Site icon ETHIO12.COM

South Sudan accuses ‘invisible hands’ of using TPLF to destabilize Ethiopia

JUBA – South Sudan’s government has accused what it calls invisible hands of using the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) to destabilize Ethiopia and has vowed to prevent at all costs the world’s youngest country from being used as launching pad for attacks against Ethiopia, the Ethiopian ambassador to South Sudan said following a meeting with South Sudan’s Minister of Interior Paul Mayom

In a meeting with Akec, Ambassador Nebil Mahdi said he congratulated South Sudan on behalf of Ethiopia on the occasion of the formation of the reconstituted transitional national legislature and stressed the strong relations between South Sudan and Ethiopia are historical.

“At the occasion, the ambassador noted that the people of the two countries have deep rooted historical ties which extend beyond regimes and personalities.  Ambassador Nebil briefed the Minister about the major reforms that Ethiopian government went through, and explained to him that though every effort was exerted to make the TPLF part of the reform team, the group rejected all the pleas and continued to engage in masterminding and orchestrating every destabilizing activity and eventually attacked ENDF command stationed in Tigray region,” the Ethiopian foreign ministry said in a statement.

The statement added that the Ethiopian envoy “informed the Minister about TPLF’s usual provocations by invading the Afar and Amhara regional states thereby displacing hundreds of thousands of people, massacring civilians and destroying public infrastructures etc.  The ambassador also mentioned the statement of the USAID office in Ethiopia that its warehouses of humanitarian aid supposed to be distributed for the needy have been looted by the TPLF terrorist group.”

It added that the ambassador “also briefed the Minister on the tripartite talks over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) and Ethiopia’s position of using the water equitably and without causing significant harm to other riparian states.”

For his part, South Sudan’s Akec “alluded to the considerable support Ethiopia provided to the cause of the South Sudanese people, and pointed out that the relationship between Ethiopia and South Sudan is based on strong cultural and historical values of the people of both countries.”

The senior South Sudan government official also said “the TPLF used to claim to be progressive while it was in power, but it was unfortunate that the group proved to be localist and separatist. He said that the Tigray issue is an internal Ethiopian issue and stressed that invisible hands try to use this group as an agent in exacerbating the instabilities in the Horn of Africa region and this need to be addressed diplomatically through regional platforms.”

“He said that regime change in the name of national dialogue is not acceptable, and reiterated that South Sudan can’t allow its territory to be used against the interests of Ethiopia.

Regarding the GERD, the Honorable Minister pointed out that it is improper to rely on colonial agreements which other riparian countries were not party to, and stated that the Nile riparian States need to utilize these waters for the common development.”

Sudan Post

Exit mobile version