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Families speak after 20 years as Ethiopia restores phones to Eritrea

Storyline:National News

After an embracing meeting in Asmara on Sunday, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and Eritrean President Isaias Afewerki told their peoples they were choosing love and forgiveness over hatred and violence.

By Tuesday morning, people in Addis Ababa were frantically trying to phone their relatives in Eritrea.

Ethiopian mechanic Mohammed Osman placed a phone call he had dreamt of making for 20 years.

He called his mother Kedija, who was expelled from Ethiopia to Eritrea in 1998 after the Horn of Africa neighbours went to war over their border.

Kedija, Kedija’s mother and more than 70,000 Ethiopian citizens of Eritrean origin were wrenched from their families, put on buses and trucks bound for Eritrea – and given travel papers marked “Expelled-Never to Return”.

A peace deal finally forged in the past two days brought relations out of the deep freeze, and prompted the phone lines across the border to be reconnected.

When Mohammed last heard his mother’s voice, he was 13. He and his father had not heard from her since.

“I couldn’t recognise her at first but for her laughter. It was surreal,” he said. “It was bittersweet.”

Kedija told him she was doing fine in Eritrea’s capital Asmara, but that his grandmother had died.

The historic reconciliation could transform politics and security in the volatile Horn region, which hundreds of thousands of young people have fled in recent years in search of safety and opportunities in Europe.

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