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Ethiopian teen's brutal gang rape and death in Addis Ababa sounds alarm

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According to the World Health Organization, more than 70 percent of Ethiopian women face physical and sexual violence.



Teen’s gang rape in Addis Ababa sounds alarm


By Tigist Geme


Hanna Lalango, 16, died on Nov. 1, from a brutal gang rape after five men kidnapped and held her captive for several days in Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa. Hanna attended a private high school in the city’s Ayer Tena neighborhood.

On Oct. 1, the day of her kidnapping, Hanna, the youngest of six siblings, “complained about not feeling well” before she left for school. "She was a typical young girl ... a timid and respectful child," Hanna’s brother told Blen Sahilu, who first posted the story on Facebook, as part of the online #JusticeForHanna campaign. “She was really nice.”

Hanna reportedly left school around 4 p.m. local time and got on a taxi that already had a couple of passengers. It is unclear at what point Hanna knew she was being kidnapped. But the culprits allegedly threatened the teen with knife and took her to one of the suspect's house. Reports vary but Hanna’s father told the local media she was raped for at least five days.

Hanna’s kidnappers had other plans. They apparently contacted her sisters by phone, perhaps to kidnap them as well. They met the sisters at an arranged place, driving the same minibus, and reportedly asked them to come along. When they refused, the men drove off, exclaiming, “You won't see your sister then!” A few days later, the suspects left Hanna to die in an abandoned area in the outskirts of the city. Hanna was found unconscious on Oct. 11 and taken to hospital.

“My phone rang 11 days after Hanna disappeared, it was the voice I missed,” Hanna’s father told the U.S.-based Admas Radio last week. “She was weak and exhausted.” For the next few days the family spent going between various referral hospitals and waiting to be admitted. Among other injuries, Hanna suffered from fistula and lost her battle 19 days after she was found. She reportedly identified three of the five suspects from her hospital bed.

On Nov. 19, police brought five suspects before the First Appearance Court in Addis Ababa, according to local reports. During a hearing attended by journalists and women right's groups, one of the suspects pleaded innocence and all five denied the allegations, telling the court their initial confessions were obtained under duress. The police denied torturing the suspects and asked for 14 days to conduct further investigation.

Hanna could have been saved. The police were slow to investigate the case as a sexual crime. The hospitals failed to treat Hanna’s case with the outmost urgency the situation demanded. I broke down in tears as I read about Hanna’s ordeal. I tried to imagine what she might have felt as her captors took turns to satisfy their desires. I imagined how helpless she might have felt. I imagined Hanna worrying and speculating about how to deal with this tragedy or even tell her parents. Hanna spent days on the streets after suffering a brutal gang rape. It took her few days to call her parents and seek help. It remains unclear whether this was planned or a random incident. But Hanna’s story is far from isolated.

Guilt and sexual trauma

Ethiopia is a deeply patriarchal, closed and conservative country. It has one of the highest rates of sexual violence in the world. More than 70 percent of Ethiopian women face physical and sexual violence, according to a study by the World Health Organization (WHO). Seven percent of girls surveyed by WHO reported experiencing sexual abuse before the age of 15. Seventeen percent said their first sexual experience was forced. The country also has one of the highest rates of bridal kidnapping or marriage by abduction.

Most women and girls keep incidents of rape and sexual abuse secret to avoid societal shunning. About 39 percent never talk to anyone about the violence and the violations they endure, according to WHO. Even fewer women ask authorities for help. Some 53 percent feared repercussions and threats from their partners, while another 37 percent “considered the violence ‘normal’ or ‘not serious,’” the WHO report said.

Worse still, most gender-based violence is solved through family arbitration and socially sanctioned compensation for the victim’s family. As a result, women often don’t feel the need to go public with their story. Therefore, it is not surprising that Hanna’s kidnappers reportedly sent “elders” seeking reconciliation with her parents even as Hanna clung to her last breath in a hospital bed.

Hanna’s story took me back to Addis Ababa, where people walk past you even when they can clearly see that you are in danger. It is a city where the police yell at the victim for running away from a man forcing her into an unwanted relationship or sexual intimacy.

“Addis Ababa is a jungle, be careful,” a friend advised me when I first moved to the city. It didn’t take me long to understand what she meant. In the 10 years that I lived in the city, I learned to cope with endless gazes and widely accepted catcalling. Addis Ababa is one of the country’s few major metropolises. To be sure, city women fare relatively better than their rural counterparts: They drive new cars, they are fashionistas, they hang out at upscale cafes along the famed Bole road, they watch American movies at the city’s upscale Enda Mall and Movie Theater (enjoying popcorn), and they go to sauna and spa every weekend.

But this city of beautiful women has another less known, darker face. In fact, the city’s cosmopolitan character gives the impression that Addis women don’t deal with sexual violence. Hanna's heart-wrenching story also reminded me of an incident that I will never forget.

I was a young lecturer at Addis Ababa University, then in my early 20s. One afternoon, a colleague from the university invited me for lunch. He took me to a place he said was his favorite near Arat Kilo neighborhood. The restaurant was located a walking distance of off the main road and looked like a place no self-respecting man would take a girl on the first date — a hole-in-the-wall in a residential neighborhood on a barely paved road. After we ate lunch, my colleague went to the bar and whispered something to one of the servers, and returned to ask me to go to the backside for "more privacy.” By then I was growing suspicious of his mannerisms and refused the request. First he tried to persuade me and then he reached and pulled my arms to force me to go with him.

The restaurant owner and customers stood puzzled as I struggled to get away from him. To cover up his brazen acts, he started pretending as if we were married or in some kind of relationship. One of the guys at the restaurant offered to help. I asked him to find a police at which point the restaurant’s owner insisted that I leave. “I don't want police to come here and ask me to be a witness,” he said. I told him I wouldn’t leave until I know that I am safe.

Shortly afterwards, the gentleman returned with two young policemen. For a minute I felt safe. I told the cops what happened. “It is all your fault,” one of the officers exclaimed. “Why would you go for lunch with him unless you are interested.” I felt insulted and humiliated in front of the restaurant’s patrons. I made it home safe that day but said nothing of my colleague who continued to threaten to get me fired for years unless I slept with him.

As a counselor at AAU, my students came to me with their problems thinking I was better of. I was older than most, but my lot was not better. I received no protection from the university or law enforcement. My students told of sleepless nights worrying about how they would make it to class the next day amid men who wake up early in the morning to do nothing but harass and intimidate them.

In contrast with those in rural areas, a woman in Addis maybe educated and assertive but they are not protected. Their daily ordeal consists of finding another route to school to escape from the guy who threatened to kill them or maim their face. It means making up stories to tell your parents about the bruises on your nose after a boyfriend punched you, or a redeye or a bruise on your chin from a guy you refused to date. It is an untold story of countless women who live with the trauma and guilt of sexual violence. There is simply no good reason or justification for a man to put his hand on a woman. And no women should go through this in the 21st century. But there are few guarantees.

A wakeup call

Hanna’s story received scant attention from the government-run media. Hanna’s story saw the light of day thanks to social media. So far only a handful of Ethiopian outlets carried the story, offering a brief account of Hanna’s kidnapping and rape. Last week, the Ministry of Women's Affairs held a press conference and pledged to assist with the investigation. However, the Ministry is a political instrument for the country's rulers and lacks the power and necessary resources to address the pervasive violence against women in Ethiopia. The officials spend more time ballyhooing the government’s record on gender equality to donors while ignoring the normalized sexual and physical violence against women. Independent human rights work is severely restricted. There are no community-based initiatives that can deal with the culturally sanctioned harassment, abuse and discrimination against women.

Hanna’s horrific death should serve as a wakeup call for all Ethiopian women. Sexual and physical violence does not discriminate. Educated or not, teenage or fully-grown women — every woman in Ethiopia is a potential victim. As Sahilu rightly noted, “rape is not about sex,” it is about traditional notions of power. Our society shames and disempowers victims while the rapists are let off the hook under the cover of culture and traditionalism. Nothing could ever bring back Hanna but her death is an opportune moment for Ethiopian women to unite and fight to end gender-based violence. It is the least we can do to honor Hanna.



Qatar Airways begins regular flights to Eritrea [Video]

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Qatar Airways begins regular flights to Asmara


By Shabait

Asmara, 05 December 2014 – Qatar Airways today began regular flight to Eritrea. Heads and management staff of the Eritrean Civil Aviation Authority and the Ambassador of Qatar to Eritrea, as well as managers of the Airways were present at the inaugural flight of the Airways.

According to reports, details of the Qatari Airways flight to and fro Eritrea from Doha city to destinations around the world would be released during the official ceremony tonight here in the capital marking the beginning of the Airways regular flight to Eritrea.

The 5-Star Qatar Airways flight covers 140 routes around the globe.





UN Chief Names New Somalia-Eritrea Monitors

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Ban Ki-moon announces the appointment of new Somalia Eritrea Monitors


UN Chief Names New Somalia-Eritrea Monitors


By Sam B.


The UN Secretary General (UNSG) recently appointed a new “finance expert” to replace the previous one, Dinesh Mahtani. Mahtani resigned in disgrace from the UN’s Somalia Eritrea Monitoring Group (SEMG), after it was revealed, by the investigative journalism of Inner City Press, that Mahtani was advocating for regime change in Eritrea in his capacity as the member of SEMG.

It should be recalled that in mid 2012, Matt Bryden the Coordinator of the SEMG, another avowed anti Eritrea member of the SEMG was also replaced in disgrace, for the shoddiness and partiality of his work, as well.

