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Eritrea's Amanuel Ghebreigzabhier wins the African Continental Road Championship

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Amanuel Ghebreigzabhier wins the African Continental Road Championship



By Inthebunch

Medal Count
Eritrea’s Amanuel Gebreigzabhier was crowned African champion after soloing to victory at the African Continental Road Championships 168km road race in Kigali, Rwanda, today.

Gebreigzabhier completed the 14 laps of 12km circuit in 3:56:29, beating teammate Metkel Eyob and Algerian Azzedine Lagab into second and third respectively.

Rwandan Joseph Areruya won the under-23 category and finished sixth overall.

View more results below.

Elite men

1. Amanuel Gebreigzabhier (Eritrea) 3:56:29
2. Metkel Eyob (Eritrea) +1:53
3. Azzedine Lagab (Algeria) ”
4. Mekseb Debesay (Eritrea) +1:55
5. Eddie van Heerden (South African) +1:58
6. Joseph Areruya (Rwanda) +2:06
7. Henok Mulubrhan (Eritrea) ”
8. Youcef Reguigui (Algeria) +2:08
9. Didier Munyaneza (Rwanda) +2:10
10. Gustav Basson (South Africa) “









Interview with Shannon Abeda: Eritrea's First Winter Olympian [Video]

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By Olympic

There have been 22 previous editions of the Olympic Winter Games, which between them have welcomed nearly 30,000 athletes from around 100 different NOCs. None of those athletes has come from the African nation of Eritrea – until now. Meet Shannon-Ogbani Abeda who, six years after representing Eritrea at the Winter YOG Innsbruck 2012, tonight carried his country's flag at an Olympic Winter Games Opening Ceremony for the very first time.

FROM ERITREA TO ALBERTA

Abeda's long journey to the Olympic Winter Games began with an even longer journey made by his parents during the Eritrean War of Independence. Eritrea became an independent sovereign state in the early 1990s but Abeda's parents, Ariam and Walday, had fled the troubles as teenagers during the 1980s. The pair eventually settled as refugees in the Canadian province of Alberta, and gave birth to Shannon-Ogbani in 1996.

Abeda grew up in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains, a hotbed of ski culture. Like many Canadians, though, Abeda's first choice of sport was his adopted country's national pastime: ice hockey.

Photos of new development projects in Eritrea - Feb. 2018

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The following are photos of some of the development projects taking place in Eritrea:


Asmara Housing Project

The Asmara Housing Project located in the districts of Halibet, Sembel and Space is making progress. The project comprises a total of 1,754 housing complexes including 930 apartments and 824 villas as well as 192 business complexes. The project is being undertaken by Italian company Piccini in collaboration with local construction companies.


Photo Credit: MassawaTube 























Construction of Asmara water tanks


Construction of water tanks near Asmara are nearly completed. When completed, they will supply water from Adi Halo Dam to Asmara.

Photo Credit: Eritrea


Solar Project Near Asmara

A solar power project around Asmara is nearing completion. According to Hizbawi Menghisteab‏, the solar project "will be connected to the main grid to give more stability to the electricity supply of  Eritrea."

Photo Credit: Hizbawi Menghisteab


New facilities under construction outside Massawa

According to Berhe Habte-Giorgis‏, new facilities and plants are under construction outside Massawa


Photo Credit: Berhe Habte-Giorgis


Housing Project near Adi Nifas?


Unconfirmed information: the photos below are said to be of Maihusa Housing Project in between Adi Nifas and Adiabeto and is being constructed by Haben construction company. 




Photo credit:  MassawaTube




Top Kenyan lawyers berate Ethiopia govt over looming implosion

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By Abdur Rahman Alfa Shaban | AfricaNews

Two top lawyers in Kenya have slammed the Ethiopian government for presiding over a chaotic governance structure that is sure to implode before long.

Donald Kipkorir of KTK Advocates in a tweet on Monday described the Ethiopian regime as the continent’s “successful benevolent dictatorship” which in his view was imploding. He criticized how a minority ethnic group had locked out the majority with a tight grip on power.

“Ethiopia on its way to be Africa’s most successful benevolent dictatorship is imploding … Its govt concentrated power on Tigray people that form only 6% of the population & locked out Oromo & Amhara that is 62%. Benevolent dictatorship wholly abjures tribalism, nepotism & corruption,” his tweet read.

For his part, Ahmednasir Abdullahi, a lawyer who represented President Kenyatta in the 2017 election petition averred that Ethiopia’s survival was in question adding, “democratisation / openness is the only way out.”



Ethiopia’s government announced political reforms in January this year which move resulted in the mass release of prisonsers at the federal and regional state levels.

But in a shock move Premier Hailemariam Desalegn resigned his post last Thursday and the government subsequently imposed a state of emergency (SOE) with the reason that they needed to curb spreading violence.

Ethiopia’s political and security headaches are seen as a danger to the wider Horn of Africa region which already has a civil war raging in South Sudan and an insurgency in Somalia thanks to Al Shabaab. Diplomatic tensions are also high between Ethiopia and Eritrea.

The SOE decision has been criticized by the United States, the United Kingdom and the European Union as eroding the goodwill that resulted from the announced reforms and prisoner releases. The African Union which is based in Addis Ababa is yet to comment on the development.

Eritrean National Cycling Team accorded warm welcome

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Eritrean National Cycling Team accorded tumultuous welcome in Asmara, concert held at Bahti Msekerem Square.



By Shabait

President Isaias Afwerki received and encouraged the Eritrean National Cycling team that won the 2018 African Cycling Championship both in the men and women’s category.

At the official reception ceremony conducted at the State House, President Isaias congratulated the cyclists and their coaches and underscored that there is huge potential for sports in Eritrea and if properly nurtured greater achievements can be registered even on the world championships.

Commissioner of Culture and Sports Ambassador Zemede Tekle on his part pointed out that in this year’s African Cycling Championship Eritrea was represented by young and new cyclists and the victory that was claimed this year attests to the bright future of cycling sport in the country.

Thousands of Asmara residents turned out to the streets of Asmara to accord a warm welcome for the victorious national team.

At the 2018 African Cycling Championship that was conducted from 14 to 18 February in Kigali, Rwanda, the Eritrean national cycling team collected 20 medals including 10 Gold, 5 Silver and 5 Bronze.



President Isaias receives at State House National Cycling Team which
won 20 medals in Rwanda African Championships




'Game Over,' U.S. Congressman jabs Ethiopia's TPLF

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U.S. Congressman Dana Rohrabacher



By Africa News

A United States Congressman has insinuated that Ethiopia’s dominant party, the Tigrayan Peoples Liberation Front (TPLF) is on its way out of power.

Congressman Dana Rohrabacher tweeted on Wednesday morning, ‘Game Over TPLF.’ His tweet incidentally mentioned three people including a famed Ethiopian activist, Jawar Mohammed.




The other two were the Eritrean ambassador to Japan and one Neamin Zeleke, an expert on political and security ongoings in the Horn of Africa region. Rohrabacher represents the people of California’s 48th District. He is a known advocate on rights issues in Ethiopia.

The AFP correspondent for Ethiopia, Chris Stein, added that the Congressman had also issued an ultimatum for government to allow U.N. rights monitors entry to probe rights issues.

He added that Addis Ababa had till February 28 to allow the monitors or face a formal condemnation vote by the House of Representatives.

Ethiopia is currently under a state of emergency imposed hours after the resignation of Premier Hailemariam Desalegn. The ruling EPRDF of which the TPLF is a member will meet to decide his successor.

The measure, the second in under two years, has been criticised by foreign allies including the United States and the European Union. Other diplomatic missions have tasked the government to respect the rights of citizens whiles enforcing the measure.

