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Father Mussie Zerai, Allegations of Facilitating Illegal Immigration & Meron Estefanos

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Mussie Zerai and Meron Estefanos 


Father Mussie Zerai, Allegations of Facilitating Illegal Immigration & Meron Estefanos

By Francesca Totolo

We have already spoken in a previous insight into the figure of Father Mussie Zerai (NGO Analysis in the Mediterranean) and on Habeshia, an organization he founded with the purpose of "helping migrants to come to Europe". Habeshia has developed an online platform, Watch The Med ( Sea-Watch partner , one of the NGOs operating in the Mediterranean), online mapping to monitor the deaths and violations of migrant rights at EU maritime borders, in addition to have drawn up a guide to assist migrants during their voyage and once they reach the Italian coast [1]. It also contains the link of the most famous vademecum "Welcome to Europe" now published by Feltrinelli. [2]

Father Mussie Zerai, the self-proclaimed "Father Moses" in his last book, was arrested last August by a warrant for the allegation of "facilitating illegal immigration" following inquiries conducted by the prosecutor of Trapani. The same investigation also involved the NGO Jugend Rettet, with the seizure of the ship Iuventa and three notices addressed to the members thereof. [3]

As reported in il Giornale [4], "Father Zerai seems to be a migrant switchboard, but if you signal the inflatables from the start, without imminent danger to people on board and maybe you are being handed over by traffickers, it's complicity. The same accusations made by the prosecutor of Trapani to the German NGO Jugend Rettet, owner of the Iuventa ship, seized for this reason by the judiciary. Not only that: the Navy has undergone pressures and blackmails by Father Zerai, who in practice intimated to go to retrieve migrants otherwise he would report a hypothetical omission of rescue. And the Eritrean regime has long accused the priest of being part of a "group" of human rights activists in Europe, which in fact favors illegal immigration and has political interests. The regime of Isaias Afewerki is certainly very similar to a dictatorship, but it does not seem to be a case that after years in Rome Father Zerai was transferred from the Vatican to Switzerland in the far Friborg."

Il Giornale's article suggests that Father Zerai is involved in a network of activists based in Europe who are opposed to Eritrean President Afewerki (Eritrea and NGOs: Resilience vs. Assistance and Refugees in Independence Square) with the aim of destabilizing its government also with the support of Western nations and international NGOs that have long been "banished" from Eritrean soil thanks to the "self-reliance" vision that drives reconstruction in the African nation.

In Sweden, we find another prolific Eritrean activist, Meron Estefanos, which established close working relationships with Father Zerai, as she already stated in NBC News in 2015, saying: "He is our ambassador. Usually called the Embassy. Instead, our people call on Father Mussie when in trouble." [5] An Eritrean newspaper, Tesfanews, in 2015 even wrote a true "sponsored" European organization by the US Department of State: "Emerging evidence suggests that activists of regime change, Mussie Zerai, Meron Estefanos and Elsa Chyrum have all been involved in facilitating the trafficking of young Eritreans." [6]

Meron Estefanos is an Eritrean human rights activist and co-founder of the International Commission on Eritrean Refugees (ICER), an organization that claims to be active in defending the rights of Eritrean refugees, victims of trafficking and torture. [7]

Estefanos also collaborates with Radio Erena [8], satellite broadcasting radio to Eritrea (transmitted from Paris) and designed by dissident journalists from Eritrea abroad with the financial support of Reporters Without Borders [9] (an organization sponsored by Open Society Foundations, Ford Foundation, American NED - National Endowment for Democracy, French Government and Swedish SIDA ). The purpose of Radio Erena is to offer "news and information that is independent of Eritrea in Eritrea" and declares itself "independent of any political and government organization", A statement that proves false after a quick look at the supporters of its main donor.

Like Father Mussie Zerai, the Eritrean journalist seems to know in advance the departure of her fellow countrymen from the Libyan coasts as evidenced by her many tweets in recent years. The last one is a few days ago and Estefanos speaks of the departure of 2000 Eritrean migrants. [10]



Perhaps Meron Estefanos is continuing the "humanitarian commitment" of Father Zerai, interrupted after receiving the court notice for "facilitating illegal immigration"?

From September 28th to October 1st, will be held the festival "Internazionale a Ferrara" [11], created by the daily online Internazionale in collaboration with Doctors Without Borders and the European Commission, which will see the participation of Father Mussie Zerai (which will also advertise his book "Father Moses") and Meron Estefanos. Both will be the speakers of the conference "Eritrea - The kingdom of fear. Repression, violence and unlimited leverage: why Eritreans flee to Europe".

The presumption of innocence is obviously established up to the third degree of judgment, but would it not be prudent and appropriate to wait for the closure of the prosecution of Trapani before "sanctifying" and "legitimizing" the work of Father Mussie Zerai through prestigious invitations at festivals and conferences? Perhaps his "work" is continuing through the activity of other people close to him and not resident in Italy, such as Meron Estefanos?

We focus on this article, inviting the reader to listen to a song that is becoming very popular in Eritrea thanks to his message: " Aytitehamel Gobezay " (Do not be naive young man/woman). The song addresses the young Eritreans and invites them to stay in the homeland to contribute to the reconstruction, pointing out that "not all that glitters is gold" in overseas countries. [12]

Obviously, the message is in sharp contrast to what Eritrean "made in Europe" activists have said, such as Father Mussie Zerai and Meron Estefanos.




Eritrean fans living in hope

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The fans are gathering to cheer on the Eritrean riders. Photo by Tobias Dahlberg.


By Tobias Dahlberg

Eritrean cycling is on the rise and most of all the fans truly love their idols!

After the race is over we find the Eritrean riders and the rest of the crew taking pictures, talking and laughing along with the group of fans gathering around the team cars. Truly Team Eritrea is inspirational, approachable and easy going off the race course.

Bergen2017.no had a quick chat with three of the fans as their national team took off to rest before the upcoming races. Asmerum Kifle Welde Kidan, Mukur Nemariam Tesfaslasie and Kadas Tsegai, all lived some years in the region of Bergen, and all originate from Eretria.

We really want to help our riders from our homeland, morally, and showing our flag. That’s why we are here, says Asmerum.

Explaining more about the popularity of cycling, Asmerum tells about the history of Eritrea as a previous Italian colony and the rise of cycling to become somewhat of a national sport. It´s just been growing and growing, he says. The entry of Eritrean riders into the large tours such as TdF could be just the beginning. Although some of the best national cyclists could not attend in Bergen, Asmerum hopes to see at least Natnael Berhane do well.

I was waiting for Daniel Teklehaymanot, but Natnael Berhane is a clever rider. I hope he could win the race, says Asmerum.

Kadas Tsegai also expresses the true spirit in the expectations. Hope is always there:

“The win. We hope, we hope, we hope!”

The cheering is also about something else, explains Asmerum. The national cyclist has shown the world about Eritrea, making it a window to the world.

It is important to continue rooting for our riders, country, this is the other aim.

And finally, the fans are really happy about everything happening in Bergen.

Very AMAZING the preparing also, the Norwegians are very ready to do this, they are doing good things for riders and audience too, says Kadas Tsegai.

There is no doubt these fans will be here the rest of the week to cheer on their heroes and how proud they are.


Snowden’s Ethiopia Leaks; Reading Between the Lines

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Edward Snowden. Photo: Barton Gellman, Washington Post/Getty


Snowden’s Ethiopia Leaks; Reading Between the Lines

By Thomas C. Mountain

Edward Snowden’s politburo for secret documents has finally begun to release NSA files on the highly classified (and not so highly classified) activities of the USA in Ethiopia. In an article in The Intercept by veteran Horn of Africa journalist Nick Turse we find the latest chapter of another long awaited expose of the role of Pax Americana in Ethiopia.

The NSA documents released show the US military was secretly running an anti-terrorist intelligence gathering operation for many years in Ethiopia. The lands surveilled include Sudan, Somalia and Yemen. Conspicuously absent from the documents is any mention of Eritrea, Ethiopia’s neighbor and arch enemy.

When you read between the lines you find that Eritrea is under UN Security Council Sanctions for allegedly supporting terrorism in Somalia in the form of Al Shabab. But no mention is made of Eritrea in the top secret cables of the US Army’s Intelligence Division when it comes to anything to do with terrorism in the Horn of Africa. If the US Army is not concerned about any link between Eritrea and terrorism then shouldn't this be a word to the wise on the matter?

This should be the final nail in the coffin of the decade old tall tale of Eritrea as a supporter of terrorism (as Cuba was so slandered for decades).

Snowden’s EthiopiaLeaks follows in the footsteps of Wikileaks Ethiopia File where we find now Acting Assistant Secretary of State for Africa Donald Yamamoto way back in 2007 saying that Eritrea’s involvement in Somalia was “insignificant” (“Wikileaks Exposes UN Eritrean Sanction Lies”).

Later Wikileaks exposed how the UN Security Council Sanctions against Eritrea passed on Christmas Eve, 2009 were crafted by, amongst others, the US State Department’s Economic Sabotage office aimed as preventing international funding for Eritrea’s mining industry start up gold mine in Bisha and had nothing to do with any alleged support for terrorism as in Al Shabab in Somalia.

Now we have Snowden’s EthiopiaLeaks showing that no matter the lies told in public by the US State Department and their allies at HRW and Amnesty International, the US military wasn't buying any of it and didn't waste any time in wild goose chases concerning Eritrea and support for terrorism ie Al Shabab.

End of Story? No…in Nick Turse’s article he interviews Felix Horne, Horn of Africa specialist for HRW who along with Amnesty continues to insist that once upon a time Eritrea was supporting the Al Queda branch Al Shabab in Somalia. Never mind Wikileaks, never mind Snowden Leaks once a lie is told never admit what you have claimed is not real. This is so true of those who once surrounded Barack Obama and Hillary the Terrible and of course, their minions in their incestous relationship with Human Rights Watch. We are talking about Tom Malinowski and his “special relationship” with Hillary Rodham Clinton (HRC) and her Mafia, when he wasn't serving as Horn of Africa specialist et al at HRW.

HRW to HRC to HRW to HRC, who could tell who he was working for. The guy who was so blatantly pro-Pax Americana while switch hitting for HRW that he caused numerous Nobel Peace Laureates to publicly protest in an Open Letter to HRW?

One thing Nick Turse’s article didn’t mention is the not so secret AFRICOM Drone Assassination and Surveillance Program long based in Ethiopia. Hopefully Snowden's EthiopiaLeaks files will have something on this for as recently as February 2015 an AFRICOM drone fired a cruise missile from Ethiopian airspace that struck an arms depot in the Eritrean town of Decamhare. Apparently wreckage from the drone was found identifying it as a cruise missile of the type used mainly by Predator drones in their assassination campaigns.

We find the hand of AFRICOM again in June of 2016 when Ethiopia sent a couple of their army divisions across the border into Eritrea at Tsorona where a major battle took place. AFRICOM’s role was so blatant that the Eritrean government issued an all to rare public statement condemning such.

So here’s to more juicy tidbits from Snowden’s EthiopiaFile, maybe something that exposes a major crime or two will surface, we have given up finding any senior criminals being named and shamed a la Phil Agee. It has taken a while for EthiopiaLeaks to see the light of day and hopefully there is much more to come.

Thomas C. Mountain is an independent journalist in Eritrea, living and reporting from here since 2006. See thomascmountain on Facebook or best reach him at thomascmountain at g mail dot com

TPLF: Using Unsuspecting Refugees for Political and Military Agenda is a Crime.

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 Photo: Ethiopian refugees of the Tigray ethnic group in Eritrea. 


TPLF: Using Unsuspecting Refugees for Political and Military Agenda is a Crime.


By Abel Kebedom

Many Eritreans have already written about the Tigrai People Liberation Front’s (TPLF’s) cruel and sinister agenda against Eritrea and its people. Also, it is important to remember that not long ago TPLF leaders have openly expressed their plan to weaken Eritrea to a point they would be able to take its Sea Cost with little or no resistance and dismantle the rest of the country into ethnic Hamlets. Moreover, it is public knowledge that, to achieve its agenda TPLF has prepared Political, Economic and Military strategy and allocated millions of dollars for its implementation.

