SCMP.com: China’s Horn of Africa envoy tells regional peace conference he is ready to mediate disputes

Beijing’s special envoy to the Horn of Africa has offered to mediate disputes in the region, where China’s multibillion-dollar investments have held firm amid long-simmering strife.

Speaking in Addis Ababa on Monday at a peace and governance conference focused on the Horn of Africa, Xue Bing said the region had benefited from a unique geographical location and abundant natural resources but in recent times had faced instability.

“I am ready to provide mediation efforts for the peaceful settlement of disputes based on the will of countries in this region,” Xue said at the conference organised by Beijing.

But the envoy, who was appointed to the role in February, acknowledged “complicated and intertwined ethnicity, religion and boundary issues” that could be “difficult to handle, as many of them date back to colonial times”.

The Horn, which includes Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan, has long been wracked by civil wars, Islamist insurgencies and military coups.

In October, Sudan’s military seized power, deepening instability and undermining Chinese investment interests, especially in the petroleum industry.

Meanwhile in Somalia, a resurgence of the jihadist fundamentalist group al-Shabab has led to fresh terrorist attacks in Kenya, prompting Nairobi to send troops into the neighbouring country, posing a further threat to regional security.

Ethiopia is engaged in a deadly civil war in the Tigray region, where millions have been displaced. Washington has responded to the conflict with sanctions, reduced aid and suspended duty-free access for Ethiopian exports.

Xue said the dialogue, peace and development plan that China put forward for the Horn of Africa at the start of the year was meant to support countries in the region in ridding themselves of external interference.

“What we learn from the lessons of history is that the Horn of Africa must not become the backyard of any country. Rather, the people of this region should be the masters of their own country’s destiny,” the envoy said.

The first-ever Chinese-led peace conference is expected to offer a platform for the Horn of Africa countries to settle their differences through negotiations.

Kenya, Ethiopia, Djibouti, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan and Uganda are attending the two-day conference. However, Eritrea skipped the meeting. When in 2020, Abiy Ahmed’s government accused the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) of attacking its military base to steal weapons, Eritrea joined Ethiopian forces in the fight.

Eritrea, which has for years been cut off from the rest of the world, sits at a strategic point for China to expand its trade because of its proximity to the Red Sea.

John Calabrese, head of the Middle East-Asia Project at American University, said if China were to undertake a mediatory role, Xue would likely find himself being pressured “by each of the contending parties to favour their respective perspectives and positions”.

Calabrese added that when a key actor is “absent from the table” it raises the possibility of the actor playing a “spoiler” role, and in the Horn of Africa, Eritrea qualifies as such. “At some point, Eritrea will have to be woven into whatever multiparty mediation might eventuate for the process to be successful,” he said.

China is making inroads in the region, investing heavily in Djibouti’s maritime sector including the country’s ports and free-trade zones. It built its first overseas military base near the Bab el-Mandeb passageway between the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea.

Beijing has likewise boosted its investments in Ethiopia, notably in building the Addis Ababa-Djibouti Railway, but the Tigray conflict is a grave concern. Beijing has also funded mega infrastructure projects in the rest of East Africa, including Uganda and Kenya.

During the conference on Monday, Redwan Hussein, the national security adviser to the Ethiopian prime minister, said Addis Ababa was ready to play its part in resolving the crisis in the Horn of Africa.

The peace conference was driven by the countries of the region and China was only playing a supporting role, Redwan said. “We have no shortage of initiatives. Several initiatives have come and gone without yielding the desired result because they were either driven by an external interest or were just imposed,” he added.

Observers said Beijing faced a tough road ahead as it helps the countries find peace.

Any Chinese-led mediation effort in the region will have to overcome political challenges, and the long-term success of any China-led initiative will ultimately depend on the willingness of regional parties to compromise on key issues, according to Lukas Fiala, coordinator of China Foresight at the LSE IDEAS, a policy think tank at the London School of Economics.

While China certainly tries to frame itself as “a different kind of external actor” in Africa that respects sovereignty and promoting African solutions to African security issues, Fiala said, Beijing may find it “difficult to convince all parties” in regional conflicts that China’s security engagement is constructive.

This is because China’s strong belief in sovereignty, evident in Beijing’s support of Addis Ababa in the conflict with the TPLF in the country’s north, might engender criticism from other, non-governmental parties to the dispute, he added.

Nevertheless, China could offer economic carrots such as investments in regional infrastructure and capacity building to bring conflicting parties to the negotiating table. “What the conference shows is that China has become more confident in sponsoring regional solutions to security issues in Africa,” Fiala said.

In any case, China’s rise as a world power over the last two decades has profoundly altered global geopolitics, according to Mohammed Soliman, a scholar at the Middle East Institute.

Soliman said the Horn of Africa was becoming a crucial area of strategic competition and “whether successful or not, China’s attempt to mediate in the Horn of Africa reflects Beijing’s rising global power and reach”.

Luke Patey, a senior researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies, noted a former Chinese special envoy to Africa, Zhong Jianhua, once asserted China was a newcomer to peace talks and that it would take decades for its knowledge to match that of other foreign powers. “Xue’s engagement marks the next step in China’s learning process, but the curve is still steep,” Patey said.

