Tag: Eritrea

  • Ethiopian dispute prompts Eritrea to “voice support for Somalia”

    Ethiopian dispute prompts Eritrea to “voice support for Somalia”

    Somalia’s president says the president of Eritrea has promised to support Somalia’s control of its own land, as there is disagreement with Ethiopia about a deal for access to the sea.

    Eritrean leader Isaias Afwerki expressed his position in a meeting with Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud yesterday, according to the state-run Somali National News Agency.

    The story was told.

    The leader of Somalia said similar things to the Eritrean media, but there was no official statement from Mr.

    Mr Mohamud visited Asmara for two days. He talked to Mr Afwerki about the sea access problem.

    Trouble started last week when Ethiopia made an agreement with Somaliland, a place that says it’s its own country.

    The deal would let Ethiopia use a port in the breakaway region for trade and military purposes.

    Somalia said the deal is aggressive. It thinks Somaliland is a part of its land and promised to protect its own control.

    No other country or big group in the world thinks Somaliland is its own country.

    President Mohamud said his government will ask for help from any friend who is willing to help us before going to Asmara.

    The media in Somalia said that Mr. Mohamud will go to Cairo shortly because he was invited by the Egyptian leader, Abddul Fattah al-Sisi.

  • Eritrea reacts to contentious remarks made by Abiy about Red Sea

    Eritrea reacts to contentious remarks made by Abiy about Red Sea

    Officials in Eritrea stated that they will not engage in discussions about Ethiopia’s use of the Red Sea after some questionable remarks made by Addis Ababa.

    During his speech to lawmakers, Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed explained that having access to the Red Sea is extremely important for the survival of his country.

    Mr Abiy said that the Red Sea and the Nile River are really important for Ethiopia and can either help it grow or destroy it. Some people think that what he said might lead to problems with Eritrea.

    Ethiopia became the biggest landlocked country in Africa when Eritrea separated from it in 1993. Since then, it has relied on the small country of Djibouti for more than 85% of the things it brings in and sends out.

    Ethiopia said some time ago that it wanted to build its navy again. Abiy mentioned that ports in Eritrea, Djibouti, and Somaliland are places where we can peacefully acquire facilities.

    A short message from Eritrea’s Ministry of Information on Monday said that recent discussions about access to the sea and related topics were too much. It said that the issue has confused everyone who is paying attention.

    Eritrea helped the government of Addis Ababa during a very violent war in the Ethiopian region of Tigray.

    Prime Minister Abiy collaborated with Eritrean leader Isias Afeworki in 2018 to bring an end to a long and difficult 20-year war between their countries.

  • Al-Burhan of Sudan to speak with head of Eritrea over dispute

    Al-Burhan of Sudan to speak with head of Eritrea over dispute

    The leader of Sudan’s military, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, went to Asmara, the capital of Eritrea, to have a formal meeting with President Isaias Afwerki.

    A statement from a government source said that the two leaders will talk about issues between their two countries, the situation in Sudan, and things that both countries are interested in. However, no additional information was provided.

    Eritrea is the fourth country that Gen Burhan has been to since Sudan got involved in conflict in April of this year. He visited South Sudan, Egypt, and most recently, Qatar.

    On 2 September, he said that Sudan’s border crossings with Eritrea would be opened again. This is so that it would be easier for people and goods to move between the two countries.

  • Eritrea denies Amnesty’s accusations of war crimes in Tigray

    Eritrea denies Amnesty’s accusations of war crimes in Tigray

    The government of Eritrea disagreed with Amnesty International‘s claim that its soldiers committed serious crimes in the Tigray region of Ethiopia, even though a peace agreement was signed last November.

    Soldiers from Eritrea supported the federal forces during the two-year civil war.

    Eritrea’s representative at the United Nations said that Amnesty International’s accusations against the Eritrean Defense Forces are not valid or based on any evidence.

    The ministry also said that the report had problems with how it was done and contained untrue statements and twisted facts. They believe it was an unsuccessful attempt to insult the Eritrean people.

    Amnesty didn’t do any research. Instead, it decided to repeat unproven accusations against Eritrea’s military team without providing evidence. These accusations were found in sources that did not mention any names or identities. This is part of their campaign to defame the State of Eritrea, which has been going on for ten years. ”

    Please rephrase the following passage using simpler language: Please simplify the text below: “Can you please restate this paragraph using more straightforward language. ”

    The ministry also claimed that the rights group is trying to spread hate and create conflict between Eritrea and Ethiopia.