In addition to the unfair and unjust sanctions and naked military aggression against Eritrea, in partnership with some clueless western governments, TPLF devised a strategy to empty Eritrea from its youth and deny its productive labor power. Such sinister agenda was supported by continuous propaganda from Radio Woyane and Radio Wogahta, both owned and operated by the TPLF minority regime. However, recently the western world that conspired with TPLF to settle every Eritrean refugee who crossed the border to Tigrai is closing its doors. Thus, refugee settlement is slowing down and ultimately it is more likely that some of the Eritrean refugees who left their country to Tigrai in the hope of being resettled to another western country will not be resettled at all. It is in the backdrop of such scenario that TPLF is planning to use them for political and possibly military agenda.

TPLF and cohorts perfectly know that the foreign policy of Eritrea is made in Eritrea, not in refugee camps in Tigrai or a “Song for peace event” in Addis Ababa. Therefore, the objective of the recent “Song for Peace” event, initiated by TPLF personalities who are major sworn enemies of Eritrea, Tsadikan Gebretransaie and Sibhat Nega, is simply another ploy to turn hopeless Eritrean refugees who languished in Tigrai refugee camps for years into opposition groups and use them for propaganda and possibly military purposes.

Over the years TPLF has created more than 25, ethnic and religion based, so-called Eritrean opposition groups. However, to the disappointment of TPLF, none of them could deliver what TPLF expected from them. The main reason for such failure is because Eritreans did not go to Tigrai refugee camps to get military Training and come back to Eritrea to fight against their brothers and sisters. The truth is they went to Tigrai because TPLF and its partners in crime promised them a better life through resettlement to a third western country. Ultimately when Eritrean refugees in Tigrai camps discover that there is no chance for them to be resettled to a third country anymore, they will likely find a way to go back to their country to stand with their brothers and sisters side by side against any possible future TPLF aggression on Eritrea. Such news is a bad news for TPLF because not only the return of Eritreans to their country will be a big blow to its sinister agenda, but also will make it lose the significant amount of foreign currency it is collecting in the name of Eritrean refugees. That is why the issue of Eritrean refugees in Tigrai camps has become a pressing issue for TPLF heavyweights and they are working hard to use them not for peace but for a dangerous and destructive purpose.

The key point is TPLF is allergic to peace because it cannot survive and flourish in peace. That is why the Ethiopia that we all see nowadays is in turmoil of ethnic conflict not by chance but by TPLF’s sophisticated design. In the era of modern society, when hundreds of thousands of Ethiopians are living and working in every corner of the world, TPLF denies citizens in Ethiopia the right to live in the land they inherited from their ancestors. It snatches land from the Ormos people who lived around Addis Ababa all their life and distributes it to loyal Tigrian operatives who want to build businesses and residential homes at the cost of the lively hood of the Oromo people. When the Oromos oppose the land grab, oppression and exploitation, TPLF arms the Ethiopian Somalis to get their women and children raped and killed and ultimately expelled from the land of their ancestors. It snatches land from Gondar and Wollo to give Tigrai a fertile land and access to Sudan. When the Amhara people oppose the land seizure, TPLF conspires with the Gambellas to push the Amhara’s out of the region they called home for generations and force them to beg for food in the streets of Addis Ababa. When frustrated Oromo and Amhara youth vent their frustration in the streets of Ethiopia peacefully, TPLF executes them with snipers in a broad light and no Major Western Media dares to cover the carnage. The crux of the matter is TPLF needs to ferment conflict between Ethiopian communities who have lived in peace and harmony for generations so that they cannot cooperate and turn against it.

Given such TPLF history, if there is any Eritrean who believes the TPLF minority regime will give up the occupied Eritrean Territories for the sake of peace, then he/she needs to visit a psychiatrist. If TPLF can make peace with Eritrea, why did it decide to construct a railway from Djibouti to Tigrai? Is that because Assab and Masswa are far from Tigrai? If TPLF has an intention to make peace with Eritrea why did it decide to re-settle Tigrians in occupied Eritrean Territories? If TPLF has an intention to make peace with Eritrea why is it working hard day and night to disarm Eritrea and empty its youth?

The truth is TPLF will continue to sow hatred, and create havoc and destruction until the Ethiopian people with the help of their Eritrean brothers and sisters develop the capacity to take their country back. That is why it is important for all Eritreans not to be fooled by TPLF’s maneuvers to establish another so-called Eritrean opposition group through the “Song for peace” Mantara. Although we perfectly know that such TPLF project will end up being another failure, it is important for the unsuspecting Eritreans to remain ahead of the game. Not only the TPLF spearheaded and honey quoted poison “Agazian agenda” will never achieve its objective to divide Eritrean Christians and Muslims, but also it will not have a chance to set foot in Eritrea.

If TPLF wants peace, I do not really believe so, there is no need for another boring song. The procedures for peace between Ethiopia and Eritrea are clearly laid out in the binding Ethiopia and Eritrea Boundary Commission decision signed by the two countries.

1. Allow the demarcation of the Border to proceed.
2. Settle a compensation for war-related damages as stipulated by the compensation commission and finally.
3. At the will of the two countries start discussion for normalization. 

Awet N’ Hafash
Zele Alemawi Kibri Ni Siwaatna.



Independent commission finds Mayor of Veldhoven's cancelling of YPFDJ Eritrean conference unlawful

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 Jack Mikkers, Mayor of the municipality of Veldhoven, Netherlands 



Article was translated from Dutch using online software

Mayor Jack Mikkers van Veldhoven could not ban a conference of Eritrean youth in Koningshof in April this year, according to the objection committee.

By Manon van den Brekel | ED

According to the members of the committee, the mayor of Veldhovene "did not make every effort" in seeking other solutions. They advise the mayor to revoke his decision. But Mikkers lays that advice aside: he insists that he has taken the right decision.

At the beginning of April, the YPFDJ, an organisation associated with the Eritrean government, organised a meeting at the Koningshof conference Centre in Veldhoven. More than 120 refugees from Eritrea demonstrated at the gates of Koningshof against this meeting. When riots broke out, Mikkers banned the conference.

Disorders

The Committee members agree with the mayor that 'serious disorders' took place. According to them, the fear of more disorders was also justified and intervention was therefore necessary. However, according to the objections committee, this does not mean that the conference could be banned, all the more because the disorder was not caused by conference goers but by others.

The mayor already indicated that, according to him, there were simply not enough policemen available to guard the entire site of Koningshof, but according to the objections of the Committee, Madhavan does not sufficiently substantiate that assertion.

In an attempt to do so, Mikkers writes that both Koningshof and the police were indicating that they could not guarantee the safety of the conference attendees and the demonstrators. After the protesters were arrested ' the police asked me explicitly to make use of my emergency powers and to ban the conference ', writes the mayor.

Compensation

Conference guests have requested compensation. However, the Objections committee does not rule on this. The mayor must take a stand on this subject, in the opinion of the committee. Therefore, Mikkers does so directly in his writing: he rejects the compensation.

The opponents are now open to the court. "It's up to my clients to decide if we are going to court now," lawyer Bart-Jan Walraven responds. He represents the conference goers. " I think it is very likely that we do."

BBC & Al Jazeera: Two Fake news outlets protect a dying regime in Ethiopia while attacking Eritrea.

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By Eritrean-American

In today’s world of deception, lying, misleading, you would think that major media outlets would do a better job of covering news to save themselves from failure. Thank god that when their ethics continue to slide down, the average person has many different avenues to consume proper and reliable information from elsewhere. Corporate media outlets and government run news organizations like AFP in France, VOA in the USA, BBC in Great Britain and Al Jazeera headed by the Qatari government have lost their minds. These are mentioned because while they deceive people as if they are independent they are really influenced by their respective governments and bankrupt politicians who sell their souls to the highest bidder.

Meanwhile, some talk about Eri-TV also being a media outlet for the ERITREAN Government. Well, the difference is that ERI-TV and media in general in Eritrea is a developing project that has also played a role in defending the nation from the many deceptions and attempts to destabilize its peaceful population. These media outlets and the millions out there are not reliable any longer. They have ruined their reputation over and over. In Eritrea’s case they are addicted to shaming Eritrea’s “SELF RELIANCE” and “INDEPENDENT” map way for standing up on its own feet. It is to be recalled when Al Jazeera using an Eritrean news anchor reported on a “FAKE COUP” that took place on January 21st, 2013. A few disgruntled members of the huge Eritrean army may be around 100 soldiers decided to drive a tank into Asmara from a remote location and seized the headquarters of the state broadcaster, Eri-TV, and allegedly broadcast a message demanding reforms and the release of political prisoners. In most countries this news would be buried in a corner under the classified
advertisement but the “Fake News” from Doha, the very same one that is opening a bureau in the capital city of “LIE FACTORY” land lead by a nasty TPLF junta requested a live play by play of what happened in Asmara only to realize that the person they spoke to told them “What are you talking about? I am in Asmara and there is no such thing as a coup! Boy were they so disappointed!

Meanwhile, with the recent addition of Tigrinya service on the BBC and the new Al Jazeera bureau opening in Addis Abeba chances are everything that comes out of there will be “FAKE NEWS”. So that everyone can be aware of Fake news, we have identified the definition and;

“According to some it is a type of yellow journalism or propaganda that consists of deliberate misinformation or hoaxes spread via traditional print and broadcast news media or online social media. Fake news is written and published with the intent to mislead in order to gain financially or politically, often with sensationalist, exaggerated, or patently false headlines that grab attention.”

Great explanation! And when it comes to these two news organizations latest attempt to confuse the people of ERITREA and the horn of Africa, they are just wasting their money. The audacity they have to hire “QUISLINGS” and TPLF funded criminals clearly shows that they are at war with themselves as they attempt save their dying regime before the majority of oppressed Ethiopians explode to take over their country. It is clear that the cancer and sickness of the horn of Africa region is the unethical, disgusting minority regime known as MLLT or TPLF and die they must. The only reason they are surviving is because of the help they are getting from western corrupt politicians. Not entire nations but politicians who gain to benefit from these thugs known as the TPLF.

BBC Tigrinya is for WOYANE TIGRAYANS! It does not and should not apply to ERITREANS! Every conscious Eritrean should be aware. Meanwhile, let us continue to keep an eye on the Qatari owned Al Jazeera as they attempt to sleep in bed with the corrupt TPLF regime in Addis Abeba, where they will start to create FICTION rather than FACTS. Our major concern should remain that fake or misleading news can spread like wildfire on social networks because of confirmation bias, the use of “likes” and sharing with our friends. This exploits an element of human psychology that makes innocent and unconscious people more likely to accept information that conforms to the existing and REAL ERITREAN NEWS, brought to you by the people for the people within ERITREA.

Awet n’ Hafash/Victory to the masses.


Asmara: A Modernist City of Africa World Heritage Site

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Asmara, Eritrea (Credit: RedSeaLove)



The State of Eritrea submitted its first ever application to UNESCO for inscription on the World Heritage List (WHL) on 1st February 2016. Asmara was officially declared a World Heritage Site and put on the prestigious World Heritage List on the 41st session of the UNESCO´s World Heritage Committee that was held from 2-12 July 2017 in Krakow, Poland.

The 1,300-page Nomination Dossier prepared for the Asmara Heritage represents the distillation of nearly two decades of collaborative research by professionals from a wide range of disciplines in Eritrea and overseas, supported by many national and international government agencies. This article summarizes the most important propositions as to why Asmara is significant as a World Heritage Site.


Eritrea’s decision to conserve Asmara’s colonial era architecture represents a profoundly different attitude towards architectural heritage and its interpretation and treatment compared with many other post-colonial settings. Asmara’s inscription also presents an opportunity to encourage critical reflections on cultural relations and heritage globally, and to promote stability and prosperity locally. In addition, Asmara has contributed towards a World Heritage global strategy redressing the comparative under-representation of African and modernist sites on the World Heritage List.

The Government of Eritrea has implemented several programmes and projects for the preservation, conservation and safeguarding of the nation’s cultural and natural heritage and their transmission to future generations. The Central Region Administration, the Ministry of Education and the Commission of Culture and Sports jointly initiated Asmara Heritage Project to inscribe Asmara on UNESCO – World Heritage List and prepare conservation and management documents. Eritrea’s approach towards conservation is not aimed only at getting Asmara a World Heritage Status but at preserving and conserving the rich urban heritage in a sustainable manner.

