The 'Hanish Islands' (
Arabic: جزر هانيش) are an
island group in the
Red Sea. Most of them are a part of
Yemen, but before 1998-1999 they were claimed by
Eritrea as well. After a long trial with an international court under the guidance of Dr. Abdul-Karim Aleryani, Yemen was granted full ownership of the larger islands while Eritrea was awarded the peripheral islands to the southwest of the larger islands
[1].
History
The Hanish Islands were claimed by
Turkey until 1923 when they were abandoned. From that point forward they were administered by the Colony of Eritrea until 1941. In 1941, after the defeat of the Italian Colonial forces, the British army established Eritrea as a protectorate. Throughout the 1970's
Ethiopia (which had annexed Eritrea) and Yemen claimed the islands. Ethiopian interest in the Islands stemmed from the fact that Eritrean liberation groups used the Hanish Islands, and the nearby
Zukur Islands, as a base to attack Ethiopian military interests.
[2]
In 1991 Eritrea gained independence and in 1995 attempted to exercise sovereignty over the archipelago. This started the
Hanish islands crises which were eventually arbitrated after a brief conflict.
See also
★
Zuqar Island
References
1. International Maritime Boundary
2. Historical Dictionary of Eritrea, , Tom, Killion, The Scarecrow Press, 1998, ISBN 0-8108-3437-5