    Eritrean soldiers helped Ethiopia’s military fight against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) from November 2020 until last year.

  • Eritrea blames outsiders over conflict in Tel Aviv

    Eritrea blames outsiders over conflict in Tel Aviv

    The government of Eritrea said that people from other countries pretended to be Eritreans who oppose the government during a fight in the city of Tel Aviv in Israel on Saturday.

    About 140 people got hurt when the police tried to break up a fight between people who support and people who are against the Eritrean government.

    The Eritrean embassy is saying that certain media and Israeli officials are portraying the Eritrean community in Israel in a negative way, and they believe this is not fair.

    It started when activists requested Israeli authorities to cancel an event planned by Eritrea’s embassy.

    The embassy didn’t mention any specific groups, but an Eritrean person on social media and a media outlet that supports the government claimed that ethnic Tigrayan Ethiopians are to blame.

  • Eritrea pulls back its forces from Ethiopia

    Eritrea pulls back its forces from Ethiopia

    The BBC has received reports from locals in various areas of Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region that soldiers from neighboring Eritrea are leaving the areas they have been in charge of in large numbers.

    Eritrean army vehicles have been driving through Adwa town since Friday morning, a local witness told the BBC.

    “They [soldiers] have been travelling in a lot of vehicles,” he said.

    Describing the number of soldiers as “like ants” the resident said the vehicles “were sounding trumpets” and the soldiers were singing.

    “They were singing with flags and also posting various slogans on their vehicles,” he added.

    Meanwhile, the Ethiopian federal army was guarding the outskirts of the town, the resident said.

    According to the peace agreement between the federal government and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), the withdrawal of foreign forces and non-federal armed groups from Tigray would take place when Tigray forces handed over their heavy weapons to the federal government, which they have.

    Another resident of Aksum town also told the BBC that dozens of vehicles transporting Eritrean troops and weapons have been passing through the town.

    “I have counted 70 vehicles, 12 tanks, and many others. The soldiers were in different vehicles. They are coming in the direction of Adwa and heading towards the city of Shire,” said Berihu Kahsay, who was among residents who lined the streets to witness the withdrawal.

    Several sources in Eritrea have also confirmed the mass withdrawal of the troops and military equipment.

    Eritrean soldiers were deployed in November 2020 to back the Ethiopian government’s offensive in Tigray.

    The war which ended in a peace agreement late last year killed hundreds of thousands and displaced millions.

    Several human rights organisations accused all parties, including Eritrean soldiers, of committing atrocities during the conflict.

  • Ethiopia’s civil war: Inside Tigray’s capital Mekelle

    As the war in Ethiopia’s Tigray region escalates once more, civilians are increasingly becoming involved in the fighting.

    Tigray rebel commanders have embarked on a new recruitment campaign, having previously been accused of forcing people to join the war effort.

    Similar accusations have been levelled against Eritrea, which has entered the war on the side of Ethiopia’s government.

    The BBC has received an exclusive report from a journalist in Tigray’s capital, Mekelle, on how residents are coping.

    Drones fly over the skies of Mekelle, which has a population of around 300,000, almost every day. I can hear one now as I write this article. It makes me feel very insecure. In the last few weeks airstrikes have hit playgrounds and residential areas – it is not clear what the targets were.

    This week the Tigray army called on every able-bodied person to join the fight – and as war-weary, as people are after 23 months of violence, they are taking up the call.

    “It is considered taboo not to join the military,” says a resident, whose name the BBC is withholding for safety reasons.

    Many Tigrayans remain defiant, saying they will no longer accept the federal rule, while Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed accuses the region’s leaders of rebelling in a bid to regain the power they lost when he took office in 2018.

    Everyone here wants to defend their rights. The latest surge in violence started in late August after the collapse of a five-month-long humanitarian truce.

    People from all walks of life, including women and young people, are answering the call to join the army of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF).

    Women have received military training, and say they are ready to fight if called up.

    They include a 23-year-old who told me she was “proud to be Tigrayan and excited to have been trained to protect my rights and preserve my land”.

    Tigray has been under a blockade since June 2021, and living conditions have been steadily worsening.

    It’s now been more than a year since telephone lines and internet services stopped, disconnecting us from the rest of the world.

    People have gone back to using paper to write messages to their families and friends – or they go to the border with Ethiopia’s Amhara region to make calls and receive money from relatives abroad.