The World Heritage Site of Asmara comprises the city’s ‘historic’ centre founded on the site of an ancient local settlement and developed during the years of the Italian occupation from 1889 to 1941. The evolution of the urban plan over this period subject to local climate, topographical, political and cultural features has produced one of the most complete early-modernist built environments in the world. As an outcome of a cumulative planning process over decades, Asmara’s layout is an embodiment of the universal encounter with modernity in the 20th century in an African context. The site extends from the indigenous quarter of Abba Shawel in the north to the industrial and residential districts of Gejeret and Tiravolo in the south, and from the edge of the escarpment in the east to ‘Forto’ and the Italian cemetery in the west. Contained within this total urban setting are the successive phases of early-modern urban planning that defined Asmara’s layout and the majority of buildings and structures that give the city its modernist architectural character.

The Buffer Zone surrounds the nominated property and follows the urban fabric and natural features. It encompasses the city limits up to the peaks of the surrounding hill, the escarpment edge urban fabric of more recent residential zones on the city’s southern outskirts and residential developments to the north.

The modernist city of Asmara is an outstanding example of a colonial capital that bears witness to the universal encounter with modernity in the 20th century and consequent postcolonial experiences. The historic urban landscape embodies in a whole city the unity of innovative urban planning and modernist architecture combined with local natural and cultural conditions.

An urban planning process based on functional and racial zoning demonstrates the Italian colonial response from the late 19th century to the challenges of modern urban requirements in a highland African setting. The architectural character exemplifies a period of intense development in the 1930s that coincided with the global proliferation and artistic apogee of pre-war modernism and its various forms. The result is a total urban landscape characterized by its human-scale buildings and mixed uses, built forms, and activities, including well-defined open spaces, cinemas, shops, banks, religious structures, public and private offices, industrial facilities, and residences. The integrity and authenticity of Asmara’s functional, aesthetic and cultural values have been retained throughout a protracted struggle for independence and subsequently assimilated into a national consciousness in which Asmara features centrally.

The historic centre of Asmara is inscribed as an outstanding example of a capital city that embodies the unity of early town planning principles and modernist architecture combined with local natural features and cultural conditions consistent with its highland African setting. The site is inscribed under the following criteria:-

Criterion (ii): Asmara, a modernist city of Africa represents an outstanding example of the transposition and materialization of ideas about planning, in an African context and were used for functional and segregation purposes; the adaptation to the local context is reflected in the urban layout and functional zoning, and in the architectural forms, which, although expressing a modernist and Rationalist idiom and exploited modern materials and techniques, also relied on and borrowed heavily from local morphologies, construction methods, materials, skills and labour. Asmara’s creation and development contributed significantly to Eritrea’s particular response to the tangible legacies of their colonial past. Despite the evidence of its colonial imprint, Asmara has been incorporated into the Eritrean identity, acquiring important meaning during the struggle for self- determination that motivated early efforts for its protection.

Criterion (iv): Asmara’s urban layout and character, in combining the orthogonal grid with radial street patterns, and picturesque elements, integrating topographical features, taking into account local cultural conditions created by different ethnic and religious groups, and using the principle of zoning for achieving racial segregation and functional organisation, bears exceptional witness to the development of the new discipline of urban planning at the beginning of the 20th century and its application in an African context, to serve the Italian colonial agenda. This hybrid plan, that combined the functional approach of the grid with the search for the picturesque and the creation of scenic spaces, vistas, civic plaza and monumental places, served the functional, civic and symbolic requirements for a colonial capital. The architecture of Asmara complements the plan and forms a coherent whole although reflecting eclecticism and rationalist idioms and is one of the most complete and intact collections of modernist/rationalist architecture in the world.

Asmara’s inclusion on UNESCO - World Heritage List for its outstanding modernist architecture and urban planning and its exceptional testimony of the universal aspiration for and attainment of national self-determination goes beyond merely pursuing international recognition for its cultural assets. For Eritreans, Asmara is not just their capital city but an object of love; an icon of unity with a very strong social bondage and attachment. This intangible cultural aspect of Asmara’s is significant not only for world heritage listing but as part of a wider and richer historiography than merely a modernist architecture and planning.

This article highlighted the significance of Asmara Heritage property as a World Heritage Site. In the next edition of this column a glimpse into the history of the development of the urban landscape will be sketched.

Eritrean seminar conducted in Western Canada concluded successfully

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Dr. Fikrejesus Amahazion, professor at the College of Arts and Social Sciences (CASS) in Adi Keih


Seminar conducted in Western Canada on September 16th and 17th 2017, in Calgary and Edmonton Alberta concluded successfully

By Eritrean Media

On September 16 & 17th 2017, Eritrean Nationals residing in Calgary & Edmonton Alberta conducted seminars with a view to strengthen organizational capacity and contribution in the national development endeavors.

At the seminars, hosted on consecutive days in Edmonton and Calgary, convened under the theme of “Strong Eritrean-Canadian Communities to Support Education and Development in Eritrea.” they discussed on strenthenig organizational capacity and participation in the national development proprams.

Mr. Lambros Kyriakakos of the Coalition of the Eritrean Canadian Communities and Organizations (CECCO) briefed to the participants at both seminar about the duty of Eritrean-Canadian communities to support education and development in Eritrea.

Dr. Fikrejesus Amahazion, the keynote speaker at the events and a university professor at the College of Arts and Social Sciences (CASS) in Adi Keih, Eritrea, provided an overview of education in Eritrea, outlining the sector’s general history, recent progress, current challenges, and potential steps forward.

Furthermore, the participants at the seminars were actively involved, raising important questions and offering critical insights. Initiatives to support students in higher education by providing e-readers were widely supported by community members. Notably, at the conclusion of the meetings, participants committed to strengthening their communities, as well as actively supporting various developmental and education-related initiatives.



















[Video] Eritrea - Awet Habtom WINS 2017 u23 World Championships Aggressive Rider

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By BikeAid

He is only 19 and it is his first year in the "men's class", but he has already astonished many people this year. And it was also the case at today's world championship Roadrace U23 in Bergen, Norway. With a lot of courage, Awet - who rode in the jersey of his national team Eritrea - was breaking away right at the start of the race and spent 150 of the 191 kilometers at the front of the race.

He tried over nd over to break away solo from the lead-group and to lead the race alone. At the end of the race, he was voted the most aggressive rider of the race for his more than active riding style. Even without a medal, it is certainly a great success to have played major role in the world championship´s - and this with just 19 years.

Congratulations Awet, we are proud of you!

In memories of our illustrious Heroes; B. General Mussa Rabb’a and Col. Tewldebrhan (Wedi- Lete)

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Colonel Tewolde Gebremariam and Brigadier General Mussa Rabb’a Col. Tewldebrhan, R.I.P



In memories of our illustrious Heroes; B. General Mussa Rabb’a and Col. Tewldebrhan (Wedi- Lete)

By Hagos Gashazghi

This is an awfully hard time for all Eritreans as a handful patriots have departed through, carrying out their historic journey of serving the Eritrea people. Duplicate by millions but also count up as millions, five patriots had been passed away in the very end and the starting of both November and September respectively. To mention their names; they are veteran hero B.General Mussa Rabb’a, Veteran Tsgereda Woldegergish, Veteran fighter Col. Teweldebrhan (Wedi Lette), Embetito, and Wedi Halima.

To mention their social roles, Veteran fighter Mussa Rabba was a Brigadier General and the commander in chief of Eastern command while Veteran fighter Ms. Tsegerda W/gish was an administrative chief at the Northern Red Sea Zone. As well, veteran fighter Wedi Lete was a Colonel at the ministry of defense and served as a commander in chief of 49 mechanized unit, Embetito from Commission of Culture and Sport while, while Wedi Halima, a Colonel and commander in chief of the Northern Red Sea police station.

It is as tough as possible to discuss about the historic roles of each and every veteran hero, as my incapability of hauling such a big responsibility concerned to be, while rewarding a hurtful respect to their heroic contributions to the remaining three in committing their life to serve the Eritrean people. Meanwhile, I will discuss about only two of them, comrade Mussa Rabb’a and Wedi Lete whom I have had a well appreciated acquaintance with.

First, let’s start by Colnel Teweldebrhan or Wedi Lete. Veteran fighter Wedi Lette was one the most known compatriots whom he had played a very crucial role in the establishment and development of the EPLF’s mechanized unit, by which such a unit played a very significant contribution in thrashing the Derg Regime. Examining the dismantlement of the Nadow Command in 1988, and Fenkil Operation in 1990, anyone could judge to how magnitude did the EPLF advance in such strategic qualification, comparing with any other resistance movement throughout history till the present, while a very sophisticated weapons at that times capitulated from enemies, manufactured by great Eritrean minds and entrusting the principle EPLF’s mantra of ‘for an enemy through its guns and bullets’.

In a very bold historic blemish, it is my sincere pleasure to discuss Wedi Lete’s one and great heroic action at a moment of trans-boundary offensive of rousing to dismantle the Derg regime at its base, collaborating with other revolutionary movements in Ethiopian land and in particularly the TPLF organization.

This was in May 1991 of the EPLF realizing its highest organizational strength in political and military standpoint. After the defeat the ‘Nadow Command’ which was one of the very strong command inspecting its Soviet donated equipments and well trained solders, the EPLF organization demonstrate as one of Africa’s strongest revolutionary resistance movement whom no force could challenge its military might.

This was proved at ‘Fenkil Operation’ in February 1990, where a strategic decision pushed by a very brilliant strategic calculation liberate Eritrean coastlines, crashing hundreds of thousands of the Derg soldiers, at which their weapons were burned and destroyed, capitulating almost 80 tanks and other strategic weapons, thanks to the great contribution of the front’s mechanized unit.

After such a historic success, the EPLF liberated Eritrea step by step, while carrying a revolutionary responsibility as if the one and only military actor to bring a lasting solution vis-à-vis peace and security in this region and in particular inside Ethiopian territory.

In a pragmatic sagacity, celebrated itself as a transnational revolutionary movement, the EPLF organization sent a mechanized Brigade full of well trained foot soldiers in 1991. This Brigade infiltrates to the Ethiopian border with well proven veteran fighters and in particular with very brilliant tank operators, technicians, equipped with dozens of EPLF Tanks. This, of course, was not only strategize to strike the Derg forces at its base but so did to share the front’s technical and strategic military knowledge to the TPLF forces in regard to the utility and applicability of mechanized armaments.

In advance, this completed very productively; institute a foundation for the establishment of TPLF’s mechanized military unit throughout the history of the Tigrean organization for the first time. Further, eloquently addressing the contribution of the EPLF mechanized unit and its foot soldiers devotion, and in collaborating with TPLF and other Ethiopian patriotic movements fighters commitment’ , at last Derg ousted and forced to flee to Zimbabwe while its soldiers were fighting a very bloody fight for the sake of its political stand in the ground.

Completing such a historic mission, the EPLF mechanized unit determined to return to Eritrea to commemorate the liberation day, entitled and make possible for the Ethiopian masses to celebrate such a grand historic occasion of emancipating from the evils of the Derg juntas.

Unfortunately for the EPLF fighters, in their way to home, a tribulation had craft by the TPLF officers or in particular by Gebru Assrat and his compliments regarding some matters. The event could be narrated this way.

The EPLF fighters creep into to Ethiopian territory through two lines. Majority of the mechanized unit cross the threshold through the rood to Mekele, while the remaining fighters enter through the rood trespassed through Asseb and then to Dridawa. On their moment of homecoming, one EPLF fighter grumbles that the TPLF fighters made some troubles regarding his small military vehicle and attempted to seize from him or either way to made surveillance upon his vehicle. After the TPLF forces endeavoring to took his car, he then went some way to his commanders which were in their way to Mekele and reported the issue.

The first fighter who hears such an inopportune complaint was Wedi Lete. Wedi Lete then propels a message to Gebru Assrat, a political officer of the TPLF organization at Mekele area and inquires that what they had done to the EPLF fighter. Gebru Assrat then replied that not only the one fighter but so did the whole mechanized unit would be checked and got under surveillance by the TPLF fighters, while leaving out from Ethiopian territory.