Eritrean medical student starts nonprofit for disadvantaged medical clinics across the world

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Tomas Tesfasilassie


Supplies Save Lives

By Nicholas Gentry | Synapse

Tomas Tesfasilassie was visiting relatives in the small African nation of Eritrea in 2014 when his uncle had a sudden life-threatening stroke. Sadly, the lack of basic medical equipment in the region meant that a condition routinely treated in America resulted in his death.

This tragic event has impelled Tomas to found the nonprofit Supply the Change, which aims to distribute donated and surplus resources to disadvantaged medical clinics across the world.

Tesfasilassie became aware of the massive amounts of supplies thrown out every day in a hospital as a third year medical student at UCSF. Much of the extra equipment from surgeries or standard practice are trashed due to the institution’s healthcare guidelines or lack of storage. This waste resonated with him, leading him to ask, “Why are people [overseas] dying of issues that are very manageable in America?”

Finding no acceptable answer, he began the process of establishing Supply the Change. Tesfasilassie and his board of six volunteers have formed connections across the Bay Area, gathering medical donations from institutions such as UCSF and Sutter Health as well as individuals.

Despite its foundation just four months ago, the nonprofit has already gathered nearly 20 pallets of supplies worth more than $2.3 million.

“When I first started this I didn’t imagine it would grow so big so quickly. I thought I would first ship a couple boxes or take some stuff with me in my luggage,” Tesfasilassie said.

Tesfasilassie will be traveling to facilitate the distribution of the donations in May during a three-month sabbatical from medical school. His nonprofit has already coordinated with the Eritrean embassy and ministry of health to identify the neediest regions of the nation. Catalogs are being created tracking which resources are most lacking in each hospital. Donations will help alleviate the most desperate needs.

Tesfasilassie emphasized that monetary donations are currently the best way to contribute to the cause.

“We got supplies very quickly, but now we are running into the issue of shipment and storage costs.”

However, any additional connections to hospitals or programs which recycle materials would further their mission as it grows. Beyond aiding Eritrea, Supply the Change intends to add another target recipient for their efforts every five years.

At each destination, Supply the Change wants to create a lasting relationship. Their goal is to create an established infrastructure so that they can continue to send medical equipment for years to come and not have to be present themselves for its distribution.

Tesfasilassie hopes that all these efforts will make a real difference for people like his uncle and their loved ones.

“The heart of all this is to make healthcare equal for all. I believe that your socioeconomic status should not dictate what kind of care you get,” he said. “We’re trying to help people around the world get the care they need and make sure supplies in these places are not the limiting factor.”

Get in touch with Supply the Change at supplythechange.org or by emailing the board at supplythechange@gmail.com.

Contact Tesfasilassie or learn more about Supply the Change through Facebook or Instagram. Donate to the cause at their GoFundMe page.


Signalling rift, Djibouti seizes UAE-operated port

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DP World won a 30-year concession to operate the port in 2006 [Photo: Ahmed Jadallah/Reuters]


Signalling rift, Djibouti seizes UAE-operated port

By Jon Gambrell | Associated Press

Djibouti has seized control of a container terminal run by Dubai-based port operator DP World, the latest move in a long-running legal dispute over the facility in the East African nation.

The nationalization of the Doraleh Container Terminal in Djibouti comes as the United Arab Emirates' interests across East Africa now also include a series of military bases allowing it to project power into the Red Sea and the crucial Bab el-Mandeb strait.

A statement on behalf of President Ismail Omar Guelleh's office issued Thursday said the government had "decided to proceed with the unilateral termination of the concession contract ... awarded to DP World."

The statement blamed the seizure on DP World's refusal to "settle amicably," likely a reference to international arbitration between the port firm and Djibouti, a nation of 865,000 people slightly smaller than the U.S. state of New Jersey.

DP World issued a statement late Thursday acknowledging that Djibouti authorities seized the port, which it described as the East African nation's largest employer.

"The illegal seizure of the terminal is the culmination the government's campaign to force the DP World to renegotiate the terms of the concession," DP World said.

DP World added the seizure would not have a "material financial impact" on the Dubai government-backed company traded on the NASDAQ Dubai. DP World stock closed slightly up Thursday to $25.10 a share, the last day of trading ahead of the weekend in Dubai.

DP World won a 30-year concession to operate the port in 2006. The port opened in 2009 and DP World says it has operated with a profit ever since.

In 2014, however, the government of Djibouti brought a legal challenge against DP World, accusing it of bribing the head of Djibouti's port authority and calling the overall agreement unfair.

In February 2017, Dubai said a panel operating under London Court of International Arbitration rules fully exonerated DP World, dismissing Djibouti's claims and ordering it to pay arbitration and other costs. A commercial court in London separately cleared Djibouti port authority head Abdourahman Boreh of misconduct in 2016.

DP World, one of the world's largest port operators, said it started a new lawsuit on Thursday over Djibouti seizing control of the terminal.

"The government's conduct is particularly oppressive and cynical," DP World said in its statement, noting Djibouti lost its previous court challenges.

Djibouti's port is particularly crucial to its landlocked-neighbor Ethiopia. More than 95 percent of Ethiopia's imports come through Djibouti, authorities say.

Guelleh has been Djibouti's president since 1999 and his family has controlled the small nation since it gained independence from the French in 1977. Corruption allegations have surrounded his rule.

However, Djibouti's location near the Bab el-Mandeb, a chokepoint at sea for oil tankers heading from the Gulf to Europe, makes it a militarily crucial location.

Djibouti is already the site of a U.S. base that launches drone missions over Somalia and Yemen, as well as a Chinese military base and Japan's first overseas base since World War II. Saudi Arabia also is considering building a base there.

Meanwhile, the UAE has expanded its military presence across East Africa . In Eritrea, the UAE has a base at the port in Assab. Another Emirati military base will be built in Somalia's breakaway northern territory of Somaliland.


Don’t underestimate Ethiopia’s crisis

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Oppressed: Oromo mourn the hundreds of people killed by Ethiopia’s security forces in the 2016 Irreecha massacre (Tiksa Negeri, Reuters)



Don’t underestimate Ethiopia’s crisis


By Simon Allison | Mail&Guardian

For the past four years, ever since the first serious rumblings of discontent began, it has been difficult to appreciate the scale of the political crisis in Ethiopia.

Africa’s second-most populous country maintains an extraordinarily tight grip on information. Local journalists are routinely harassed, intimidated and censored, and foreign journalists are closely watched and prevented from going anywhere too sensitive. Local nongovernmental organisations and opposition parties operate under similar restrictions: under draconian laws, NGOs must tow the government line or risk losing their operating licences; opposition sympathisers are locked up in their thousands.

The international NGOs and think-tanks that operate in Ethiopia are complicit in maintaining the veil of silence. Many agree to refrain from any criticism of the Ethiopian regime in exchange for unfettered access to the African Union, which is based in Addis Ababa. Others turn a blind eye to the government’s routine human rights abuses because of its relatively good record on delivering socioeconomic development — although that record has been called into question by the sheer volume of protest action over the past few years.

In this climate, building an accurate picture of the unrest — and getting any of the usual suspects in the international community to raise the alarm — becomes nearly impossible.

There were plenty of clues, however, that not all was right. The odd massacre made international headlines — such as the dozens, perhaps hundreds, mowed down by security forces at an Oromo religious festival in October 2016. Reports of co-ordinated protests across the restive Oromia and Amhara regions suggested that resistance to the regime ran far deeper and was much better co-ordinated than the government was willing to admit.

Now, the political crisis has exploded into the open, with the resignation of Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn — always little more than temporary successor to Meles Zenawi, who died in 2012 — and the imposition of Ethiopia’s second state of emergency in under two years.