Given the controversial nature and history of the SEMG and the United States of America’s role in advancing these blatantly anti-Eritrean sanctions, one would assume that going forward the Security Council (the Monitoring Group) and the UNSG would be keen to avoid even the appearance of impartiality.

Alas, it appears even the fig leaf of impartiality is now totally abandoned. Ban Ki-moon just appointed yet again the AMERICAN, one Nicholas Argeros, from the United States of America, as the “finance expert”. Ban Ki-moon has also “designated Mr. Trajber to serve as Coordinator of the Somalia and Eritrea Monitoring Group. The three remaining experts (regional affairs, armed groups and arms) of the Monitoring Group will be nominated shortly“, Ban Ki-moon said.

It should be noted that Jarat Chopra was the previous Coordinator of the Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea, Nicholas Argeros was also a member as a Finance expert and Zeina Awad a Transport expert (all signed the last 10 October 2014 report). The level of movement in the personal is concerning. Many questions ought to be raised. Why are they back to the old lineup? Why is the Jarat Chopra the previous Coordinator replaced by Christophe Trajber of France, who is also the maritime/transport expert? What happened to Joakim Gundel who came to replace the Danish arms expert, Cornelis Steenken? Why does this controversial group suffer so much attrition?

Still, the questions raised by the Inner City Press earlier this year ought to be reiterated:

What is the role of the people chosen and paid by the UN to monitor sanctions? In the case of the Somalia and Eritrea Monitoring Group there is a history of controversy, from former chair Matt Bryden to …“finance expert” Dinesh Mahtani.”

Indeed what is the role? Speculations are riffe the SEMG is nothing but an instrument at the service of the US foreign policy. Given the completely sloppy nature especially of the finance arm of this group, as reported here: Eritrea – Is SEMG Competent to Report on Eritrea Mining? – ICP’s question is of growing relevance.

However, as the former UN Secretary General, Boutrous Boutros-Ghali, informs, “a major problem at the UN was that the Department of Peacekeeping Operations was very infiltrated by the American authorities”. Boutros-Ghali further elaborated on “how the UN is infiltrated” and how this “impacts” the organization. He states:

“The US authorities have taken control of the UN system through financial administration and the appointment of officers and staff who are paid directly by the United States. The UN doesn’t have the means to appoint senior officers and specialist staff. When these people are selected and paid by a foreign government, they are obviously more loyal to that government than to the UN. As a result, reports presented to the Secretary General and to the Security Council are purged and modified.”

The entirety of Ban Ki-moon’s letter to the Security Council announcing the new appointment is appended below.



Letter dated 26 November 2014 from the Secretary-General addressed to the President of the Security Council

I have the honour to refer to Security Council resolution 2182 (2014), adopted on 24 October 2014, by which the Council decided to extend the mandate of the Somalia and Eritrea Monitoring Group for a period of 13 months.

Accordingly, I wish to inform you that, after having consulted with the Security Council Committee pursuant to resolutions 751 (1992) and 1907 (2009) concerning Somalia and Eritrea, I have appointed the following experts:

Somalia

Déirdre Clancy, humanitarian affairs (Ireland)

Bogdan Chetreanu, finance (Romania)

Christophe Trajber, maritime/transport (France)

Eritrea

Nicholas Argeros, finance (United States of America)

Zeina Awad, transport (Lebanon)

I have designated Mr. Trajber to serve as Coordinator of the Somalia and Eritrea Monitoring Group. The three remaining experts (regional affairs, armed groups and arms) of the Monitoring Group will be nominated shortly.

I should be grateful if you would bring this matter to the attention of the members of the Security Council.

(Signed) BAN Ki-moon


President Isaias Afwerki Arrives in Qatar on a 3-day Working Visit

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President Isaias Afwerki is in Qatar on a three-day working visit 



By QNA

President of Eritrea Isaias Afwerki arrived in Doha Saturday on a visit to the country.

The Eritrean President and his accompanying delegation were welcomed upon arrival at Hamad International Airport by HE the Minister of Culture, Arts and Heritage Dr. Hamad bin Abdulaziz Al Kuwari and HE the Eritrean Ambassador to Qatar Ali Ibrahim Ahmed. (QNA)






ERI-TV Interviews Journalist and Filmmaker Andre Viltcheck [VIDEO]

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Eri-TV's  Raphael Giuseppe interviewing Andre Vltchek


Eri-TV's Open Mic host, Raphael Giuseppe, interviews novelist and filmmaker Andre Viltcheck, who is in Eritrea to make a documentary to show the world the real situation in the country.

Raphael: Mr. Viltcheck, as you know Eritrea has been the target of deliberate and relentless demonetization campaign. What are your thoughts on this and how do you see your role as a filmmaker and truth seeker?

Andre: For those spreading the propaganda, Eritrea is a virus. It's worse than Ebola because a country like Eritrea that stands on its two feet, which is serving its own people, is the worst nightmare the imperialism or savage capitalism can imagine.  Now imagine the countries we mentioned before, Ethiopia, Djibouti, Kenya, Uganda, Democratic Republic of the Congo, will get contaminated with the idea that the government should actually use its resources to serve their people; to feed their children. Can you imagine the entire system of African neo-colonialism that is being re-introduced from Europe and the United States - this entire project would collapse. 


Ethiopia: Hundreds Detained, Many Suffer Broken Arms and Legs

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Ethiopian protest


Hundreds Detained, Many Suffer Broken Arms and Legs


By Abraha Belai

ADDIS ABABA (Dec 7) – Senior opposition party leaders and three busloads of protesters were admitted to the 3rd Police Station on Saturday night, eye-witnesses said. The 3rd police station is adjacent to the infamous Maekelawi Prison in the capital.

Many of the arrested were limping with injuries from police beatings. Engineer Yilikal Getnet, chairman of Semayawi Party, reportedly suffered a broken hand.

Families and friends who tried to take food and clothing to the detainees at the 3rd Police Station and elsewhere, were turned back, without passing the essentials.

Other activists who suffered beatings were also being held at Kazanchis and Cherkos police stations.


Seventy Ethiopian migrants drown off Red Sea coast of Yemen

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Exhausted Ethiopian and Somali refugees on Yemen beach


By Reuters

At least 70 Ethiopians drowned when a boat used by  smugglers to transport illegal migrants to Yemen sank in the Red Sea in  rough weather, security authorities in the western part of the country said on Sunday.

Human traffickers often use unseaworthy boats to smuggle African migrants to Yemen, seen as a gateway to wealthier parts of the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia and Oman, and the West.

Security authorities in Taiz province said the small boat sank on Saturday due to high winds and rough seas off the country's al-Makha port.

They said the boat was carrying 70 people, all of them Ethiopians.

Tens of thousands of migrants from Africa, the Middle East and beyond crowd into often unsafe boats each year and many drown.

In March, at least 42 illegal African migrants drowned in the Arabian Sea off the southern coast of Yemen.

(Reporting by Mohammed Ghobari; Writing by Sami Aboudi; Editing by Stephen Powell)

Danish Report Finds Eritrean Migrants Aren't Refugees

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Eritrean, Sudanese and Ethiopian migrants in Tel-Aviv, Israel



Danish Report Finds Eritrean Migrants Aren't Refugees



By Israel National News


A special research delegation of the Danish Immigration Service (UDL) went to Ethiopia and Eritrea to clarify the political realities in the region in terms of "refugee status" for immigrants illegally leaving Eritrea, and last month published its precedent setting results.

The report, released November 14 and entitled "Eritrea - Drivers and Root Causes of Emigration, National Service and the Possibility of Return," removed the blanket asylum granted to Eritreans in Denmark.

In research based on diplomatic sources, NGOs, and witness testimony from within and without Eritrea, the report found that there is no true danger posed to army deserters who escape forced service, and who in nearly all cases are not given any sort of punishment.

Aside from Denmark, the report has great implications for Israel where tens of thousands of Eritrean and Sudanese illegal infiltrators have made their way into the country and drastically raised the crime rates, as the Knesset struggles with the High Court to find a way to combat the phenomenon.

While leftist organizations have claimed the infiltrators are refugees, figures presented by the state have shown the overwhelming majority of them are not refugees, but rather work migrants breaking the law in a search of greater job opportunities. Those figures are backed by the Danish report, which gives credence to the appraisal that infiltrators do not have refugee status.

Harsh punishments?

In the UDL report, a source from an international organization within Eritrea declared that in the worst case scenario, an Eritrean who left the country without permission will be arrested "for several days up to one
week," and then sent back to army service.

Many sources cited in the research reported that those who pay a 2% tax of their earnings can receive a passport and return to the country without any sanctions for deserting the army, or illegally leaving the country. In some instances those returning weren't even required to return to army service.

Aside from activist opponents of the regime, the Eritrean government views deserters as immigrants leaving for financial reasons and not traitors, and doesn't try to pursue or punish them, according to the report.

The report noted that many Eritreans leave and return to the country on a constant basis, and many instances were described of Eritreans leaving without permission and returning for visits - including a visit by a group
of 400 Eritreans with Swedish passports who had left without a permit and were stopped at the airport. They were allowed to return to Sweden without any problems.

In another case described in the report, a group of several hundred Eritreans were returned to the country by force by Egypt after leaving illegally and trying to infiltrate into Israel. Back in Eritrea, they were arrested for a mere two weeks and returned to their families.