This moment was an unfortunate time for Ethiopia where there was no a central government to fill the power vacuum left by the Derg juntas and every group pretends to act as if the one which could fill the vacuum. Despite the fact that there were dozens of resistance movements placed themselves as an alternative power in Ethiopia, the EPLF organization abetted the Tigrean Libration Font and support until the final battle within Addis Abeba which was done at the Governmental Palace. In spite of such a historic reality, there were some unfortunate actions put into effect by the TPLF fighters for example. One and greatest of all was, on the day to march through the rood to Addis Ababa and conveying through the Addis Streets, the TPLF fighters ordered to situate their Tanks in frontage, while arranging the EPLF’s Tanks to be rearranged at the back.

Observing this a first day treachery and bearing the pain of watching and remembering EPLF fighters being sacrificed and our tanks being burned on the fight to Addis in mind, Veteran fighter Wedi Lete then asked one decisive question to Gebru Assrat; “have you ever check or register a single section of our military module while we were crossing the boundary to assist you?’

“No we didn’t” replayed Gebru Assrat.

“And by now no one have had an authority and couldn’t be able to made a surveillance or check upon our military unit” said Wedi Lete. Determined to his courage, he boldly clarified his stand to Gebru Assrat and elucidated that;” if you want to check or to make a single surveillance upon our Birgade, then wait tomorrow at Mekele and we will give you an idea about who we are” concluded Wedi Lete.

The day after, Gebru Assrat and his team were not there at the door out from Mekele to Eritrean or at the check point thanks to two points, first and the greatest was the determinable courage of the EPLF fighters and in particular their commanders bravery and further a very appreciated mediatory roles of some great veterans from the TPLF side particularly father Sebhat Negga.

Secondly, an honorable patriot whom we as Eritreans fill heartrending to watch him passed away this month and whom I am going to discuss only a plenty part from his furthermost historic contribution to the Eritrean people will be comrade Mussa Rabb’a.

B.General Mussa Rabba is one of from the very few fathers, whom Eritrean history placed at its corner as an honorable patriot because he get hold of the opportunity to be a fighting member of ELM, ELF and EPLF consecutively.

Born in 1947, B. General Muss’a was a one whom devotes his live destiny for the sake of public good. He was in a threshold of entrusting as a public servant for almost half a century or 53 years. Born to be from a peasantry background, comrade Mussa organized in cells of Eritrean Liberation Movement in 1964 only at the age of 17. Not appreciating the ELM’s strategic line of following peaceful resistance to dismantle the Ethiopian invasion of Eritrea, comrade Mussa jointly with other nationals left ELM and joined Eritrean Liberation Front in 1966 aiming at fulfilling their profound dreams of librating Eritrea through violent means.

Playing a very influential roles at ELF organization, at last Mussa opposed the undemocratic and under-nationalistic lines of the ELF leadership, turned to form EPLF organization whom a front rewarded the completion of the historic march of liberating the Eritrean people. From 1971, veteran Mussa plays a very crucial role both as veteran fighter and as a public administrator in the librated areas. An underlined event from his historic contribution as a military leader, for instance, was, he played a very constructive role at the formative age of the EPLF organization.

As if any other revolutionary movement, in its initial stage, the EPLF organization was internally and immensely confronted and challenged by contradictory ideas, because of a quantity of less compromised reactionary forces. There was a very tense ideological confrontation in both 1973 and 1975 which was nicknamed as Menka’a and Yemein movements respectively. In their initial stage, both movements seemed as a step for rectification, but later diverted into reactionary sides which threatened to the continuity and survival of the revolution.

In such an exigent circumstances, what history witnesses was the tolerant, intelligent and determinable etiquette of the great Eritrean fighters. They successfully handled the situation, rectify their mistakes and ensure the continuity of the armed struggle while strengthening their national unity in the face of the Ethiopian enemy. Particularly at both organizational and at leadership level, this moment shows a very strong potential muddling through challenges of handling difficulties, and ensuring the art of compromising differences.

In a more specific sense, the 1975 movement was particularly occurred at the 500 military Battalion which was led by comrade Mussa Rabb’a. Of reassuring his commitment, optimism and heroism, he was the one whom played a vital role personally and letting the situation to resolve peacefully. He was the one whom coordinate and led one of the longest meetings in history (hold for almost 19 hours without stop, and the one who stands to lead such a meeting without rest was veteran fighter Wolderfiel Sebhatu) until the root causes of such an ideological confrontation within the Battalion got addressed.

Furthermore, any revolution couldn’t succeed without the support from the masses. In an Eritrean case, the fighters were a fish while the mass was like a sea. The EPLF organization from its inception descends in such a mantra of the mass must got conscious organized and got militarized. In attaining this, comrade Sefhat Efrem appointed to lead the political office for handling public issues while comrade Mussa Rabb’a appointed to lead the office for the administrative tasks for the masses of the Sahel region during EPLF’s first organizational congress in 1977.

Placed his office at place called Hishkip, Veteran fighter Mussa Rabb’a subsequently played a very crucial roles in organizing the people whom inhabited the Sahel areas. His office played a momentous role in teaching, organizing and at last rearranging the masses to participate at fronts both materialistically and physically.

Practically speaking, comrade Mussa organize an office for the supporting the EPLF fighters, by whom the people at the Sahel region prepared food to eat and water to drink for the fighters, and stay in line with their sons and daughters even at a worst challenge like the Red Star offensive.

Many also got victimized, considering as collaborators with Shabia, and got killed, tortured, wounded and so did their livestock destroyed immensely. Our great hero and martyr, whom represents the Eritrean mothers' bravery and heroism mother Zeineb Yassien was the one who cultivated and organized under such a great office. Mother Zeineb played an exemplary role during the resistance movement, in teaching the principles of the revolution, in defending cultural backwards and in showing a practical model of being a revolutionary mother.

In my conclusion, Benjamin Harrison says; “Let those who would die for the flag give a better proof of their patriotism and a higher glory to their country by promoting fraternity and justice.” Certainly, all Eritrean martyrs in general and those whom I already discussed about are passed ways for a greatest cause watching Eritrea librated, being administrated by its sons and daughters and marching on the path to all-around secio-economic progress. Therefore, in opinion, I do agree that for those who reward as such kind of respect, we as nationals must honor ourselves by dedicating once and for all to attain their dreams of making Eritrea and its people a great country.

Eritrea: Striving towards Efficient use of Renewable Energy

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Windmills in the Southern Red Sea Region of Eritrea



Climate changes throughout the world have put countries into discussion and consideration on how they use energy. Many forums and summits have been conducted to bring universal solution to the harsh changes causing disasters across the world.

Countries are working towards positive and impactful changes for the good of societies and the world as a whole. The seventh and thirteenth Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) discuss affordable and clean energy and climate action that are crucially important for other goals.

The Eritrean government is committed to sustaining the most and getting a relief by using renewable energy supplies while pursuing its national development agenda. Multiple programs are underway in partnership with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and local organizations so as to answer to the country’s growing demand of energy with renewable energies such as solar and wind mills. Windmills are providing alternative energy for rural communities across Eritrea.

Goal number seven of Sustainable Development Goals discuss affordable and clean energy. This means ensuring universal access to affordable electricity by 2030 by investing in clean energy sources such as solar, wind and thermal. Thus, adopting cost-effective standards for a wider range of technologies would also reduce the global electricity consumption by buildings and industry by 14 percent. This means avoiding roughly 1,300 mid-size power plants. Expanding infrastructure and upgrading technology to provide clean energy in all developing countries is a crucial goal that can both encourage growth and help the environment.

People normally rely on traditional forms of energy such as coal, oil or petroleum and for the household use wood is the main source of energy. In the past, around 80% of the energy came from biomass. In addition, the conventional use of electricity results in greenhouse gas emission or CO2 which is hazardous to people’s health. However, between 1990 and 2010, the number of people with access to electricity has increased by 1.7 billion, and as the global population continues to rise so will the demand for cheap energy.

Thus, the introduction of renewable energies was imminent. In Eritrea it started with solar energy in the year 1995.

In 2013, 104 solar modules were installed on the roof of the building, producing a total of 15.5 kilowatts of electricity, enough to power the office for eight continuous hours a day.

According to director of Renewable Energy Center in the Ministry of Energy and Mining, Mr. Tesfay Ghebrehiwet, the currently addressed renewable energies in Eritrea are the Solar, Wind and Geothermal energy (only pre-feasibility study). Though the installment of solar energy is costly, Mr. Tesfay is confident that it is widely distributed across the country for household and any organizational uses. In 2010, there was only 2% coverage of the solar energy but now the figure has roughly increased into 10%. The reason for the widely use of solar energy, according to the director, is that it is modular, easily installed and applied. This type of energy is not sensitive to topography unlike the wind energy that is highly dependent on the topography of an area. As the temperature in the eastern and western lowlands of Eritrea is higher, the insulation of solar powered energy gets lower but in the highlands the insulation is higher and more reliable. Sometimes in the summer season clouds make it harder for the solar panels to charge and supply power. In these times hybrid energy power generation helps to keep the consistency of the power supply. Geothermal energy can assist the solar energy base load. Solar energy these days is used and applied in communication, agriculture, health institutions and household consumption. In agriculture it is used for refrigerators, incubators, veterinary machines and for storing vegetables and fruits.

Efficient use of renewable energy and quick transformation from biomass and fuel based power generation enabled Eritrea to comply with the clean energy goal. Mr. Tesfay stated that the country is not really a contributor to the global warming but a victim of its consequences. When seen in percentile, its contribution is negligible. On the safe side, using the smokeless stove or Adhanet has an immense impact on preserving trees and thereby protecting the environment from adverse damages. Economy wise, costs are high for oil based power generation. But using renewable sources such as solar and wind boost power efficiency and are future oriented. Introducing efficient renewable energy minimizes the electricity consumption fee per kilowatt. If properly utilized, it makes a big difference on household and organizational saving patterns, and thus economy uplift of the country.

Moreover, using renewable energy reduces biomass energy use and enables people to focus on other investments rather than cutting trees. Further in agriculture, farmers are using solar energy to operate water pumps to fill their reservoirs and water their farms.

The Ministry of Energy and Mines in partnership with the Solarcentury, provided two solar powered mini-grids to power the communities of Areza and Maidma.


Financed by the Global Environment Facility and co-financed by the Eritrean government and the UNDP, the Eritrean Wind Energy Application project increased its national capacity to plan, design, install, operate and maintain wind energy systems in the country as part of the Eritrea’s contribution to climate change mitigation efforts. Over the last decades Eritrea has made considerable progress in different fronts such as mapping of the Coastal Marine and Island Biodiversity resources and establishing an Integrated Coastal Area Management framework; piloting viability of application of renewable wind energy technologies.


Piloted by the government and the UNDP, there is a wind farm with a capacity of 750 kilowatts in the port city of Assab. Wind energy is applied in the southern Red Sea region in Eritrea. This type of energy, despite its higher logistic costs, provides optimal power energy. The 300 km wind potential area is likely to offer such energy to villages such as Rahayta, Gahro, Berasole, Edi, Beilul and Dekemhare. Places such as Dekemhare and Gizgiza are the wind corridors that feed wind to the other villages. In these villages there are six small stand-alone decentralized wind turbines installed. At present more than 35,000 people have direct access to reliable energy. Wind energy has improved the supply of electricity to water systems, schools, health facilities and small-scale businesses. The project also provides lighting, ventilation, cooling systems, and fish preservation centers, which have improved the livelihoods of small-scale fishermen in the region. Such huge projects brought immediate environmental benefits, as fossil fuel consumption has been reduced. The diesel power plant in the port city of Assab is now saving approximately 680,000 liters of diesel per year, or nearly $730,000 per year in diesel costs.

Smaller villages are also getting fuel savings. They save approximately 16,000 liters of diesel annually, or $17,000. The result is a reduction of CO2 emissions by 1718 metric tons per year with the added benefit of minimizing smoke-related health complications. Despite the positive results wind energy installation requires skilled manpower to operate and continually monitor it. The running cost of wind energy is much higher than that of solar energy as it has moveable partitions.

Aside from the immediate economic and social benefits to local communities, the Eritrean Wind Energy Application Project is helping minimize the destruction of forests and reduce carbon emissions.

The Ministry of Energy and Mines looks for higher penetration of the renewable resources to get the optimal power services to the society and plans to make a 50% power supply using renewable sources of energy. The target is to give optimal service by using available renewable resources efficiently.