This new state of emergency, valid for six months pending parliamentary approval, will give sweeping powers of search and arrest to the security forces and restrict freedom of movement, protest and association. It gives licence for another crackdown on all forms of political opposition.

In this context, it is clear that recent political reform, including the release of hundreds of political prisoners, was not a symptom of more progressive policies but the desperate act of a government increasingly fearful for its very survival.

But the rapturous reception received by the freed opposition leaders, especially the Oromo Federalist Congress’s Merera Gudina and Bekele Gerba, seems to have convinced the hardliners in the country’s ruling coalition to remove the velvet glove and revert to the iron fist, which has served the regime so well for so long.

Now the country waits to see who will replace Desalegn. In another bid to placate protesters, it is almost certain to be someone from the Oromo region, either Lemma Megersa or Abiy Ahmed — both senior officials in the Oromo Peoples’ Democratic Organisation, one of the four ethnically based parties that make up the ruling coalition. The Oromos are Ethiopia’s largest ethnic group but have been long marginalised both economically and politically.

Somehow, the new prime minister will have to find a way to balance the demands of the protesters, who will expect immediate, demonstrable change, with the needs of the powerful securocrats in the ruling coalition who are manoeuvring for their own political futures, especially senior figures in the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front, who have long monopolised power and are not anxious to share.

“Whoever ascends to the top post will have much to prove but they should begin by following the advice of the United States embassy in Addis Ababa, which warned recently that the answer to growing unrest is ‘greater freedom, not less’,” wrote Mohammed Ademo, founder and editor of OPride.com, for African Arguments. “Indeed, Ethiopia sorely needs national reconciliation and an all-inclusive dialogue, and the next leader must act swiftly to make good on pledges of widening the democratic space.”

The alternative is too frightening to contemplate.

“[The ruling coalition] is at a historic crossroads and the options are clear. It can choose to genuinely reform or it can implode under the weight of a bitter power struggle and popular discontent,” said Ademo.

President Isaias Meets FIFA President

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President Isaias Afwerki received FIFA President Giovanni Vincenzo Infantino at Denden Guest House yesterday [Credit: Yemane G. Meskel]



By Shabait

President Isaias Afwerki today met and held talks with FIFA President Gianni Infantino at Denden Hall.

President Isaias during the meeting called on FIFA to keep-up the reformation programs it has already started and praised President Infantino’s visit to Eritrea as enhanced relations are means to better achievements.

Mr. Gianni Infatino on his part noted Eritrea’s long history and great potential in football and underlined FIFA’s readiness to contribute to the growth of the sport in Eritrea and endorse mutual partnership. Mr. Infantino also met with the Commissioner of Culture and Sports, Mr. Zemede Tekle, and held talks on issues of interest to the growth of Eritrean football.

During his one-day visit, Mr. Gianni Infatino visited the grass-roots training at the Asmara Stadium, the new office building for the National Football Federation of Eritrea and toured the art-deco buildings of Asmara that have been put at the UNESCO world heritage list.

The FIFA President also met with Commissioner for Sports and Culture,
Ambassador Zemede Tecle, and toured Asmara UNESCO Heritage sites

Adulis: New Fossil Findings Discovered

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 This 4th century church ruin in Adulis is the oldest in the Horn of Africa


By Shabait

New fossil findings discovered in the ancient port of Adulis have given a still greater international significance to the area and attraction for more research.

A 7th phase of archaeological excavation is being conducted in Adulis under the supervision of the Commission of Culture and Sports in collaboration with the National Museum of Eritrea, the Museum of the Northern Red Sea region as well as the Universities of Milan and Napoli, reports indicate.

Field experts stated that pieces of pillars made of hard rock with paintings, engravings, Greek writings, ceramics, bronze coins and nails, as well as two human skeletons among others were discovered following the seventh phase of archaeological research and excavation conducted for over a month.

Noting that the findings will make significant contribution in researching and discovering the ancient history of Eritrea, including ancient civilizations in the area, Prof. Habteab Tsege, Head of the Department of Archaeology at the Eritrean Institute of Technology, said that the discovery has created opportunity for further archaeological studies and believes that the findings will help correct the misinformation on the history of Eritrea and the Horn of Africa.

Coordinator of the Project, Prof. Serena Massa, also said that only 1% of research has been conducted in the area that extends 40 hectares and that the archaeological findings discovered so far are ancient cultural heritages with international significance.

Ethiopia orders forces to “take all necessary measures” against protesters

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By Nizar Manek | Bloomberg

Ethiopian authorities ordered the country’s security forces to “take all the necessary measures” to deal with anti-government agents in the restive Oromia region.

The so-called Command Post, which is administering a state of emergency declared on Feb. 16, must deal with “illegal forces” in Oromia if they “do not refrain from their destructive actions immediately,” according to a statement published Tuesday by the ruling-party funded Fana Broadcasting Corp.

The government has been struggling for more than two years to end sporadic and often deadly anti-government protests in the Oromia and Amhara regions. The Oromo and Amhara communities together make up more than half of Ethiopia’s population, Africa’s largest after Nigeria. Activists from both groups claim that minority ethnic Tigrayans, who are about 6 percent of the population, dominate an authoritarian government.

One person was killed this week and seven were wounded as protests continue in Nekemte, an Oromia market town about 242 kilometers (151 miles) west of the capital, Addis Ababa, Oromia spokesman Addisu Arega said in a Facebook post Tuesday, citing reports received by the regional government.

Government forces blocked leaders of the opposition Oromo Federalist Congress, including Chairman Merera Gudina and Secretary-General Bekele Gerba from entering Nekemte on Sunday, said Beyene Petros, who heads the Medrek coalition of opposition parties that includes the OFC. Merera was freed from prison in January and Bekele this month as part of a mass release of more than 7,000 detainees first announced by the government in January.

“The population is angry and reacting,” Beyene said by phone from Addis Ababa. “The population was waiting to receive the leaders of the Oromo Federalist Congress.”

Calls to the mobile phones of Merera and Information Minister Negeri Lencho didn’t connect when Bloomberg sought comment.

Bekele and Merera “had to be sent back to Addis,” according to Beyene. “Since we are under a state of emergency, under that kind of embargo, no activities are allowed.”

Ethiopia, Africa’s fastest-growing economy over the past decade, is a key U.S. ally in its battle against al-Qaeda in the Horn of Africa. Home to more than 100 million people, the $72 billion economy has drawn investors including General Electric Co., Johannesburg-based Standard Bank Group and hundreds of Chinese companies.

The U.S. on Feb. 17 said it strongly disagreed with Ethiopia’s decision to impose a state of emergency that “includes restrictions on fundamental rights such as assembly and expression.”

Deaf Eritrean twins break barriers in fashion world [Video]

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Deaf Eritrean twins break barriers in fashion world

By BBC

Twin models Heroda and Hermon Berhane, from Eritrea, are on a mission to break barriers that stop people with disabilities getting into the fashion industry.

They moved to the UK as children with dreams of being models but were repeatedly rejected by agencies because they are deaf.

Now they're rising stars with photo shoots all over the world, and they’ve got advice for anyone who wants to follow in their footsteps.

Video Journalist: Patrick Clahane



How Did Massawa Get Its Name? [Video]

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According to the author Jonathan Miran,  Massawa means "Shout loudly"

"Most theories advanced seem to agree on the lingusitic roots of the word Massawa, which would be a Tigre word derived from the Ge'ez word Mesuwa', meaning "cry, loud call." According to one version, a fisherman from Dahlak, surpised by a storm, was thrown by the winds with his boat onto an uninhabited island that was situated very close to the mainland. Following his return to Dahlak, he described it as so small that if one shouted strong enough he could make himself heard on the other side of the island. From that point onward, the Daalakis who began to settle there called it "Massawa." The other version relates that before the causeways connecting Massawa to mainland were built (1870), when traders came to the port their caravans, they reached Gherar on the mainland, and had to shout to the boatmen on Massawa Island to come and get them and their goods to the island-town."