Several diplomatic sources in Eritrea were cited by the report saying that the regime has changed its policy and no longer prevents immigration by its citizens. They reported that in the last two years there is no attempt to prevent people from leaving or returning, as long as immigrants pay the required taxes at the embassies.

UDL noted on international reports which claim that up to 10,000 people are imprisoned in Eritrea, and based on the research findings said the reports are "difficult to harmonize with the reality on the ground."

Responding to criticism, UDL's vice director Lykke Sørensen told the Danish newspaper Berlingske "the report stands. It is based on credible sources within Eritrea, showing that some of our ideas about the situation in the country were not fully up-to-date.”

An Israeli-European coalition to return infiltrators

Yonatan Yakubovich, head of the NGO Israeli Immigration Policy Center's publicity department, said the report has profound meaning for Israel.

"Despite the fact that a large part of what is described in the report was already known from testimony by Eritreans, this is the first time that an official body in a European country gives it official confirmation based on diplomatic sources," said Yakubovich.

He continued "unfortunately, for years the public opinion in Israel was stuffed with reports written by radical organizations, most of them from testimony of the infiltrators themselves."

"The Israeli government needs to cooperation with the Danish government and other countries like Norway to quickly advance arrangements to return the infiltrators from Eritrea to their land," said Yakubovich. "Until then, the ban on employing them and negating the incentives to their continued presence in Israel will bring the voluntary return of most infiltrators."



Eritrea: Nevsun unfazed by unreliable power at Bisha plant

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Eritrean miners at the Bisa plant 



Nevsun unfazed by unreliable power at Bisha plant


By Henery Lazenby


TORONTO – Eritrea-focused copper producer Nevsun Resources was unaffected by power supply issues that had forced a temporary halt in concentrate production at its flagship Bisha mine.

Vancouver-based Nevsun reported that the 27-generator-strong third-party-supplied power plant was undergoing routine maintenance when it failed to reliably restart this week.

Nevsun noted that despite the power outages, mining operations continued at full capacity and Bisha continued to truck and export stockpiled concentrates.

The company had already achieved its full-year production guidance of between 180-million pounds and 200-million pounds of copper in concentrate and the plant interruption did not have a negative impact on the company’s 2014 financial results, as it would draw down and sell from stockpiled concentrate inventories.

Bisha’s diesel power plant is provided by Aggreko Power Systems. Recently, Aggreko replaced nine of the 27 generators as part of scheduled maintenance of the plant. Nevsun said that Aggreko had now sent to the Bisha site the appropriate resources and technical personnel to assess and correct the problem.

The company’s TSX-listed stock was trending negatively on Monday, changing hands at C$4.30 apiece in afternoon trading.



Eritrean Airlines Begins Weekly Flights to Europe

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Eritrean Airlines Boeing 767-238 (ER) - (Credit: Paul Morris)


Eritrean Airlines Begins Weekly Flights to Europe


In a recent advertisement made on Eritrea Profile, Eritrean Airlines announced it has commenced operation to a number of destinations effective this month.

According to the ad, the national flag carrier has added the routes Asmara-Khartoum-Cairo three times per week and Asmara-Milan-Asmara once per week to its destinations.

Moreover, Eritrean Airlines is operating its regular flights of Asmara-Jeddah-Asmara and Asmara-Dubai-Asmara.

The addition of Milan to its destination seems to be an indication that the EU Air Safety List (black list) on Eritrean Airlines from flying to Europe has been lifted.

The EU bans airlines which do not comply with the EU safety standards. In some cases, if the EU finds a civil aviation authority of a country that does not fulfill the required international safety oversight standards, it bans all the airlines that are licensed by the authority in that country.





Eritrea is the only nation in East Africa not implicated in the global CIA torture network

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Eritrea is the only nation in East Africa not implicated in the global CIA torture network, according to Senate Intelligence Committee's report released today.

The report finds Ethiopia, Djibouti, Kenya and Somalia have all unlawfully facilitated CIA torture of suspects alleged to have ties with extremist groups.

The study, distilled from more than six million CIA documents, also says the agency consistently misled Congress and the Bush Administration about the harsh methods it used and the results it obtained from interrogating suspects.

After examining 20 case studies, the committee found that torture “regularly resulted in fabricated information”, said committee chairwoman Dianne Feinstein, in a statement summarizing the findings. She called the torture program “a stain on our values and on our history”.

The investigators concluded that the "enhanced interrogation techniques" did not provide any worthwhile intelligence. It also indicates that CIA officers themselves repeatedly questioned whether the interrogations were useful.







As Houtis advance in Yemen, President Isaias Calls on Red Sea Countries to Maintain Security

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Eritrean Coastguard and Air Force patrolling the Red Sea




Houthis’ advance threatens Red Sea countries

By Al-Monitor

In light of the current crisis in Yemen and the control of Sanaa by Houthi armed groups, Egyptian experts predict that Egypt would intervene in the conflict to prevent the Houthis from gaining control of the strait of Bab al-Mandeb on the Red Sea, in defense of Egyptian and Gulf security.

Commander of the Egyptian navy, Osama al-Jundi, openly declared the navy's readiness to protect the country's territorial waters, economic interests and the Egyptian coast in all directions and to deal with any risks that might threaten them.

At the same time, a number of initiatives were launched in an attempt to ward off this war. Egypt and Saudi Arabia both received an invitation from Isaias Afwerki, the Eritrean president, to start negotiations to find a way to maintain the security of the countries along the Red Sea.

Former secretary-general of the Arab League, Amr Moussa, issued a joint statement with former Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora. They called for an Arab initiative to work on restoring the unity of the Yemeni army and mobilizing to restore security. In addition, they would eliminate all usage of weapons in Yemeni cities to move forward with the parliamentary elections.

Moussa and Siniora warned about the division in Yemen and the danger it poses to Arab security from the Red Sea and the Arabian Sea, if the Houthis, who are supported by Iran, reach Bab al-Mandeb strait.

The initiative was made by Moussa and Siniora after the failure of the Gulf Cooperation Council initiative for organizing the transition in Yemen, since the terms of this initiative were not implemented and most importantly, the restructuring of the Yemeni army never happened.

Siniora and Moussa's statement also mentioned former Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh’s link to the ongoing events in Yemen, as well as his alliance with the Houthis in preparation for his return to power in an agreement for the joint management of the country.

According to the Eritrean ambassador to Egypt, Cairo welcomed Afwerki’s initiative to sponsor a meeting for the Red Sea countries to maintain security in the face of the Houthis. But, it did not take actual steps to implement it and did not call the rest of the Red Sea countries to negotiate measures needed to protect security in the region. The ambassador said that this is due to Arab concerns about involving Israel as one of the Red Sea states in the initiative. The Eritrean ambassador thus reiterated his country’s call to implement the initiative without including Israel.

Commenting on the Eritrean initiative, the Egyptian ambassador to Eritrea and former assistant to the secretary of state for African affairs, Mona Omar, told Al-Monitor that the Houthis' strength can never match the military power of one of the Red Sea countries (Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Jordan, Israel, Egypt, Eritrea and Djibouti). “I don't think that the threat posed by the Houthis to the Red Sea countries could spark a war in the true sense of a 'war,'” said Omar. She said, “Since this group is exactly like all terrorist movements that currently exist in a number of Arab countries and that are going to be eliminated.”

She added, “The issue of Somali pirates still casts a shadow on the Red Sea and there are still the naval fleets belonging to a number of countries at the entrance to the Red Sea. The Egyptian maritime patrol is indeed present in the Egyptian territorial waters and they [the Houthis] will be dealt with in the event that they cross the Yemeni territorial waters.”

Regarding the possibility of Egypt engaging in a war against the Houthis in the event that they pose a threat on the Red Sea region and the new Suez Canal project, security expert and founder of the International Terrorism Association, Gen. Rida Yacoub, told Al-Monitor, “This war may not be a direct military one, as is the case currently in the Sinai [Peninsula] between Egyptian forces and terrorist groups. It will be an indirect war between Egypt and the Houthis, through the support of the Yemeni army that will provide plans, ideas and intelligence data. It will also supply [Egypt] with the necessary equipment and techniques to get rid of the Houthis.”

He stressed that it would result in the arrest of groups, and Yemen would have to apply the same measures on the Houthis to prevent the establishment of a safe haven for them and the flow of money between countries. Moreover, Egypt and Yemen would have to be provided with modern techniques by the Counter-Terrorism Committee in the UN Security Council to eliminate them.

“Libya did the same with Ansar al-Sharia, and succeeded in having the Security Council issue a resolution for their elimination,” Yacoub said.

He added, “Egypt might resort to closing the Bab al-Mandeb strait — as it did during the Yom Kippur War with Israel in October 1973 — to prevent any communication between the Houthis and other terrorist groups in Egypt, and in Sinai in particular.”

On the subject of association by Iran’s Shiite regime with the Houthis in Yemen, security and strategic expert Maj. Gen. Hossam Sweilem told Al-Monitor, “Exactly as Iran controlled the power in Lebanon through the Shiite party Hezbollah, Iran is attempting to control the regime in Yemen through the Houthis, who are also Shiites.”

He said, “Egypt must anticipate and prepare to intervene militarily to prevent the Houthis closing the Bab al-Mandeb strait because it would put it under the control of Iran — like the Strait of Hormuz [in the Persian Gulf]. This would have negative effects on the Suez Canal and would make it a battle of life or death for Egypt. I do not think that the international community would allow this to happen."