    Groups gather around a single radio on the side of the road to find out what’s happening. Everyone talks about the peace process and follows attentively the news about that but many people here believe that the Ethiopian government isn’t ready for peace talks, because they have not stopped bombing.

    People here cannot make money, or withdraw cash from banks because they have been closed. So businesses are not functioning.

    It has led to the emergence of open-air markets, which were illegal before the war, and the movement of cash through the black market, with brokers charging a commission of at least 30%, down from 50% a few months ago.

    My own neighbours live on money sent by their families in the US and Canada.

    One of the neighbours says he can’t feed his five children if they don’t send cash. He has two sisters in the US, and he has received money from his siblings four times since the start of the siege.

    The conflict has prevented essential goods, including fuel, from reaching Tigray. Many people go around on foot, or in donkey carts.

    A view of Mekelle
    Image caption, Mekelle has been cut off from the rest of the world

    Prices keep increasing. Teff, the grain we commonly use to make the traditionally baked bread known as injera, goes up every week. The current price of 100kg (220 lb) is around $265, compared to $85 a year ago.

    People are dying due to a lack of medication that can’t be brought in because of the siege. The cost of medicines for chronic diseases has increased tenfold.

    As every new airstrike kills more civilians, more young people are driven to join the military.

    A 29-year-old woman told me that three of her family members – two brothers and a sister – have now joined the Tigray army.

    For the past two months she has been spending her time, and using the little she has, to prepare food for fighters on the frontline.

    Other residents are sharing their food with the families of those who’ve gone to fight.

    When news broke last week that African Union-brokered peace talks could start in South Africa, people were happy.

    But the talks failed to get off the ground for reasons that are unclear. Many here are just desperate for peace and churches and mosques are full every night, with people praying for this war to end.

    The BBC has withheld the name of the journalist and interviewees for their own safety.

    DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana

    Source: bbc.com

     

  • Eritreans frightened as military call-ups increase in response to the Tigray war in Ethiopia

    As the conflict in neighbouring Ethiopia intensifies, numerous Eritrean sources have told the BBC that the government of Eritrea has increased military mobilisation and is looking for draught evaders throughout the nation.

    The latest round-ups are the worst so far as women have not been spared, with many elderly mothers and fathers detained in a bid to force their children, who have gone into hiding, to surrender, they say.

    They spoke on condition of anonymity as Eritrea is a highly restrictive state that controls almost all aspects of people’s lives.

    Eritrea has sent troops to help the Ethiopian government against forces from its northern Tigray region, which borders Eritrea.

    “As many ignored the call-up, the round-up has been intensified,” a source said, adding that wives have also been detained after their husbands tried to avoid conscription.

    Checkpoints have been set up along major roads, and widespread searches are taking place in cities and villages.

    In the capital, Asmara, round-ups are being carried out on the streets while in many rural areas, the authorities have sealed homes, confiscated cattle, and harassed relatives if a wanted person is not found, the BBC has been told.

    The BBC has contacted the Eritrean government for comment.

    Last month, Information Minister Yemane Gebremeskel said that a “tiny number” of reservists had been called up, denying that the entire population had been mobilised.

    The almost two-year-long war in Tigray and neighbouring regions has been described by some analysts as bloodier than the conflict in Ukraine. But there has been fewer media coverage of it as the Ethiopian and Eritrean governments have heavily restricted travel, and communication lines to Tigray have mostly been down.

    Tigrayan forces have also embarked on a mass mobilisation campaign to bolster its army following the collapse of a five-month-long truce in August and the failure of the African Union to get peace talks off the ground.

    A source in Eritrea said the authorities were trying to “stir emotions” at public meetings, linking their military intervention to “the existence and sovereignty of the nation”, and saying that Tigray’s ruling party “must be buried”.

    A man reacts as people gather around the body of a young man that witnesses say was shot by security forces after breaking curfew, capital of Tigray on February 27, 2021
    IMAGE SOURCE, GETTY IMAGES Image caption, The conflict has caused a massive humanitarian crisis in Tgray

    Last month, Eritrea recalled reservists under the age of 55, and some were sent to the frontlines.

    In the last few days, fighting has been reported in many border areas, including Adigrat, Rama, Shiraro, and Zalambesa.

    But many Eritreans have resisted the latest call-up, saying they do not want to die in what they see as a needless war.

    Elderly men have also “been forced to be on a war footing in many areas and in most cases, the operation of the conscription is being carried out arbitrarily”, one source said.