Source: Red Sea Citizens: Cosmopolitan Society and Cultural Change in Massawa, p. 123 by Jonathan Miran.

Revisiting Africa: Egypt, Eritrea

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Joe Gillam's wife, Chong, stands in dowtown Asmara, Eritrea.


By Joe Gillam | Coastal Courier

I finished my Vietnam tour in the early ‘60s before the big build-ups, so when we left in those days we generally got our next assignment as requested.

My patrol partner had been stationed in Eritrea, and talking about his tour there was all he could do. The great MP duty, nice climate, hunting, fishing and the city full of beautiful Italian girls. Day after day on patrol he pounded his African tour into my ear – and like a good used car salesman, he sold me the goods.

Sure enough, a few weeks before I was to leave, along came my orders assigning me to the MP Company, Kagnew Station, Asmara, Eritrea. It seemed that Tom was more excited than I was.

For the last few weeks he gave me explicit instruction on fishing, hunting, places to eat and he threw in all he knew about the Italian girls. I left Vietnam and took a couple of weeks stateside leave, and then was off to Africa.

Tom had not missed a beat. A wonderful place, great duty and of course the sports and girls were just as he had promised. I met one of the before mentioned Italian girls, got married, and we had three wonderful daughters. But God took her home after many great years.

The God that took Lidia was gracious enough to give me Chong in my later years, and we have become great travel nuts. Around the country and world as best time and money can permit.

I’ve often told Chong about the beauty of Eritrea and she suggested we put it on the bucket list. So, like the rest of our travels, we started our homework. My initial thoughts were that a trip like that would cost a small fortune, but I was wrong. It’s a great trip and affordable.

We searched through the airlines and their varied rates by dates and found that Egyptian Air was by far the best deal. Another fact we have learned is that a cruise ship repositioning voyage from Europe back to America can be cheaper than airfare. Go figure that, 14 or so cruising days with several stops along the way with free meals and Broadway-type shows.

So we booked our round-trip travel then dug into hotels. We wanted to see Egypt along the way, so a week in Cairo at the Five Star Intercontinental Hotel with a daily exotic full breakfast included, overlooking The Nile River was a scant $97 US per night.

We took in all the Cairo adventures, including a Nile River dinner cruise with belly dancers and a private car tour of the Pyramids, Sphinx and all the ancient things for a scant $47 US. Cairo is full of history, most interesting and extremely inexpensive. Roundtrip airfare with a no corner cutting and a week in Cairo is easily doable for two under $2,500.

We finished the week in Cairo then went on to Asmara, Eritrea, on a short three-hour Egyptian Air flight. By now I was on the edge of my seat. I had first arrived in Eritrea as a young kid with no responsibilities and literally burning the candle at both ends.

Like so many more of my friends, the years in Eritrea became a pivotal point in our lives. We met many people from many countries, traveled East Africa, had great experiences and fostered our friendships, many that last to this day.

The MP company has an annual reunion each year in Myrtle Beach. The company was deployed from 1956 to 1974 and during that time about 2,300 MPs rotated in and out. Each year we gather and there are about 100 or us at the three-day reunions.

Chong and I arrived at the Asmara Airport about 4 in the morning. We had obtained visas before we left the states, so we briskly cleared customs and found our hotel shuttle right outside the terminal. The same terminal, with very little changes, that had delivered me then taken me away some 50-plus years ago.

There are a couple of new and rather nice hotels in Asmara, but our reservations were for the Crystal Hotel, one I remembered from back then and which is still thriving. Our room was nice, the hotel bar was quiet, and the dining room served a good variety of native and European dishes.

My first meal was the famous zigni and ingera. Zigni is a very spicy stew like dish served with the ingera, a flexible thin pancake type bread. Tare off a square of ingera and pinch in the stew and away you go. An acquired taste, but I loved it.

We wanted to drive around town and take a trip from the 8,000-foot elevation of Asmara down to sea-level at the Red Sea port of Massawa. I had been at the two-man MP detachment at the Massawa R&R Center for a year and just had to see how that town was doing.

Travel outside the city of Asmara required a travel permit and renting a car required an Eritrean driver license. Three trips to the Minister of Transportation and two trips to the Minister of Interior got us the documents. The rental car, less than $25 per day with unlimited mileage was the best the agency had, a 5-year-old Honda with more than 300,000 kms on the clock. It was sometimes hard to start and had a somewhat slipping clutch but away we went.

We spent one day driving around Asmara, about the size of our Hinesville. I was surprised to see that not much had changed. Asmara was constructed and built by the Italians in the 1920s and 1930s – a huge Italian colony with a population of some 60,000 before World War II.

When I was there, the city was supported by an Italian population of 40,000 and an American population of 10,000. This trip we met no Americans and only one Italian, a school teacher. She told us that there were less than 20 Italians left and that of course when the base closed the Americans all left with now just a few with the embassy.

She was correct. There were no more Italians ripping down the street in their Alfa Romeo sports cars and, of course all the Italian girls were now back in Italy. Gone, too, were most of the great Italian restaurants, but a couple remained as Eritrean cooks copy the old receipts. They do a wonderful job, too. We had a couple of great meals downtown. Still there are the sidewalk cafes. The huge Italian community passed on much of their culture to the Eritreans over the years, and you still get a taste of Italy in the city.

Chong and I walked for hours taking in the old Italian buildings, very well maintained and still in service. Many with their names and functions still set in the stone in the Italian language. Then we went on to the old U.S. Army post.

Us vets have followed the status of “our” post over the years. A couple of guys before me had ventured back to Asmara but were not allowed on the former U.S. Army installation. After the Americans left, the Ethiopian Army took it over, then after the war of independence in the ‘90s the Eritrean Army used it.

Chong and I drove to the front gate not knowing what to expect. I was prepared to beg and use my very best negotiating skills to get a peek inside, but was totally surprised to find the old MP gate and guard shack still there but no guard or policeman.

I slowed to almost a stop, expecting to be challenged at any time, but nothing. I stopped and saw that the entrance was totally open and unguarded. So in we went. Of course, my first stop was the old MP station where I met an official. He told me that half the post is used for disabled veterans of the war of independence and the other half for orphan children. The MP station is now office space of the library for the children.

Nobody was there so I was not able to go inside for a look-see, but I did notice that the rather tall telephone pole that post engineers had planted for our new police radio system along about 1965 was still in the ground with the same antenna swaying in the breeze some 50 feet in the air. I looked up at that, and as I brought my eyes back down I fully expected to see a 1965 Ford police car backed into a parking slot.

The post was a shamble, sadly run down. The former Army hospital looked in OK shape as it cares for the vets and kids. The commissary was totally missing, and I was told it had burned down some years ago. The former movie theater was boarded up with “danger do not enter” signs, and the PX had been converted into some type of living quarters.

All the barracks and family housing were in really poor shape and appeared to be used for living space. The swimming pool was bone dry and the edges were falling apart. There was no more green grass tended by post engineers, just sand and bare ground.

We rode around for a couple of hours as I pointed out the former use of the building to Chong, and we took pictures for my presentation at the next reunion. We drove out the gate and stopped. I got out and Chong took a picture of me as I said goodbye to an old friend for the last time.

Asmara is often called the city above the clouds because of its 8,000-foot elevation. The next day we drove our questionable rental “down the mountain” to Massawa – 8,000 feet down to sea level in just under 120 miles, a lot of switch-back and mountain hugging road, but an extremely beautiful trip.

Gone are the Italian cafes that dotted the road, but still there are some of the Eritrean bars where a nice cold beer could be had to fight the heat. We stopped often and took tons of breathtaking pictures, and Chong was beside herself with the beauty.