[Video] Address By Eritrea’s Foreign Affairs Minister To The 72nd Session Of The UN General Assembly

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NEW YORK, 23 SEPTEMBER 2017

President of the General Assembly

Mr. Secretary General
Excellencies and distinguished delegates,
It is another year and another session of the UN General Assembly. We meet in the same assembly hall and deliver our addresses from the same podium.
Yet, no modicum of protocol can mask the gaping divide in our ranks.

We live in an increasingly fragile, unjust and unequal world. A small minority holds the reins of power and wealth between nations and, for the most part, within nations. The overwhelming majority of nations and their citizens are without power, without voice, without the means for a decent life, and often without peace and security. We may be called the United Nations, but the reality is that we are divided nations and societies.

Despite our deep divisions, however, our destinies are inter-twined in a fundamental way. We share a common home, a small planet in a vast universe, a tiny boat in a vast ocean. Whatever calamity happens anywhere in our world – epidemics, poverty, violence, mass displacement, war, terror- it will eventually catch up with all of us.

We share responsibility to address the fundamental problems of our common world. Certainly, the mighty and wealthy should shoulder bigger responsibility as they command vast power and resources. It is only fair that more is asked from those to whom much has been given, or more accurately, those who have appropriated much for themselves. We should unflaggingly remind them of their obligations and press them, not for charity, but for enlightened self-interest that understands that might is not permanent and that only shared benefits are sustainable.

We would, however, be gravely mistaken and would have forgotten the lessons of history, if we pinned all our hopes on the goodwill of those who currently enjoy disproportionate power, wealth and influence. Power does not readily concede its privileges of its own accord. It resorts to deception, coercion, pressure, sanctions, violence and war to maintain and if possible increase its privileges.

The developing countries and the marginalized peoples of the globe stand to gain most from a more peaceful, secure, just and equal world. They owe it to themselves and to coming generations to build solidarity and to steadfastly strive and work and innovate for a better world. It is their duty to ensure freedom, dignity and prosperity to their peoples.

Excellencies,

Africa remains the most marginalized of all continents.

Undoubtedly, there is some progress, more in some countries than others. But talk of an African Renaissance, of fastest growing economies is misplaced and premature. We should not flatter ourselves, or allow others to flatter us.

Africa remains a producer and small-bit exporter of primary products. It retains minimum revenue from this export, with foreign companies getting the lion’s share. Processing of primary products, value-addition, industrialization, technology development barely exist. African economies, physical and social infrastructure, institutional and governance structures, peace and security architectures remain undeveloped.

Yet, Africa boasts tremendous human and natural resources; indeed, over 60% of global natural resources lie in Africa. It is only when Africa’s economies, the quality of its infrastructure, the standards of its health and educational institutions, the level of its artistic, scientific and technological products, the effectiveness of its institutions and enterprises, and more importantly the quality of life of its citizens, reflect more accurately its great potential that we can rightly speak of Africa taking its rightful place in the world.

We should safeguard independence and sovereignty, fight ethnic polarization and rampant corruption, chart our own paths, develop bold and imaginative policies that suit our conditions, rely mainly on our own resources, and build an Africa that meets the aspirations of its people and makes valuable contributions to humanity.

Excellencies,

Eritrea is a young nation, strategically located and with significant human and natural resources.

It joined the community of independent nations a quarter of a century ago by dint of its people’s long, 30 year long, struggle for freedom and self-determination, fought and won against tremendous odds.

As an independent nation, it has faced the full brunt of an unfair and unjust international order. It has faced demonization, ostracization, sanctions and armed aggression.
This sustained external hostility caused much harm to Eritrea and its people. It slowed down Eritrea’s progress, but it was not able to stop it. It could not shake the resolve of the

Eritrean people and their government.

Eritrea was severely tested. It emerged intact, more determined, experienced, and in many ways stronger. It is peaceful, stable, secure and harmonious, a haven of stability in a turbulent neighborhood.

Eritrea is, quietly and without fanfare, engaged in comprehensive nation-building. It is pursuing policies and taking concrete measures to strengthen the unity and harmony of its people, foster their political participation and unleash their energies and talents. It is laying the ground for broad-based and sustainable economic development. It is step by step putting in place modern infrastructure. It is working to ensure that all its citizens get good access to nutritious food, clean water, electricity, shelter, transport, communications, health and educational services as well as cultural, sports and recreational facilities.

Eritrea has also embarked on a massive, water and soil conservation, as well as an afforestation program, as part of its comprehensive plan to enhance the environment and fight climate change.

Eritrea is confident it will meet the Sustainable Development Goals ahead of time.
In its ambitious development program, Eritrea avoids dependency, and relies first and foremost on its people and on its domestic resources. At the same time, it welcomes and

encourages cooperation and partnership, with a focus on trade and investment.

Eritrea also seeks to make a modest contribution to peace, stability and cooperation in its wider region, which includes the Nile Basin, the Horn of Africa, the Red Sea Basin and the Gulf. It has successfully fought and continues to fight radicalization, extremism and terrorism on its own and in cooperation with its neighbors.

Eritrea extends its hands of friendship and solidarity to all peoples and nations who strive to build their countries and contribute to a fairer, more just and equal world.
Eritrea takes the initiative to engage with all countries, including those who differ with it.

Eritrea strongly believes that its political, economic, social and diplomatic path would be smoother and easier if the external obstacles that have been on its path were removed. It therefore once again calls on the United Nations Security Council to lift the unfair and unjust sanctions imposed on it for the past nine years. There is no justification for them to continue and they do not serve any useful purpose.

Another impediment in front of Eritrea, indeed in front of the whole Horn of Africa region, is the 15-year old occupation of sovereign Eritrean territory by Ethiopia. Eritrea calls on the Security Council to ensure the end of this flagrant violation of international law and several UN resolutions.

I thank you.

Source: Shabait



Farmajo's betrayal of the Somali people

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The cabinet's decision to hand Qalbi-Dhagax over to Ethiopia is not a well thought out one, writes Arman [Feisal Omar/Reuters]


By handing ONLF officer Abdikarim Sheikh Muse to Ethiopia, the Somali government has betrayed its own people.

By Abukar Arman

All betrayals are not made equal. In recent weeks, a political disaster of epic proportions has befallen upon Somalia. The Somali government has committed what many - including some of its staunchest supporters - consider a treasonous act.

Somalia's National Intelligence and Security Agency (NISA) has extradited a Somali citizen, a highly decorated military officer, a war hero who was wounded in the 1977 war against Ethiopia and an officer of the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) to Ethiopia without any due process.

Initially, the government denied and dismissed all information related to the illegal rendition as "vicious rumours intended to undermine government's credibility"; claiming their objective is "Qaran dumis" or to destroy the nation.

Once the truth hit the streets that Abdikarim Sheikh Muse (Qalbi-Dhagax) was handed over by his brethren to a brutal regime with a long record of human rights violations, it unleashed a collective public fury the likes of which Somalia had never seen. The public space became saturated with songs, poems, and skits expressing extreme disillusionment on a popular president - Mohamed Abdullahi Farmajo - who only a few months earlier was celebrated as the long-awaited saviour of the nation.

Making Matters Worse

Desperate to shake off this scandal, Prime Minister Hassan Ali Khaire convened a Council of Ministers emergency meeting. To the utter dismay of many who were still hopeful that their government will do what is right, the Council of Ministers made the problem even worse. They accused Qalbi-Dhagax of being a terrorist who "committed serious crimes in Somalia" and who "was in cahoots with al-Shabab to further sabotage the nation". Furthermore, they declared ONLF, which is an internationally recognised liberation movement that has offices throughout the West, Middle East and Africa, a terrorist organisation.

To understand the foreign-dominated, self-refuelling system that propels the Somali political process one should think of an aircraft carrier with a massive flight deck where the Somali president is granted the discretion to walk, march or even run to any direction he wishes as that will neither alter the carrier's course nor its destination.

While irredentism or Somalia's historical struggle to reclaim all five parts of its nation as partitioned by the "colonial masters" is, for all intents and purposes, dead; the loyalty, the commitment to advocate for the rights of all Somalis in the region to live freely and off the chains of oppression is alive and well. It is in that spirit of solidarity that Somalis of all walks of life support the ONLF cause and the group's right to work towards liberating their homeland.

Let us hypothetically assume that all allegations against Qalbi-Dhagax were true and that he was a ruthless "terrorist" who carried out clandestine operations to sabotage Somalia and has killed and committed rape as the cabinet (no judge or jury) has declared, how do such allegations justify his rendition to Ethiopia? Why would the government not prosecute him in Somalia?

If he is guilty of these serious crimes, why he was living in Mogadishu for years as an ONLF officer without ever being arrested? Qalbi-Dhagax was not an anonymous figure. He was not in hiding. Clearly, the cabinet's decision to hand him over to Ethiopia is not a well-thought-out one.

If the cabinet does not withdraw the politically motivated charges directed at Qalbi-Dhagax and implant them into the law instead, anyone who supports him or the ONLF either verbally, in writing, by marching or even by simply rejecting the charges government directed at them could get charged with "aiding and abetting" terrorism and subsequently could be renditioned to Ethiopia.

Lies and deception

To understand the foreign-dominated, self-refuelling system that propels the Somali political process one should think of an aircraft carrier with a massive flight deck where the Somali president is granted the discretion to walk, march or even run to any direction he wishes as that will neither alter the carrier's course nor its destination.

For over a decade, the same strategy has been used to lure each Somali president into a glorified failure. I call it the "3F seduction": False security, false esteem, and false authority. That is to say, while he, the president, in on the deck of the aforementioned aircraft carrier, he can dress for the part and quixotically claim to be in charge. Meanwhile, the system continues its course.

The Qalbi-Dhagax case is not only good for Ethiopia, it is good for all other failed institutions: UNSOM, AMISOM, other clandestine operatives and economic predators who perpetuate the status quo in Somalia -the overtly most-aggressive beneficiaries being the UAE and Erik Prince of Blackwater port management partnership.

Can Farmajo be rescued?

Most of those who knew the new president (this author included) were confident that he would prove himself the right catalyst for a genuine Somali-led reconciliation process and revitalise Somalia's decaying sense of nationhood. Unlike his predecessors, President Farmajo came in with a certain level of experience and a significant political capital and public trust.

He knew any substantive reform would have to be instituted and implemented within the first year. He was not to waste time or to squander opportunities. The expectation was to reclaim Somalia by pushing for the establishment of an Independent Reconciliation Commission, made of credible citizens of good character with no political affiliation or ambition; by pressuring the Parliament to establish a constitutional court; by establishing an Anti-Corruption Commission composed of trustworthy patriotic citizens; by creating a Somali military counterintelligence branch that keeps track of all foreign militaries, paramilitaries and mercenaries in the country and their activities; and by reaching out to Somaliland.

Back in February, I described the newly Parliament-elected president as "a champion of enlightened patriotism that is optimistic and relies on itself to restore the corroded dignity of a self-destructive nation". Two weeks later, after he appointed a man who was an employee and part-owner of Soma Oil and Gas as prime minister, I saw the writing on the wall but opted to give one last chance to the new president.

Seven months of dazzle have only proven that President Farmajo and his team have mastered how to seduce public sentiments - mainly overenthusiastic youth - with glittering generalities such as justice, peace, and accountability, without any specifics. It is common to hear President Farmajo make assertions such as: "Ours is a government of the people. We are accountable to the people." But, when the masses were outraged by the government's decision and demanded answers, the president of the people sought refuge in silence. He is yet to make a single statement regarding the Qalbi-Dhagax fiasco. Farmajo seems to have plunged into that old too familiar cesspool of presidential betrayals. He has succumbed to a system that was designed to perpetuate failure and keep Somalia where it is or worse. And in doing so, he has written his legacy in the pages of infamy by becoming the first ever president to commit betrayal of such magnitude against the Somali people.

At this point, aside from divine intervention, the only remaining conceivable game-changer is the Somali Parliament. The speaker of the parliament has appointed a committee to review this grave matter. The Somali people are now waiting to see whether its representatives are going to do the right thing.

Abukar Arman is a Somali political analyst, writer and former diplomat.

How Sudan Got Off Donald Trump's Latest Travel Ban List

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By Ryan Grim, Alex Emmons | TheIntercept

When the Trump administration released its revised Muslim ban turned travel ban on Sunday, a handful of unlucky nations found themselves added to the list.

