However, when the commission awarded the contraversial town of Badme, the centre of the hostilities, to Eritrea, Ethiopia refused to recognise the decision. It claims that the decision was biased towards Eritrea, and will not allow the physical demarcation of the border to commence.
Ethiopia has been calling for former Canadian Foreign Minister, Lloyd Axworthy, to attempt to settle the deadlock. However, Eritrea quickly rejected this proposal as it sees Mr Axworthy as a possible alternative to the boundary commission's ruling, with which it is happy.
If the tensions are not dealt with soon then there is a possibility that the war will reignite, causing havoc in an ulready dangerously unstable region. Legwaila Joseph Legwaila, the UN special representative for Eritrea and Ethiopia said that a new war in the near future was unlikely, but that the situation was getting continually more dangerous.
The 1998 war, which lasted for two years, cost over 100,000 lives and has also resulted in huge numbers of refugees and internally displaced people. It has also exacerbated problems of famine and drought in both countries.