We arrived in Massawa to find that all the delicious Italian seafood restaurants were gone and that the city had been rather well destroyed in the war of independence. We had lunch in what seemed to be the only place in town to eat and it did not measure up.

I cruised the old patrol area for a couple of hours pointing out landmarks to Chong and taking some pictures for the guys then we headed back up the mountain. We stopped at the former Half Way House, a spot that had been owned and operated by a retired Army Sgt. Jessy Dobbins. Of course, he was long gone and nobody had even heard of him, but the beer was cold. Then we were on up the hill and back in Asmara just after dark.

The next day we returned the rental car and took our last walk around Asmara. I paused often to remember the city in its 1960s prime and thought about what it must have been like in its really glory days of the late 1930s before WWII.

Yes, time is a changer. No matter how hard one wants to make their change to effect society or the outcome of events, it is always Father Time that makes the biggest impression on things.

The following day was getaway day and our flight from Asmara to Barcelona, Spain, was an early one, departing at 5 a.m. The hotel shuttle took us to the airport and we arrived a bit after 4 a.m., checked in and had a final cup of the genuine article espresso coffee before boarding the Egyptian Air Boeing 737. There was a brief stop in their Cairo hub, then on to Spain.

We arrived early afternoon and found a cab to the Barcelona Best Western Hotel. Best Western is all over the world and Chong and I always check them first. They offer a strong military discount and are great on points and promotions. Their property in Barcelona is right in the shopping district and a leisurely walk to several good restaurants. We had stayed there twice before, so it was like a homecoming and a very welcome stay after two weeks in Africa.

We were in Spain four days before our cruise ship departed back to the states. One of my favorite adventures anyplace we go is the open top hop-on hop-off bus. A ticket lets you ride all day, and if you see something, get off check it out and then catch the next bus.

They usually pass about every 20 or 30 minutes so you’re never stranded. Our style is to get on the bus and make a complete lap of the route, taking note of places to see. Then on the second lap, we start our hop-offs and hop-ons. It’s a fun and inexpensive way to see things.

After some sightseeing, shopping and some great meals and too soon it was time to head home. On sailing day, we got to the port at the early check in time and waded through the crowd and got on board in about an hour’s time. Our vessel, Royal Caribbean’s Brilliance of the Seas, is one of their mid-sized ships but still holds about 3,400 passengers. This sailing was not full by a long shot, but it was still a nice gang of travelers to be in line with.

We have made a couple of other repositioning cruises from Europe back to the states and always on Royal Caribbean ships. They are a nice line and I guess kind of a blue-collar group. No tux or formal gowns needed, dinner in the main dinning room calls for smart casual, and most guys are in slacks and a nice sport shit and the gals in a skirt and blouse.

The trip back to Tampa took us 14 days with several stops in Spain and Portugal, then the Madeira Islands before the 6-day sailing across the Atlantic. Those days can be very relaxing, sitting by one of the two onboard pools, enjoying the hot tubs, meeting the other travelers, shows, movies and of course all the food one can eat.

This crossing, like the others we have enjoyed, was smooth as silk. It would be several days between being able to see any type of white cap or bigger waves.

We arrived in Tampa right on time and sailed through customs. I had reserved a rental car and found their desk right outside the customs zone. The car was ready, and we were on our way home in less than 15 minutes. It was Thanksgiving Day, so we made a nice steady drive and got home right on schedule for the Cowboys game and my middle daughter’s turkey. It was a great cap to a wonderful trip.

Joe Gillam is a veteran and resident of Hinesville.

Joe Gilliam on patrol in 1965 while stationed in Africa.

Joe Gillam is served a dish of zigni while traveling recently in Africa.



An aspiring Eritrean pilot veers into a career as a JetBlue aircraft mechanic

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In training, Jerusalem Melke found she focused more on how planes work than how to fly them


An aspiring pilot veers into a career as a JetBlue aircraft mechanic


By Hilary Potkewitz | Crains New York

Jerusalem Melke has spent more sleepless nights at John F. Kennedy International Airport than even the most road-weary frequent flier, although she is there by design. Melke is an aircraft technician for JetBlue Airways, and her workday starts at 10 p.m. “The terminal is pretty desolate at night, but outside the hangar it’s bustling,” she said.

Service vehicles zip around, pulling planes and moving jet bridges. There’s engine noise, hydraulic bursts, walkie-talkie chatter and music on loudspeakers. “It could be salsa, bachata, rock, soul—it depends who puts theirs on first,” she said.

Melke and her fellow aircraft techs perform regular maintenance checks on JetBlue planes. In addition to the engines, she is responsible for anything that spins, opens, lights up or turns on—think cockpit dials, cargo doors, wing flaps, windshield wipers.

The job is part mechanic, part engineer and part ninja. “You’re climbing on things all the time—on top of the wing, under the engine, up on the tail—and you’re problem-solving,” Melke said. “I like that it’s mental and physical.”

Melke was hooked on air travel from her first flight at age 9, in 1991. Her family joined dozens of other immigrant families on a homecoming trip to Asmara, capital of the newly independent Eritrea. It was the first commercial flight into the East African city after nearly 30 years of civil war. “When we landed, everybody’s relatives were there—hundreds of people cheering as we got off the plane, like we were celebrities,” she recalled.

Eventually she learned that most flights don’t disembark to standing ovations, but that didn’t dampen the thrill of it. While in college she began taking flight lessons. “But I had so many questions about all the instruments and how they worked,” she said. “My instructor said I needed to talk to a mechanic, not a pilot.”

Melke soon realized that flying a plane wasn’t as interesting to her as learning how they work. Instead of pursuing her Federal Aviation Administration pilot’s license, she got an Airframe and Powerplant license. Her family was puzzled by her career choice. “They didn’t see it coming, but it made complete sense to me,” she said.

Before emigrating to the U.S., her father was a sailor and worked on a fishing boat in the Mediterranean. Once here, he became a taxi driver, eventually running his own fleet of five cabs. “So there’s a history of transport and mechanical ability there,” Melke said, “plus, a sense of freedom.”


Tiffany Haddish would like to represent Eritrea at the Oscar by wearing the national dress [Video]

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Tiffany Haddish Talks Meeting Oprah Winfrey: 'It Touched My Very Soul'



By Antoinette Bueno‍ | ET

Tiffany Haddish is still reeling from recently getting to meet her idol, Oprah Winfrey.

The 38-year-old comedian met Oprah when she appeared on The Ellen DeGeneres Show last month, when DeGeneres surprised her by bringing out the talk show icon. ET spoke with Haddish at Alfre Woodard's 9th Annual Sistahs Soiree on Wednesday, where she talked about the viral moment.

"It touched my entire soul," Haddish told ET's Kevin Frazier. "Look, OK, I want to hit her up and ask her what should I wear to the Oscars. Like, I want her to give me advice on everything in life."

Haddish then hilariously proceeded to ask Oprah on camera about a potential dress she's considering for the Oscars. Haddish is presenting at this Sunday's ceremony.

"Oprah, should I wear this Eritrean African dress to the Oscars on the red carpet because my daddy from Eritrea, and he passed away," she said, looking directly into the camera. "And I want to pay respect. I want to show the world. What you think? You think she's going to call me?"

Haddish also talked to ET about a possible sequel for her breakout hit, Girls Trip. In the 2017 ensemble comedy, she and her three best friends (played by Jada Pinkett-Smith, Queen Latifah and Regina Hall) visit New Orleans for the annual Essence Festival, which of course, turns out to be an unforgettable getaway.

"We've been talking about it," Haddish shared of a potential Girls Trip 2. "I would like for us to go to Africa. I think that would be the dopest. It would be magical. Man, don't get me crying, because I would love for our people to see ... When I say our people, I mean all Americans to see how beautiful Africa really is. It's a gorgeous place."

