Business

Ethiopian-Eritrea Border Teems With Activity After Thaw

Original Story Published by: Staff Writer for Khaleej Times
Photo Source: AFP File


(Above) People shop at a market in the southern Eritrean town of Senafe, some 30km north of the border with Ethiopia. 

The border's re-opening has sparked a surge in refugees and also raised concerns over the black market currency trade.

For two decades, little besides soldiers, refugees and rebels moved across Ethiopia and Eritrea's closed border, but today the once-barren no man's land teems with activity.

Horse-drawn carts, buses full of visitors and trucks piled high with bricks and plywood make their way across the frontier, watched by relaxed soldiers from the two nations' armies who just months ago stared each other down from trenches carved into the rocky soil.


After 20 years of bloody conflict and grim stalemate, the Ethiopia-Eritrea border is bustling once again, revitalizing frontier towns and allowing the countries' long-estranged populations to reacquaint themselves.


"We have everything we didn't have before, from the smallest to the biggest products," said Abraham Abadi, a merchant in the Eritrean town of Senafe whose shop is now filled with biscuits, drinks and liquor made in Ethiopia.

Yet the border's re-opening has sparked a surge in refugees and also raised concerns over the black market currency trade that some fear will destabilise the economy.

Once a province of Ethiopia, Eritrea voted for independence in 1993 after a bloody, decades-long struggle.

A dispute over the the border plunged the neighbours into war in 1998, leaving tens of thousands dead in two years of fighting.


To read the full article, visit Khaleej Times.

Advertisements

Upcoming Events

There are no upcoming events at this time.

Advertisements

  • MA_InHouseAds_6.jpg
  • MA_InHouseAds_.jpg