Regarding the possibility of deploying international forces to maintain security in the Red Sea area, Sweilem said, “It is difficult and will not be allowed by either the Yemenis who dominate the eastern side of the Bab al-Mandeb strait, nor the Eritreans who control the western side.”

He added, “There is a military base and coastal Iranian missiles on the Eritrean coast. Sudan is one of the most important countries on the Red Sea and it has become so in part from this dependence on Iran. In addition, there are Iranian weapon factories in Khartoum, including the Yarmouk factory [that was bombed in October 2012].”

Many initiatives were presented to solve the issue of the Houthis reaching the area of Bab al-Mandeb and threatening the security of the Red Sea countries. However, none of them were effectively initiated. It is this that threatens the outbreak of military confrontations in the region in the event of the Houthis' anticipated arrival to the strait area.

35th Anniversary of National Union of Eritrean Women (NUEW) in Toronto, Canada

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35th Anniversary of NUEW celebrated in Toronto


35th Anniversary of National Union of Eritrean Women (NUEW) in Toronto


By ENHOC Ontario,


The ceremony of the 35th Anniversary of National Union of Eritrea women, begun with the national Anthem and remembering our martyrs, also the Hidri Group added energy by performing a cultural Show and leading the events,  Further a speech by the Chairwoman, Ms. Netsihti Haile she went on to elaborate the story of HAMADE in Toronto along in the environs the hard work that was presented during the armed struggle and still pledge to continue and sustain the contribution to national building process in a highly well organized manner and energy. Furthermore on the occasion of event Mr. Ahmed Iman the (HEAD of Consular Affairs to Canada) went on the express the satisfaction towards the role of NUEW has been playing since the Armed struggle and still working hard towards the nation-building, also expressing Eritrean women are and has been the backbone of Eritrean Success also went on to congratulated to all HAMADE across the globe and the NUEWs branch in the city of Toronto for the success they have been achieving.

The members of the National Union of Eritrean Women branch in Toronto have asserted readiness to enhance role towards ensuring women’s active participations in State affairs on the basis of higher organization. The members in a Toronto and Environs cities made the pledge in connection with the 35th founding anniversary of the Union.

The observance in the city of Toronto and Environs witnessed brief explanations regarding the principal role played by Eritrean women in the days of armed struggle for independence and safeguarding the nation’s sovereignty, as well as nation-building process.

The participants of the gathering expressed readiness to bestow the values of the Eritrean women to the young generation, and back up the national development drive.












Inside Kenya's Death Squads [VIDEO]

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Kenyan death squads are killing around 500 people annually 


Inside Kenya's Death Squads


By Al Jazeera

For the first time members of Kenya’s counter-terrorism police admit to “eliminating” suspected Muslim radicals.

Speaking exclusively to Al Jazeera’s Investigative Unit, officers from four units of Kenya’s counter-terrorism apparatus admitted the police assassinate suspects on government orders.

They claim that the order to assassinate is made by the National Security Council, a body chaired by President Uhuru Kenyatta.

The film examines how extra-judicial killings are seemingly becoming normalized, thirteen years after the so-called ‘War on Terror’ was declared.




Statement of Erirea's Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Human Rights Day

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Eritean Ambassador Tesfamicael Gerahtu addressing the EU's Human Rights Day in Asmara [Image credit: Iqbal Jhazbhay] 



Statement of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs On the Occasion of Human Rights Day Event Organized by the EU Delegation in Eritrea



Event Organized by the EU Delegation in Eritrea


Asmara, 10 December 2014



Honourable Ministers, Excellences
Ambassador Christian, EU Delegation Representative in Eritrea
Ms Christine, UN Resident Coordinator
Ladies and Gentlemen

It is a great honour to address this gathering representing the Ministry of Foreign affairs on the occasion of the Human Rights Day. It is an event which symbolizes the collective effort we all devote to humanity. Let me first commend the EU delegation in Eritrea for organizing this important event.

Ladies and Gentlemen

Eritrea is a country that emanated from the struggle for human rights which entailed huge human sacrifices paid for the basic values of liberation, freedom and democracy. Accordingly, human rights in post independent Eritrea has constituted the epicentre of state building, social justice and a viable future imbued with progressive morality. The effort is squarely based on promoting humanity and hence human right has been mainstreamed in nation building.

In essence this is interlinked with the concerted effort of ensuring human dignity, human security and human development and is thus managed as a process. The fundamental principles in terms of strategy have also encompassed a broader development outlook which includes the following:-
  • strengthening the supremacy of the internal transformations
  • decisiveness and centrality of the human factor in our society
  • integration of human rights into all sectors of life
  • indivisibility of rights and responsibilities and
  • interlink between peace and security, and human rights and development

Ladies and Gentlemen

The short span of time since independence and the challenges of nation building taken as a reality, Eritrea’s achievement of nation building as reflected in human right issues are really substantial. In particular the effort to promote equal rights and opportunity in all sectors of life and sanctioned by national laws as a major trend is exemplary. It is a process and hence a long way to go.Nevertheless, a strong foundation for peace, stability and all round development in the political, economic, social and cultural life of the society has been laid and is vividly reflected in the human rights of all citizens. 


As in all other sectors of development and like in any other country, there are however, human right challenges and problems which the Government continuously works to address. Nonetheless, the prevailing structures, processes and the outputs signify the importance of the systemic approach established and implemented through various policies and programmes. In this perspective, Eritrea reiterates its commitment to further consolidate the progress achieved in the promotion and protection human rights.


Ladies and Gentlemen

The sacrosanct ideals of humanity and the continuous effort to promote and protect human rights are thus predicated on the above thinking and practice. On this term and as part of the collective effort to humanity, Eritrea also continues to uphold its responsibilities on the basis of the international treaties it has acceded in congruence with its national laws. It has also reinforced its engagement as an integral part of its development diplomacy. The UPR recommendations it accepted in the UPR 2nd Cycle will thus be utilized broadly towards this end. At this juncture the MOFA is glad to inform all partners that work is going on to reflect these UPR recommendations in the sustainable development goals of the nation.


Ladies and Gentlemen

Eritrea however, strongly opposes all politically motivated resolutions as well as country specific mechanisms meant to target countries, Eritrea being one of them, under the guise of human rights but with no dividend at all. In the same vein, the prevailing tendency to co-opt human rights and use them as a pretext for intervention in internal affairs is also counter-productive. This also runs contrary to the basic principles of the HRC and HR Commission and undermines engagement and cooperation through the UPR.

In the context of the above outlook briefly described and to conclude, the MOFA reassures the EU delegation and all other bilateral partners that Eritrea will continue to strengthen its engagement and collaborative efforts on human rights. It is to be expected though, that the politically motivated resolutions and mechanisms on Eritrea are lifted towards this end. On the other hand, it is also critical to take into consideration the seriousness of the violations of the peoples’ human rights due to the occupation of sovereign Eritrean territories by Ethiopia and the illegal and unjust UN sanctions imposed on our nation.

I thank You Ladies and Gentlemen! 




Eritrea: Construction of Adi Halo Dam [Pictures & VIDEO]

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Eritrea: Construction of Adi Halo Dam


The Emba Tekera Dam, which is under construction in the environs between Adi-Halo and Adi-Kefelet, is a 20 million cubic meter dam. When completed, the dam supply water to Asmara.

Living up to the national motto of "Eritreans build with sweat, not debt", the dam is reportedly being financed and constructed entirely by Eritrea.


The following are images and videos of the dam:




Video of Engineer Saleh informing people about the project:




Click on images to enlarge [image credit: Amaniel Kiflat]



Ethiopia: Large scale killing and deportation of Somali-Issa people in the Awash River

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The TPLF regime is forcefully removing thousands of indigenous people from their ancestral lands in order to sell the land to internationally companies


Ethiopia: Large scale killing and deportation of Somali-Issa people in the Awash River


By Mareeg


During the recent weeks, the Ethiopian government is perpetrating a crime against humanity against the Somali-Issa people living in the following towns: Gadmaytu, Undufo and Cadaytu, located near the Awash River. More than  300,000 people were asked to clear an area the size of Belgium (30 000 square kilometers), to pave the way for a program designed few years ago, with the prime purpose of leasing or selling lands to foreign investors.

International institutions such as the World Bank or the African Bank for Development are repeating these past few years that Ethiopia has an annual growth between 8 to 10%; but on the ground, in spite of the few foreign investments in the hospitality industry, or infrastructure projects like the "grand renaissance dam" which damaged the environment, 70% of the 80 million Ethiopians are still living with less than 1 dollar a day.

Ethiopia is also well-known with having a very poor record regarding Human rights. Political opponents and journalists are routinely jailed, if not killed. According to Reporters Without Borders, a leading NGO in the field, the government has created a climate of fear within the press ahead of the parliamentarian elections in May next year "At least six publications had to close in recent months; and around 30 journalists have fled abroad since the start of the year, as a result of the biggest crackdown on the privately-owned press since 2005". Prominent journalists like Mr. Temesgen Desalegn, the editor of "Fact" magazine, are jailed with vague charge of "terrorism". According to another press watchdog, the Committee to Protect Journalists: "Ethiopia has one of the most restricted media in the world and the highest number of journalists living in exile".

The general elections in May 2005 were marred with frauds and violence, leaving more than three hundred deaths and thousands wounded. Several well-known opponents including blogger Eskinder Nega and opposition leader Andualem Arage paid a huge price for their search of freedom: Mr. Nega was jailed for 18 years while Mr. Arage was sentenced for life. As a result, the current Parliament elected in 2010 comprised only 1 opponent out of 547 Parliamentarians!!!