    An Eritrean in the diaspora expressed concern about his brother and sister-in-law in Asmara.

    He said his sister-in-law had fled with the couple’s children to her parent’s village, and he feared that his brother had been detained.

    Authorities are also refusing to issue shopping coupons – used to buy basic commodities like sugar and oil at discounted prices – until families heed the call-up, sources added.

    ‘Hiding someone is treason’

    “What they had been doing in the countryside, they have started in the capital, abusing families with the local administration coupons, licences, and so on,” a source told the BBC.

    Residents have been brought to the offices of local administrations, and warned that “hiding one’s children or husband, or cooperating in desertion is considered as treason”.

    “They are putting a lot of stress on the people,” the source added.

    One woman in Eritrea said that many people were frustrated and bitter as war has consumed the lives of generation after generation.

    “People are expressing their opposition in various ways, but the security system is so merciless that it can commit any kind of atrocity against its people,” the woman added.

    Abiy Ahmed and Isaias Afwerki
    IMAGE SOURCE, FITSUM AREGA Image caption, Eritrea’s President Isaias Afwerki (R) and Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, seen here in 2018, are staunch allies

    An Eritrean living in Europe said he feared for the safety of his family back home.

    His 67-year-old father was a reservist who had been deployed in his area, though he has not yet been ordered to fight on the frontlines.

    He was more worried about his 23-year-old sister, who, he said, had been detained at a military camp near the western city of Akurdet after being caught attempting to cross the border.

    “It has been a while since the family heard from her. She is now missing,” the man said.

    Sources said the authorities have been threatening to take detainees far away to areas with harsh conditions. The regime runs a network of secret detention centers where people are held for many years without due process of law, human rights groups say.

    The war in Tigray broke out in November 2020 following a massive fall-out between Ethiopia’s Prime Minister and Nobel Peace laureate Abiy Ahmed and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, which formed the regional government, over a wide range of issues, including whether Ethiopia should retain an ethnically based federal system.

    The conflict comes against the backdrop of long-standing hostility between the Eritrean regime and the TPLF, which dominated a coalition government in Ethiopia until Mr Abiy’s rise to power in 2018.

    Under the TPLF, Ethiopia and Eritrea fought a border war that claimed the lives of about 80,000 people. An international tribunal later ruled that Ethiopia should hand over territory to Eritrea, but the TPLF-controlled government failed to do so.

    Eritrea regained its territory soon after the current war started in November 2020.

    In the 28 years since it gained independence from Ethiopia, Eritrea has fought wars with all of its neighbours – Yemen in 1995, Sudan in 1996, Ethiopia from 1998 to 2000, and Djibouti in 2008.

    Mandatory military service was supposed to last for 18 months but has become indefinite.

    In the last two decades, tens of thousands of young Eritreans have left the country to escape conscription, which includes forced labour.

    “This situation has affected the children of my martyred brother whom I considered as my hope. They have joined the army. What can I say except to beg for God to protect all the young,” said an Eritrean woman exiled in Italy.

  • Mass mobilisation in Eritrea during the civil war in Ethiopia

    Eritrea has been helping neighboring Ethiopia fight off rebel troops by mobilizing military reservists to strengthen the army.

    Security forces have started stopping people in several places to determine whether they are exempt from military conscription.

    Witnesses report seeing groups of men sobbing as they said goodbye to their families.

    Reservists up to the age of 55 have been called up, they said.

    Eritrea has compulsory, decades-long military service, which has been widely criticized by human-rights groups, but analysts say the latest mobilization efforts are linked to the civil war in northern Ethiopia – a conflict that recently flared up again after five months of relative peace.

    The Eritrean government has not commented on the report.

    Witnesses told BBC News Tigrinya that mobilization notices were distributed on Thursday in the capital, the second-largest city, Keren, the western town of Tessenai, and other areas.

    They called on reservists to report to their respective head offices, while also advising that they should carry their own supplies, including blankets and water containers.

    Mothers, children and wives were crying as they bid farewell to their sons, fathers, brothers, and husbands, sources told the BBC.

    Those who do not heed the call-up have been warned of severe consequences, but some are reportedly ignoring it.

    Eritrea has been fighting alongside Ethiopia’s central government troops since the civil war broke out in Tigray in late 2020.

    Hundreds of thousands have been killed and millions displaced by the war and many more remain desperate for food, according to aid organizations.