One country, though, managed to slip its way off: Sudan.

It caught Sudan-watchers by surprise.



Indeed, Sudan has precious little lobbying capacity. But it has a friend in the right place: The United Arab Emirates recently began lobbying on Sudan’s behalf in Washington, putting its considerable capital to work. The diplomatic favor comes as Sudan has stepped up its on-the-ground involvement in the war in Yemen, giving the Saudi- and UAE-led coalition the kinds of boots on the ground those nations are uninterested in risking themselves, preferring to wage an aerial campaign instead.

“Sudan is doing the UAE’s dirty work,” explained one well-placed U.S. government source not authorized to speak publicly about the situation. In exchange, UAE ambassador Yousef Al Otaiba has put his substantial diplomatic weight behind the Sudanese government. Otaiba is particularly close with White House adviser Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law. Kushner plays a leading role in setting Mideast policy for the administration.

In September 2015, 45 Emirati soldiers in Yemen were killed in battle, the deadliest military event in the small nation’s history, sending shockwaves through the country. It is hard to overstate the impact of those 45 deaths in the UAE, giving the Gulf state reason to outsource the fight.

Sudan is an original member of the Saudi-led (and U.S.-backed) coalition in Yemen. When the bombing campaign began in March 2015, Sudan contributed four of its fighter jets and dispatched ground troops to Aden later that year. While Saudi Arabia has relied mostly on bombing from the air, Sudanese troops have suffered heavy losses fighting alongside the Saudi-backed government, retaking cities from the Houthis and policing cities in the south.

To date, Sudan has provided more than 1,000 troops and promised to commit even more. “There are 6,000 fighters from special forces, ground forces, and elite troops ready to participate when requested by the leadership of the coalition,” Ahmed Awad Ibn Auf, Sudan’s defense minister, said in May. “Even if more troops and military contributions are needed, we are ready for any developments.” The Sudanese fighting force became even more important after Qatar withdrew its soldiers from the coalition in June.

And Sudan is reaping the rewards of its military alliance with the Gulf states. Since 2015, it has received billions of dollars in loans from Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and funds from Dubai and Abu Dhabi are helping to prop up its central bank.

That Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, the Saudi-backed leader of Yemen, must rely on foreign government troops to wage the ground war is an indication of his lack of popular support. After Arab Spring protests unseated Ali Abdullah Saleh, the longtime leader of Yemen, in 2011, Hadi was installed by international actors as part of a power-sharing deal. He was later elected president in a 2012 election in which only his name appeared on the ballot.

For the past decade, Sudan has repeatedly been named as one of the world’s worst human rights violators, giving it a strong incentive to ally with countries close to the United States, in order to blunt such criticism.

Sudanese government forces have purposefully attacked civilians in Darfur, South Kordofan, and the Blue Nile region, according to Human Rights Watch, and the sitting president, Omar al-Bashir, has been charged with multiple counts of genocide by the International Criminal Court, related to his actions in Darfur. The court issued a warrant for his arrest in 2009, but despite pressure from activists and the ICC, numerous countries have declined to arrest him during state visits.


Danakali: Broker Hartleys values the stock at double current valuation

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Danakali Ltd (ASX:DNK) holds a 50% interest in a truly Tier 1 asset, the Colluli Potash Project in Eritrea.


By John Phillips | PproactivIenvestors

Colluli is the world’s shallowest potash deposit, and being amendable to open pit mining, this delivers a higher overall resource recovery and compelling economics.

The resource is favourably positioned to supply the world’s fastest growing markets.

This potential is not going unnoticed by the broker community, with Hartleys applying a Speculative Buy and 12-month price target of $1.16, which is close to double the later traded price of $0.65.

The following is an extract from the broker report.

Offtakes should be arriving soon

Danakali Ltd is continuing to advance its Colluli SOP potash project in Eritrea.

Recent FEED optimisation studies have shown that SOP output capacity can be increased by 47ktpa to 472ktpa, by debottlenecking the processing plant configuration.

Further optimisation of the plant site and pond materials are underway.

The Company has also said that offtake discussions are advancing towards binding agreements, expected to be announced later this year.

We would expect that financing would follow offtake agreements and could be a major catalyst.

The Colluli project is attractive for a number of reasons including its large reserve (1.1Bt @10.76% K2O) giving it an expected mine life >200years, producing 472-944kt pa at low cash costs (~US$290/t CIF) for phase I development capex of US$298m.

The project is unique in its scale, open-pit mining, favourable combination of potassium bearing salts suitable for production of SOP, SOP-M and MOP and ability for low cost expansions to lift production.

Upcoming catalysts for DNK

We view the negotiations for binding offtake agreements as significant, with the Company believing that binding agreements should be finalised later this year.

Other possible catalysts include further optimisation study results and advancements in financing.

Hartleys estimates Stage 1 EBITDA ~A$80m pa to DNK

We assume Stage 1 EBITDA of ~A$80m pa (DNK share), which should more than double after Stage 2 (year 5).

Our pre-tax NPV12 for DNK is ~A$570m (project NPV roughly double).

Consequently, despite the large capital requirement, the project is highly economic. Our DNK base valuation is $1.23/shr.

Using spot prices (US$540/t), our pre-tax NPV12 for DNK is ~A$360m (project NPV roughly double), with Stage 1 EBITDA ~A$60m pa ($120m pa to JV). Our spot price valuation is $0.60/shr.

Retain Speculative Buy

We retain our Speculative Buy recommendation. The Colluli project is highly economic.

Financing is the final hurdle to development and hence we also expect offtake soon (expected by the end of the year).

We see a trade sale to a larger company as a distinct possibility. We have a twelve-month price target of $1.17, implying funded EV/EBITDA of 7.5x.

We assume construction begins mid next year (CY18), which appears realistic if binding offtakes and financing are completed in the next six months.

We note the last Company to receive a mining licence in Eritrea was Sunridge Gold in 2015, and it was taken over shortly afterwards.

Our fair value takeout price (discount to valuation, but with no more dilution) is >$1.70/shr.



Sweden must stand up for Eritrea in the border conflict with Ethiopia: Swedish Journalist

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Martin Schibbye says Sweden needs a people to people approach with Eritrea


This article was translated from Swedish using online software

By Martin Schibbye | GP

Today, Dawit Isaak has been imprisoned for 16 years and since his arrest, the debate has raged on the best strategy to get him free.

I was in Eritrea last year with a unique journalist's visa and could, on site in Asmara, notice greater transparency towards journalists and answer the questions I asked.

A few years ago, questions about Dawit Isaak were rejected with aggression. Now I was notified that he is alive and that he was treated well, but that the issue of a solution was an internal Eritrean affair.

After interviewing ministers and soldiers who had been thirty years in the trenches, it became apparent that there was no "pressure" in the world that could put Eritrea down and start to "obey" Sweden.

Not even a military intervention would have such a result. The rulers would probably go up in the mountains, dig up and wait for another 30 years.

Threats and sanctions are currently doomed to fail because it is based on an ignorance of the current Eritrean leadership and the history of the country.

To be credible and to build a relationship, we must also stand up for Eritrea in Sweden in the border conflict with Ethiopia about the town of Badme.

This spring 15 years ago, the border conflict between Eritrea and Ethiopia was settled by the International Arbitration Tribunal in The Hague, where it was found that the disputed Badme area belongs to Eritrea.

Yet this fierce border conflict is something that is rarely noted. Here lies the key to an understanding of the country and development.

Another striking feeling during my report was how little contact there was between our countries. There were no traces of any aid projects, no youth exchanges, no investments.

Looking back in history, there are strong ties to bond to, from the missionaries' work in the 20th century to solidarity campaigns during the long liberation war.

After my return, I wrote and said it was high time that we all as compatriots to Dawit Isaak ask ourselves what we as citizens can do to break the isolation of Eritrea and open up more contact areas.

The question is whether Sweden's relation to Eritrea is far too important to hand over to our politicians. It is time to break the fear of touch and demystify the little country on the Horn of Africa.

"Why not initiate collaborations between schools, hospitals, music festivals, football clubs and companies in each country? Are you a sports coach? Why not get in touch with an Eritrean Youth team?

Do you sing in a choir? There are Eritrean choirs to visit and engage in exchanges with? You arrange child theatres? Why not contact the cultural associations in the country?"

Since then, nothing has happened. Rather the opposite. We often read the same texts calling for tougher measures.

While the ideas that had demanded political courage were left untouched in fear of criticism.

During the summer, Asmara was given world heritage status by the UN UNESCO UNESCO, but it did not even cause any bilateral projects or architectural trips.

It may sound naive to bring ideas about culture and civil society into a country that is severely sanctioned, but I think it is necessary to open up new contact areas: Human to Human. Association for Association. But without budging an inch in calling for Dawit's freedom. Or on the criminality to keep people locked up without trial for 15 years.

It is also inevitable to compare with my own case.

I am a free man today and can attend the Book Fair since Sweden first prioritized relations with Ethiopia where I was imprisoned.

Sweden concluded that conversations and dialogue with the dictatorship would have the best opportunity to lead to a desired result; the release of two Swedish citizens.

The focus was on getting Swedish citizens - not to fight or humiliate a country.

It is therefore important that we all already this fall do everything we can from our different starting points.

Unless Dawit can go to the Book Fair, or boycott it if he would like - why not contribute to a book fair in Asmara?

UN Secretary-General Meets Foreign Minister of Eritrea

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Secretary General Antonio Guterres (right) meets with Osman Mohammed Saleh, Minister for Foreign Affairs of the State of Eritrea, Sept 27, 2017. (Credit: UNMultiMeda)


By InnerCityPress

After UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres grip and grin sessions on the UN's 27th floor during UN General Assembly high level week, his meetings and photo ops on September 27 with the foreign ministers of Eritrea and Iran were back on the 38th floor, with USg Jeff Feltman at both meetings. Both countries are subject to sanctions; Iran's Javad Zarif was on his way to speak at the Asia Society. He entered jauntily. Guterres, his spokesman told Inner City Press, is often about "private" diplomacy. Here was his Eritrea read-out:

"The Secretary-General met today with H. E. Mr. Osman Mohammed Saleh, Minister for Foreign Affairs of the State of Eritrea. The Secretary-General and the Minister for Foreign Affairs exchanged views on a number of issues, including cooperation between the United Nations and Eritrea, and the peace and security situation in the Horn of Africa region."





Ethiopia must let Somalia determine its own fate

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TPLF forces in Somalia


Somalia will not be able to assert itself and prosper until Ethiopia stops meddling in its affairs. Western nations also need to reevaluate their support of the Ethiopian regime if they ever want to see peace in the Horn of Africa.


By Jamal Osman | TRT (Turkish media)


Ethiopia has long been a thorn in the side of Somalia, a troublesome neighbour, and an obstacle to regional peace.

In an ideal world, the two countries would be brotherly nations but in reality the opposite is the case. The energy and resources spent by these erstwhile adversaries in undermining each other — could have made both nations prosperous.

To Somalis and many outside observers, Ethiopia is the aggressor in the relationship. Ethiopia, a land-locked state, has long harboured ambitions to annex Somalia in part of its quest for a Greater Ethiopia.

Currently, thousands of Ethiopian forces are in Somalia to contribute ostensibly to the UN "peacekeeping" mission there. But in the minds of many Somalis, Ethiopia has a hidden agenda and is using this as a cover.

Ethiopia has long meddled in Somali affairs. While negotiating with the British in 1897 over who should control Somalia, Emperor Menelik of Ethiopia claimed: “Somalis had been from time immemorial, until the Moslem [sic] invasion, the cattle-keepers of the Ethiopians, who could not themselves live in the low countries.”

That flawed quest to subjugate Somalis is the driving force behind Ethiopia’s policy towards Somalia. The British were against the idea and warned of long-term consequences but eventually ceded the Ogaden, a Somali-inhabited region, to Ethiopia. This territory — 95 percent ethnic Somali — is part of historic Somalia.

The Somali-populated region of Ogaden in Ethiopia formed part of historic Somalia. Today there is a low-level insurgency by Somalis resisting what is considered by many to be an "Ethiopian occupation."

Following their liberation, the two countries fought disastrous wars in the 1960s and 1970s. Somalia longed to regain its lost territory, and for many people there was a longing to unite with their extended families across a border they viewed as divisive and arbitrary.