ET also spoke with Haddish last month at the Super Bowl in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where she joked about being on the hunt to meet her future baby's daddy.


TPLF officials told U.S. delegates state of emergency was decreed to “prevent a military takeover”: diplomatic sources

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Ethiopian Foreign Minister Workeneh Gebeyehu informed US delegates state of emergency was decreed to 'prevent military takeover'. 




By ESAT

A delegate from the United States was told by TPLF officials that the state of emergency was necessary to “prevent a takeover of power by the military,” according to ESAT’s diplomatic sources.

A diplomatic mission led by Foreign Minister Workneh Gebeyehu was in Washington, DC few days before the declaration of the martial law on February 16, 2018 to meet officials at the U.S Department of State, who told the Ethiopian delegate that the state of emergency was a bad idea and advised against decreeing the law.

The martial law was declared before Gebyehu returned back to Addis Ababa, but he requested to come back to the U.S. “to explain why the decree was necessary.” That request was turned down by State Department officials who told the Foreign Minister that he could meet with a delegation of the U.S. that was already on tour in Africa.

According to ESAT sources, as soon as meeting the U.S. delegates, the Foreign Minister arranged a meeting between them and leading members of the TPLF namely Sebehat Nega, Seyoum Mesfin and Abay Tsehaye. The trio told the delegates from the U.S. that the state of emergency decree was “necessary to prevent intervention and takeover of power by the military removing the civilian government.” They also told the U.S. delegates that they should not be criticized for declaring the state of emergency.

The TPLF side also told the U.S. delegates that the martial law was declared “in consultation with the military.’”

The U.S. delegates did not find the argument convincing and the Embassy in Addis Ababa came up with statement that “strongly disagree” with the declaration of the state of emergency.

“We strongly disagree with the Ethiopian government’s decision to impose a state of emergency that includes restrictions on fundamental rights such as assembly and expression,” said a statement from the Embassy issued on February 17, a day after the decree.

Critics say the argument by the three TPLF officials, who together with a handful of others run the country with iron fist, does not hold water. Critics also question why the trio were the ones speaking to the U.S. delegate while those in official position such as the Prime Minister and his deputy as well as the Foreign Minister himself were supposed to represent the Ethiopian side.

Djibouti’s greatest threat may come from within

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Personnel attend the opening of China’s new military base in Djibouti. China has joined the United States, France, Japan and Italy in opening a base in this tiny East African country. (STR/AFP)


Djibouti’s greatest threat may come from within


By Simon Allison | Mail&Guardian

A rocky, steep-banked promenade outlines the port of Djibouti. Old men use it for their late-afternoon constitutionals and the odd beggar sleeps on its benches. The breeze is thick with salt, which mostly disguises the faint tang of sewage.

To understand what Djibouti has become, it’s worth taking a slow stroll along that promenade.

The Jijiga, a Chinese freighter named after a city in eastern Ethiopia, is moored at the pier. Towering cranes, like giant mechanical giraffes, are ready to unload its precious contents, destined to sate Ethiopia’s growing consumer demand.

Behind it, a pair of tugboats are manoeuvring a French warship, registration L9014, into dock. It is the Tonnerre, a Mistral-class helicopter carrier, which has seen action during the civil war in Côte d’Ivoire and the toppling of Muammar Gaddafi in Libya. Waiting for a berth behind it is a Chinese frigate, the Yanchang, which was deployed to the region to combat piracy.

“The big boats come all the time, at least once a week,” says Abdi, who works at the marina. “Not just the French. The Chinese, the Americans. They’re all here.”




This strange juxtaposition of international trade and heavy-duty military hardware is no aberration. It has become Djibouti’s trademark, and it’s not hard to understand why.

From an economic perspective, Djibouti is bleak. Crops don’t grow in this rocky, rust-red desert hellscape, where the lakes are salty and it’s 30°C in the middle of winter.

There’s little under the surface, either, except more salt, which is a major — albeit not especially lucrative — export for the tiny East African nation.

Life here is hard and so unforgiving for its population of less than one million people that even refugees, mostly from neighbouring Somalia or nearby Yemen, don’t want to stay. “It’s too hot for them,” said one aid worker. “They would rather try their luck elsewhere.”

But there is one thing that Djibouti has going for it — an irresistible attraction that keeps bringing superpowers to its shores, like alpha dogs marking their territory on the same lamp post.

In geopolitics, as in property, location is everything — and, on the global political chessboard, few countries are more strategically important than Djibouti.

It sits on the Bab-el-Mandeb, which is the narrowest point of the Red Sea. This is one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes, linking Asia to Europe, making it also the world’s most important trade artery. From Djibouti, superpowers can keep their fingers on the pulse of global commerce and guarantee uninterrupted passage for the dozens of container-laden freighters and bulging oil tankers that traverse the route every day.

The civil war in Yemen, just across the strait, has made Djibouti even more attractive.

“If Yemen had not disintegrated into civil war, you would have seen more basing in Aden rather than Djibouti. But Djibouti has managed to take advantage,” said Timothy Walker, a maritime security expert with the Institute of Security Studies.

Superpower playground

In a country at peace, especially such a small one, the roll call of superpowers and military hardware on show is staggering.

In a sprawling complex built adjacent to Djibouti City’s main commercial runway — and in full view of the civilian planes taking off and landing — the United States military maintains its largest base in Africa. There are 4 000-plus American soldiers stationed here, including a large continent of special forces. The base also houses a fleet of Predator drones and a Pizza Hut. The Americans have one eye on shipping — keeping the Red Sea pirates at bay — and another on the twin conflicts in Somalia and Yemen, where those drones have seen plenty of action.

Next to the Americans are the French, who operate an additional naval base a few miles away, on the Heron peninsula. Across the runway are the Japanese, whose Self Defence Force is there to self-defend the Japanese ships that make up 16% of the world’s cargo fleet. And a few hundred metres from there, Italy runs a military facility that can accommodate 300 soldiers, although the usual complement is only about 80.

Each superpower pays a hefty premium for the privilege of leasing land in Djibouti, making it one of the government’s major sources of foreign currency. The US pays $67-million a year and the French $30-million.

As unusual — and dangerous — as this conglomeration of military might sound, it’s not unprecedented. These countries are all more or less on the same side of the 21st century’s great conflagrations — they have worked together before, in places such as Iraq and Afghanistan.

The same cannot be said for China, the latest superpower to build a base in Djibouti. China is building a “string of pearls” across the Indian Ocean, a series of military and commercial facilities designed to guarantee its maritime security interests, to complement its plans to create a 21st-century maritime Silk Road. Djibouti is the first completed military outpost, making it the shiniest pearl of them all.

“The basic purpose of this military facility is for logistics supporting Chinese humanitarian and anti-piracy operations in this region,” said Professor Zhang Chun, of the Shanghai Institute of International Studies. “In the past several years, the Chinese navy has had lots of operations in this region, including anti-piracy patrols in the Gulf of Aden and the evacuation of Chinese and foreign nationals from Yemen, among others.”

The Chinese base is 10km from the airport, next to the brand-new Port of Doraleh (also Chinese-built, of course, and soon to be Chinese-operated). Although the base has now been officially open for seven months, it remains shrouded in secrecy.

Here’s what we do know. The base, which is reportedly leased for $20-million a year, is built on 36 hectares of prime ocean-facing real estate, and currently houses about 1 000 troops, although there is apparently space for 10 000 if necessary. A short tarmac strip is built for helicopters to take off and land. Satellite images during construction reveal a vast subterranean labyrinth, rumoured to be between three and seven storeys deep, the purpose of which is unclear.