During the last five years, the authoritarian Ethiopian government has put in place an ambitious GTP (Growth and Transformation Plan) aimed at attracting international investments. Unfortunately, this Plan is based on the forced eviction of 1.5 million people in the Gambela, Afar, Somali and Benishangul-Gumuz regions. In the Regional Somali State alone, 500,000 people have to be deported. This process is well-known as "land-grabbing", consisting of selling or leasing large pieces of land in developing countries to international firms, governments (Brazil, India, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Republic of Korea, etc.) or wealthy individuals. According to activists monitoring the issue worldwide, who published their findings in "Farmlandgrab.org" and "Survivalinternational.org"; or works undertaken by researchers like Jon Abbink, an anthropologist specializing in the Horn of Africa, Ethiopia is deeply engaged in this process in a very bad way: < In Africa, Ethiopia is at the forefront of handing out land >. Of course the amount paid by foreigners to acquire land is never released and it is very unlikely that this money will ever reach the poor Ethiopians.

Several NGO working in the field of Human Rights have reported and documented how the Ethiopian government has removed at gunpoint thousands of indigenous people from their ancestor lands in the OMO River and the Gambela region since 2010. Killing, rapes, extrajudicial executions, arbitrary detentions and beating have been used during the deportation process, according to Human Right Watch, Survivalinternational and the Oakland Institute.

Those last weeks, the Ethiopian government sent its military forces into the Regional Somali State, besieging the towns and villages of Cadaytu, Undufo, Gadmaytu, and the surrounding area inhabited by Somali-Issa pastoralists and farmers.

The violence deployed against the indigenous tribes living in Gambela and around the OMO River is again underway there. Demonstrations have been staged by the Somali-Issa inhabitants. The response was a fierce repression with the army firing indiscriminately. Dozens of people lost their lives, while hundreds have been wounded. All this happened in silenced as not one single media - be it national or international- is reporting this slow onslaught on Somali-Issa pastoralists in Ethiopia.

On 25 November 2014, in yet another crackdown aimed at discouraging Somali-Issa, four elders and a dozen youths living in the above localities and in Dire-Dawa, the second largest city in Ethiopia, were arrested and taken into custody in Jigjiga, the capital of the Regional Somali State. On 5 December 2014, elders Guhaad Adaan, Cali Muuse, Xareed Xasan and Axmad Nuur Cabdilaahi were sentenced to 3 years imprisonment, whilst the youths were jailed for 2 years.

As highlighted recently in a conference by the courageous and well-known Ethiopian activist and ONLF official Rayaale Hamoud, the Tigrean ethnic minority who seized the power in 1991 in Ethiopia is trying to thwart and diminish the influence of the Oromo, Amhara, and Somali, which outnumber them in various subversive ways.

In Gadmaytu, Undufo and Cadaytu, the Tigrean government has set up an intractable and artificial border dispute between the Afar and the Somali Regional States, applying an old tactic inherited from the colonial powers: "divide and rule". They pushed the Afar into claiming the area on the basis of historical ownership, in a flagrant move contrary to the provisions of the Ethiopian Constitution which states: "States shall be delimited on the basis of.language, identity and consent of the peoples concerned". Indeed, many internal reports upholding the constitutional provisions, taking account of other disputes between Regional States across Ethiopia, written by neutral officials recommended the organization of a referendum to settle
the issue. Notably, one report said that "the Afar claims of ownership of some of the territories in which the Issa are presently found, such as Cadaytu, Gadmaytu, Undufo and others, based on the claim that the Afar used to inhabit these territories in the past. Nevertheless, the issue of territory should not be considered by looking at history, but what should be considered is the status quo instead. The present settlement patterns, plus the fact that both the Afar and the Issa are people of one country; and that inter-regional boundaries should not be a barrier for the two communities from using the scarce natural resource that are found in their localities".

The man fueling the dispute and opposing any amicable resolution between the two neighboring tribes is Mr. Shiferaw Tekelemariam, the Ethiopian Minister of Federal Affairs, who is married to an Afar woman.

What is more unfortunate is the sinister role played by high rank Somali officials. Both Mr. Abdi Ilay, the current President of the Regional Somali State, who is a Somali-Ogaden; and one of his deputy Mr. Abdi Hakim, a Somali-Issa, are acting as servile lackeys, leading the repression against their own people. These two men are so inhumane that they even changed the age of the four elders, submitting to Court false documents stating that that they are 40 to 50 years old in order for them to be jailed. In reality, each elder is more than 70 years old.

In any case, the authoritarian Tigrean government is not in favor of the Afar people at all, rather, it is pursuing its main purpose: namely the ultimate deportation of either Somali-Issa or Afar, in order to sell or
lease those fertile lands around the Awash River to foreign states and international funds.

Eritrea Come & See [Documentary]

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Young boy representing Eritrea during the 40th anniversary of Bologna Festival


Eritrea Come & See

Eritrea come and see is a documentary made by French filmmaker Petit Oeil. It showcases the reality in Eritrea, which is currently the most demonized country in Africa. The documentary interviews senior Eritrean officials (including President Isaias Afwerki), health officials and citizens to give the viewers a perspective of Eritrea that Western media rarely shows.



Eritrea’s Struggle for Independence

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College of Arts and Social Science at Adi Keyih 


Eritrea’s Struggle for Independence


By Andre Vltchek

Qohaito is a mysterious, ancient, pre-Aksumite settlement in the Eritrean highlands, with several impressive monolithic columns rising towards the sky. It is said that right there, under the surface, exists another entire lost city. As you walk, the earth shakes, and somewhere deep below; you can hear the echo of your footsteps.

Just a few minutes drive from the columns, the plateau suddenly ends. There is a cliff and a breathtaking view into the deep valley. This place is called Ishka. And this is where thousands of Eritrean freedom fighters and civilians used to hide from the brutal Ethiopian occupation forces.



I set up my cameras right near the cliff, asks my local cameraman to roll, and then put the first question to a local mountaineer, Mr. Ibrahim Omar: “How was life here, for you, before and after the independence?”



“There were two separate lives”, he explained. “The first one, before independence – that was harsh, brutal. And then came the other life, a totally different one, after we won. This is when our basic human rights got recognized and respected. The schools, health posts and roads were built. Everything was suddenly transformed.”

I ask Mr. Omar for an example and he readily replies:


“Before, a pregnant woman would have to ride on a camel, for long hours, to reach some medical post, in order to give birth. Many women would die during the journey. Now medical posts are readily available in this area…”

He thinks for a few seconds, then adds: “And this is what I call life.”

As we drive back to the capital city – Asmara – we can see new roads, some paved, some not yet, cutting through the rugged, mountainous terrain. And parallel to them, new electric wires are stretching out towards the horizon.

In the car, I am thinking about what Mr. Omar defined as ‘human rights’. Here, it is in direct contrast to what the expression stands for in the West. In the United States and in Europe, ‘human rights’ were created as an ideological tool, a weapon in the Cold War period. In Eritrea, it has a very simple meaning: feeding the people, giving them free education and medical care, building new roads, supplying them with electric power.


To understand Eritrea is not easy. But outside Asmara, everything is exposed; nothing can be hidden. Both poverty and the heroic attempts to eradicate it are right here, in my face. Farmers are working hard; many roads and electric grids are under construction.

But Western propaganda against Eritrea is so mighty, that often even I catch myself recalling its slogans, instead of concentrating on observing the reality with my own eyes. And I am professional: I have dedicated my life to uncovering Western indoctrination campaigns!

I film and photograph, in order to capture the truth, through my lenses.

After just a few days, a very clear portrait emerges: Eritrea; the African Cuba – country that stands on its own feet.

Eritrea – a proud and determined nation, which fought for a long 30 years for its independence, and in the process, losing hundreds of thousands of its sons and daughters during the struggle.

Eritrea – a country with its own egalitarian development model, working relentlessly for the welfare of its people.

Eritrea – a nation unwilling to sacrifice its citizens for the whims of the Empire and its corporations.

All this is in direct contrast to the propaganda that is emanating from London and New York, smearing the country, and trying to portray it as an outlaw state which supports terrorist groups in East Africa, oppresses its citizens, and violates all basic ‘human rights’.

On this journey, on my search for the truth through the country which the West describes as perhaps the most hermit place on earth, I am accompanied by only three people – Ms. Milena Bereket, (Director of “African Strategies”, an independent research and outreach think tank based in Asmara), by a local cameraman Azmera, and by a driver.

African Strategies is hosting me in Eritrea, but practically it is responding and accommodating my requests, arranging interviews and transportation to the places that I want to visit. We are planning together, working shoulder to shoulder. African Strategies is an independent research think-tank, established online in 2011, initially created to respond – virtually – to the growing demands of the Diaspora and continent-based Eritreans, as well as other Africans for fact-based and localized information regarding the Horn of Africa region, and more specifically Eritrea.

In a relatively short time, I have managed to visit three regions (zones) of the country, and I would have been allowed to visit all six of them, were I to have more time. As it is, in eight days in the country, I hardly sleep, but I encounter people from the mountain villages and from the port city of Massawa, I lead a roundtable discussion with several prominent young intellectuals, and I discuss politics and the development model of Eritrea with officials from the Ministry of Education and Health, as well as with former liberation fighters, and Eritrean diplomats.

All of my encounters are spontaneous. Eritrean people are well informed and educated. Our political discussions are open and often passionate. I cannot believe my own eyes, or more precisely: I cannot believe the lies that are being told about this country.