However, Ethiopia was not satisfied in ruling over the Ogaden region, rather there is an almost messianic desire to conquer or rule by proxy, swathes of the remainder of Somalia.

As the Ethiopian historian Belete Belachew Yihuna noted: “After 1977, even when engaged in peace talks and attempts at reconciliation, Mengistu’s Ethiopia saw safety only in the total disintegration of Somalia.”

With the disunity, corruption, tribalism and external interference that has enveloped Somalia, Ethiopia's former communist era President Mengistu and his successors have managed to incapacitate Somali state.

There are several factors that have contributed to this.

The main one is that although a third of the population is Muslim, Ethiopia is a Christian-led country. Its leaders manipulate international politics by playing the victim card "as a Christian nation threatened by Muslim neighbours." Therefore, it receives unparalleled political, military and financial support from the US and Europe. With the support of the most powerful nations in the world, Ethiopia has been given carte blanche to drive its agenda.

It’s also good at distracting critics and taking calculated risks. When the country’s late leader, Males Zenawi, came under pressure following the killing of protestors in 2005, he sent his army to unilaterally invade Somalia. It was a message to remind the West that Ethiopia remains a valuable partner in the "War on Terror."

That message was understood loud and clear in many foreign policy circles in London, Washington and Paris. So, rather than condemning his government’s actions, Western nations rallied around it.

The leaders in Addis Ababa have convinced Western nations that it’s only Ethiopia that can deal with Somali "troublemakers."

This gives them power to meddle in Somali politics even at the village level. It has created an atmosphere of fear. In most of Somalia, it is safer to publicly criticise your own leaders than to oppose Ethiopia’s policy towards Somalia.

The recent case of Abdikarim Muse aka Qalbidhagah, which caused public uproar, is a good example.

Abdikarim was abducted from Somalia and handed over to Ethiopia. He was reportedly a member of the Somali National Army before the collapse of the central government in 1991. He later joined the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), a movement fighting for self-determination. What has shocked ordinary citizens is that the Somali government, which is supposed to protect its people, "facilitated" Abdikarim’s rendition to Ethiopia.

This was a big test for Somalia’s leaders of how far they are willing to compromise the nation's sovereignty. It is moves like these that embolden Ethiopian leaders to continue to push the boundaries of a government struggling to assert itself in the face of systemic threats.

However, Somalis still have a chance to save their nation. And it may come from an unexpected and unlikely source: Ethiopia itself.

The foreign policy ambitions of the Addis Ababa government have come at the expense of neglecting its own citizens. For the past two years, the two largest ethnic groups in Ethiopia, the Oromo and Amhara, have been demonstrating against the government.

The initial peaceful protests have turned into an armed struggle. With the authorities struggling to contain the violence, this has had serious implications on its ability to wield power effectively. The still largely tribal nation faces tensions that until recently had been masked by the economic and political largesse bestowed by Western governments.

The current regime's ability to hold onto power has been called into question. As state institutions falter and several ongoing insurgencies with dozens of ethnic groups vieing for power, Ethiopia’s unity is in jeopardy.

The net result of this unfortunate outcome for the average Ethiopian citizen may well mean that Somalia could pull itself out of the mire in which it finds itself to build a stronger and more prosperous nation.

Regardless of what happens in Ethiopia, Somalis have to take control of their own destiny. First, they must accept that Ethiopia would not have achieved anything without the assistance of Somalis. This is of our own making. Somalis can not expect states that have their own interests, ambitions and machinations to build a state for them.

The current nation-state order demands that states work towards their own primary interests first and foremost, and yes, even at the expense of other states. That’s what Ethiopia did — outmanoeuvring Somali leaders.

The solution is for Somalis to look from within their nation not as individuals but as a collective, as a society. They must not remain divided through clan lines; often loyalty to clan comes before the interests of the nation. It is about understanding that inward-looking clans cannot form a modern cohesive nation. The Somali people share several favourable characteristics that make for a strong nation in todays world: one religion, colour and language.

Somalis must understand that the benefits of uniting as a nation outweigh everything else.

State Of Emergency; a Sign to Decayed Ethnic Federalism in Ethiopia

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TPLF security forces wait in a pickup near a crowd of Oromo festival attendees 


By Haben Tekle

1. Introduction

In order to address the structural problem of marginalized nationalities and ethnic groups encountered in Ethiopia’s political system, TPLF adopted a policy of institutionalizing ethnicity with federalism. Since 1995 the country has been governed by a newly published constitution, which divides the state in to nine regional states and creation of federally administered two city states.

Consequently, there are doubts about TPLF leader’s intention to implement the constitutional provisions in full. The constitution stipulates a fair representation of all nationalities despite its absence in reality. Nationalities and People region feel excluded from state power. As Doctor Merera said, “the EPRDF leaders, keen on the consolidation of their hard-won victory, made sure to selectively invite weak parties most of which were created overnight, and selectively excluded the actual or potential real power contenders from the process.”[1] Yet given the privileged position to top officials, the constitution’s power is more theoretical than real. Accordingly rights of those individuals or groups whom they seek for liberally structured governmental system have been breached. They demand for liberal-democratic system, in which the government should rest on the consent of the governed, and the minority accepts the rights of the majority (i.e. incumbents) to make decisions. Despite, under the law of Antiterrorism Proclamation of 2009, political opponents, journalists, human-right activists and other civil-society representatives had been imprisoned and some condemned to death in absentia.

From 1995 to present, despite the mushrooming of political parties in the country, the freedom of opposition parties to operate had been so circumscribed that none of them even had the slightest chance of competing with the EPRDFs[2]. So that opposition political parties considered the government illegitimate and established ethnic-based rebel fronts in the neighboring countries and waged guerilla warfare against the authoritarian government. In 2014 report of Freedom House regarding political and civil liberties Ethiopia received 6 out of 7 points, which is the worst score. Such intentionally mesmerized acts plots down that Ethiopia is one party dominated state.[3]

Accordingly rights of those individuals or groups whom they seek for liberally structured governmental system have been breached. They demand for liberal-democratic system, in which the government should rest on the consent of the governed, and the minority accepts the rights of the majority (i.e. incumbents) to make decisions. Despite, the theoretical approval of Antiterrorism Proclamation in 2009, political opponents, journalists, human-right activists and other civil-society representatives had been imprisoned and some condemned to death in absentia.

2. Human Right Abuse

Government clamped down on the number of non-governmental organizations. After the proclamation of charities and societies of 2009 within four years the number of non-governmental organizations lowered by approximately 48%. State’s systematic censorship invades the freedom of speech. Only anti-opposition political party’s biased defamatory reports are delivered on the national outlets. Private news media are nascent. And the media outlets controlled by state have limited reach across the country. According to the Welfare Monitoring Survey in 2011, just 38% of households owned a radio, 10% a television, and 25% a mobile phone (Central Statistical Agency, 2011). This data shows Ethiopia is lagged behind in the sectors of communication infrastructure.

Freedom of association and of assembly is still very limited, though that it is excerpted in the national law. Marches, demonstrations and public gatherings are strictly under scrutiny. Such makes it difficult to demonstrate against the government or its interest. For example, it is nearly impossible to demonstrate against government’s decision of sending troops to Somalia, Sudan and South Sudan.

On 14th December, 2016 one of senior officials of US Mr. Tom Malinweski arrived in Ethiopia, to make a brief discussion on addressing civic and political rights with the Ethiopian government. He expressed a grave concern about the human rights situation in Ethiopia.

In general, Ethiopians are particularly interested in democracy and not satisfied with authoritarian political system in place. The political system is not perceived to be legitimate and there is a wide range of dissatisfaction or serious challenge to it. This is evidence by the fact that the 2014 and 2016 popular Ethiopian’s protest against the government. There is a conspiracy of silence to cover up the crimes against humanity committed against the Ethiopian people.

3. Large-scale Land acquisition

“Haile Salassie was bad, Derg did the resettlement which was also not good, but it was never like this. They never forced us to leave. See this big forest behind us, during the massacre people hid there. Now it will be gone. What is the future for our kids? They will be slaves. The worst part is the people did not come here to talk to us. If they did we could have told them this is our ancestral land” A villager in one of the leased areas in the region Gambella speech to the Oakland Institute[4].

To mention one pillar root cause of the dissatisfaction is the policy of land grabbing adopted by the government which forced farmers to lease their land. The phenomenon of large scale land acquisition has increased in the past years. Between the year 2004 and 2008, 1.19 million hectares of agricultural land has been leased to foreign and domestic investors in Ethiopia[5]. There is an expansion of large scale land acquisition in Ethiopia. The case is government’s policy towards foreign investors is very generous. There is no any limitation in the amount of land to be leased to international investors.

Foreign investors have the right to fully repatriate, in convertible currency, profits and dividends, principal and interest payments on external loans, proceeds from technology transfers, and from asset sales in the event of liquidation of the investment, and proceeds from the transfer of shares or ownership to a domestic investor. Expatriates employed in an enterprise may remit in foreign currency salaries and other payments accruing from their employment.[6]

Not only this, National Bank of Ethiopia devalued the currency Birr claiming to reduce imports and boost the foreign exchange reserves which caused a severe inflation in the country’s economy. Consumer prices in Ethiopia increased 10.4% year on year in August of 2017, following a 9.4 percent increase in July. It indicates the unjustness of land grab that obviously resulted to shallowness of food insecurity in the host country.

An almost total lack of foreign exchange currency, high rates of inflation especially for food and fuel, large scale unemployment, the plummeting value of the Ethiopian Birr, and unserviceable external debt all make for an economy that continues to implode. Mining is also another industry that is gaining ground in corruption. The risk areas undermining the industry, include; licensing, operations and mining revenue, whilst the absence of policy and regulatory framework in land management deterred regional states from implementing the law in the same way.


Lorenzo Cotula, a senior researcher at the UK’s International Institute for Environment and Development, has tracked the evolution of transnational land deals. “Land might be seen as an asset class by a fund manager,” he says, “but for many rural people it is a foundation for social identity and food security.”

Article 11 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights says,

“1. The States Parties to the present Covenant recognize the right of everyone to an adequate standard of living for himself and his family, including adequate food, clothing and housing, and to the continuous improvement of living conditions. The States Parties will take appropriate steps to ensure the realization of this right, recognizing to this effect the essential importance of international co-operation based on free consent.

2. The States Parties to the present Covenant, recognizing the fundamental right of everyone to be free from hunger, shall take, individually and through international co-operation, the measures, including specific programmes, which are needed:

(a) To improve methods of production, conservation and distribution of food by making full use of technical and scientific knowledge, by disseminating knowledge of the principles of nutrition and by developing or reforming agrarian systems in such a way as to achieve the most efficient development and utilization of natural resources;

(b) Taking into account the problems of both food-importing and food-exporting countries, to ensure an equitable distribution of world food supplies in relation is in need”[7]. It demands for indigenous peoples to not be forcibly removed from their lands or territories. No relocation shall take place without the free, prior and informed consent of the indigenous peoples concerned and after agreement on just and fair compensation and, where possible, with the option of return. In 2012 UN approves a guideline meant to protect local landowner against land grabbing which states to the increase transparency in land investment which give special strength to the position of local farmers in the land grabbing dealing process.

To sum up, the purchase of land in Ethiopia is illegal since it is mismatched with the definition out lined in Article 40(3) of the constitution. It declares,

“The right to ownership of rural and urban land, as well as of all natural resources, is exclusively vested in the State and in the peoples of Ethiopia. Land is a common property of the Nations, Nationalities and Peoples of Ethiopia and shall not be subject to sale or to other means of exchange”[8].

In 2005 a renewed rural land administration and land use proclamation NO, 456/2005 claimed rural land belongs to government ownership. More importantly the Sub-Article 5.4 of the proclamation made clear that the rural land redistribution will be assured by leasing right of a rural land. Such policy aggravate for the rise of productivity in Ethiopia. If that is so, why the Anuak massacre in 2003 happened in the Gmabella Region? This policy has served as apolitical advantage to the government since it leads to the greater concentration of authority in the hands of TPLF cadres. Large numbers of Ethiopian people were displaced from their land. Comparing the misery life created by grabbing policy to the pastoralist to the rental fee is ridiculously low. From Bale, Bako, Borena, Rayitu, Wollega, Illubabor, Harage of the Oromo region, Awi of the Amhara region, Metekel, Pawe, Guba and Assossa from Beni Shangul region and from Wollaita and Omo Valley of the Southern region of Ethiopia; a total of 226,500 Hectares of land has been transferred to domestic and foreign investors.