Security around the base is tight. When the Mail & Guardian approached in a taxi, we were turned away 50m before reaching the main gate. Previously, Chinese officials had either ignored requests for a tour or stated that media were not yet welcome.

The land surrounding the base has been forcibly cleared of human habitation. Occupants were compensated and moved into a nearby slum. Locals interviewed insist that the perimeter is dotted with landmines: “If you walk there, it goes ‘boom!’” said one.

Efforts to put this claim to Chinese officials, along with other questions about the Chinese presence in Djibouti, were repeatedly ignored. The closest the M&G got to an official interview was to doorstep a Chinese naval officer outside the Chinese embassy in Djibouti City. He declined to give his name, and said his country did not need to explain itself to journalists. “People have been saying bad things about China for hundreds of years, but we’re still here,” he said.

Whispers of discontent

China’s longevity, and its long-term plans, are precisely what keeps Doualeh Egueh Ofleh awake at night. He’s a politician with the opposition Movement for Democratic Renewal and Development.

When we meet, in his dingy office in downtown Djibouti City, desks squeezed into a decaying ground-floor shophouse, Ofleh was one of just three opposition MPs.

Two days later, he was out of a job, unseated in local elections that the main opposition parties declined to contest. Ofleh said the vote was rigged from the start, because the government, with President Ismaïl Omar Guelleh in charge for a 19th consecutive year, had failed to implement promised electoral reform.

Ofleh is one of the few political actors who would speak, on record, about China’s new military base. He’s not a fan. His laundry list of complaints begins with the fact that the base was built with Chinese labour.

“Why don’t Djiboutians like the Chinese?” he asks. “Because they bring their drivers and cooks and guards with them. Everyone. At least the French and Americans give us something, even if it’s small. The Chinese don’t do that. It’s unfortunate.”

Later, a taxi driver expressed a similar sentiment. “You know, the Chinese, they don’t even use our prostitutes,” he said.

Ofleh is also concerned about the proximity of the Chinese base to the new Doraleh port. “You have got your country’s main commercial port right next to the military base of a foreign power. What happens if the relationship goes bad?”

Even if all goes according to plan, Djibouti is going to struggle to keep up with the repayments on the enormous sums it has borrowed from China to build the port, as well as another airport, a fancy new railway line linking Djibouti with Addis Ababa, and a 102km water pipeline bringing fresh water from Ethiopia. These loans are worth at least $1.1-billion, according to the International Monetary Fund.

If recent history is any guide, the consequences of failing to repay Chinese debt can be severe. In 2017, the Sri Lankan government had to relinquish control of its Chinese-built port to the Chinese government when it found itself unable to keep up with repayments.

“The spectre of China’s dealings with Sri Lanka should serve as a major wake-up call to Djibouti. There are a number of obvious parallels between the two countries and, given Djibouti’s growing dependency on Beijing, there’s a very real threat it will fall victim to the same fate,” said Ronak Gopaldas, a director of Signal Risk, a risk analysis firm.

But Ofleh’s biggest gripe is what the presence of China, and other military powers, means for domestic politics. Although he doesn’t have a problem with the concept of hosting military bases — he knows, pragmatically, that the country has little choice but to monetise its strategic location — he is concerned that funds generated are being squandered by Guelleh’s notoriously corrupt administration and, of even greater concern, that Guelleh is using the military bases as cover to tighten his grip on power.

Having invested so much in Djibouti’s stability, superpowers are all too prepared to overlook the abuses of the Guelleh regime — well documented by Freedom House and others — in an effort to guarantee that stability.

But this hear-no-evil, see-no-evil strategy might backfire, warns Offleh. “Go to the poor areas, you will see that this country is not satisfied.”

Recipe for instability

The M&G followed Ofleh’s advice. Just a short drive away from the plush houses and hotels of the upmarket Heron district, which crawls with diplomats and intelligence agents and shady business people, and not far from the faded grandeur of downtown Djibouti City, is the sprawling, hilly suburb of Belbela.

Parts of it overlook the new Chinese military base but the suburb’s inhabitants are struggling to see how all these foreign soldiers and sailors are supposed to be improving their lives.

“None of the money is coming to us,” said one resident.

This is where “middle-class” Djiboutians live: some in rudimentary brick houses, others in colourful corrugated iron shacks.

There are no tarred roads and little sign of the economic development that Guelleh’s government has promised.

Beyond Belbela are suburbs that are even less developed, lacking basic services like water, electricity and sanitation, where the country’s poorest eke out a living among mountains of scrap metal.

Statistics bear out the fact that the hundreds of millions of dollars earned from military bases, and the billions in associated investment, are not reaching the majority of the population.

According to the World Bank, although gross domestic product has doubled in the past decade — from $848-million in 2007 to $1.7-billion in 2015 — 23% of the population still lives in extreme poverty. Unicef data show that nearly 60% are unemployed.

This is not a recipe for continued stability. Instead, Guelleh is maintaining control through a security apparatus that accounts for nearly 20% of the state’s annual budget. And there’s no doubt that his authority is reinforced by the visible presence of the foreign militaries he has welcomed into the country.

It is a state of affairs much to the president’s liking. In a recent interview with Afrique magazine, Guelleh dismissed criticism of China and said the two countries would continue to work closely together. “China is a genuine partner; indeed, the only one today that functions on co-operation on a long-term basis. China is our friend ... They are unrivalled investors in Africa. They believe in our future, our emergence,” he said.

Back at the promenade, the Tonnerre completes its refuelling and resupplying, and moves off the dock. The Yanchang replaces it. The sheer size and might of these warships only highlights the vast gulf in power between tiny Djibouti and the superpowers competing so hard for its attention.

It’s also hard to escape the symbolism of the moment, as the old colonial masters make way for the neocolonial ambitions of another distant country.

With Guelleh having cozied up to Beijing, there’s no doubt that he and his government have become dangerously dependent on China’s continued largesse.

What would happen if those ships were to sail away? But China, and the other countries with military bases here, have also taken a risk — on Guelleh’s continued ability to maintain stability in this little corner of the Horn of Africa that he considers his own.

As development stalls and dissatisfaction continues to grow, could this gamble on Guelleh backfire first?

February in the History of Eritrea

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EPLF Fighters


February in the History of Eritrea
Simon Weldemichael
Adi Keih College of Arts and Social Sciences
Feb 2018

“Man is an historical animal with a deep sense of his own past” said Geoffrey Barrowclough. Life must be lived forward, but it cannot be understood without looking backward. History is the most important product which the chemistry of the mind has concocted. My intention is not to fill readers with false memories or incite grudges over old grievances. The aim is simply to provide historical morsels for the lovers of truth.

Eritrea has a long, unique history. The centuries old tradition of resistance against domination and colonization has made every inch of land a fertile field and every day a mark of history. It’s practically impossibly to discuss everything that has happened in the month of February from ancient times to the present. Therefore, I am going to select some of the important historical events which have great national significance and implications.

1 Feb 1975 - Wekidiba Massacre:. Many villages had suffered devastating losses during the 30-year-long war of Eritrean liberation. Under the motto of “it’s Eritrea’s land that we want, not its people,” successive Ethiopian colonizers of Eritrea committed countless atrocities to exterminate the Eritrean people. The Wekidiba massacre was one of atrocities committed against Eritrean civilians by the Ethiopian army. The Ethiopian army devastated the village suspected of harboring the liberation fighters. The Ethiopian army also believed that to kill the fish one has to empty the sea. Unable to fight with the liberation fighters, the Ethiopian army was engaged in killing defenseless civilians. This tragic massacre of Wekidiba was most remembered as Black Saturday.