***

In the Hotel Asmara Palace (former Inter-Continental) I met a distinguished Ethiopian author and researcher Dr. Mohamed Hassan, a former Ethiopian diplomat in Washington, Beijing and Brussels, as well as an MP representing the militant Belgian Labor Party. He now spends a substantial amount of time in Eritrea, which is extremely close to his heart and to his ideological beliefs.



Without wasting much time on formalities, we began working together, almost immediately, filming and recording the discussion.

Dr. Hassan offered his well-defined thesis, right from the start:


“I am from the horn of Africa, and I saw the of Eritrea’s point of view, even in the time of their struggle, which was not just the national independence struggle for Eritrea, but for the whole Horn of Africa in general. It is true that Eritrean people’s strife for freedom had been denied and the Eritrean people had to embark on a very long journey to reach their independence… it took them 30 years to defeat the enemy, which consisted also of my country – Ethiopia – that was supported by many powerful forces… At one point it was the United States and all other Western countries… then Israelis supported special troops fighting against Eritrea… In 1991 the struggle ended, and we thought that we would build, all of us together, the new Horn of Africa, on the basis of equality, as brothers and sisters, with no differences between us and no hierarchy… 1991, I thought, was the best moment that our region ever had. Eritrea defeated the neighboring regime, and it was supporting revolutionaries in Ethiopia; people like us… There were great changes taking place in Ethiopia, then. We hoped that our economies would get integrated, and that we would establish new people to people relations…”

But it was not meant to be. There were huge changes in the world, as Mr. Hassan recalled. The Soviet Union disappeared and the balance of power had tipped to one side.

Mr. Hassan continued:


“Suddenly, in the United States, an officer, one of the very important officers in the Pentagon, wrote for a military journal called “Parameters”, his memoranda and his understanding of what should be done to Africa. It described the US interests in Africa, and it divided Africa into 4 regions… One region was to become the Southern part of Africa, all that huge area from South Africa to Congo; the region full of minerals; that region that was ‘very important for the US military and the US companies… Second region was Horn Of Africa, which was supposed to be integrated with East Africa and ‘greater Middle East’, which G.W. Bush was later trying to create. Western military bases located in the Horn of Africa were supposed to be ready to intervene in the Middle East and in other African countries…”

The 3rd zone was to become West Africa; rich in oil that is extracted in order to satisfy demand in the North America. 4th zone was to cover North Africa, from Egypt to Mauritania.

All 4 zones had to be, of course, fully controlled by the West.


“Immediately after this document was published, Mr. Anthony Lake, who was then a national security advisor under Clinton Administration, published his new theory called ‘Anchor States’. He also divided the African continent into 4 bases; defining 4 ‘anchor states’. One: South Africa, ‘responsible for southern Africa, two: Ethiopia, ‘responsible’ for the Horn of Africa, three: Egypt for northern Africa, and four: Nigeria ‘in charge of’ western Africa. Very soon, Nigeria intervened in Sierra Leone and Liberia, and Ethiopia accepted its role as well, becoming the base for Western aggressiveness in the region.”

Eritrea never sold out. It did not accept the imperialist’s games in the region. It stood patently in the way of the Western domination of the region, because of its principles of national independence, non-interference, no military bases in the Horn of Africa, and its desire to build the new Horn of Africa… All this was considered by the big powers as ‘negative’, according to Dr. Hassan. This is why Eritrea was identified as pariah state.

***

How brutal, how consistent could the punishment be – retribution for attaining independence and for taking care of the people, for social justice?

Embargos against Cuba are a very good example of how far the Empire is willing to go. Or ‘making the economy scream’, under the socialist government of President Allende in Chile, who was obviously having an extremely ‘bad influence’, according to Mr. Kissinger and the corporate bosses, on the entire Latin America and even on the far away Mediterranean countries. Or maybe direct military attacks, as those that were performed against Indonesia during the reign of the independent-minded President Sukarno.

Both Indonesia (in 1965) and Chile (in 1973) were bathed in blood, in the Western-orchestrated coups. Chile recovered recently, Indonesia never did. Cuba stood firm, at a tremendous price and with incomparable determination and courage.

And so Eritrea has been as well– standing and fighting against constant subversions, attacks, propaganda, embargos and provocations.

That is why it is often called the “African Cuba”. Or maybe it should be compared to Vietnam, or to both. But to be precise, Eritrea has developed its own model of resistance. Its courage, its struggle, is its own. It is a totally unique place, and its people are proud to be distinctive.

But can Eritrea survive, while much bigger and richer countries, like Libya, Iraq, and Syria are falling one after another, simply because the Empire decided that they were giving too much to their own people, and too little to its corporations?

***

“We do not want to be boxed”, I am told over and over again, whenever I ask whether Eritrea is a socialist country.


“Look at Amílcar Cabral, from Guinea-Bissau”, I am told by Elias Amare, one of the most accomplished writers and thinkers of Eritrea, who is also a Senior Fellow at the ‘Peace building Center for The Horn of Africa’ (PCHA). “Cabral always said: ‘judge us on what we are doing on the ground’. The same can be applied to Eritrea.”

Most of the leaders of Eritrea, most of its thinkers, are either Marxists, or at least their hearts are very close to socialist ideals. But there is very little talk about socialism here, and there are almost no red banners. The Eritrean national flag is in the center of all that is happening, while independence, self-reliance, social justice and unity could be considered as basic pillars of the national ideology.

According to Elias Amare: “Eritrea registered success, substantial achievements, in what the United Nations defines as ‘Millennium Development Goals’, in particular ensuring primary education for all, free-of-charge; ensuring women’s emancipation and equality of women in all fields. In healthcare – it achieved a dramatic reduction of infant mortality, as well as the reduction of maternal mortality. In this regard, Eritrea is considered exemplary in Africa; few other countries have attained that much. So, despite all the obstacles that the country faces, the picture is positive.”


“Eritrea continues on the national independent path. It has progressive view in building national unity. Eritrea is a multi-ethnic, multi-religious society. It has 9 ethnic groups, and two major religions: Christianity and Islam. Two religions co-exist harmoniously, and this is mainly due to the tolerant culture, that the society has built. There is no conflict or animosity between the ethnic groups or religious groups. The government and the people are keen to maintain this national unity.”

This is in stark contrast to the rest of Africa. Ethnic and religious conflicts are plundering Sudan, Kenya, Congo, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and many other nations. Behind them often stand the old colonialism and neo-colonialism.

What Eritrea has accomplished is not some minor achievement, but an essential breakthrough.

Then why, I ask Elias, is the West so aggressively against the Eritrean path? He replies:


“I go back to Noam Chomsky’s view on this: whenever a small country tries to pursue an independent national path, and does credible work on development, Western countries do not like it. They want their ‘client states’. They want states that are submissive to the global capitalist interests…. All this is no-no in the eyes of the Western imperialist countries. They want neo-colonial regimes that obey the diktats of the World Bank, IMF, WTO, and so on.”

***

The port of Massawa, is still in ruins. Ethiopia bombed this historic city to the ground, during the last stage of the Eritrean war for independence.

Since then, the reconstruction work is progressing, slowly but surely. And the port is now functioning well; it is modern and efficient. Cargo vessels are sailing to all corners of the globe, while passenger ferries are connecting the mainland with the Dahlak Islands.

Still, in this city itself, the horror of war is visible at every step. Many historic buildings stand like ghosts, with nothing inside. At the entrance to the port, there is a massive stand. I ask, what statue used to be placed on it, in the old days? “Haile Selassie”, I am told.

We stop at the ancient coffee shop, which is known for its lengthy coffee ceremonies. Life is slowly returning to normal. People are drinking, and chatting.

Two ladies are cooking in front of their house. We approach them. I want to know whether their life has been improving.

Ms. Maaza, 55 years old, replies:


“It is definitely better than when the Ethiopians were here. Adults are being educated… Kids are being educated as well: all for free. Medical care is also provided, when we get sick. We are optimistic, hopeful about the future.”

Then she invites us home, for lunch.

Massawa is, once again, waking up to life. There is a new college (College of Marine Sciences and Technology), new international airport, and a free-trade zone.

Hotels are opening their doors.

The countryside is still dotted with war relics, with monuments, with destroyed tanks and armored vehicles.

What this country went through is mindboggling. The fact that it is here, that it survived, that it won, managed to move forward, is itself a miracle. Or more precisely: it is proof of the heroism of its people.

***


In Asmara, I sit down for a talk with a senior Eritrean diplomat, Tesfamichael Gerahtu, a former Ambassador to the United Kingdom. But Mr. Gerahtu is not just a representative of Eritrea abroad; he is one of the national heroes, who fought, for long years, for the independence of this country, against all the odds. And he has been helping to build his nation, to this day:

“Eritrea is peaceful and stable because of the government’s ‘integrated development paradigm’ – equal opportunities for all, with a special concentrated focus on rural areas and areas that were previously particularly disadvantaged. We are improving the general and overall quality of life… we are working on a cultural transformation that would lead to the creation of a ‘knowledge society’, where every person is an owner of the development process. We are trying to build cooperation based on dialogue, respect and ownership of the development programs and the process.”

I ask about the way the United States has been treating this country – this African rebel.


“The US pattern of behavior towards Eritrea over the years has been full of conspiracies.”

He quoted the then US ambassador to the UN (later to become US Secretary of State) John Foster Dulles: “From the point of view of justice, the opinions of the Eritrean people must receive consideration. Nevertheless the strategic interest of the United States in the Red Sea basin and the considerations of security and world peace make it necessary that the country has to be linked with our ally Ethiopia.”

I mentioned that the United States used and continues to use different pretexts and mechanisms to destabilize Eritrea, to which Mr. Ambassador replied, passionately:

“They have actively promoted an economic blockade … when that failed the US used Ethiopia to start the war in 1998 … when that failed, it injected political dissent and tried to create divisions and cleavages along ethnic lines… when that failed, it used religion – Pentecostals …when that failed, it actively began luring youth out of the country, even issuing visas, illegally, to people without the passports … and then it turned around and accused the government of “human trafficking” … when that failed, it actively pushed different neighboring countries to pick fights with Eritrea and also to encouraged them behind closed doors to encircle Eritrea out of IGAD … It used the ‘client’ states to promote its own strategy for this region… And when that also failed, it used the infamous “terrorism” label to engineer illegal and unjust sanctions … Finally, when everything failed, it used and continues to use “human rights” and “democracy” as a battle cry for intervention…”



“See what we are doing and tell us whether we are socialist country or not”, is repeated to me, by many.

The more I see, the more I am convinced that the Eritrea’s plan, its process, its revolution, are extremely close to what is being fought for in Cuba, in Venezuela or Ecuador.

But there is great pride and also great modesty, here. The Eritrean process is shy, unvocal. As a result, the world knows very little about this remarkable country.

***

Dr. Taisier Ali is a Sudanese who lives in Eritrea for 15 years. He is the director of PCHA. We sit down in his office, and try to analyze, why the Eritrean model is so misrepresented abroad, or why it is ignored by the Western mass media:


“When you talk about Eritrea, to the international community and the outside world, I think it is one of the most misunderstood countries on the whole globe… After coming here, I soon realized that here, they have a sense of purpose, a ‘national project’, conceived and developed during the 30 years of struggle. We don’t have to accept it, but at least they are determined to take their country from the point A to point B. They face many challenges, but they have always stayed on course. The rest of Africa is similar to my country – Sudan – no sense of purpose.”

“One disturbing factor in Sudan and in Africa in general, is corruption. Eritrea is nothing like that. For me it was always a reminder that if Eritrea could focus on its development; bottom-up development, rising from the real needs of its people, then why can’t we, the rest of us, do it, too?”

I asked, “Is the national project and ‘purpose’, what is actually bothering and scaring the West, the most? The fact that Eritrea could influence, positively, the rest of the region?”


“The international community, imperialism, neo-colonialism – they cannot perpetrate any society, unless the society is divided, unless it is weak, and clueless about where it wants to go; unless it does not have a national project. The national project galvanizes all natural resources, national actors, the human capital, to achieve the level of development that would improve the living standards of the people.”


“Like in Cuba?”


“Cuba is a very good example, yes! I also think that one of the reasons for this misunderstanding of Eritrea has to do with the self-reliance attitude of the party and the ordinary citizens. It is simply not seen almost anywhere in the world.”

Mr. Ali says that many other countries have talked about self-reliance, including Tanzania, but it was mainly rhetoric. Eritrea did it. And when he speaks to local comrades, they realize that with this approach, the journey will take longer, but it will be achieved on Eritrean terms.

And that is definitely not what the West wants.

****

“Eritrea is not a neo-colonial state. Eritrea is an independent state. Eritrea does not host any military bases, any external forces. Eritrea has the vision, and not only for Eritrea, but also for the region. It is also promoting self-reliance and regional integration. It is also built on the ideal: ‘let us use our own resources, and let us build our independence. It means elevating the life of Eritrean people, particularly those in the rural areas. This approach was considered in the West, as Chomsky said, as ‘a rotten apple’.”

There is Dr. Mohamed Hassan, again.

I ask him as well: Is it the main thing that the West is afraid of? A domino effect: an influence Eritrea could have on the rest of Africa?

“Of course”, he replies. “Africa has some 50% of the world natural resources… Then consider this: the leadership of this country – they don’t steal. They are living a normal life, that of normal people. No leadership in any other country in Africa lives like ours here. You go next door – the Prime Minister of Ethiopia who just died, left his family some 8 billion dollars.”

I see the point: the lack of corruption could also considered be as ‘very dangerous’. John Perkins explained to me, a long time ago, that corruption is one of the most effective tools used by the West in its quest to control the entire planet. It gives power to the elites, and it makes indebted and divided countries totally defenseless.

“Eritrea didn’t attack anybody. But their views were considered very dangerous. And as you said, Eritrea is considered a virus contaminating much bigger nations,” concludes Dr. Hassan.

A great Eritrean intellectual, Elias Amare, adds more, along the same lines:
“Eritrea has been insisting that its independence would be a genuine independence. It insists on self-reliance.” It doesn’t mean that Eritrea rejects direct foreign investment, for example. No. But when direct investment enters, Eritrea wants it to be on equitable terms. For example: Eritrea has huge natural resources. Gold, copper, zinc to name just a few. But it does not want to replicate what happened in DR Congo, or in Zambia. It wants an equitable partnership. Many Western countries do not see all this favorably. And that’s the main reason for the hostility Eritrea is facing.”

But Elias, the West is also constantly using the accusations that Eritrea is supporting terrorist movements all over the region.

Elias replies vehemently: “That is totally baseless and false. First of all, because of the nature of how Eritrea gained its independence, the country is totally against any religious extremism. It has been actually targeted by Islamist extremist groups for many years. Eritrea is a secular state: it does not mix politics with religion. It had been proven by many credible investigative journalists, that there is no support for terrorism, coming from Asmara; no support for Islamic extremist groups, or for Christian extremist groups.”

“Big powers do not want the Eritrean example to be replicated in Africa. I say again, Africa has huge natural resources. Big powers are now trying to grab these resources. What will happen if other governments in Africa were to try to follow Eritrea’s example? It would definitely not be beneficial to great powers.”

***

In the days that I am spending in Eritrea, I see dams and irrigation systems, villages working and the building of strategic food reserves. I see schools and medical posts, new roads.


I stop the car and talk to several girls walking on the new Domhina Road, some hundred kilometers from Asmara. They are all from the 5th and 6th grades; cheerful, laughing, optimistic:


“In our village we already have an elementary school, and now we are walking to a secondary school, in a bigger village. We are good at school; we love English and math.”

The girls want to be teachers and doctors, but one resolutely aims at becoming an engineer, in order to build bridges, roads and power grids for her country.


Eritrea is still very poor, but it is neat, and orderly.

Crime is extremely low. I spoke to a Laotian eye surgeon, Dr. Soukhanthamaly Phonekaseumsouk, who has been performing cataract surgeries, for many years, in the deep countryside of Eritrea, where batteries that are charged using the solar system have been mainly powering her equipment. Eritrea is number 2 in the world, per capita, in terms of the use of solar energy. The Doctor explained that she never felt unsafe, living alone, in the countryside or in the city; she was never harassed.

The adviser to the Minister of Health, Dr. Ghebrehiwet Mismay, took me on visits to the hospitals in Asmara. The neat institutions were in shocking contrast to the monstrous hospitals that I saw in several turbo-capitalist countries like Kenya and Uganda.


In Eritrea, medical care, including medicine, is virtually free. Wards are clean; those hosting children are overflowing with stuffed animals.

The country has managed to dramatically reduce child mortality through vaccination programs and constantly improving medical care.

China has just completed several specialized blocks of the hospital in Asmara, including those for cancer treatment and for heart surgery. Several Cuban doctors are teaching here, and treating the patients.

New housing projects are going up in several parts of the capital city, as well as in Massawa and elsewhere.

The day before my departure I met 2 education experts from the government, Mr Tquabo Aimut and Ms Mehret Iyob, who explained to me, clearly, how seriously adult literacy is being taken here.

Eritrea is now one of very few African countries that will be able to meet many of the Millennium Development Goals.

At Independence, life expectancy stood at only 49 years, at the last census it was up to 63 (very high by African standards). In 1991 adult literacy stood at between 20% to 30% and only 10% for women. In 2008 it climbed to 65% and in 2010 to 74%, 2015’s (realistic) goal being 80%.

We are talking about post-literacy and functional-literacy programs, but above all, about how democratic the system really is. Not ‘democratic’ in terms of the Western perception, but democratic in terms of the participation of the people in decision-making; in developing the curricula, and the blocking of projects that would bring no benefits to the communities.

Both ministries – those of Health and of Education – agree that while Eritrea is repeatedly praised by several UN agencies, including UNDP and UNESCO, very little of it is ventilated in the mainstream Western press.

***

For all these days, it has not always been a smooth ride. One evening I hold a round-table discussion with young intellectuals. We shout, argue: about socialism, about the fight against imperialism, about whether Eritrea should be more engaged; whether it should be closer to the socialist countries or not.

I film, photograph and record.

I am introduced to Mr. Zemhret Yohannes, Director of the Research and Documentation Center at PFDJ (People’s Front for Democracy and Justice), and we have a long discussion about the turbulent Eritrean history and on the country’s right to improve the life of its people. We talk into the night, until the tapes are gone and my memory cards are full.

During my last night I speak at a hall full of people. I address the local intellectuals and youth. And just few hours earlier, the ERI-TV interviews me.


It is all totally interactive; it is all one huge “process”; nothing is staged, everything spontaneous.

***

Eritrea is under fire; it is clearly on the hit-list of the West, because it serves its people, and because it is refusing to aid the Empire and the corporate world.

The West is using its toxic propaganda to the maximum, in order to smear the country.

It is also systematically boosting, financing and manufacturing ‘the opposition’, as it does all over the world.

Periodically, huge campaigns from the BBC and other sources of Western propaganda get pointed, directly, at Asmara.

For instance, at the height of the “coup” that never was (January 2012), African Strategies served as a defying force that helped patriots around the world counter the barrage of disinformation regarding Asmara and the
Government of Eritrea spread by the so-called “experts”.

That is the time when the Western news channels and Al-Jazeera were reporting on the ‘rebellion’ in the capital city.

My local camera-person, Mr. Azmera, summarized the event:

“As the ‘coup’ was taking place, I was just leaving the Presidential compound, after working there for some time. I walked out, ate lunch… Then at 4PM I was called and told: ‘Al-Jazeera is reporting that there was a coup in Asmara!’ I just ignored them, and walked home.”

***

After my intensive work in Eritrea, I testify: I came to my conclusion: the country is socialist!

It is socialist, if the definitions of Latin America were to be applied.

At the same time, it is socialist in its own way. It will never take any diktats from anybody: from the West, or even from the friendly countries of Latin America, South Africa, China or Russia.

Eritrea belongs to its own people.

I have worked in 150 countries of the world, and I never encountered a nation like this.

My first three days there were confusing. I tried to place Eritrea in a box, somewhere. Later, I just let go and smiled… And enjoyed the ride, so to speak.

What a beauty she is! And what strength, courage, and resilience she radiates!

As my plane was taking off, for Cairo, at 4 in the morning, I was humming some tune, happily. I was leaving behind a country that I truly could admire.

Inside, in my heart, I felt much richer than when I arrived.

If this was, for Western capitalism and imperialism, a virus – political and economic, social Ebola – then I was ready to be infected by it, gladly over and over again!





______________________________
Andre Vltchek is a novelist, filmmaker and investigative journalist. He covered wars and conflicts in dozens of countries. The result is his latest book: “Fighting Against Western Imperialism”. ‘Pluto’ published his discussion with Noam Chomsky: On Western Terrorism. His critically acclaimed political novel Point of No Return is re-edited and available. Oceania is his book on Western imperialism in the South Pacific. His provocative book about post-Suharto Indonesia and the market-fundamentalist model is called “Indonesia – The Archipelago of Fear”. His feature documentary, “Rwanda Gambit” is about Rwandan history and the plunder of DR Congo. After living for many years in Latin America and Oceania, Vltchek presently resides and works in East Asia and Africa. He can be reached through his website or his Twitter.




Eritreanism vs Incoherent and Aimless UN-Eritrean Oppositions and Why is Eritrea Successful

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Canadian-Eritrean youths dancing on stage during the Eritrean Festival in Toronto - August 4, 2013 (Credit: Zantana Imaging)


Eritreanism vs Incoherent and Aimless UN-Eritrean Oppositions and WHY IS ERITREA SUCCESSFUL


Deep inside our heart, we have the love of Eritrea we can’t erase or dismiss regardless of what the mind thinks.  The significance of Eritreanism is even becoming crystal clear as I began to question and understand my children who didn’t have the opportunity to grow up in their homeland.

They are raised to be decent British citizens who will serve and defend the Kingdom whenever it is asked of them. But they are not English, Welsh, Scottish or Irish. I start to feel this through my eldest son as he is starting to assert and associate himself with the coloured people. I suddenly started to recall the debate that was happening on several medium whether coloured people can be classified as English/Scottish/Irish/Welsh.

My son’s intuition is telling him he is different hence his innocent heart is looking for belonging. As responsible parent, it is my obligation to ensure he is aware of his true identity.  I do not want him to perceive his identity through race or colour but that Eritreanism, we are all proud of and as analysed through the knowledge and wisdom of Tegadalay Syum Woldemariam. Anyhow I strongly recommend to everyone to view and understand the philosophical analysis from one of our Tegadelties.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XtwW8z5fUNk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?g v=tk8MXazXgP8

After listening to Tegadalay Syum, I start to explore other countries and societies in order to develop more understanding on the importance of identity and its psychological effect. I was taken by surprise how organised and powerful are those societies that haven’t lost their identity or sense of belonging. I was actually in disbelief with some of my findings. I have observed various societies and countries but one that strike me most was the Jews society and the State of Israel. Wow! There is a lot of resemblance there.  I would like us to view the video clips below and learn something from it despite other reservations the world might have towards Israel

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2scrDzw3BcM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o1HqEdLslNo

I then started to look at the challenges my children and the young generations are facing as Eritreans.  Will they be able rise above the problems the world is hurling at them and shine as Eritreans?  Will they listen to their heart and assert their Eritreanism?

How do we make sure the spirit our freedom fighters is propagating in every Eritrean heart for ever to come and the young people do not become the victims of the ego based system? I have been following our adversaries and the huge appetite to kill Eritreanism from every single of us. It is becoming a concern and risk to our very existence as free and independent people. It is the responsibility of every Eritrean to continue the struggle and expose the hidden agenda orchestrated behind the Incoherent and Aimless UN-Eritrean Oppositions. It is actually openly aired to confuse and lead us into some kind of submission as bluntly as expressed in the video clips below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gewPTSK2hJU

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ej8gARyfxDs

Sadly, these evil powers are uprooting and stealing some of our young hearts. The innocent hearts are being disposed in the deserts and oceans with such a contempt and unprecedented cruelty.

At the same time I feel proud and assured, when I hear a child who is born thousands miles away from his homeland and yet fighting for his very existence and free Eritrea through that innocent and intuitive heart. Rejecting the mind of corrupted and irrational Dr. Bereket Habtesilassie and many other stooges.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbxYU2VvHig

Having listened to this brave and wise child challenging the UN-Just Sanction on Eritrea and defending his Eritreanism, I have turned into my own son and asked him to make a presentation on the importance of the Eritrean Community School before we close for the Christmas break.  Here is his piece of writing in its authentic that touch my heart with a mix of joy and tears.

WHY IS ERITREA SUCCESSFUL

"Eritrea is a special community. One where there is no such thing as: despair, anger, hatred. It’s only a place of peace. In which some -like I- may consider it paradise. Some –like I- may call it a privilege to come from Eritrea. But let me tell you something. I know that Eritrea is a magnificent place to be. I know it is filled with streets of joy. And I just want to emphasise the ‘I know’. Some people only believe it’s a great place. They are -how could I phrase it- not as confident as others. But I would like to send a message to them. If you truly believe then you could turn your belief into a fact.

Now I will start to reach the main body of this speech. However, before I start talking about the good things of Eritrea, I want to talk about the sacrifices. During the war many people lost their lives. Eritrea lost a bit of its soul; nonetheless do not feel down-hearted as I can assure you they will have a safe place in heaven. For example, my grandfathers lost their sacred lives in the war. Yet I do not hate the man who murdered him. For I have forgiven his sins just how I hope you will to. But because I have forgiven the man who killed my grandfathers doesn’t mean I don’t mourn for him every day. It doesn’t mean I have forgotten him because deep down in my heart I know that every second of every day he is watching over me. So for my grandfather and your ancestors. I think we should have just have fifteen seconds of silence. And kids don’t moan and groan because I just want you to reflect on your family if anyone has lost their life to save yours just think and in your heart tell them ‘thank you’…

Okay. So now we’ve got all the bad things out of our minds and we can start talking about the positive things. Life is like a camera. Just focus on what’s important. Capture the good times. Develop from the negatives and if things don’t work out take another shot. Now that seems beautiful to me. It infers how no matter what we need to stay as a community. Stay strong and live life because if you truly believe you want to do something, you don’t need anybody’s approval. Now kids don’t take this to an advantage. You still have to listen to your parents.

Eritrea is a community. This is why we are successful. We will fight for each other until the very last man. We do everything for each other. I KNOW that I am an Eritrean citizen and I will cherish that deep down and I will bury it deep in my soul. And in school kids often ask me where I’m from. But I just say to myself. The only reason these people can’t tell where I am from is because Eritrea is a land of magic. Hidden on earth and is only for the people who deserve it. And congratulations because all of you have earned a spot in Eritrea.”

Here is my own son, who is just 11, transcending into another level and asserting and catching his Eritreanism through his own heart and the spirit our Martyrs. Indeed the spirit of our fallen heroes is not letting Dr. Bereket Habtesilassie and many other stooges destroy Eritreanism.

As my son put it in a black and white, we will forgive but will never forget and disconnect from Eritreanism. Those stooges who are disservice to the people of Eritrea and irrationally disconnecting their children’s heart should try to reach their conscious and listen to the heart that is yearning for belonging. Not just for Eritrea but for their own children wellbeing at most.

The Government and People of Eritrea are not dreamers bur visionaries for the common purpose.  In the eyes of the greedy and dominant systems developed in the developed countries, we are a hindrance to their supremacy.

Every peace loving individuals or societies have been facing execution and hardship. Even the life of great singers such as John Lennon are not spared. Will the heart give up?  Will they destroy Eritreanism?  If this was the case or reality, how did we gain our freedom against all the odds?

I rest here and urge the stooges to listen to and join with the people’s heart and “Imagine of All the People Living Life in Peace.” Eritreanism is in the people’s heart.  The self-centred stooges can corrupt the mind but the heart is impenetrable where the Eritreanism glow and grow for ever.

Awet N’Hafash,
Samuel Tukue Ghebreab


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