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Addis Abeba – Maj. Gen. Stephen Radina from Kenya will be leading the long-awaited African Union Monitoring, Verification and Compliance Mechanism (AU-MVCM) that was officially launched in Mekelle, the capital city of Tigray regional state on Thursday 29 December.
The US State department hailed the decision as “another important step toward securing lasting peace for the people of northern Ethiopia” and pledged to stand ready to support its implementation.
“The United States stands ready to support the AU-MVCM and full implementation of the cessation of hostilities agreement (COHA), which includes disarmament of Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) combatants, withdrawal of Eritrean forces, unimpeded humanitarian access, resumption of essential services, and implementation of transitional justice,” the state department said.
“The joint mission to be led by Maj. Gen. Stephen Radina from Kenya was formed as part of the signed implementation deal between the Federal Government of Ethiopia and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) finalized in Nairobi on 22nd December 2022,” said the office of former Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, who facilitated the launching together with Olusegun Obasanjo, AU High Representative for the Horn of Africa, AU High-Level Panel Members, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, former Deputy President of the Republic of South Africa and Member of the AU Panel of the Wise, and Dr Workneh Gebeyehu, Executive Secretary of IGAD.
Maj Gen. Stephen said that the mission under his leadership is going to monitor, verify, and observe compliance inconsistency with the signed peace agreement and that he will look forward to continuing to support all bilateral, and multilateral peace process agreements.
“I come ahead yesterday and I had an opportunity to visit and saw a lot of enthusiasm with the population, I also had an opportunity to visit the mechanized garrison at Agulae where I saw a shipment of heavy weapons and the willingness and the handover has continued with a peace process,” Maj. Gen. Stephen spoke after the launching.
Colonel Rufai Umar Mairiga of Nigeria and Colonel Teffo Sekole of South Africa will join Maj. Gen. Stephen to form the three-member mission. Picture: Office of former Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta
Colonel Rufai Umar Mairiga of Nigeria and Colonel Teffo Sekole of South Africa will join Maj. Gen. Stephen to form the three-member mission.
“The three-member mission formed by the African Union is tasked with the responsibility of monitoring, verifying, and enforcing the November peace agreement,” Uhuru’s office said.
Gedion Timothos, Minister of Justice, and one of the representatives of the federal government in the peace agreement signing in Pretoria, also hailed the launching of a monitoring and verification mechanism as important in the implementation of the signed peace agreement. “The conflict that has ravaged the northern part of Ethiopia for the last two years has been very tragic and deadly it has caused a great deal of pain and suffering, the agreement concluded in Pretoria have been a major break,” the minister said.
On Tigray’s side, Getachew Reda, the spokesperson of TPLF and member of the central command, on his part said that authorities in the region “have done every effort on our part to make sure that the heavy weapons that have at our disposal are there for monitoring. A battalion of the Ethiopian National Defense Forces has moved into its position; between our two parties there is nothing that cannot be achieved”. However, he highlighted that more things can get done, and there was “a long way to go.”
“Spoilers in the form of external forms There is a lot of things has to be done with respect protection of civilian but, as long as we put our heads together there is nothing that cannot be achieved,” Getachew said.
Uhuru Kenyatta on his part highlighted that the most important aspect was to see “peace begin to take shape” and to see both parties sit together “and engaging and each side showing a determined commitment to searching for a lasting peace and a lasting solution to the problems that resulted in this conflict that has led to so many lives being lost, properties being damaged and development being stalled.” AS
The subject of this year’s prestigious Beatrice de Cardi lectures, held at the Society of Antiquaries of London, was the archaeological discoveries over the past 22 years in Bahrain.In 2001, the Crown Prince and Prime Minister of Bahrain, Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, established the Anglo-Bahraini Early Islamic Bahrain Project to understand how Islam travelled across the country that, as an island nation, was a key stepping point between the Arabian peninsula and Persia and East Asia.“The state of archaeology in Bahrain has always been very good, but the Islamic period was neglected,” says Timothy Insoll, the Al-Qasimi professor of African and Islamic Archaeology at the University of Exeter, who delivered the lecture. “I think it was in part to do with the fact that people think [Islam] is what we are now – so why is it important archaeologically?”Islam was also not a preferred subject of study for most European or American teams, who tended to excavate periods they perceived more of a connection to such as early Christianity or Greco-Roman sites – whether in Bahrain or other locations across the Islamic world, such as Afghanistan.Insoll and his teams worked to fill in these missing gaps to try and understand what happened from around 7th to 11th centuries when the inhabitants of Bahrain converted to Islam, largely from Christianity.Timothy Insoll, the Al-Qasimi Professor of African and Islamic Archaeology at the University of Exeter. Photo: Wikimedia commons In the 2010s, they found the site of Bilad Al Qadeem, which they have shown to be the centre of Islamic settlement in the 11th to 13th century AD. Excavations at the palace there divulged information about what kinds of food the inhabitants then ate, how they kept and stored water and even the environment.The presence of mollusks showed that ground was wetter and danker than the current desert. That might have brought with it its own complications – such as the spread of parasites, which Insoll and his team theorise came along trade routes. The large mangrove trees that were used to support the palace at Bilad Al Qadeem, as for other houses of the time, were imported from Madagascar and East Africa, and the diseases might have come with these beams on the ship.Insoll, working with Rachel MacLean of the University of Exeter, as well as students and other archaeologists, opened a small museum in 2016 to display some of the extraordinary funerary monuments they discovered, with their finely carved calligraphy attesting to the names of the men and women buried there.A small park, which is coming soon, will integrate a canal from the time of Bilad Al Qadeem into the recreational environs, drawing on its 1,000-year-old ability to cool the air and circulate water.Insoll also identified a number of changes over the past two decades of working in the Gulf – most notably, an expansion of who has been involved in the field.Previously “it was all foreigners, parachuting [into the Gulf] and doing their monthly fieldwork, and then publishing in journals like these,” he explained, gesturing at the leather-bound volumes in the Society of Antiquaries’ library. “Archeology wasn’t engaging with the local population or building capacity among local students. And this has been a change throughout the Gulf – and now in Saudi with Vision 2030.”Insoll’s team now includes Salman Almahari of the Bahrain Authority for Culture and Antiquities – the first Bahraini to achieve a PhD in archaeology.They also discovered another site showing the fertile crossover of religions in Bahrain, such as Samahij, a Nestorian Christian dwelling from the 7th century. Found on the isle of Muharraq, just off the coast of the country, signs in the site heavily suggest Christian habitation, such as the outline of a fish etched into one of the walls and ceramics bearing the sign of the cross.Local Bahrainis helped the archeologists identify some of the food sources, such as the fish that were very similar to those of the present day.“The notion of partnership is extremely important, and that’s pushing archaeology to the next level,” says Insoll. “We are now integrating the local voice – people saying I remember this site 50 years ago, this is what was here then. Why don’t you go and excavate here, or I understand this type of structure or material – like the madbasa, a room that was used for fermenting dates.“The world is changing, and archaeology should reflect that. And archaeology is a lot richer for it.”Updated: September 23, 2023, 7:07 AM
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