To understand the situation I provide an account from a survivor of the massacre - Colonel Zeremariam Tesfay. At the time of the Wekidiba massacre, he was 18 years old and later he spent his days in the struggle for independence. Zeremariam’s full acount is available in Tigrigna and English in a book titled, Massacre at Wekidiba, authored by Habtu Gebreab. He said that “in every house, there were two or three dead bodies. The ground was drenched with blood. After committing the atrocities, the soldiers brought in trucks. Stepping over the dead bodies, they hauled away anything of value from these houses…As the morning progressed, the soldiers began killing the roaming cattle and made meals out of them” (Habtu 2013: 201-2). The massacre and dispossession perpetuated by Ethiopian colonizers followed a strict conformity to Machiavellian advice on holding the conquered. Nicole Machiavelli in his book The Prince, instructs that whenever those states which have been acquired have accustomed to live under their own laws and in freedom, there are three courses for those who wish to hold them: the first is to ruin them. He further recommended that “there is no safe way to retain them otherwise than by ruining them” (20-1).

14 Feb to April 1950 - the Five member UN Inquiry of Commission visits Eritrea. With the failure of the plan for partition, the UN General Assembly again discussed the Eritrean question and called for more information to decide on its disposal. On 21 November 1949, it resolved to send its own inquiry commission and elected Burma, Guatemala, Norway, Pakistan, and South Africa. The mandate of the United Nations Commission was to ascertain “The wishes and welfare of the inhabitants of Eritrea.” The Commission discovered the strength of the Eritrean Independence Bloc and the political maturity of the people. The chief of the British administration, Robert Mason, wrote in a confidential memo to the Foreign Office in London that the Independence Bloc represented “a clear majority of the population of the country” (Tekie 1990: 10). The delegations of Pakistan and Guatemala recommended the independence of Eritrea. Despite this fact however, the final recommendation of the commission was divided, leading to the erroneous decision by the UN promoting federation. Independence of Eritrea was ignored simply because it didn’t suit the interests of Ethiopia and the United states.

11 Feb 1967 - the Massacre of Adi Ibrahim: the Ethiopian army killed, burned and bayoneted the inhabitants of Adi Ibrahim and surrounding villages. Dr. Habtu Ghebreab, a professor of history has pointed the insincere remark given by Zewde Reta, a former Ethiopian official under Haileslasie “in the [years] we have lived togather … we should never forget that we Ethiopians have committed no offense against our Eritrean brothers” (Habtu, 2). Denial to such an extent reveals the unregretful mentality that leads to other problems. This is scoffing at the blood of the innocent Eritreans shed in Adi Ibrihim, Omhajer, Ona, Sheib and many other places.

15 Feb 1982 - the Sixth Offensive (Red Star Campaign): launched by Ethiopia in 1982 to quash the Eritrean revolution once and forever. The event was organized to commemorate the 36th anniversary of the sixth offensive; an all means aggression that tested the perseverance of the EPLF, which, according to Dan Connell, was the largest war ever since the Second World War fought in Africa. The sixth offensive was the largest and challenging of all previous offensives that aimed to remove the EPLF from the face of Eritrea. It was unique in that the Derg conducted a two-year-long multi-dimensional preparatory phase. During the war, the Derg deployed more than 120,000 soldiers and many Soviet military advisors (to help plan and lead the war). The sixth offensive is a great symbol of the perseverance of the Eritrean revolution. In the course of the war that lasted for more than three months, almost half the EPLF fighting unit were martyred or wounded. The EPLF had foiled Ethiopia’s ultimate goal to alienate and annihilate the EPLF. During that time Isaias Afewerki, then its vice secretary, described the invisible power of the EPLF: “the EPLF does not possess sophisticated modern weapons and an abundance of ammunition. Nor does it have satellites at its disposal. What the EPLF possess is political consciousness and it is this that works miracles” (Fekadu 2008: 222).

10 Feb 1990 - Liberation of Massawa: the offensive called the “Fenkil Operation” started on February 8th, 1990. In the period between the demise of the Nadew Command (March 1988) and the Fenkil Operation, the EPLF conducted 50 military operations that cleared the way for the liberation of Massawa (PFDJ 2015: 214). In the Fenkil Operation, the EPLF naval forces, using small but speedy motor boats surprised and confronted Ethiopian warships from the rear. Finally, after three days of intense battle, the EPLF captured the Port of Massawa and sealed off Ethiopia’s land forces from all but air-borne supplies. In retaliation, the Ethiopian army bombed the civilian population of Massawa using cluster bombs and napalm - remembered by Eritreans as qbtset (desperation). The operation profoundly shocked the foundation of Derg and hastened the final defeat of the Ethiopian army in Eritrea. On the other hand, the operation enhanced the position of the Eritrean revolution in regional and international politics. Soon after the liberation of Massawa and as defeat loomed for the Derg regime, Mengistu realized that the key to his survival was to solve the Eritrean problem. The Fenkil Operation is amongst the most highly celebrated occasions in Eritrea and Massawa.

10 Feb 1994 - Third Congress of the EPLF, held in Nakfa: after achieving its goal to liberate Eritrea from Ethiopian colonial oppression, the EPLF convened its third congress and transitioned to a post-war political movement, the People’s Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ). This would be to build on the EPLF’s legacy and to lead the country. The PFDJ’s basic goals, as summarized in the National Charter, were: national harmony, political democracy, economic and social development, social justice (economic and social democracy), cultural revival, and regional and international cooperation.

23 Feb 1999 - Second military campaign or Weyane invasion of Eritrea: the so-called border dispute which could have been resolved peacefully, instead led to devastating conflict, largely due to Weyane’s covert intentions. The conflict was created by the TPLF, a minority group that assumed power in Ethiopia. The situation exploded with the killing of Eritrean officials who went to negotiate and soon escalated when the Ethiopian Parliament made an ultimatum and declared war with the bombing of Asmara. The TPLF obstructed the efforts to resolve the issue in a peaceful manner. As a result, Weyane launched full scale war toward the end of February. Some estimated the second offensive of Weyane “to be the biggest battle on African soil since the expulsion of Nazi forces from Egypt during the Second World War” (Tekeste and Tronvoll 2000: 73). The immediate source of the conflict was Badme. In an intense Ethiopian offensive against Eritrean positions at Badme, Ethiopia used a human wave strategy of pouring thousands of men to secure short-term gain. Conservative estimates suggest that Ethiopian causalities at Badme reached 10,000 (Ibid 73-74). Subsequently, the Eritrean army withdrew from Badme. For the last 19 years (1999-2018), Badme, which has been confirmed by the EEBC as Eritrean territory, has been under the illegal occupation of Ethiopia.

February, and its history, is a reflection of our entire history. Eritrea is a repository of historic memories: of resistance, sacrifice, massacres, and dispossessions. It is the place where our martyrs and heroes are remembered forever and where successive generations lived, worked, and struggled. The Ethiopian war of aggression is the most unjust war ever waged against the freedom and independence of Eritrea. Noam Chomsky in his famous book Turning the Tide; US Intervention in Central America and the Struggle for Peace, notes that “Killing the dream, a wiser strategy is first to kill the dream by a campaign of terror, intimidation, sabotage, blocking of aid, and other means available…that is immune to retaliation, until the errant society cracks under the strain and its people recognize that in the shadow of the enforcer, there can be no hope of escaping from the miseries of traditional life” (1985: 146). Ethiopia’s killing and torture was aimed to kill the hopes of Eritreans.

All this makes Eritrea a unique homeland of people who are ready to sacrifice for their dignity and identity. Explaining national identity, Smith (1991) states that “national identity provides a powerful means of defining and locating individual selves in the world, through the prism of the collective personality and its distinctive culture” (1991: 17). Eritrean national identity offers a powerful means of defining and locating individual Eritreans in the world. History tells us that in the past, Eritreans of all backgrounds died for their identity and territorial integrity and now Eritreans are making more history in development and progress.

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