African Union welcomes the peace agreement between Eritrea and Djibouti.

Addis Ababa, June 8 .- The African Union (AU) today welcomed the agreement signed last weekend between Eritrea and Djibouti to try to resolve their long-standing border disputes which threaten to become another focus destabilizing the Northeast Africa.

At the request of the emir of Qatar, Hamad Ben Khalifa Al Thani, the presidents of Eritrea and Djibouti, on Sunday, darkfall gold for sale, signed an agreement June 6 that it gives a mandate to mediate and propose a final treaty, the two sides agreed to accept .

The agreement was signed after reports that Qatar had deployed military forces in the common border of two states on 3 June.

The Qatari News Agency reported, meanwhile, that Eritrea and Djibouti have authorized the mediator, buy darkfall gold, to "issue a working document leading to a treaty" final.

In its statement of support for the initiative of the Emir of Qatar, the AU said that the final treaty, which will open the way for a normalization of relations between Eritrea and Djibouti, may bring peace to that part of the Horn of Africa, "as so, ffxiv gil, also to neighboring Somalia.

Last year, the UN imposed sanctions on Eritrea, which refused to seek a peaceful resolution to border dispute with Djibouti, while backing rebel groups at war with Somalia's transitional government, backed by the community internationally.

Then the signature of the original agreement will be established a joint commission with members from Eritrea and Djibouti, chaired by Qatari Prime Minister, whose task is to solve the border disputes within the framework of the authorization granted by the two parties in conflict.

The Commission has a mandate to appoint, with the consent of both sides, an international company to carry out the demarcation of borders between the two countries.

Following an earlier mediation of Qatar, Eritrea withdraw its troops from Djibouti, which had occupied in April 2008 in an incursion into the area of Ras Dumera in the north of the country.

This is the second African crisis in Doha that the authorities act as mediators following the successful agreement reached between Sudanese protagonists to resolve the crisis in Darfur.