The presidents of Kenya
and Eritrea have wrapped up two days of talks by agreeing to remove visa
requirements for their citizens as part of improving relations.
Kenya's William Ruto
and his Eritrean counterpart, Isaias Afwerki, also agreed to promote regional
peace and stability even as Eritrea faces questions over alleged rights abuses
in Ethiopia.
Afwerki said Eritrea
would rejoin the Intergovernmental Authority on Development, or IGAD, an East
African trade bloc.
"This is an
obligation in the name of the people of the Horn region," he said.
"We have to assume responsibility and revitalize IGAD so that we can have
a functional, real organization for the region is critical. Without that
mechanism, ideas and goodwill will not be productive. We will have to create an
institution that is functional and result-oriented so that we can say we have
changed the face of the region."
Eritrea suspended its
IGAD membership in 2007 following a disagreement with Ethiopia over the
presence of Ethiopian troops in Somalia. In 2018, Eritrea and Ethiopia
reestablished diplomatic relations and agreed to end years of hostility.
Ruto said he expects
Eritrea to support the region's ongoing security operations and peace efforts.
"I look forward to
working with you to ensure that we stabilize Somalia, we eliminate terrorism
and we build a much more secure region," Ruto said. "I also look
forward to working with you in resolving the issues in Sudan and South Sudan,
and working with our brothers in Ethiopia to build a better region for all our
people and ensuring we make this region attractive for investment, trade and
business."
Eritrea, Ethiopia's
neighbor, has been accused of widespread human rights violations in two
conflicts that erupted in November 2020 between Ethiopian federal government
forces and the Tigray rebel group.
Last November, the
government in Addis Ababa and representatives from the Tigray region in
northern Ethiopia signed a peace agreement.
Tigray officials and
residents say Eritrean troops have yet to leave the region, months after
signing a peace agreement that requires Asmara to withdraw its forces.
Afwerki dismissed the
allegations against his troops.
"Why are you
bothered about the Eritrean troops who are there or not there? Come out and not
come out," he said. "Let's assume the peace process in Ethiopia is
going on without any obstacles. We would like to see the agreement signed in
Pretoria and Nairobi implemented on the ground so that we can secure peace and
stability in Ethiopia for the benefit not only of Ethiopians but the whole
region."
Eritrea has denied its
troops fought in Ethiopia's conflict in Tigray region, but rights groups allege
the troops committed atrocities, including punishing families of accused draft
dodgers.
Meanwhile, Human Rights
Watch on Thursday called for sanctions against Eritrea for the government's
alleged role in rounding up people and their family members who refused to
participate in mandatory military service.
Laetitia Bader, who
heads the Horn of Africa operation at Human Rights Watch, said since September
of last year, the Eritrean conscription campaign has been targeting draft
evaders.
"They have
resorted to new methods of repression against families of alleged draft
evaders. So, we found that they were detaining relatives, including older
people, but they were also evicting people from their homes," she said.
"So, this was not only the security forces but alongside local officials
that keep a list of households through a coupon system which enables people to
have access to subsidized goods, and they were going door-to-door trying to
identify individuals who were missing."
The U.S.-based rights
organization is urging the international community to pressure Asmara to reform
what Human Rights Watch calls Eritrea's abusive national service system. The
rights group says the system continues to drive Eritreans into exile.
VOA
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