Without getting all the sides around the table and accepting China’s role as mediator, Patey said, it would be harder for Beijing to sell its engagement as non-interference. “China is a major player in the region, but it might also benefit from working alongside other foreign powers to advance its peace agenda,” he added.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Important, Yet Overlooked: Maternity Waiting Homes

Eritrea is one of the few countries that entered the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs) period having achieved most of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals related to health. Since the onset of the UN SDGs period close to a decade ago, the country has continued to make considerable progress in a number of areas, including within neonatal, child, and maternal health. In particular, the country’s maternal mortality ratio dropped from 998 per 100,000 live births in 1990 to 228 in 2015, and 184 in 2019 – an overall reduction of approximately 82 percent during the period running from 1990 to 2019. In addition, between 1990 and 2020, the neonatal mortality rate in Eritrea was reduced by about 49 percent, dropping from 35 deaths per 1,000 live births to 18, while the country’s under-five mortality rate was reduced by approximately 75 percent, falling from 153 to 39. Of note, the average annual rate of reduction (AARR) for under-five mortality in Eritrea between 1990 and 2020 is estimated at about 4.5 percent, which is not only considerably ahead of the AARR for the entire Sub-Saharan Africa region (approximately 3.0 percent), but also among the fastest anywhere in the world.

As one considers these various health-related improvements that have unfolded in Eritrea, it is well worth recalling that they were achieved despite an array of daunting challenges and myriad significant obstacles for the country, including many years of illegal, unjust sanctions, tough general climate and environmental conditions, and an extremely difficult regional geopolitical context. Another issue that merits further consideration is how these particular improvements have actually been brought about. To be brief, there is no single cause or element that accounts for the country’s success in reducing neonatal, child, and maternal mortality. Instead, the substantial improvements have been the result of a comprehensive approach and a mix of factors that cut across several sectors.

Although I (in addition to a number of other authors) have explored and discussed many of these various factors at length in past articles, the following few paragraphs will briefly shed light on one increasingly important, yet relatively underdiscussed, contributing factor: maternity waiting homes (MWHs).

MWHs are not a new development within global or public health. They have a relatively long, extensive history. Sometimes also referred to as maternity waiting areas, mother’s shelters, or antenatal villages, they may be most simply defined as standalone, safe residential facilities where pregnant women and girls can stay for an extended period prior to the onset of labor or before being transferred to other health facilities for delivery.

A number of empirical studies conducted in an array of settings around the world have demonstrated that MWHs can be a relatively cost-effective, successful strategy to help reduce the risk of adverse birth outcomes and child or maternal mortality, especially within low- and middle-income countries or resource limited settings. Timely, high-quality care during and around the period of delivery is crucial as serious complications and maternal and newborn deaths are heavily concentrated around this time. (In fact, research shows that the majority of maternal and newborn deaths are caused by preventable or treatable complications that take place during labor, delivery and the immediate 24 hours after giving birth.)

MWHs help ensure more high-risk pregnancies can be detected, with these pregnant women subsequently being provided specialized services, further examination, and appropriate care or treatment. As well, MWHs can mean that more pregnant women are delivering with the assistance of skilled birth attendants. In addition to the important role that they perform throughout pregnancy, the academic literature is replete with evidence showing the significant, vital role performed by skilled birth attendants during childbirth and postpartum. During delivery, for instance, skilled birth attendants closely monitor progress of labor, facilitate physiological processes, and help address complications (e.g., obstructed labor, birth asphyxia, and trauma), while in the period shortly following birth, when the risk of mortality for newborns and mothers can be quite high, they help with feeding, managing complications (e.g., postpartum bleeding, infection, or depression), and counseling (e.g., providing information or advice about family planning and birth spacing), along with offering other vital forms of support.

In terms of Eritrea, MWHs were first introduced into the national health system in 2007, primarily in order to better serve women in remote and hard-to-reach areas. Steadily, the role and position of MWHs has expanded to where they now represent an integral link within the continuum of care for maternal and newborn health in the country.

At present, there are a total of 43 MWHs distributed around the country. In addition to offering a much-needed setting where women can be comfortable, safely accommodated, and receive timely, high-quality health

services during their pregnancy, the nationwide network of MWHs reduces the need for difficult or long distance travel, provides women with critical education, such as learning about healthy behaviors and how to best care for the baby or themselves, offers much-needed social, cultural, emotional, and psychological support or the opportunity to build mutual support networks, and helps to promote births in facilities and assisted by skilled birth attendants. In areas of the country where malaria is endemic, local health personnel also provide pregnant women with medications and insecticide-treated mosquito nets, while MWHs additionally provide greater opportunities for new mothers to rest, recover, and receive follow-up care following delivery.

Over the years, there has been an increase in the use of MWHs in Eritrea, with more babies being delivered in these facilities. In 2017 there were 7,699 deliveries in MWHs, while in 2018 and 2019 there were 8,670 and 9,173 deliveries, respectively. This, in combination with a variety of other factors, has played a role in positive maternal, newborn, and child health outcomes.

As a final point, since they significantly improve access to maternal and child care in remote, hard-to-reach areas within Eritrea, as well as among historically marginalized communities or groups in the country (which have historically borne the greatest burden of childbirth-related complications and deaths), MWHs are promoting social justice and dignity, reducing inequalities, and a genuine reflection of the principle of leaving no one behind.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Financial contribution to families of martyrs

Over 700 Government employees in Logo-Anseba sub-zone extended financial support to 215 families of martyrs in connection with Martyrs Day.

Indicating that 107 thousand Nakfa was disbursed to the disadvantaged families of martyrs selected by area administrators and village coordinators, Mr. Abraham Hagos, secretary of PFDJ in the sub-zone, called for strengthened contribution.

The beneficiary families on their part expressed appreciation for the support they were provided.

The residents of 13 administrative areas in Logo-Anseba sub-zone also conducted popular campaigns at the Martyrs Cemeteries in their areas.

In the same vein, residents of Liban administrative area contributed 15 thousand 500 Nakfa in support of 31 families of martyrs.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea