Quantcast
Channel: Madote
Viewing all 4577 articles
Browse latest View live

Ethiopia after its electoral drama: second “renewal” imminent?

$
0
0
TPLF Oligarchs

By RENÉ LEFORT 7 July 2015

The so called “dominante party” steamroller has flattened everything in its way. The opposition held one seat in the outgoing parliament. It will not hold a single one in the parliament elected on May 24, 2015. And of the 1,987 seats in the regional parliaments, only three will have escaped the ruling party. In the light of these figures, the multi-party state that the regime claims to have established remains a distant mirage.
The first factor in this sweeping triumph is the first-past-the-post electoral system. Under a proportional system, with 9% of the votes, the opposition could have counted on some fifty MPs.
Vigorous economic growth also played a hefty role. Even if the official figures are exaggerated, annual growth has probably been running at around 6% to 7% for the last decade. The infrastructure boom is astonishing, as is the proliferation of schools and health centres, the widening of access to drinking water and, more generally, a net reduction in the percentage of people in poverty, although the number of those below the national poverty line remains stable, currently at around one quarter of the population.
Now with more than 7 million members, one in five Ethiopians aged between 20 and 65 is a member of the EPRDF. The so-called “one to five” system was created to build a “development army”. The idea is that each “model farmer” – obviously a party member – should bring five peasant neighbours in his wake.  However, this “army” has also become a multi-tentacled tool to enlist and to control the whole population.
Finally, the opposition is virtually non-existent. The National Electoral Board, making sovereign decisions based on murky criteria, inter alia, about the eligibility of candidates, contributed to this, and even more so an increasingly constricted political sphere. However, the opposition is also a victim of its own divisions and the inconsistency of its programmes. This weakness arises, amongst other things, from the extreme difficulty of building a political force with the goal of acceding to power not through the gun but through the ballot box, when there is no evidence that the ruling power would accept the result, and in a country where power has historically always been acquired by force.
In consequence, these elections were – as expected – no more than a ritual performance and, as such, failed to play one of their essential roles: to bring to the fore during the campaign – explicitly and clearly – problems that have been becoming ever more acute, in particular since the death of the omnipotent Prime Minister Meles Zenawi in 2012.
In the absence of a real opposition and a vigorous civil society, they can only be tackled within the de facto single party, the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF). The question is, does it want to and is it able to tackle them? Time presses. Each of the party’s four components – Tigrean People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), Amhara National Democratic Mouvement (ANDM), Oromo People’s Democratic Organisation (OPDO), Southern Ethiopian People’s Democratic Movement (SPDM) – will be holding their congresses in August, the EPRDF as a whole in September.
Sebhat Nega, patriarch of the TPLF since its foundation, no longer holds any official position within the Front. In reality, he continues to play a decisive role, along with a handful of former senior figures from the “old guard”. In spring of last year, after a trial of strength with the Front’s current leadership, which has changed since 2010, following a rejuvenation campaign decided by and begun under Meles Zenawi, this group was the first to sound the alarm after visiting Tigray to hear what the people had to say. With a frankness that he is one of the few to allow himself to express, he delivers his assessment: “the people is not satisfied, it has a lot of grievances.”[1] Sebhat begins by identifying three: “corruption, bad governance and lack of accountability.” These may be the headline criticisms, but the censure goes much further.

The developmental state


Petty corruption has become systemic. It is standard practice amongst local authorities and officials – almost all party members – and arouses powerful resentments. Inflation also weighs heavily, quantitatively affecting farmers more than the urban populations, since more than half of the former are net purchasers of food, unable to produce enough for their needs. “Inflation is worse than prison”, is a common refrain. True, it has fallen, but prices have nonetheless doubled over the last four years. In any case, it is probably not the countryside that is likely to be the arena for inflation-fuelled “food riots”, given the ascendancy of the new class of “rich” peasants, many of whom are now supporting the regime.
In the cities, on the other hand, the possibility of such riots is one of the regime’s obsessive fears, especially with the explosion in youth unemployment, even amongst recent graduates. Recently, it has taken on a particularly tragic form: the clandestine migration of tens of thousands of boat people via the Mediterranean, but also – with much less media coverage – via the Red Sea to the Arabian Peninsula.
This exodus raises a crucial question: nobody in the leading circles disputes that the “developmental state” should remain in charge of key sectors and rigorous economic planning. However, funding is becoming more and more problematic. Loan repayments, in particular to private banks, will soon start to become a burden. The deficit in the trade and services balance accounts for almost a fifth of GDP, external debt – though still moderate – has risen to almost half of GDP. The estimates for future growth are expected to diminish.[2]
The early outlines of the next five-year Growth and Transformation Plan suggest a more “liberal” economic strategy. The idea is that the private sector, largely from abroad, will set up “sweatshops”, bringing local investors in its wake and thereby absorbing mass unemployment. However, this assumes that foreign capital will flood in,[3] and even more that local capital will follow: this is the only way to generate a dense network of small and medium-sized enterprises, the main potential source of jobs.
However, domestic capital continues to neglect industry in favour of services, where risks are lower and profits higher. The real challenge, therefore, is to find a good balance between continuing necessary public intervention and increasing the entrepreneurial autonomy essential to a market economy. This is a vital issue for the ruling party: the main credit to the regime is coming from the high levels of growth. “As long as the state will deliver, its legitimacy will be kept”, is the refrain that emanates from the business community and experts in international institutions.

Ethiopia stuck


In a 180° turnaround from its previous laudatory positions, The Economistconcluded a highly critical article as follows:[4] “Endless red tape and restrictions on finance deter investors… Only further reforms can sustain the goals of economic growth and political stability… (But) Ethiopia is stuck.”
Reform versus deadlock: that is the heart of the economic problem. First in the dock is the EPRDF. It has turned the entire state and its components into a satellite. Front and state have merged. Civil servants who are not party members are few and far between. As a result, the agenda of the Front and its hierarchy takes precedence over that of the state, party obedience hinders the free exercise of professional competence. The complaints about this issue are constant. Yet the smarter public management required by a more advanced economy demands that administrative managers should have freedom in their analyses and proposals. In the private sector, the obligation to meet the growing demands of the party, which include “voluntary contributions” andbaksheesh, are less and less tolerated. While the multinationals have access to the topmost political echelons, small entrepreneurs are in the hands of small-time local operators. Finally, there is the weight of history: centuries of authoritarianism, an implacable sense of hierarchy, a ruling power that has always been the fulcrum of the economy, government membership or high connections that have always offered the opportunity for lucrative rewards. In short, the legacy of a “mediaeval culture”, as the historian Haggai Erlich calls it.
Reform is on the TPLF agenda, but with no direct priority in the economic sphere. “There is a gap between the demand of the people and the supply brought by the Party, the government, and all of their services”, asserts Sebhat Nega. Indeed, “the Front is staggering… Its political soul is not lost, but it is at least too weak”. “Massification” – the transition in party membership from 400,000 to 7 million in ten years – has taken place in the absence of “a very disciplinary political education”, as was the rule during the armed struggle: it has thrown open the doors to “power mongers and rent seekers”, the expression used for those who take venal advantage of their position.
The TPLF has become a “machinery which has lost its capacity of producing people who are qualified, competent and committed to the cause of the people”. And this machinery is also – at least partially – pursuing its own course: “it isnot deeply organized so it doesn’t fully control its people, it isn’t strictly followed.” Consequence: “the Front must be revived and purified.” It needs to be repoliticised in order to recapture the militant purity of the glorious era of armed struggle. Sebhat Nega calls for a second campaign of “renewal” (“Tehadso”), lasting “three or four years”. According to him, the first “renewal” focused on the political line after the 2001 TPLF’s internal crisis, with the elimination of key figures from its leadership, followed by the purge of thousands of mid-level cadres. The second would concern only people and organization. To make an ecclesiastical parallel: the dogma is irreproachable, the rules impeccable, but there are too many lost sheep…
The first goal is for the Front once again “to internalize the problems, their causes and the issues”. So everyone must be “free to speak his mind without any fear” at all levels, not only internal but also external: “zero defence between the party and the people.” This freedom must also apply in the famous sessions of gimgema (criticism and self-criticism), one of the Front’s political and functional keystones. They have drifted, and need to recapture their original purity, which includes opening them up without fear or taboo to the people, before whom local officials will need to account for their actions.
But nobody, even the Front’s most “reformist” members, is calling for this process of democratisation to challenge the party’s “democratic centralism”. Open debate about everything, fine, but the decision-making process must remain the prerogative of the leadership, which can then draw on all the discussion in reaching its conclusions.

Meles Zenawi’s legacy


Should this democratisation be extended – even timidly – to civil society? For Sebhat, the Front needs first to be successfully updated in order to deprive the present “destructive opposition” – as it is commonly called - of its critiques when they are justified, and thereby make room for the emergence of a “loyal opposition”. However, others go further. If they are not given some elbow room, opponents will only be tempted by armed extremism, religious or ethnic, or seek to encourage popular uprisings, thereby compromising the country’s long-term stability. An external stimulus is needed to prevent the EPRDF stagnating again. [5]  
The second objective is to purge the Front of its “rent seekers” and “power mongers”, at all levels. “The party machinery has to be rebuilt”, explains Sebhat Nega, “but through a political process, not an administrative one.” To achieve this, he simply points to the upcoming congresses, where the “agendas should circulate at the grassroots level”. Then the central committee and finally the executive council will need to “assign people with clear duties” and impose “responsibility and accountability, at all levels, from the bottom to the top”. But young and devoted members of the Front are more explicit: the purge must include members of the current leadership. Their view is that these leaders have completely failed, that their eradication is a necessary condition if the Front is to recover its popularity.
Few, however, are bold enough to break a near taboo: questioning the dark side of Meles Zenawi’s legacy. It is after the 2001 crisis that the Front gradually mutated into a “machinery”. Meles held it in an iron grip. Meles and Meles alone devised and relentlessly imposed what became the country’s intellectual orthodoxy, preventing the emergence of any independent thinking. He transformed the Front into a multi-tentacled channel for the communication of orders from above – penetrating the remotest hamlet – and into an organ of control of the population. Some of his most ardent admirers go so far as to concede that he appointed too many “yes-men” to key positions. In return for blind discipline and total commitment, its members progressively came to see the party as an escalator to greater powers and material benefits, by legal but increasingly by illegal means. After its designer, builder and principal – if not sole – beneficiary died, without a leader of his stature emerging, this decapitated, depoliticised and devitalised pyramid lacks the indispensable internal strength to play its role as the near-single party.
In consequence, hidden failings of this system have come to light. The most striking is the dislocation of the leadership. Since the TPLF, the pillar of the EPRDF and by far the most robust and legitimate of the EPRDF’s components, is “staggering”, a chain reaction has begun. In the other components, where again the real “bosses” are not always – indeed rarely – those who hold the highest positions. In the government, despite its facade of unity. In the army and security services, which run their show pretty much as they like. At national level, where centrifugal forces are increasingly evident. And above all between the four components of the EPRDF, whose cohesion is cracking.
When questioned about this, Sebhat Nega responds soothingly. He can’t ignore the fact that if the TPLF “staggers”, the whole EPRDF edifice inevitably totters. But he refrains from giving an opinion on the state of the ANDM and OPDO. However, he denies a thrust from the “chauvinists” in the ANDM – a code word for “vengeful” Amharas accused of having never truly accepted the loss of their supremacy – and the “narrow nationalists” in the OPDO – another coded term stigmatising Oromos who want much more autonomy for Oromya. He emphasises the work done by these two parties to counter these tendencies, in particular through their general mobilisation for several weeks last autumn.

The ‘Tigrean perspective’


Sometimes saying out loud what is whispered within the TPLF behind locked and bolted doors, Tigray On Line, run by members of the Tigrean diaspora, who are strong supporters of the Front, is one of the few foreign-based websites on Ethiopian politics that is accessible in Ethiopia itself. One of its most recent postings opens with an entirely typical reading of what Tigrean intellectuals call “the Tigrean perspective” on history. Briefly put, this perspective is that, from the reign of Menelik (1889-1913) onwards, Tigray was deliberately divided, weakened, marginalised, in a word disempowered and impoverished, to perpetuate what they call “the domination and oppression of the Amhara/Shoan ruling class”.
However, the article goes on to acknowledge the current primacy of the Tigreans, a primacy fiercely denied by the authorities. The regime “is being accused of having an army with mostly Tigrean generals, a bureaucracy dominated by Tigreans, topmost political positions occupied by Tigreans, and the economy “suffocated” by Tigrean investment”. But since the vanquishers of the Derg military junta were essentially a Tigrean force, “historical processes may by themselves create the situation which may be hard to avoid. This imbalance requires time and patience and a slow and steady political process to correct.” But is this imbalance diminishing, increasing or remaining static?
Opinions, whether they reflect reality or not, greatly differ in this regard. Nonetheless, according to this view, Tigreans everywhere, in every sector, are and remain victims of nothing less than a “war of hate”. They are “harassed” and “they have in fact become the most marginalised… as they have always been”. Worse still: this hatred comes “even many times from the non-Tigrean members and sympathizers of the EPRDF”. In summary, writes another commentator from the same website, “the fight all in the Ethiopian politics… is between those who fabricate lies to bring the old system and stay on top of the majority of Ethiopians” – in other words: the “chauvinists” or more broadly the Amhara – “and those who want to build a just and equitable society”. In clear terms, this quote asserts that Ethiopian politics continue to be dominated by the age-old conflict between Amhara and Tigreans.
For its part, the ANDM, or at least its mid-level cadres, often express a symmetrical resentment. They are no longer ready to tolerate bearing their Amhara identity like a cross, in other words being pilloried because they are descendants of the ethnic group whose leaders dominated Ethiopia for a century. They frequently employ the same language as used by the Tigrean militants during their armed struggle, claiming to have become “second class citizens”. Many are bitter towards their leadership, in which the overrepresentation of natives of North Wollo, on the periphery of the Amhara region, is a further source of diminished legitimacy. They accuse it of selling out the rights and interests of their nation.
In OPDO, the charges are equally harsh. They essentially revolve around the central authority’s annexation – real or imagined – of whole chunks of Oromya. This is a reference to the Addis Ababa Masterplan, perceived as having been launched as a fait accompli, under which the capital will extend into Oromya territory. The central authorities will also play a major role in the future “industrial parks”, numerous in this region. In the background hovers the trauma of the conquest of much of Oromya by Menelik’s armies. Here again, the leadership of the OPDO is accused of lacking determination.
The regime constantly proclaims that its most striking success, perhaps even greater than the economic successes, is to have established harmonious relations between the different “nations, nationalities and peoples” of Ethiopia, through the introduction of federalism. These relations are being severely tested. A cohesion enforced by Meles’ ascendancy is giving way to divisions brought about by the advancement of regional powers and interests, one of the primary drivers of which is a polarisation based on identity – ethno-nationalism – which can reach irrational dimensions. What is really at stake is the EPRDF’s capacity to construct a federalism that is genuinely accepted by its four components, to broker agreement on a division of powers and resources which would be perceived as equitable. The history of this country is decidedly one of eternal recurrence. The “national question” re-emerges where it has always been, with varying degrees of visibility: at the heart of Ethiopian political life.

The national question recurs


This is the backdrop to the project for a second “renewal”. It cannot be ruled out that the purpose of the reform sought by part of the TPLF is also to strengthen its hand as much as possible in preparation for this federal shakeup. A TPLF with a “strong organization” and “high political maturity” – Tigrean activists acknowledge – is the ultimate guarantee of the survival of the federal system, i.e. of the survival of the Tigrean minority’s equal rights in relation to the other, more populous nations.
Amharas and Oromos respectively represent 27% and 35% of the population, together around 62%, as compared with 6% for Tigreans. But the federal system, at least as perceived by the TPLF, is based on the rule: one nation, one vote, whatever the size of population. Moreover, the ANDM and OPDO approach this restructuring with a serious handicap. Never, since their creation under the aegis of the TPLF in the late 1980s, have they been able to claim to be genuinely representative of their nations, whether because they lacked the capacity to do so or were prevented. Their current share of real power – political, economic, military and security-related – is limited. Finally, the OPDO is riddled with profiteer networks whose power and secrecy undermine its formal political order.
And then, will they want – and be able – to engage in this second “renewal”? The names that come up most often as potential leaders of such a movement are those of the TPLF’s “old guard”; Arkebe Oqubay, also a member of the Front, adviser to the Prime Minister, very active in opening up Ethiopia to foreign capital; Redwan Hussein, number three in the Southern Movement, Minister at the Government Communication Affairs Office; and of course Haile Mariam Dessalegn, who is purported to be a committed reformist. As a southerner, his constituency is the weakest of the four. However, the tensions between the three others make him – prime minister by default though he may be – paradoxically strong. He could play a major role as go-between.
Is it an accident that none of the leaders of ANDM and OPDO is mentioned? Do they believe themselves sufficiently strong to launch their parties into a root and branch reform process while maintaining control, in other words to lift the lid off the pot without getting burnt by the steam?  Otherwise, what modus vivendimight develop within the EPRDF between a TPLF in genuine mutation, and an ANDM and OPDO clinging to the status quo?
Then there is the position of the army and the security services. To find out where they stand would mean piercing the enigma at the heart of an already enigmatic universe. The most plausible hypothesis is that they would favour this reform agenda. Amongst the few certainties in this sphere: army chief Samora Yunus refused to intervene in Meles Zenawi’s succession process, and Getachew Assefa, head of the security services, has proved that he is ready to take a stand against corruption.
As is often the case, these institutions have a ringside seat from which to spot the cracks. There is no doubt that if the regime were to falter, they would step forward. However, it appears that they would only wish to act as a last resort. They would seem to feel that they have enough to do, with – amongst other factors – the threat of Islamism, the interventions in Somalia and South Sudan, the cold war with Eritrea, to welcome the establishment of a power sufficiently coherent and robust to tackle political issues initially by political means.
Amidst all these “machineries”, will the “reformers” be able to muster the critical mass needed to succeed, against the combined forces of those with entrenched advantages to defend, whether political, economic or administrative – though the three generally go together? The hard-core of “reformers” consists of an alliance between TPLF founders and an ardent “new guard”. The latter look to the “old guard” to lead this reform successfully. It is the only group it trusts. It is resolved to support it with all its strength. But will it find sufficient backing amongst the mass of mid-level cadres?? This hard-core is calling for a return to disinterested activism, for the renunciation of personal advantage, in return for the moral satisfaction of “serving the people”. Will this be persuasive?

The new middle class


The attitude of a group that has become a key player in Ethiopia’s political game could be decisive: the new middle class. It is everywhere on the rise. In the countryside, it is represented by the peasant elite, the “model farmers”, the local officials, the big shopkeepers. In town, this class is first of all represented in the administration, but it is also present in public and semipublic companies, and in the service segment, in particular the private sector. Yet its attitude to the EPRDF is ambivalent, even schizophrenic.
On the one hand, it knows that it is indebted to the party. First for peace and security, at a time when the memory of the two bloody decades (1970-1990) remains traumatic. Then, for a strong economic environment. It knows that its membership of the Front – to which the vast majority of the new middle class belongs, voluntarily or by necessity – brings it benefits in recruitment, in promotion, in support, even in hard cash. It wants to maintain those advantages, and with them the general order that underpins them. However, there is another side to the coin. Public service salaries remain meagre, and are further curtailed by taxes and “voluntary contributions”. This new group is the first to perceive that discontent with the regime is steadily rising, as is the thirst for change that goes with it, and that – unless it is stemmed – it could lead to the worst. However, at least at this stage, the most common middle-class demand is not primarily for the exercise of democratic rights, starting with freedom of opinion and expression. Rather, its slogan could be: let us do our work, let us go about our business! It fluctuates between satisfaction and frustration, the desire for and fear of change.
All these unknowns, at least as much as the rise in popular discontent, contribute to the vague but palpable disquiet in the ranks of the EPRDF. There is a general sense of having embarked upon a period of high tension whose outcome remains uncertain. The alternative presented by the “reformers” is between movement and inaction, in other words a weak consensus in the upcoming congresses and the symbolic roll of a few heads, and with it an inevitable escalation of the difficulties until a breaking point is reached. “The survival of the TPLF is at stake”, some Tigreans go so far as to say. If this is true of the Front, it is even more so for the ANDM and OPDO. Sebhat Nega is not prepared to go so far: “The party is weakened, but still alive”, he asserts. And when asked for his prognosis, he sinks into his armchair in a long drawn-out silence, takes a slow drag of his nth cigarette of the day and, with eyes half-closed and a discreet smile on his lips, answers: “I am optimistic”.

[1] Interview, 8 June 2015, Addis Ababa.
[2] 8,6% in 2015, 8.5% in 2016, compared with 10,3% last year
[3] Foreign Direct Investment reached a billion US dollars in 2014, and should rise to 1.5 billion in 2015, making Ethiopia the eighth biggest recipient in Africa in 2014 (Capital, 07/06/15). However, it receives less than 1% of Africa’s FDI, while accounting for 8% of its population.
[4] The Economist, 11 February 2014. See also the reaction in the blog http://hornaffairs.com/en/2015/06/09/why-the-economist-wants-to-meddle-in-ethiopian-domestic-politics/
[5] “In the long run, the waning influence of the opposition will lead not only to apathy but their frustrated supporters may resort to other [illegal] means of struggle… In the absence of a competent rival, the reigning party may become complacent and insensitive” (The Ethiopian Herald, the « official » English speaking daily newspaper, 26/06/2015).

Eritrea says constitution will be ready in the next 3 to 4 years

$
0
0
H.E. Ambassador Tesfamicael Gerahtu



By Tom Miles & Aaron Masho(TPLF supporter)

A top Eritrean diplomat said human traffickers, not rights abuses, were driving people to leave the impoverished African country, after a U.N. body accused the government of presiding over forced labour, torture and other rights violations.

Ambassador Tesfamicael Gerahtu told Reuters in Geneva on Tuesday there was an international "conspiracy" to tarnish Eritrea, saying Western nations had in part been swayed to act against it by regional rivals.

Eritrea, one of the most tightly controlled countries in Africa, has long accused its much larger neighbour Ethiopia -- with which it fought a 1998-2000 war over a disputed border -- and others in the region of trying to destabilise it.

Ethiopia and Eritrea have regularly traded accusations, while nearby Somalia and Djibouti have pushed for greater U.N. scrutiny of human rights in Eritrea.

The U.N. refugee agency UNHCR says 5,000 people flee Eritrea each month and many end up being picked up in the Mediterranean trying to cross to Europe. Those who make it often say they are fleeing indefinite military conscription and other abuses.

Tesfamicael dismissed these charges, saying the number of migrants leaving Eritrea was "insignificant" and that many of those claiming to be Eritrean in order to secure asylum were lying. The figure of 5,000 was a manipulated statistic, he said.

"The whole ideological apparatus of the Western countries has been mobilised against Eritrea, believe it or not," he said.

"Human trafficking networks have been established even in the major cities of Western countries."

U.N. refugee officials at camps near Eritrea say they want to discourage migrants from making the perilous and often fatal journey to Europe.

"BELLIGERENT"

Tesfamicael repeated accusations that Ethiopia was meddling in his country -- something Addis Ababa routinely denies.

"Ethiopia’s belligerent stance, as a way of trying to weaken Eritrea ... and even make regime change in Eritrea, has also been part of this equation," said Tesfamicael.

On Tuesday, Ethiopia's Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn told parliament Eritrea maintained a "belligerent stance" against his country and warned of "scaling up" Addis Ababa's response. He did not say what that might entail.

Tesfamicael came to Geneva to urge the U.N. Rights Council not to give a new mandate to three investigators who produced a 484-page report accusing Eritrea of widespread torture, forced labour and other violations. But their mandate was renewed last week.

Eritrea has vehemently denied the allegations, but the investigation could lead to a referral to the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity.

"We are not worried about that," Tesfamicael said, adding that human rights were used as a weapon to "intimidate" Eritrea.

Some migrants describe military conscription as a form of indefinite servitude, where men and unmarried women alike aged 18 to 50 are forced to serve for meagre wages.

Tesfamicael said 100,000 people had been demobilized in the past decade and that demobilisation would continue, but he did not say how many were still doing military service.

"We have our whole population defending the country in various ways and in various capacities," he said. "The whole of Eritrea's four million people have always been mobilised, as a small nation, as a young nation, fighting against 90 million Ethiopians."

Eritrea plans to reach a "new level of development" by 2018 and is now writing a new constitution that will be ready in the next three or four years, he said.

Eritrea is also working with several U.N. bodies and various nations including Finland, Denmark, Egypt and South Africa, said the envoy, adding that reforms had to be driven by internal forces, not dictated from outside.

"There is nothing that we want to hide in Eritrea."

(Reporting by Tom Miles; additonal reporting by Aaron Masho, editing by Edmund Blair and Gareth Jones)

A Better World: Yet To Come Under United Nations!

$
0
0
UNHRC


                                            A Better World: Yet To Come Under United Nations!

                         “Tell the truth, or someone will tell it for you.” Stephanie Klein

 We dream of better world to come under United Nations. Today, inside the United Nations, the truth is buried beneath all the rhetorical lies; the righteous is buried beneath all the layers of unethical; and morality is buried beneath all the layers of immorality. What is happening to our civilized world and the United Nations? Also, who should be held accountable for all the unjustifiable and irreversible destructions which are currently unfolding every corner of our societies? What has happened to the values of genuine-caring for a fellow human-being. The rampant irreversible crisis, which was made by the greed of human beings and/or in name of national interests, has certainly engulfed numerous societies into flames.  Little more than decade, the world has witnessed several nations which were member of International Communities [IC] have rapidly descended into multi-fragmentation of governances. These failed nations were directly victim of smear campaign of media which was stemmed from Western nation to suit its national interests. Today, these failed -countries are the incubator’s institutions of producing savaged terrorists who certainly have a barbaric mind of slaughtering human-beings [Christian’s faith] as if they were sheep. Indeed, very dark-chapter to our memories!  According to the ancient civilization, the virtue of truth and morality were considered to be sacred values and also the building-blocks to the foundations of creating civilized societies.  So, why these sacred values which are dear to the ancient and also to the modern civilization as well are gradually eroding from our Universe?

The Wheel Of Truth Has Been Replaced By The Wheel Of Lie: In the twentieth-first century, the might nations found a media propaganda to be powerful tool to obtain. Especially, the negative-propaganda media has proliferated in a staggering number in every corner of our world.  According to psychology, negative-propaganda has a greater impact on the fragile minds than positive propaganda.  The negative- propaganda media, especially on war-campaign, has profoundly one mission to accomplish; which is to put fear on people. For instance, our civilized world has witnessed a mighty nation to use ‘fear’ propaganda for manipulating the fragile minds and changing the tender-hearts of its citizens and also to seek allegiance of countries for its political agenda mission. Using both of the ‘wheel of lies’ and ‘fear-propaganda’ as a synergistic tool which are extremely effective ingredients todemonize, to isolate, to sanction, and ultimately to invade a sovereignty country (regime change) that is member of International Communities (IC).  There are several countries could be mentioned that were victimised by the negative-propaganda. For instances, the infamous Iraq is still fresh on many minds and hearts. Amazingly, the fear of ‘Weapon MassDestruction’ (WMD) propaganda was told by dignitary people of its cause-effect of dilemma inside the building of United Nations before invading the sovereignty of Iraq which was a member of IC. Unfortunately more than decade has passed away and, yet WMD to be discovered. Sadly, today Iraqis are fleeing in millions from their ancestral lands because their country is engulfed with sectarian crises and irreversible destructions….

All Human Beings Created Equal By The creator: In today civilized world, ‘HumanRights’ should be profoundly enshrined in land of constitution of any country who is the member of the IC.  By all means, ‘Human Rights’ should be unconditionally respected and safeguarded by all human-races. Also, it’s should be an obligation and a civic-duty of all human-races to safeguard the humanity-laws. Unfortunately, the opportunistic-activists and a Western nation with a hidden political-agenda have used the ‘Human Rights’ as a pretext of waging smear-campaign  to accomplish a clandestine mission. Sadly, several peaceful African countries are in the mists of fighting a negative propaganda of ‘Human Rights violations’ allegations in which was used as precursor-format to wage a systematic smear-campaign to manipulate the fragile minds and tender hearts of their citizens and seeking other sympathizers as well. Certainly  to use the pseudo ‘Human Rights Violations’ allegations as a pretext for a smear campaign to demonize,to isolate, to sanction, and ultimately to invade sovereignty of a country (regime change), should not be a norm in a civilized world. Furthermore, it’s unacceptable and unethical standards to the civilized world when lies are proliferated and presented them as yard-stick measurements of credibleness and integrity for the purpose of manipulating the minds of its citizen and members of IC that necessary steps swiftly needed to be taken to address the roots of cause-effect dilemma. Subsequently an action must be taken swiftly against a developing country regardless of its majority voices of citizens. In reality, the root causes are stemmed from the wheel of liesthat is certainly designed to fabricate, to manipulate, and to sterilize the fragile minds of citizens with disinformation to pave way for the path of wheel of lies to reign. According to history, vicious smear-campaigns against peaceful nations have been used to demonize, to isolate, to sanction, and ultimately invading the sovereignty of a nation. For example, Eritrea is a peaceful African Nations which is located on the Red Sea Basin and Horn of Africa. This country is currently defending itself from vicious smear-campaign of ‘Human Rights Violations’ that is political motivated by a might nation and thuggish TPLF regime (Ethiopian Government). Accordingly to history, Eritrea is not the only African country has been victimized by smear campaign of Human Rights Violations -bogus allegations. However, Eritrea’s case is very unique because this African nation is doing an extraordinary deed in eradicating abject poverty, eradicating epidemic diseases such Polio and Malaria, drastically reducing HIV/AIDS, building-quality standards of primary and secondary schools and higher learning institutions, drastically reducing morbidity and mortality ratios, health-care facilitates, and quality infrastructures in every corner of the country. What is the most fascinating about Eritrea is that all the developments of country are done within its citizens’ capacity and a meager GDP.  Nevertheless, this country has been relentlessly tarnished its credibility , integrity, and its citizens are muzzled and harassed by ‘Human Rights’ bogus allegations that it was waged by opportunistic-journalists and parasitic-activates -with the blessings of a Western nation- who have no regards to the virtue of truth and righteous in our Universe. Sadly, these opportunistic-journalists, parasitic-activist, and a predator Western nation have found sanctuary and immunity to invent their wheel of lies about Eritrean nationat heart of noble-building of United Nations.

If we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong to each other.”  Mother Teresa

In today civilized world, several parts of our world is in a full-flame which has caused misery and irreversible destruction on millions of lives. The global economic dire circumstance has partially been a catalytic mode for causing in stability in many societies. However, the significant portions of irreversible destructions on our environment and relatively in the world perhaps are directly resulted from Western-nation’s foreign policy of interventions which its national interests come first than the humanity. The world is witnessing on the rampant irreversible destructions in the Iraq, in the Libya, and in the Syria that have created an endless suffering on millions of lives. As resulted of this, huge waves of immigrants are risking their lives by transiting thru the furious currents of oceans and seas- regardless of its danger-to knock the doors of Europeans and Western nations for sanctuaries. Perhaps it is very imperative that International Communities must not let the United Nations be a suitable ground for opportunistic-minority to invent their wheels of lies and present it as wheel of truth to score the clandestine political agenda. The ‘Human Rights’ should not be used a Trojan tool to demonize, to isolate, to sanction and ultimately to invade acountry (regime change) which is the member of IC. We teach our children to have characters of integrity, honours, morality, and truthfulness because someday they are going to be the future leaders who are going to safeguard the torch of truth and justice in the civilized world. Therefore, the International Communities have a noble duty to safeguard developing nations, such as Eritrea, from predatory Western-nation and ‘Human Rights Violations’ bogus allegations. The member of IC must immediately stop the descending path of making ‘ Human Rights Violations’ as a mockery of tool for accomplishing hidden political agenda….

Yosef Tesfasilase

Necessary Illusions: Understanding Desalegn’s Recent Comments

$
0
0
Hailemariam Desalegn


Necessary Illusions: Understanding Desalegn’s Recent Comments
Ray Ja Fraser

Recently, Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn warned that Ethiopia will “be forced to take…appropriate action to quell [Eritrea’s] destabilization efforts.” The comments parallel those he made in an interview conducted last year, warning that Ethiopia has shifted its policy towards Eritrea and is now determined to unseat Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki by force. While the respective statements are serious – in that they precipitously challenge, if not flagrantly violate, accepted international norms, laws, and diplomatic protocols – they do not constitute “breaking developments” per se. For example, prior to his passing, the late Meles Zenawi had similarly changed Ethiopia’s policy toward Eritrea from one based on “no-war-no-peace” to the active pursuit of “regime change” in Asmara. Generally, Ethiopian saber rattling has often sought to deflect attention from internal challenges and crises, with the latest comments arising after reports of attacks on the Ethiopian regime by the opposition.

It goes without saying that Desalegn’s comments merit mention; conflict and potential war carry massive consequences for all involved, and simply, a region with a long history of war (and with an array of current socio-political, economic, and environmental challenges) really cannot afford another. Yet, the comments also merit interest due to the manner in which they have been reported and discussed. Almost without fail, various analysts, think-tankers, and media outlets have accepted Desalegn’s claims about Eritrea’s destabilization efforts uncritically. This point reflects the sorry state of reporting and analysis on Eritrea and the Horn of Africa.

Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four describes “doublethink” – the act of holding, simultaneously, two opposite, individually exclusive ideas or opinions and believing in both simultaneously and absolutely. Likewise, during his visit to the Oxford Union in the 1960s, Malcolm X exposed how “the powers that be use the press to give the devil an angelic image and give the image of the devil to the one who’s really angelic…[or] they’ll take a person who is a victim of the crime and make it appear he’s the criminal, and they’ll take the criminal and make it appear that he’s the victim of the crime.”

Are there really no journalists, experts, or analysts that recognize the sheer irony of Desalegn’s claims about destabilization? You don’t have to be a “regime loyalist” to see how Desalegn’s comments about regional destabilization, coming while his country illegally occupies (and repeatedly attacks) Eritrea is hypocrisy of the highest order. Furthermore, in just the past several months, Ethiopia has repeatedly and illegally made military incursions into Kenya, while it has a long, bloody history of intervention and occupation in Somalia. A la the 18th century French diplomat Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord, not only was Ethiopia’s intervention into Somalia a crime, but it was a monumental blunder. Rather than stemming terror (the professed mission), it actually served to send terror and carnage cascading across the region. So who is destabilizing the region, again?

Like Chomsky’s “it’s only terror when they do it,” Ethiopia (on behalf of the West) is incapable of destabilizing others. Empire’s media, experts, think-tankers, and analysts don’t care about truth, rationality, context, or critical questions. Instead, part of Empire’s strategy is psychological and ideological propagandizing. For Empire, “the human being has his most critical point in his mind. Once his mind has been reached, the political animal has been defeated, without necessarily receiving bullets.” That is why Empire’s corporate media outlets churn out sensationalism and feed us mindless drivel, not context, truth, or rational analysis. If you’re not careful, war becomes peace, freedom becomes slavery, ignorance becomes strength, and wolves become sheep. Stay woke! 


36th issue of Eri-News

$
0
0


36th issue of Eri-News 

The Press Section of the Permanent Mission of the State of Eritrea to the AU and UNECA has released its 36th newsletter.

Visit here to read the previous newsletter.

Articles featured in this issue:

  1. Eritreans Held Europe-Wide Demonstration Against the UN COI Report
  2. At UN HRC, Eritrea Reaffirmed its Commitment to the Promotion of Human Rights,  Rejected Politically Motivated Mechanisms
  3. Eritrea Investing in Its Youth to Secure a Brighter Future
  4. Eritrean Youth Making History at the Tour de France


Eritrea Investing in Its Youth to Secure a Brighter Future

Human capital development is at the center of Eritrea’s development strategy. Eritrea provides its citizens with free, accessible and quality education from pre-elementary to post-graduate levels. Over the last two weeks, more that 3200 youth graduated from Tertiary and Technical/Vocational Education and Training (TVET)Institutions. More than 40% of the graduates are female.


Eritrean Institute of Technology (EIT)

1,283 students graduated from the Eritrean Institute of Technology (EIT) with Master’s, 1
st Degree and Diploma in the fields of Engineering, Science and Education. 10, 901 students have graduated from EIT over the past eight years.

Adi-Keih College of Arts and Social Sciences

350 students graduated from Adi-Keih College of Arts and Social Sciences with 1st Degree, Diploma and Certificate. The areas of study include Archeology, Anthropology, Law, Eritrean Languages and Literature, Political Science and International Relations, Sociology and Social Works, Journalism and Mass Communication, and Fine Arts.

Asmara College of Health Science

416 students graduated from the Asmara College of Health Science with 1
st Degree and Diploma in Patient Care, Pharmacy, Public Health and Health Assistance. More than 2,000 students have graduated from the College since its opening in 2005.


Asmara Community College

Asmara Community College graduated 440 candidate teachers with Diploma and Certificate. 326 of the graduates are female.

TVET

  • 167 students graduated from Dombosco Tech-nical School, with certificate in the fields of Mechanics, Wood and Steel Works, Electricity and Electronics…
  • 21 students graduated from Halai Technical School with certificate in General Metal Works
  • 446 students graduated from Denden Commer-cial School with certificate in Accounting, Sec-retarial Science and Book Keeping.
  • 150 students graduated from Mai-Habar Tech-nical School with certificate in Mechanics, Building, Drafting, Electronics, Plumbing, General Metal and Wood Works, Electricity and Surveying.

Continue reading:


Video: Behind the scenes with Daniel Teklehaimanot at Tour de France

$
0
0


Going behind the scenes with Team MTN-Qhuebka and Daniel Teklehaimanot at Tour de France.


Videos: Daniel Teklehaimanot makes history in Stage 6 of Tour de France

$
0
0

Teklehaimanot first African in polka dot jersey

By NBC News

Daniel Teklehaimanot has a unique care in the Tour de France. The Eritrean is the first African to receive the polka dot jersey on his shoulders.

Of the South African team MTN QHUBEKA climber chose in the sixth stage to Le Havre early on their heels with the Belgian Kenneth Vanbilsen and Frenchman Pierrig Quemeneur. Of those three Teklehaimanot proved the strongest of the three mounds of the fourth category. With that he took three mountain points, one more than the wearer of the polka dot jersey Joaquim Rodriguez.

Dream

Teklehaimanot earlier this year put even seize the polka dot jersey in the French stage race Critérium du Dauphiné. When he looked forward to the Tour de France. "When I was looking up at the Tour de France young, I was always enthusiastic about the battle for the polka dot jersey for the yellow than that," said Teklehaimanot. "I hop that I get the chance even to fight again for the polka dot jersey. A day with this sweater would be enough for me."

Impey and Hunter went for

Teklehaimanot is the first rider of the African continent which is leading in the mountain classification. The yellow jersey and the white jersey places were previously worn by Africans: South Africans by Daryl Impey and Robert Hunter. Impey wore two days, the yellow in the Tour of 2013. In 2011, Hunter was allowed a day in the white car.





Eritrea’s Gratitude and Commitment to Martyrs and Veterans is Unshakable

$
0
0
Eritrean youth commemorating Martyr's Day in Asmara, June 20, 2015 (Credit: RedSeaFisher)


Eritrea’s Gratitude and Commitment to Martyrs and Veterans is Unshakable

Amanuel Biedemariam

The thirty year struggle for the Independence of Eritrea has cemented a legacy and history of valor unseen anywhere.

The history is based on stories of a nation that marched forward regardless of the hurdles and stumbling blocks. These are stories of bravery of people that marched forward burying the martyrs on the spot and en-route to certain victory. These are stories of gallantry by those that marched nonstop while drenched with blood and carrying the wounded to safety. They forged ahead eying the future with one thing in mind, Independence. No matter what happened along the way, Eritrea marched forward and won Independence beating all odds and ensured international recognition.

Along the way Eritrea paid dearly with lives of over 60,000 martyrs that perished, thousands more wounded and countless were forced to flee while the world gave blind eye and ignored the plight.

The successful struggle for independence is remarkable achievements that demonstrate the trajectory of Eritrea that is unstoppable and straight-upward. It is a trajectory of a successful nation that lives in honor and to honor the martyrs while holding the veterans in reverence.

To understand Eritrea’s determinant, successful and unwavering path one must go back to the beginning when the people of Eritrea were stripped bare of all their rights and handed to Ethiopia by the UN at the behest of the US. Eritrea then had nowhere to turn but to look inward to find ways; ingenious, indigenous and independent ways to free a nation from the grips of imperial power that imposed archaic feudal system. The system that the UN led by the US imposed upon the people of Eritrea was primitive and incompetent to the point that if left alone had no chance of survival. However, American and European minds with long term strategic views and agendas propped the system to life, empowered it and promoted Emperor Haile Selassie as a mythical figure to be revered by the third world.

Led by the US, the West created the mechanisms and methodology necessary and enacted a process that lead to the subjugation of the people of Eritrea systematically and by force when needed. Various ploys were employed to divide the people leading to the creation of the federation which was a pretext to ease Ethiopia into Eritrea through the UN with minimum challenges. In short, the US handed Eritrea to Ethiopia; colonialism by proxy and used the UN to legitimize the forced union. Scores of Eritrean patriots were killed and imprisoned when they campaigned for the independence of Eritrea.

At the end of World War II, Eritrea and South Africa were the most developed nations in Africa. However, the world turned a blind eye as Halie Selassie’s regime and Great Britain stripped Eritrea bare to weaken it. Eritrea was denied diplomatic, political support and stripped bare of its resources, institutional structures and leadership. Eritrea was left to die. That is what the people of Eritrea had to overcome to become independent. Ethiopia in the process was lifted as a global player by design. Then-as- in-now the US pushed US agendas under in the guise of the UN.

However, the brave people of Eritrea immediately bounced back and were able to reorganize; and created formidable liberation force and started fighting the feudal system and its handlers first the US and later the Soviet Union. Eritrea then was scorched bare by US and Soviet funded Ethiopian army.

While the battles with Ethiopia were raging, at the time the greatest challenge the people of Eritrea had to overcome was the civil war between Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF) and Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF). After the EPLF won decisively, with leadership of EPLF at the helm, the people of Eritrea refocused on the mission-ahead and moved forward.

Eritrea then was empty, dry as drought raged everywhere, farmers were unable to farm as farm lands became battlefields, trade was halted as roads in-and-out of cities were blockaded creating suffocating living conditions, and villages were burned to the ground as people were slaughtered by Ethiopian soldiers.

Then as in now, the US, Europe, UN and the Organization of African Union gave blind eyes to the suffering when Ethiopian regimes committed atrocities and genocides against the people of Eritrea.

As a result, by necessity the people of Eritrea were forced to look inward and to come up with ways to conduct the struggle. They knew then that there is no other help that can save them. That is where the principles of SELF RELIANCE, the recognition that the “Struggle is Long and Victory CERTAIN” come from, as there were no other option. That, of course, was based on a core value “Victory for the Masses.”

In 2015, the people of Eritrea are facing the same enmity and danger to their existence as they did after the end of World War II. Under the guise of the UN Human Rights Commission continuous schemes are hatched on a daily basis to defame the gallant history, to sally the progress the people of Eritrea are making, to bully Eritreans in the Diaspora and scare them from supporting their government, to destroy the image of a nation that works for social justice by portraying it as one that enslaves its people and to portray the national service as slavery in order to destabilize Eritrea and save the dying regime in Ethiopia.

The question is where were they when the youth was forced to struggle for thirty years? Where were they when the people were bombed with napalm bombs? Where were they when villages were torched, mother’s breasts mutilated and children shot openly…? The atrocities were endless but, where were they then?

After the cloud of misery on the hands of successive colonizers was lifted and as Eritrea is readying to embark onto a new chapter overcoming all their schemes, they are hatching yet more schemes to undermine Eritrea’s independence using the UN Human Rights Commission. With lies, a UN body is brazenly disregarding the voices of the people of Eritrea by embracing few disgruntled and by manufacturing none-existent human rights violations. They failed and failed miserably.

Regardless of the cover used, the primary objective remains regime change. Successive attempts to change the government Eritrea using different means has failed. The first attempt was conducted by the minority TPLF regime of Ethiopia that waged an illegal war under the guise of border dispute. Eritrea was forced to pay with lives of over 20,000 youth.

That was followed by successive attempts to incite revolt within Eritrea. When that failed they focused on the youth, the national service and started campaigning against the service as part of the campaign; enticed the youth with quick asylums in Europe, Israel, US and Canada. This was an attempt to deny Eritrea the youth that defends and builds the nation, and ultimately, to ensure forced entry without resistance, when opportune.

The youth flight is then painted as crisis and egregious violations of human rights perpetrated by Eritrean government to be taken to the international criminal court. The entire campaign is designed to accomplish what they long failed to do through other means and that is regime through the powers of the International Criminal Court (ICC).

This was clearly evident at the press conference on 24 June 2015, that the United Nations Commission of Inquiry (COI) held in Geneva. The COI, outside its mandate, tried to connect the leaders of Eritrea with unsubstantiated, fabricated claims of Human Rights violations to send to the ICC unsuccessfully. When the chair of the COI Mike Smith admitted that his investigation failed to connect Eritrean authorities to the alleged Human Rights violations, the eagerness on the part of the special rapporteur Sheila Ketaruth was expressed as she tried to link the “G15’s” arrest with President Isaias Afewerki.      

Key

As the saying goes, “That which does not kill you only makes you stronger.” The ill-will of the west has always strengthened the hand of the people of Eritrea. What the COI invented angered Eritrean’s and spurred them into action. Over 10,000 strong showed up in Geneva to show their discontentment and express their anger against the continuous malicious premeditated injustices perpetrated against them by the institution that calls itself United Nations.

What stands-out is the flexibility and the ability of the people of Eritrea to mobilize quickly. It showed how well-organized that Eritreans are across the globe when, in less than 10 days, they managed to gather from all around Europe, US and other countries to protest against the COI report. The demonstrators frustrated the commissioners that displayed open hostility towards the people that came to fight for their right. They were frustrated because they failed to shake the unity of the people since they know that is the back bone to the strength of the nation.

In the process, the UN Human rights Commission and its western handlers were exposed for what they are, fraudsters and criminals guised as agents for global human-rights. These are individuals with intelligence background like Mike Smith of the COI that are assigned to create mechanisms to destabilize vulnerable countries and, their work has nothing to do with human rights or humanity. This was transparent by how they conducted the investigation, how they unjustly undermined the concerns of the people and government of Eritrea and, by the setting they created to demonize, belittle, criminalize and dehumanize the people of Eritrea.            

This is a huge miscalculation because contrary to how they wanted to portray Eritrea and their sinister intentions i.e. to destabilize, exploit the riches and control one of the most important strategic locations of the world; their actions accord Eritrea unprecedented global exposure. As the saying goes “All publicity is good publicity” and, “The only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about.”

Conclusion

As angering as it may be, all these-ill attempts accords a unique opportunity to promote Eritrea and what it stands for. The people of Eritrea know well all these unwelcome attention is not because their nation is bad or that these countries are genuinely trying to help better the standard of life for their kids. They know all these attentions are because Eritrea’s values are immeasurable. They have also learned that all that they can depend-on is each-other to fight-off the enmity. That is based on the history and, the trajectory of victories that the histories represent.

The valiant history started in the fields of Eritrea without support from the world and, managed to purge enemies and replaced it with euphoric sense of independence. That independent path is now being challenged by the very enemies responsible for the thirty year struggle that Eritrea had to endure. However, and to their dismay, that independent path is now the torch that is guiding the fight against these poorly conceived failed webs of conspiracies that aims to bring down a nation erected with blood of dear.

Eritrea is a blessed nation and the blessing that the people of Eritrea need to embrace now is that yesterday, Eritrea was on the trenches trying to fight for independence; yesterday, Eritrea was forced to fight unruly TPLF soldiers and today, Eritrea is fighting the fight from the streets of Geneva and by trail blazing in Tour de France with Daniel Teklehaimanot leading the way. That is the highest form of blessing for a nation that should have long ceased from the map, a testament to the resilience and commitment of the people. And now all that is left is to ensure that the battles remain-confined inside the corrupt doors of the UN and its handlers, and ensure that these battles are executed with the fierceness and decisiveness that the martyrs fought and died for to bring independence.

That is the fight that will keep the torch lit forever, in honor and for honor.

Awet N-Hafash

Awetnayu@hotmail.com

Natnael Berhane subjected to racist abuse at Tour of Austria

$
0
0
Natnael Berhane at Tour of Austria


African team MTN-Qhubeka complains of racism on Tour of Austria

By Press Association

MTN-Qhubeka, the first African team to ride at the Tour de France, has written to cycling’s world governing body after claiming one of its riders was racially abused at a race in Austria on Wednesday.

Natnael Berhane, from Eritrea, is alleged to have been subjected to racist abuse by Branislau Samoilau, a Belarusian who rides for the CCC Sprandi Polkowice team, during stage four of the Tour of Austria and the squad took his complaint to the UCI.

On Thursday, CCC Sprandi Polkowice acknowledged an unsavoury incident had taken place but did not address the question of the abuse being racist.

MTN-Qhubeka’s team principal, Douglas Ryder, said: “One of the riders from another team said to Natnael Berhane get out of the way you effing n*****. Just outrageous.”

A statement from CCC Sprandi Polkowice read: “In the heat of the battle some words have been said by our rider, which were very unfortunate and unacceptable. We, as a team, do not tolerate that kind of behaviour and the rider will suffer consequences.

“Before the next stage the situation has been clarified between two teams and the riders, but we don’t want to get into details.” The UCI has been contacted for a response.

Qhubeka is a charity – World Bicycle Relief’s programme in South Africa – and means ‘to carry on’, ‘to progress’, “to move forward”. It is understood Samoilau will donate a month’s salary to the organisation.

MTN-Qhubeka, based in South Africa, is beginning to make an impact on major races.Johann van Zyl, Berhane’s team-mate, won stage five of the Tour of Austria on Thursday, when Daniel Teklehaimanot claimed enough points to take the Tour de France’s King of the Mountains polka dot jersey, in so doing becoming the first black African to take a major jersey at a Grand Tour.

Teklehaimanot, one of two Eritreans in MTN-Qhubeka’s Tour team, won the King of the Mountains title at the Critérium du Dauphiné last month, demonstrating his huge potential.

The majority of the professional peloton is supportive but there have been unfortunate incidents, with the Norwegian Edvald Boasson Hagen and American Tyler Farrar sometimes having to intervene. “Some of the riders are struggling to grasp what we are doing here. They are in the minority, I’m glad to say,” Ryder added.

“One of the biggest teams in the world last year in the Tour of Spain, when we were trying to bring one of our riders to the front going into the mountains, [said] ‘you guys don’t belong here, fuck off to the back of the bunch’. We have riders like Tyler and Edvald, riders who are well respected in the peloton, and they are their team-mates, and they say ’hey guys, come on, these guys deserve to be here’.

“And we have had massive support from the major team owners and bosses.” “Guys like Shayne Bannan [of Orica-GreenEdge], Dave Brailsford [Team Sky], Viacheslav Ekimov [Katusha]. Those guys love this team. They believe they should be here.”

ሓሶት ከም ቅቡል ባህሊ ፡ ምጽወታ ከኣ ከም ናይ ልምዓት ወፍሪ

$
0
0
Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn threatens war against Eritrea

ሓሶት ከም ቅቡል ባህሊ ፡ ምጽወታ ከኣ ከም ናይ ልምዓት ወፍሪ  
ሕዱር ሕማም መራሕቲ ኢትዮጵያ
ብግርማይ በርሀ (ሽካጎ)
07/09/2015

        መራሕቲ ኢትዮጵያ ፡ ክውንነት ሃገሮም ኮነ ፡ ቑጠባዊ ትሕዝቶን ዓቕምታትን ህዝቦም ዘንጸባርቑን ኣብ ጸብጻብ ዘእቱዉን ፡ ንቐጻሊ ዕቤት ሕበረተ ሰቦም ንቅድሚት ክደፍኡ ዘኽእሉ ፡ ፖሎቲካዊ ዕላማን ሃገራውን ዓለማውን ፖሊሲታትን ዝኽተሉ ኮይኖም ኣይጸንሑን ። በኣንጻሩ ነቶም ንቑጠባውን ወተሃደራውን በሓትነትን ዕብለላን ዝሰርሑ ግዳማውያን ሓይልታት ድሌታቶም ከማልኡን መደባቶምከሳልጡ ዘኽእሉ ኩነታት ክፈጥሩን  ምእዙዛት ምዃኖም ከረጋግጹን ፡  ንናይ ተለኣኣኽነት ስልጣኖም ውሕስነት ክረኽቡን ኣብ ኣህጉራውያን ማሕበራት ዝከላኸልሎም ኣካል ኣጥርዮም ክኸዱን መዋእሎም ሰሪሖም ። እቲ ናይ ሓያላት ሓይልታት ናይ ቑጠባውን ፖሎቲካውን በሓትነትን ዕብለላን ፡ ወተሃደራዊ ዓንዳርነትን ንምዕዋቱን ንምሕላዉን ዝካየዱ ስርሒታት ፡ ምስቲ ናይ ህዝቢ ኢትዮጵያ ረብሓታትን ድሌታትን ስለዘይሰማምዑ ፡ መራሕቲ ኢትዮጵያ ኣብ ክንዲ ፈጸምቲ ድሌታት ህዝቢ ኢትዮጵያ ፡ ናይ ግዳም ሓይልታት እሙናት ኣገልገልቲ ኮይኖም ይርከቡ ኣለዉ ።
    መራሕቲ ኢትዮጵያ ክውንነት ዞባና ብልክዕ ዝተረድኡን ነቲ ዘሎ ጸገማት መፍትሒታት ንኽረኽቡን ናብ ዝሓሸ ንኽቅይሩን ፡ ጻዕርታት ምስዘካይዱ ሓይልታትን ጉጅለታትን በብጊዚኡ ኣብ ጎንጽታት ክኣትዉ ሕዱር ሕማምኮይንዎም ጸኒሑ ኣሎ ።  ኢትዮጵያ ኣኺሉ ዝተርፍ ጸጋታትን ዓቕሚ ሰብን’ኳ እንተለዋ ፡ ብሰንኪ መራሕታ ፡ ሃንቀውታ ህዝባ ዘይኮነ ፡ ድሌታት ናይ ካልኦት ሓይልታት ዝፍጸመላ ሃገር ጸጋታታ ከይረብሐት ፡ ህዝባ ከይቀሰነን ከይከበረን ፡ ከም ጾርን ጸገምን  ማሕበረ ሰብ ዓለምናይ ዓለም ተቆጺራ ፡ ብረዲኤት እናተቀለበት ትነብር ሃገር መለለዪ መልክዕ ሒዛ ትኸይድ ኣላ ። በዚ መሰረት ከኣ ንህዝባዊ ዕላማ ዘይቆመ ሓይልን ድሌታት ህዝባ ዘይኮነትን ዘይሰርሐትን ሃገር ፡ ንናይ ጎሮባብታ ህዝብታት ድሌታት ክትሰርሕን ኩነታት ክትጥምትን ትኽእል እያ ኢልካ ምሕሳብ ነብስኻ ምትላል’ዩ ።  ሓልዮት ሃይለማርያም ደስኣለኝ ንህዝቢ ኤርትራ ከኣ ፡ ነቲ ዝቅርምዎ ረድኤት ሕጋዊ መልክዕ ዘትሕዝ ፡ ንግዚኡ ከም መሳርሒ ተራእዩ ዝዓርብ ውልቀ ሰብ ምዃኑን  ናይ  ደርጋውያን ፖሎቲካዊ ኣሰራርሓ ውርሻ ዝሓዘን ገይርና ክንጥምቶ ንኽእል ።
    ሃይለማርያም ደስኣለኝ ኣብዚ ዝሓለፈ ሰሙንንኤርትራ ኣመልኪቱ ኣብ ዘቅረቦ ጸብጻብ “ ከም ኣብ ዓጋም ዝተጸገዐ ቆልቋል ከይንኸውን ምጥንቃቅ የድሊ” ኢሉ።  መራሕቲ ኢትዮጵያ ንሓሶት ከም ቁቡል ባህሊ ስለዝወስድዎ እንተዘይኮይኑ ፡ ነቲ ክውንነት ዝገልጹ መርትዖታት ከምዘለዉ ዝጠፍኦም ኣይመስለንን። እስከ ገለ ውሑድ መርትዖታት ንርኣ ፡-
  1. ዝተበደለ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ፡ እቲ ን30 ዓመታት ከምኡ’ውን እቲ ካብ 1998 ክሳብ 2000 ኣብ መንጎ ኤርትራን ኢትዮጵያን ዝተኻየደ ኩናት ብሓፈሻዊ ግምት 98 ሚእታዊትባድመ ሓዊስካ ኣብ መሬት ኤርትራ እዩ ።  ኣብ መንጎ ሃገሩ ናጻ ከውጽእን ንህልውንኡ ክከላኸልን በቲ ሓደ ፡ ዶብ ሃገሩ ጥሒሱ ወራር ዘካየደ ሓይሊ ከኣ በቲ ካልእ ሸነኽ ዝተኻየደ ኵናትን ዝጠፍአ ሂወትን ክርአ እንከሎ ፡ መን ዓጋም መን ቆልቋል ?
  1. ብናይ ግዳማውያን ሓይልታት  ኣማኸርትን ሓገዝትን  (እስራኤላውያን ፡ ኣመሪካውያን ፡ ሶቭዮታውያን ፡ ኩባውያን ፡ ጀርመናውያን ፡ የመናውያን ካልኦትን)  ተሰንዮም ፡  ኣብ ኤርትራ ተጓሪቶም ፡  ኣብዘይመሬቶም ኩናት ዘካየዱ መራሕቲ ኢትዮጵያ  ዶ ኤርትራ ? መራሕቲ 4 ሚልዮን ህዝቢ ዶ 80 ሚልዮን ህዝቢ?
  2. ንኣህጉራዊ እገዳ ፡ ንናይ ደቂ ሰባት መሰላት ክሲ ፡ ኣሳሰይትን ደገፍትን ፡ ተንኮላቶም ንኽምቅር ኣቃመምትን ንሓልዮት ህዝቢ  ኤርትራ ዶ ንጥፍኣቱ ?
  3. ዋና ዝኾነ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ከይተጠቅመ ፡ መደበር ቓኘው ኣስመራ ንኣመሪካውያን ፡ ደሴታት ዳህላክ ድማ ንሰቭየታውያን ብምሃብ ናይ ክራይ ገንዘብን ረድኤትን ዝኣከቡ ፡ ኣብዚ ጊዜ እዚ ከኣብስም ስደተኛታት ካብ ናይ ረዲኤት ትካላት ጅቦኦም ዘህጥሩ ዘለዉ መራሕቲ ኢትዮጵያ ዶ ኤርትራ ? ሓልዮት ዶ ቑጠባዊ ወፍሪ?
  4. ኤውሮጳውያን ገዛእቲ ሓይልታት ፡ ንመግዛእታዊ ዕላማታቶምን ረብሓታቶምን  ከሳልጡ ክብሉ ኣብ ኤርትራ ዝመስረትዎም ትካላት ፡ በንቊሮም ናብ ኢትዮጵያ ዘግዓዙን ንግዳማውያን ሓይልታት ዝሸጡን መራሕቲ መን እዮም ? እዚኸዝምታ ዶ  ወይስ ሓልዮት’ዩ ዝቚጸር ?
  5. ኣብ ናይ ዓለማዊ ቤት ፍርዲ ቀሪቦም ፡ ንዝዋሃብ ፍርዲ ብዘይቅድመ ኩነት ክቅበሉ ፈሪሞም ከብቅዑ ፡ ፍርዲ ምስተዋህበ “ኣይንቅበልን” ዝበሉ ፡ ቅድመ ኩነት ዝፈጠሩ ፡ ንኵናት ዝዕድም ተጻብኦታት ዘጋውሑን ኣብዘይመሬቶም ሰፊሮም ዘለዉን መን እዮም ? መን እዩ ንሰላም ቀዳማይ ቦታ ዝህብ ?

መራሕቲ ኢትዮጵያ ድሕሪ ናይ ነዊሕ ዓመታት ሓሶታት ምድግጋም ፡ ኣብ ገለ ሸነኽ ናይ ኢትዮጵያውያን ምሁራት ዝባሃሉ ፡  ናይ ምስፍሕፋሕን ናይ ወራራት ኣተሓሳስባታትን ተቀባልነት ረኺቡ ጸኒሑ ኣሎ ።  ዓለማውያን ዓንደርቲ ሓይልታት ፡ ነቲ ኣብ ዝተፈላለያ ሃገራት ዘሎ ጸጋታትን ዕቑር ሃብትታትን  ንኽቖጻጸርዎ ክጥዕሞም ፡ ኣብ መንጎ ህዝብታት ሓዊ ክኣጉዱን ነቶም ህዝብታት ክብትኑን ክሰርሑ ከለዉ ፡ መራሕቲ ኢትዮጵያን ኮስኲሶም ዘዕበይዎም  ምሁራት ኢና ባሃልቲ ኮራኩሮምን ብጊድኦም ፡  ኣብ ልዕሊ ቀይሕ ባሕሪ ኤርትራ ፡  ኣብ ናይ ብሻ ወርቅን  ካልእ ዕቑር ሃብቲ ኤርትራን ጠመተካብ ምግባር ዓዲ ኣይዋዓሉን ። ሓድነት ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ንምልሕላሕ ኣብ ገለ ብሄራት ኤርትራ ምትኻር ኣይገደፉን ።  ሶማልያ ኮነ ጅቡቲ ሕንፍሽፍሽ ብምእታው ናይ ምስፍሕፋሕ ሕልምታት ተፈልዩዎም ኣይፈልጥን ። ኣብ ዝኾነ ጊዜ ዕድል እንተ ተረኺቦም ድሌታቶም ንምፍጻም ድሕር ዝብሉውን ኣይኮኑን ። እዚ ኣተሓሳስባታት እዚ’ኸ  ናይ ሰላም ዶ ናይ ህውከት ?

 ሃይለማርያም ደስኣለኝ ምስ ኬንያን ጅቡትን ጽቡቅ ርክብ ከምዘለዎም እዩ ገሊጹ ። ብመሰረቱ ኣብ መንጎ ኣዕነውትን ኮራኩርን ዝኾኑ ሓይልታት ፡ ብዘይ ቁዱስ ረብሓታት ዝተዓደገ ዕስለ ምትእኽኻብ እንተዘይኮይኑ ንናይ ህዝብታት ረብሓታት ዝሕሉ ዝምድና ክኸውን ዝኽእል ኣይኮነን ። ስለዝኾነ ብቀሊሉ ብጎይቶቶም ክዕረቑን ክባኣሱን ዝኽእሉ ምዃኖም ርዱእ እዩ ። ካልእ ይትረፍ ፡ ብናይ ረዲኤት ቑልማጾ ኣብ ጅባ ናይ ውሑዳት ኣትዩ ፡ ዝስራሕ ዘመናዊ ህንጻታትን ትካላትን ኣብዘን ሰለስተ ሃገራት ዝርኣ ፡ መደባት ልምዓት ብረዲኤትን ብናይ ውሑዳት ዋንነትን ዝካየድ እዩ ።  ኣብ ብልሽውና ዝጣሓሉ ሓይልታት ካብ ህዝባዊ ማዕበላት ዘይፈርሕሉ ምኽንያት’ውን ስለዘየለ ንድምጺ ብዙሓት ክዕፍኑ ብሓባር ዘይሰርሕሉ ምኽንያት እውን የለን ።   ንሶማል እውን እንተኾነ ኬንያ ብታሕቲ ፡ ጅቡቲ ብላዕሊ ፡ ኢትዮጵያ ብማእከል ጸጋታት ሶማል ካብ ምጥማት ማኣስ ዓዲ ዊዒለን ። ኩለን ብደገ ተመዊለን ዝንቀሳቀሳን ግዝያዊ ትንፋስ ሰኺዐን ዝኸዳን ፡ ብዳንጋታት ጎይተተን ዝፍክራ ፡ ምዃነን እውን ማኣስ ተሳሒቱ ። ጅቡቲ ከም መደበር ናይ ግዳም ሓይልታት ፡ ከንያ ከም ናይ ብልሽውና ማዕከን ፡ ኢትዮጵያን ከም እምንቲ ኣሳሳይት ናይ ካልኦት ዝተፈልጠት ኩለን ኣብ ሕቡራት ሃገራት ከኣ  ናይ ሓባር ተኸላኸልቲ ዘጥረያ ሃገራት ፡ ከመይ ኢለን ምስታ ኣብ ህዝባ እምንቶ ዘለዋ ፡ ተኻላኸሊ ዘይብላ ሃገር ኤርትራ ፡ ኣብ ሓደ ክስራዓ ?

Daniel Teklehaimanot: 'I'm proud to be an Eritrean riding the Tour de France'

$
0
0
Merhawi Kudus, left, and Daniel Teklehaimanot at the start of stage two of the Tour de France. Photograph: Doug Pensinger/Getty Images


By Basia Cummings

Daniel Teklehaimanot has a lot of firsts weighing on his shoulders. On Thursday, he became the first African rider to wear the coveted King of the Mountains jersey in the Tour de France, racing as part of the first African team to compete in it, MTN-Qhubeka.

For weeks now, the term “making history” has been following this impossibly tall, softly spoken Eritrean cyclist around. Along with his team-mate, Merhawi Kudus who, at 21, is the youngest tour rider this year, he is the first black African to compete in the world’s biggest bike race.

Born in a market town not far from the capital city of Asmara, Teklehaimanot explained on a sweltering day in Amsterdam, at the team’s official presentation before the start of the race in Utrecht, how cycling was in his blood. “I first started cycling at home, a long time ago. There are many cyclists in Eritrea, the people love it, it’s really popular,” he said.

Bicycles were brought to the country in the 19th century by Italian colonisers, who soon established the Primo Giro dell’Eritrea in 1946, named after another of the world’s longest-running and most prestigious races, the Giro d’Italia.

“When I was 10 or 11 I started riding my bike. When I grew up a bit, around 16, I always watched the tour on Eritrean TV, and when I became a good rider, I started dreaming that one day I could make it.”

And the 26-year-old has: in June, Teklehaimanot won the polka-dotted King of the Mountains jersey at the Critérium du Dauphiné, taken to be a marker of who to watch in the Tour de France. Chris Froome, the Kenyan-born Team Sky rider and former Tour winner, raced to victory there too.

But perhaps none of this should come as a surprise. Eritrea is gripped by a fanatical love for the sport. Bicycles are everywhere in the capital, and racing has become known as the country’s “unofficial fifth state-sanctioned religion”. Five-time Tour de France winner Bernard Hinault has predicted that the east African nation’s riders “are the next Colombians”.

Sitting 2,325 metres above sea level, at the tip of an escarpment of the Great Rift Valley, Eritrea breeds strong cyclists. “The geography is a main part of why we’re so good,” Teklehaimanot said, “but we also just work hard.

“When I was young, around 2005 and 2006, and I watched [the tour on] TV, me and my friends talked a lot about the bikes, the wheels – but we didn’t really know how they are racing. So now I’m really excited to be a part of that same race,” he said.

It has been a long journey for the Eritrean. In 2010, he started catching the attention of European teams when he came first in the African Championship road race, won the individual and team time trials, and came first overall in the Tour of Rwanda. But Teklehaimanot’s entry to World Tour cycling was blighted by recurring visa problems, which sabotaged his chances to compete at the highest level with his team at the time, Orica-GreenEdge.

“There are so many African riders – from Eritrea, South Africa and Rwanda – but it’s not easy to become a part of the big teams. We have to work hard, so I’m thankful for MTN-Qhubeka,” he explained.

Kudus said he felt the same. “It’s not easy when you come from Africa. There should be more invitations, and more opportunity. Especially for places like Rwanda, where riders are becoming better and better. But we need more opportunities – it’s more difficult to get to Europe for us.”

Recognition and respect

In what has historically been a predominantly white, European and exclusive sport, the inclusion of black riders is still, lamentably, a novelty. “I hope this is the beginning of a shift,” said MTN’s Scottish team manager, Brian Smith, adding that there was not enough respect for black riders in the peloton.

“You look at long-distance running, it’s all Africans now. You just need one racer to break through, and it makes others realise they can do it too. It’s the same here. We don’t see enough black cyclists.”

Though little could mar Teklehaimanot’s win on Thursday, a racism row surrounding another of MTN’s Eritrean riders, Natnael Berhane, has exposed the serious racial politics that hang over professional cycling.

At the Tour of Austria, which runs in tandem with the Tour de France, MTN’s management are said to have appealed to the UCI, cycling’s governing body, to have the Belarusian rider Branislau Samoilau expelled from the race for racial abuse.

The team’s principal, Douglas Ryder, said: “One of the riders from another team said to Natnael Berhane: ‘Get out of the way you effing n*****’. Just outrageous.”

By way of apology, Samoilau has reportedly paid a month’s salary to the Qhubeka foundation, a charity that helps provide Africans with bicycles, although no official statement has been released.

Smith said MTN frequently battled prejudice, but that the peloton was slowly learning to respect the talent of the African team, and recognise their right to contest at the front of the race. “Lots of test teams are trying to globalise the sport, and Africa is an untapped entity. Daniel was the trailblazer, that’s why there are so many [Eritreans] coming through now,” he said.

“Although we’ve got foreign people on the team [American Tyler Farrar and Norwegian rider Edvald Boasson Hagen, among others], this is an African team. We want African riders. We want to make sure this team is where all the African talented riders come to perform. Not to be a development team – we want to keep the cream of the crop.”

Last month, Teklehaimanot and Kudus returned to Eritrea to compete in the national championships. In the infamously closed-off country – better known for dire human rights records and contributing to Europe’s growing migrant crisis – the two riders are stars.

“There was a big welcome for us. After the nationals, the government wished us good luck for the tour. We met the president, Isaias Afwerki, in his office. It was a big moment for us,” Teklehaimanot said.

Afwerki has been in office since independence from Ethiopia in 1993, and no national elections have been held in this time. While Eritrean footballer players are notorious for using international matches as an opportunity to escape and seek asylum, the cyclists say they are proud of their country’s support.

“They are really supportive, the president too, we got lots of media attention – everyone is watching us,” said Kudus.

At this Tour de France, soon to enter its second week and enter the brutal mountain stages, Smith said the Eritreans were hoping for further glory. “I want to give them the opportunity to try to win in one or two stages,” he said. “We’ve got no general classification hopes, no big sprint hopes, so it’s save energy and grab a stage. I’ve told them both: go show the world what you can do.”

For Teklehaimanot, there’s no doubt this is his moment: “My family are waiting for the tour, they’ll be watching on television, and my wife is coming to Paris [for the final stage]. I’m really proud to be an Eritrean riding. It’s big for me, for the team also. I’m really happy.”

Eritrea: 8th Commencement of CASS

$
0
0
CASS students walk to 8th Commencement ceremony in Adi Keyih


Eritrea: 8th Commencement of CASS

By Eritrea Profile

Access to education, at all levels and for all citizens, has been among the top most priorities in Eritrea. Equitable education for all is a principle which the country has translated into a reality. Institutions of education ranging from primary through secondary and colleges of tertiary education have been flourishing in different regions of the country.

In line with the opening of new institutions of higher education, enrolment of students has been redoubled and so have the number of courses that has been offered in the colleges. It has been just 11 years since the
establishment of the College of Arts and Social Sciences (CASS). Formerly situated at the Eritrean Institute of Technology (EIT) at Mai-Nefhi, the college moved to Adi Keyih in 2009.

While at EIT, the CASS used to offer degree courses in English, History and Geography. Journalism and Fine Arts were courses in diploma. The scope of study has now been expanded to include a total of 10
courses ranging from certificate to degree.

During the 8th commencement held on 2 July 2015, CASS had conferred first degree, diploma and certificate to 360 graduates; 205 are graduates with degree, 37 with diploma, and 118 with certificate.
Female students constitute 50% of this year’s graduating class.

Not only the number but also the quality of courses has been steadily improving since the opening of the new college at Adi Keyih, said Dr. Weldetnsaie Tewelde, Dean of the College.

CASS has been creating linkages with relevant local ministries associated with the courses being offered in the college. Present in the graduation event, designee of his Excellency Isaias Afwerki, President
of Eritrea and Chancellor of Institutions of Higher Education, Ms. Fawzia Hashim, Minister of Justice, said education is a basic social service every member of society should be equipped with so as to be competitive and active participant in all development undertakings.

Present in the graduation event, designee of his Excellency Isaias Afwerki, President of Eritrea and Chancellor of Institutions of Higher Education, Ms. Fawzia Hashim, Minister of Justice, said education is a
basic social service every member of society should be equipped with so as to be competitive and active participant in all development undertakings.

Indicating that Social Sciences lay firm foundation for economic progress, Minister Fawzia reminded the graduates to equip themselves with political, legal, administrative, cultural and artistic knowhow
and thereby to make positive input in changing the lives of their society.

The opening of new tertiary educational institutions has created a chance for broader participation of students including members of Defense Ministry.

Anwar Mohammed Omar is a member of the third round national service program. He has earned a degree in Applied Geography. Like many graduates, he was on cloud nine celebrating a hard won success in his
educational career. He is married and with kids, and a number of people, he said, used to criticize him for his passion in education thinking that he would not give due attention to his parenting role. He recommended that
youngsters should follow their hearts and exert needed effort to their level best.

Another graduate, Semira Yosuf studied Sociology and Social Work and earned a certificate. She said what she has learned during her stay in the college has enabled her to have a clear picture of societal livelihood.

Haben Tekle, graduate with degree in Political Science and International Relations, studied Natural Science while at the WarsayYikealo Senior Secondary School in Sawa. As an outstanding student in her secondary
education, she received a Zagre Award of Excellence. But her inclination towards Social Sciences made her shift to Political Science and International Relations in college. “Education has enabled me to be highly confident and equipped me with knowledge, and this in turn will allow me to contribute my share in the national building process,” She said.

CASS has been offering degree courses in the fields of Anthropology and Archaeology, English, Eritrean Languages and Literature, Geography, History, Law, Political Science and International Relations, as well as
Sociology and Social Works. Fine Arts and Journalism and Mass Communication are courses in Diploma. Sociology and Social Works is the only certificate program.

Access to education has been among the basic human rights provided for all nationals throughout the country. Distribution of schools all over the country has been showing remarkable progress. The number of workforce which has been deployed to different work areas has tremendously increased. Thus, institutions of higher education has been playing due role in the equipping nationals with better know-how in different specialties.


Video: Reaction in Asmara as Daniel Teklehaimanot is awarded the polka-dot jersey

$
0
0


It feels so good to see the support Daniel and the team get: amazing crowds in Eritrea.
Posted by Team MTN Qhubeka on Friday, July 10, 2015


Crowd reaction in Asmara as Daniel Teklehaimanot steps to the podium to be awarded the polka-dot jersey at Tour de France.

On Eritrean Endurance: Response to Amanuel Beademariam

$
0
0



On Eritrean Endurance: Response to Amanuel Beademariam

You are right;  our immortal martyrs who still live in our memories ones entrusted us this land that we proudly call home, sweet home. We do the rest in building our country from the ashes and ruins of war. We know it is hard to build a house, but easy to destroy it with a single blow;  in a relatively short period of time. Hence, a big challenge demanding commitment, self-denial and endurance is likely to come to the fore in this hard time. I suggest every Eritrean to read a book: "The Human Side of Japanese Enterprise." It describes the economic miracle of Japan which is purely based on national character, not on national resources as the following epigram denotes:

"Endurance"

The Japanese....
This people of a rising sun
Symbolized after their national flag
Are so quiet, so humble
Who achieved such an economic miracle
Within a short period of time
Have a message to their own kind
That says: "Never mind...
The more the rain hits the ground
The more it becomes
Hard, solidified
Ossified, petrified."
So is with Eritrea
Its overt and covert enemies
Might move to disrupt
Its national policies
Out of hate or jealousy.
But once and for all
It is destined to grow
Through many roads
Whose dire opponents
Have not control.


Similarly, this has to do with Eritrean resilience or endurance. A full treatment on endurance will be available soon in Tigrigna language.

Anyway, that is why psychologists  say that an attitude (character)  makes the difference. knowing this,  the powerful establishment employs mind-engineering to wipe out the primordial trait such as  morale in advancing the hidden agenda,

-Haile Bokure

Ethiopia's threat of war against Eritrea is a bluff

$
0
0
Arbegnoch-Ginbot7 rebels on the move in Northern Ethiopia


In what has become a perverse annual tradition for the minority clique in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on Tuesday has warned it may go to war against Eritrea because of what Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn called Eritrea's 'destabilizing' activities in the region.

The latest saber-rattling comes days after the coalition Ethiopian rebel group Arbegnoch-Ginbot 7 launched a major offensive on regime positions deep within Northern Ethiopia. According to reports, the rebels were able to overrun TPLF military positions in Western Tigray; exposing just how vulnerable and limited Ethiopia's military prowess really is.

But while the stunning battlefield victory of the rebels may have rattled bigwigs in Addis Ababa, the threat of war against Eritrea was likely a bluff in which the regime knows it is in no position follow through on for the following three reasons:

  1. With President Barack Obama set to visit Ethiopia later in July, the Ethiopian dictatorship has been on its best behavior. It has released journalists and announced they will give Obama an official Ethiopian name. So the last thing TPLF wants to do is attack Eritrea, as the international media would focus on the Eritrea-Ethiopia conflict ahead of Obama's visit, which would then make Obama either skip visiting Ethiopia, or if he does visit, he would be under pressure to bring up Ethiopia's occupation of sovereign Eritrean territory which is at the heart of the conflict.  

  2. It's the rainy season in most parts of Eritrea and Ethiopia, especially along the highland border areas. Therefore, it would be a logistical nightmare to wage an attack.

  3. Ethiopia's forces are stretched too thin. Just a day before even stating the threat, TPLF quietly sent 3,000 troops into Somalia, raising suspicion that the threat was a cover for this operation. With so much of its forces extended, TPLF knows it has severely limited its fighting capacity, thus they are not likely to engage with Eritrea while they are in a weakened military position.

Even if these aforementioned issues weren't in the way, the setbacks alone suffered from TPLF's military campaign in Somalia is enough to not want to pick a fight with Eritrea. In many ways, Somalia has become Ethiopia's Waterloo. Ethiopian troops are taken causalities by the hundreds per month. This is taking a toll on the moral of its soldiers and commanders. Things are getting so bad that one of TPLF's trusted commanders, Colonial Tilahun, recently defected to the militant group al-Shabab, after promising to convert to Islam.

On the domestic front, things are even more worse. TPLF is committing horrid human rights abuses and limiting the political landscape. Power is dominated by the TPLF, which hails from an ethnic group comprising of less than 6% of the population. The severe ethnic polarization and lack of political freedoms in the country is compelling more and more Ethiopian Air Force pilots, seasoned troops and disillusioned citizens to defect to Eritrea to form fighting forces of their own.

Among the largest of these groups is the Tigrayan Peoples Democratic Movement (TPDM). With over 20,000 fighters[1] in its rank, TPDM is by far the largest rebel group in the Horn of Africa, and is arguably the biggest domestic challenge to the ruling regime. The fact that so many young Ethiopians have joined this rebel group shows that even Tigrayans, which have been traditionally the power base of TPLF, yearn for a regime change in the country.

While many Ethiopians are picking up arms to fight the brutal TPLF dictatorship, others are taking the fight to social networking sites like Facebook. Some like Kuma Mossisa, an Ethiopian who studied civil Engineering at Addis Ababa Institute of Technology, took the threat of war against Eritrea as an opportunity to poke fun of TPLF's North Korean-style 100% election victory:

"War with Eritrea is not as simple as winning 100% parliament seats by vote rigging!"



In conclusion, TPLF's latest threat against Eritrea is nothing more than desperation by a belligerent regime that's facing military opposition on multiple fronts. With Obama on his way to visit, the rainy season in full swing and with Ethiopian forces stretched thin, TPLF has severely diminished its fighting capacity. Thus, the latest threat of war against Eritrea should be seen as a sign of desperation from an overstretched military desperately hoping its enemies do not call out its bluff and capitalize on its vulnerabilities.


---------------------

The following are Facebook comments of Ethiopians reacting to their PM's threat of war against Eritrea:





_______________
1. Page 29, https://www.scribd.com/doc/243121671/Leaked-SEMG-Report

Video: Henok Teklay (Nago) performing at the Eritrean Festival in Germany, 2015

$
0
0


By EriMedia Germany

The largest Eritrean festival in Germany, “Festival Eritrea Germany“, is held each year in Giessen in July . The festival generally lasts for about 3 days and is held at the city’s Messe Hallen, attracting thousands of people. The festival is largely a celebration of Eritrean life and culture, something very important to the Eritrean citizens and Eritrea’s Friends.

The festival’s events include Seminars,traditional food, dancing, children hall, youth-programm, theatre, Exhibition and Sport. Cultural displays of costumes and art are also common. Many paintings, sculptures and other hand made items are also offered for sale at a large bazaar.

Tour de France #8: Daniel Teklehaimanot retains the Polka Dot Jersey

$
0
0




By MTN-Qhubeka

Alexis Vuillermoz (AG2R La Mondiale) won the 8th stage of the Tour de France, riding clear on the Mur de Bretagne. Dan Martin (Cannondale-Garmin) was 2nd and Alejandro Valverde (Movistar) came in in 3rd place.

MTN-Qhubeka p/b Samsung’s first objective of the day was to retain Daniel Teklehaimanot’s Polka Dot jersey. With 2 points available at the stage finish, our African team were relying largely on Joquim Rodriguez (Katusha) not winning the stage, as he was the only real threat to Daniel’s jersey today. With Vuillermoz taking the victory, Daniel will keep the Polka Dots for another day.

The stage saw a group of 4 riders escape from the 9th kilometer. There was an intermediate sprint with 74km to go, which brought the peloton to life. Directly after the sprint a surge by those participating in the sprint saw the early break caught. 3 riders would then chance their arm and established a new breakaway, forcing out a lead of just over 1 minute. Cannondale-Garmin wanted to keep the break in check though and so set a hard tempo for the final 70km.

The 3 leaders had to surrender with 8km to go and we would have a showdown on the Mur de Bretagne. Edvald Boasson Hagen would be our rider for the final climb and the Norwegian was in a great position with 1.5km to go as he sat on the wheel of Peter Sagan (Tinkoff-Saxo). Unfortunately it would not be Edvald’s day as the smaller punchers were more at home on the Mur. Vuillermoz accelerated away with 850m to go and this would be the definitive move of the stage.

Daniel Teklehaimanot – Rider
It is good to keep the jersey and to go into the team time trial with it still in our team. I can’t believe the support I am getting, it is just more and more everyday and I am very thankful. It still feels like I am in a dream.

Eritrean riders are the Jackie Robinson of the Grand Tour

$
0
0
Daniel Teklehaimanot, the ambassador of African cycling


Eritrean riders are the Jackie Robinson of the Grand Tour

By Bereket Kidane

When Jackie Robinson became the first black Major League Baseball player for the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947, he was taunted and racially abused by white players who realized that their dominance of the sport was about to end. Today, only 60% of Major League Baseball players are white. The game’s top athletes are blacks from the Caribbean countries like the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and Cuba. The same thing will happen overtime to the UCI’s Grand Tours as well.

We are proud to witness  that Eritrean athletes are the trail blazers at the forefront of that change led by great champion riders like Daniel Teklehaimanot, Merhawi Kudus and Natnael Berhane.  They deserve all the accolades and praises they are getting from the international media.  They have put Eritrea on the cycling map of the world and have become “the talk of the town” at the Tour de France. Even the BBC couldn’t ignore what was happening and was forced to say something positive about Eritrea for a change.

African cycling has been made fun of in the past, but no longer. One has to be careful here when racially classifying people, of course, but there have been some North African riders from the Maghreb countries in the Grand Tour of Cycling before. In 1950, Abdel-Kader Zaaf, an Algerian who competed in the Tour de France, was cycling out front one day when extremely hot summer temperatures forced him to stop for a break.  Abdel Kader Zaaf, a devout Muslim, was offered wine by a spectator (his first taste of alcohol) and passed out under a tree.  When he woke up, he groggily climbed back on his bike, headed off in the wrong direction and was disqualified.  Glad to see Eritrean athletes are not doing anything to embarrass themselves or their country.

For such a small country, Eritrea is becoming epic in the cycling world.  Its cycling team is becoming among the best in the world winning jerseys and medals in top European contests.  Per capita, Eritrea probably has the most cycling medals in international competitions.   It’s unquestionably Africa’s Powerhouse and now has the King of the Mountain in Daniel Teklepolkadot.

Branislau Samoilau and his team CCC-Brandi-Polkowice better get used to seeing Eritrean and African riders in the Grand Tour.  Eritrean participation in the Grand Tour is not going to be a one-time thing.  Eritrea is likely there to stay.  There are more Eritrean riders waiting in the pipeline ready to follow in the footsteps of Daniel, Merhawi and Natnael and will likely join the Grand Tours in two to three years or sooner.   Be on the lookout for Frekalsi Debesay, Meron Russom, Mekseb Debesay, Teklit Tesfay, Tesfom Okubamariam, Metkel Eyob, Meron Teshome and the rest of Team Eritrea that are racing for feeder  teams.  They are coming.



At Tour de France, Riders From Eritrea Hope to Blaze a Grueling Trail for a Continent

$
0
0
Daniel Teklehaimanot with supporters before the eighth stage. He wore a polka-dot jersey as the Tour’s top climber. Credit Lionel Bonaventure/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images


By By Ian Austen | New York Times

MÛR-DE-BRETAGNE, France — All manner of flags are waved at the Tour de France. But at the start in Rennes on Saturday there were a few dozen examples of one that had probably not made an appearance: the red, blue and green of Eritrea.

Those flags appeared because of Daniel Teklehaimanot and Merhawi Kudus, who are Eritreans of many firsts. In a sport in which black riders from any continent are rare, Teklehaimanot and Kudus are the first black Africans to compete in the Tour. Teklehaimanot is the first African rider to wear the red polka dotted jersey as the Tour’s best climber. And perhaps most important, they ride for the Tour’s first modern African team, MTN-Qhubeka, which hopes to make Africa as important a force in cycling as it is in endurance sports like long-distance running.

Despite his status as the leader of the climbing competition, Teklehaimanot faltered Saturday on what was arguably the most difficult climb of this Tour so far, the dramatically named Mûr-de-Bretagne, or Wall of Brittany. While relatively short, it included a grueling 10 percent grade at one point, which swiftly sorted out the field.

Alexis Vuillermoz, a French rider who started out in mountain biking, launched an attack against the race leader, Chris Froome, near the top of the hill and went on to win the 181.5-kilometer (112.5-mile) eighth stage in 4 hours 20 minutes 55 seconds. Dan Martin, who rides for the American Cannondale-Garmin team, was second.

In what may have been a preview of what is to come when the race moves into the mountains, Vincenzo Nibali, last year’s Tour winner, lost 10 seconds to Froome and trails him by 1 minute 48 seconds. Froome, who is among the favorites for the overall victory, leads the American rider Tejay van Garderen by 13 seconds and the two-time champion Alberto Contador by 36.

While Teklehaimanot finished 63rd, 1 minute 13 seconds behind Vuillermoz, he retained the climber’s jersey because of points he had acquired previously. Still, his status is unlikely to continue when climbs in the Pyrenees begin Tuesday.

Not that anyone is complaining. Douglas Ryder, a South African who founded MTN-Qhubeka, said the team’s plan for the opening stages of the Tour was merely to survive.

“Our riders have been superscared; we just wanted to get our riders through this first week,” he said Saturday. “Our major objective was no broken bones.”

How the team came to surpass that goal involved parallel paths taken by Ryder and Teklehaimanot.

During the 1990s, Ryder rode as a professional on small teams, including an American one sponsored by the now defunct Plymouth auto brand. When he raced at the Atlanta Olympics in 1996, the performances of other Africans, particularly in running, convinced him of Africa’s potential in cycling.

“I thought that if we can get African guys onto bicycles, there’s no way that they won’t be successful,” he said.

Ryder went off to have a career with IBM and Microsoft, but about a decade ago he began working on what ultimately became his team.

There were several obvious hurdles that needed to be overcome in Africa, starting with inadequate and overcrowded roads and simple access to bicycles.

But Ryder, who is white, found that among black Africans in many areas, riding a bicycle carried a social stigma.

“Africa is a continent of walkers,” he said. “There’s a perception in Africa that if you own a bike, that means you’re too poor to own a car. So you’d rather walk because it becomes a bit of a status symbol.”

Not everywhere in Africa, however. Because of its past as an Italian colony when it was part of Ethiopia, Eritrea has had a road-racing scene off and on since the 1940s, and it sent riders, as Ethiopians, to some Olympic Games.

The soft-spoken Teklehaimanot said he followed the Tour as a child on television, and he started road racing when he was about 13, using a sluggish mountain bike. “I just loved to ride the bike,” he said.

In 2009, he was selected by the International Cycling Union, or U.C.I., to join a program at its headquarters in Switzerland to develop promising young riders from regions that were underrepresented in the sport.

“When I came to Europe, for me the weather, everything was difficult,” he said while sitting on the steps of the team bus as a number of Eritrean autograph seekers gathered behind a barrier. “But I wanted to be a professional, so I was happy that the U.C.I. could teach me everything I needed to know.”

The next year he finished sixth in a major race for young riders and was invited to join a team sponsored by Cervélo, a Canadian racing bike maker. The Australian Orca Green Edge team took him on but found sorting out his visas to be an almost insurmountable problem because of the political instability in Eritrea.

The creation of MTN-Qhubeka solved those issues.

“It’s really special for me because they look after us, everything,” he said. “We don’t have any problems now about visas or anything.”

The MTN in the team name is a traditional sponsor, a telecommunications firm. Qhubeka is the African branch of World Bicycle Relief, an American organization that hopes to improve people’s education and economic status by providing inexpensive yet durable bikes.

Ryder also hopes that as more Africans cycle, the social stigma associated with the activity will diminish, and some will take up the sport.

“We’re trying to fill our own pipeline to draw from for the team for the future,” he said. “If we can make it cool with African riders doing so well in races, people will say: ‘Gee, the bicycle is a cool thing.” While Froome races under British citizenship, he was born in Kenya and did much of his early cycling there.

On Saturday, Froome predicted great things from that part of the world.

“I believe riders from East Africa are potentially the best riders in the world,” he said noting the hurdles they need to be overcome. “I don’t think it’s too long before we start to see some real talent coming out of East Africa.”

Right now, MTN is relying heavily on non-African veterans at the Tour, including the American Tyler Farrar and Edvald Boasson Hagen, a Norwegian who used to be among Froome’s teammates.

Ryder said he has given them an unusual performance objective for the season: help get 5,000 bicycles to young Africans.

“We’re not just here for ourselves, we’re here to show the potential of the African continent,” he said before pointing out a row of African flags down the street from the team bus.

Video: President Isaias Afwerki speech in Sawa

$
0
0



By Shabait

Sawa, 11 July 2015 – Participants of the 28th round National Service and 7th course of Vocational Training Centre in Sawa graduated today.

In a speech he delivered on the occasion, President Isaias Afwerki explained that substantial investment is being made to upgrade the educational standard and skill provided at Sawa National Training Centre. He also pointed out that more emphasis would be given to students who did not score passing mark to enable them attain higher educational level. The President went on to express appreciation to nationals who made relentless efforts so as to ensure the nation’s continued march along the path of sustainable development.

In a report he presented at the graduation ceremony, Col. Debesai Gide, Commander of Sawa National Service and Training Center, stated that a total of 11 thousand participants of the 28th round were from 86 Secondary Schools across the country received academic, military and political training.

Also speaking at the graduation ceremony, Mr. Tesfai Tewolde, DirectorCol. Debesai Gide
Col. Debesai Gide

 of Sawa Vocational Training Centre, said that the 2,029 participants of the 7th course attended 2-year training in 18 fields.

The graduates who attained overall excellence in military training and the ones in vocational training course received prizes from President Isaias, while Mr. Woldenkiel Abraha, Minister of Local Government, Mr. Semere Russom, Minister of Education, Mr. Abraha Asfeha, Minister of Public Works, Mr. Arefaine Berhe, Minister of Agriculture, respectively handed prizes to the graduates who achieved educational excellence. Moreover, Gen. Filipos Woldeyohannes, Chief of Staff of the Eritrean Armed Forces, handed prizes to individuals with high skill in target shooting and physical fitness.

The graduates of the 28th round National Service took oath to serve the country and the people with dedication.
Viewing all 4577 articles
Browse latest View live


Latest Images