government of Eritrea
Eritrean Network Information Center
Welcome To Ethiopia Online
United Front of Ethiopians - Ethiopian National Congress
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees

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