Ethiopians demand for all the international norms to be compiled in the process of land acquisition implemented by Ethiopian government. Long-term impact of the unfair land use policy is to achieve the political goal of complete ownership of the land through silent eradication of the indigenous communities. The Anuak, Ogadeni, Oromo, and Omo tribes are the most affected ones. At one time researcher Dessalegn Rahmato conclude in his “Land to investors; large-scale land transfers in Ethiopia” titled thesis, that, the outcome of the landing grabbing policy of the government indicates that the damage done at present by the projects outweighs the benefits gained.

In general, Ethiopians are particularly interested in democracy and not satisfied with authoritarian political system in place. The political system is not perceived to be legitimate and there is a wide range of dissatisfaction or serious challenge to it. As of 2009 incident in Madagascar where a 1.3 million hectares land deal with South Korea Company led to the overthrow of the government; such galvanized protest is inevitable in Ethiopia in the nearer future.

4. Restriction on Political parties and proneness to armed struggle

After twenty six years in power, the EPRDF is in decline. It failed to usher in an orderly transition based on peaceful multiparty competition. The arrest of leading opposition politicians and civil society leaders has immobilized political developments and silenced political speech for the moment and leaves the regime fragile [9]. The government’s priorities are not supportive of an open democracy. So the government has constricted the available political space by imprisoning opposition leaders. Its central policy is regime (TPLF) survival, and by divide and rule tactics and repression, it has survived in power for two decades.

But this does not mean that the government succeeds in quelling peoples protest all over Ethiopia. After twenty six years in power, the EPRDF is in decline. It failed to usher in an orderly transition based on peaceful multiparty competition. The arrest of leading opposition politicians and civil society leaders has immobilized political developments and silenced political speech for the moment and leaves the regime fragile.[10] The government has been unable to prevent ongoing armed resistance. Popular opposition appears to have grown due to land grabbing policy. Life of 12-15 million Ethiopian agriculturalists have been affected severely by this policy. After crushing the pro-democracy movement that engulfed the country by killing, arresting and intimidating many opposition leaders and their supporters, the government deliberately narrowed the political space. At present, almost all opposition parties are unable to conduct their activities even if they are legally registered parties.[11] The Federal Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (FEACC) is widely perceived as a tool used by the government to silence oppositionists. Semayawi Party (Blue Party), Ginbot 7, The Afar Revolutionary Democratic Unity Front (ARDUF)), Tigray People’s Democratic Movement (TPDM)……are to mention some of the opposition groups that claim for a genuine democracy in the authoritarian country Ethiopia.

Throughout the western and eastern part of the Oromia region clashes among the government forces and OLF have been seen daily. To tackle this Ethiopia reached a mutual understanding with neighboring states (Sudan, South Sudan and Somalia) for expelling opposition groups operating in their territories against the regime in their homeland. Especially, the role that particularly Khartoum has played in supporting the various armed groups including the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) and Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) has throughout been a concern to the Ethiopian government[12]. Not only this other opposition parties, such as OFDM (Oromo Federalist Democratic Movement) and the OPC (Oromo People’s Congress) are accused by the government of secretly collaborating with the outlawed Oromo Liberation Front (OLF).

5. Corruption

Corruption undermines democracy and good governance. World Bank reported a huge sum of money get circulated illegally among senior officials of Ethiopia. A number of businessmen and state officials were arrested on corruption charges, including the head and deputy head of Ethiopian Revenue and Customs Authority (ERCA). Within Africa, Ethiopia falls into top-10 list in terms of the largest volumes of illicit financial flows (IFFs) specifically in land grabbing operations. According to Transparency Center of international studies report in 2016 Ethiopia is listed as one of the most corrupted nation in the world. Such problem is triggered with the lack of checks and balances to regulate state officials spending.

The 26 years of rule by the TPLF regime in Addis Abeba have been marked by extraordinary levels of graft, corruption, cronyism, and outright theft of national wealth. The theft of this national wealth may take many forms, may be more or less brazen, and may be more or less open to scrutiny by outside observers; but the use of the military and security services to protect the regime in continual self-enrichment defines it as a kleptocracy.

In other way round in Ethiopia when legal action against alleged corruption is initiated, the motivations are likely political. The government used the anti-corruption campaign as a means to get rid of “disloyal” individuals. Prominent officials from ministerial level[13] to lower officeholders have been held on charge of corruption and racketeering. Best example is the 2014 ouster of Somali regional state president, Abdi Mahmud Omar. This episode was carefully orchestrated, with the state president summoned twice in a week to Addis Ababa by the leaders of the EPRDF, who pushed for him to resign. This was bolstered by criticisms from the national-level chief of staff, General Samora Yunus, due to his ostensible failure to cooperate in resolving ethnic conflicts between Afar and Issa in his region, while the head of the National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS), Getachew Assefa, simultaneously withdrew his support and accused him of corruption.

According to Transparency Center of international studies report in 2016 Ethiopia is listed as one of the most corrupt nation in the world. It ranked 108 out of 176 states. As a result of the wide spread embezzlement Ethiopian government has a high level of debt, especially external debt, and counter a difficulty in managing it. Addis Admas Ethiopian gazette states out that the total amount of Ethiopia’s debt reached $23 billion on last July. Ethiopian leaders are genetically more venal, more ruthless and more corrupted. Hayle Gebre an Ethiopian military officer in Somalia who has been repeatedly accused of selling arms to Somali war lords and receiving bribes from Somalia’s presidential candidates is one of them. In a report published by InnerCityPress.com the UNDP’s Director of the Regional Bureau for Africa Tegegnework Gettu has been faced nepotism allegation. Azeb Mesin, former Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s widow; Salem Kebede, the wife of Mr. Abay Tsehaye; Minister for Finance, Zayed Woldegabriel, Director General of the Ethiopian Roads Authority……the list name of mostly corrupted officials goes on.

Conclusion

The present crisis in Ethiopia, both internally within its border and externally is as a result of the presence of contesting identities due to differing interpretations of history and opposition groups that challenge the authority of the state. Ethiopia was formed in the late 1880s by means of conquest and agreements with European powers. Heavily populated and strategically situated areas of the Oromo, Afar, and Ogaden region put under control of the Ethiopian empire. From that time those nationalities present themselves as colonial subjects. For instance the region Ogaden constitutes about one-fifth of Ethiopian territory, an area of 80,000 square miles. But those groups irrespective of their minority or majority status, remained excluded from the possibility of participation in major decisions affecting their future.

The Ethiopian government failed to address an inadequate consensus on democratic norms and values on its system. Sham elections had been held to entertain the opportunist’s agenda of controlling all. As Norwegian observers group to Ethiopian elections of May 1995 noted,

“if one alternative is held up as the only loyal one while other alternatives are suppressed, prohibited or silenced, the debate is not inclusive – and then the elections are meaningless… Under such circumstances it is better to hold no elections at all than to discredit them as a tool for democracy, thereby discrediting democracy in the people’s minds” . As a result the government has been criticized for failing to heed public quest. Opposition leaders portrayed as criminals and terrorist. Thus opposition and dissent came to entail severe punishment and repression.

In today’s Ethiopia, people show more allegiance to their ethnic background than their citizenship. It erodes the political power and future viability of the EPRDF’s ethnic based political rivals. It failed to implement democratic norms. It failed on bringing about an equitable development among the regions. Federalism in Ethiopia deliberately ignores democratic rights and good governance[14].

The last but not least point of this argument is to quote down his Excellency President Issayas Afewerki speech,

“We do not want any absolute or childish democracy, and neither do we advocate European or US-style democracy which would not be suitable for our society, because these were established in circumstances different from what we have gone through …. We now need a political climate which will guarantee stability and the reconstruction process,”

So does the Ethiopian people!



References:

1. Merera Gudina, Ethiopia: Competing Ethnic Nationalisms and the Quest for Democracy, 1960-2000. Addis Ababa: Chamber Printing Press, 2003.
2. Abdalla Hamdok Chege, Michael, Per Nordlund, and Joram Rukambe, Political Parties in East Africa: Diversity in Political Party Systems. International IDEA Research and Dialogue Coordination, 2007.
3. Ibid page 35-36
4. www.oaklandinstitute.org
5. http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTARD/Resources/ESW_Sept7_final_final.pdf
6. Dessalegn Rahmato, LAND TO INVESTORS: Large Scale Land Transfers in Ethiopia, Forum for Social Studies, 2011
7. http://www.ohchr.org/EN/ProfessionalInterest/Pages/CESCR.aspx
8. http://www.wipo.int/edocs/lexdocs/laws/en/et/et007en.pdf
9. Terrence Lyons, Avoiding Conflict in the Horn of Africa, U.S. Policy toward Ethiopia and Eritrea,COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS, CSR NO. 21, DECEMBER 2006
10. Terrence Lyons, Avoiding Conflict in the Horn of Africa, U.S. Policy Toward Ethiopia and Eritrea
COUNCIL ON FOREIGN RELATIONS, CSR NO. 21, DECEMBER 2006
11. Wondwosen Teshome B., Ethiopian Opposition Political Parties and Rebel Fronts: Past and Present, International Journal of Social, Behavioral, Educational, Economic, Business and Industrial Engineering Vol:3, No:11, 2009
12. Cliffe, Lionel: “Regional dimensions of conflict in the Horn of Africa”, Third World Quarterly, vol. 20, nº 1,
(February 1999), pp. 89-111.
13. http://www.africanews.com/2017/08/04/ethiopia-state-minister-for-finance-arrested-in-anti-corruption-crackdown//
14. http://www.ethiopianvoices.org/2015/07/23/the-challenges-of-ethnic-federalism-in-ethiopia/


[Video] BBC report on Ethiopian regime kidnapping its own citizens who sought refuge abroad

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By Felix Horne | HRW

“Wako” fled Ethiopia for Kenya in 2012, after his release from prison. He had been locked up for two years after campaigning for the Oromo People’s Congress, an opposition party that has often been targeted by the government.

In Kenya, he hoped to be safe. But six months later Ethiopian officials kidnapped him in Nairobi and brought him to Ethiopia’s notorious Ziway prison, where he was mistreated and tortured, before being released. He fled to Kenya a second time.

When I spoke to him in Kenya, he said he planned to travel overland to South Africa. He hoped for better safety there.

Human Rights Watch has documented numerous cases of harassment and threats against Ethiopian asylum seekers in Kenya and elsewhere since 2010. In a recent letter to the Kenyan police, to which they have not responded, we describe how asylum seekers were assaulted, detained, and interrogated before Ethiopian officials in Nairobi, and forced to return to Ethiopia. Many also received threatening phone calls and text messages from Kenyan and Ethiopian phone numbers.

In private, some Kenyan police told us that Ethiopian Embassy officials in Nairobi have offered them cash to arrest Ethiopians. Ethiopian refugees said Ethiopian officials tried to recruit them to inform on others, promising land, protection, money, and resettlement to the US or elsewhere.

Threats to fleeing Ethiopians are not limited to Kenya. Community leaders, social media activists, opposition politicians, and refugee protection workers have been harassed in other countries. Human Rights Watch has documented abductions of Ethiopian refugees and asylum seekers from Uganda, Sudan, Djibouti, and elsewhere.

High-profile opposition figures with foreign citizenship have also been handed to Ethiopian authorities without a legal process, including a British citizen detained in Yemen, a Norwegian citizen in South Sudan, and a Somali national handed over last month by Somalia’s government.

In Somaliland, we recently spoke to 10 asylum seekers who were forced back to Ethiopia during one of the frequent roundups of Oromo in Somaliland. Eight said they were tortured upon their return to Ethiopia. Many described harassment from Ethiopian consular officials and indifference from the UN refugee agency.

All this creates a climate of fear and mistrust amongst Ethiopian refugees, preventing them from living normal lives, going to working or even applying for asylum.

The UN refugee agency and host countries should work harder to ensure Ethiopians fleeing torture and persecution can safely access asylum processes and be safe from the long reach of Ethiopian officials.



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