    Several human rights organisations have accused Eritrean soldiers of committing atrocities in Ethiopia, but these claims have been denied by Eritrean officials.

    The US has imposed sanctions on the Eritrean Defence Forces and the ruling PFDJ party in response to their involvement in the conflict.

    President Isaias Afwerki has ruled Eritrea since the country broke away from Ethiopia in 1993, but between 1998-2000 the two nations fought a brutal and costly war over a contested border area.

    A 20-year military stalemate ensued until Abiy Ahmed became Ethiopia’s prime minister in 2018. The peace deal won Mr Abiy the Nobel Peace Prize a year later.

    Isaias and Abiy hold hands
    IMAGE SOURCE,REUTERS Image caption, President Isaias Afwerki (left) welcomed Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed to Asmara in 2018

    The two leaders later united against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), a common foe, whose elites dominated Ethiopia for three decades before Mr Abiy came to power.
    The Ethiopian government accuses TPLF leaders, who control the northern Tigray region, of plotting to destabilise the country, while Mr Isaias sees them as a sworn enemy.
    Eritrea is isolated diplomatically and is a highly militarised state which controls almost all aspects of people’s lives.
    The repression has led to many young people fleeing the country.
    During Mr Isaias’ rule, apart from fighting Ethiopia, Eritrea found itself at war with all its neighbors at some point – Yemen in 1995, Sudan in 1996, and Djibouti in 2008.
  • Eritrea mobilises reservists as Ethiopia fighting heightens

    There is a military mobilisation under way in Eritrea, according to reports.

    Reservists up to the age of 55 have been recalled to replenish the army.

    On Thursday, Asmara residents were issued notices and taken within hours to front lines along the country’s shared border with Ethiopia’s Tigray region, sources told BBC Tigrinya.

    Reservists in many other parts of the country have also been told to report to their respective head offices.

    Recently, roundups have been intensified in many areas including Asmara. Security forces are stopping people to check if they are exempted from military conscription.

    Some reservists were told to bring their own supplies such as blankets and water containers, sources say.

    There were scenes of mothers, children and wives crying as they bid farewell to their sons, fathers, brothers and husbands.

    The latest mobilisation has created fears that the conflict in neighbouring Ethiopia’s Tigray region might escalate further.

    A map of Ethiopia and Eritrea

    Fighting between the Ethiopian government and Tigrayan forces resumed last month after five months of a humanitarian truce.

    Tigray leaders have accused Eritrea of joining forces with Ethiopian troops in the western parts of their shared border.

    Both Ethiopian and Eritrean authorities have not responded to requests for comments – but Eritrean authorities had accused the Tigray forces of planning to attack them.

    Eritrean forces fought alongside the Ethiopian government army against Tigrayan forces in the initial phase of the war. They were accused of atrocities – which Eritrean officials denied.

    The US has put sanctions on the Eritrean Defence Forces and the ruling PFDJ organisation in response to their involvement in the Ethiopian conflict.

  • Eritrea releases 28 Jehovah’s Witness prisoners

    Eritrea has released 28 members of the Jehovah’s Witnesses group after they served prison terms.

    In 1994 the citizenship for all members of the church was revoked and followers are routinely imprisoned without trial.

    One of the reasons given was their refusal to go on military service.

    A Jehovah’s Witness statement said its members were freed from prison in Eritrea after serving sentences of between five and 26 years.

    Some were detained for being conscientious objectors in a country with compulsory military service.

    The organisation says 24 members are still in prison.

    President Isaias Afwerki stripped Jehovah’s Witnesses of their citizenship in 1994 – the year after he became leader of the newly independent country.

    Eritrea is one of the most oppressive nations in the world – with no elections or parliament and a draft constitution that has never been implemented.

    Only four religious denominations are allowed – Roman Catholic, Orthodox Christianity, Sunni Islam and the Lutheran church.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Ethiopia says it has seized another Tigray town as conflict embroils Eritrea

    Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government said on Monday it had captured another town in the northern Tigray region after nearly two weeks of fighting in a conflict already spilling into Eritrea and destabilizing the wider Horn of Africa.

    Hundreds have died, at least 20,000 refugees have fled to Sudan and there have been reports of atrocities since Abiy ordered airstrikes and a ground offensive against Tigray’s rulers for defying his authority.

    The conflict could jeopardize a recent economic opening, stir up ethnic bloodshed elsewhere around Africa’s second most populous nation, and tarnish the reputation of Abiy who won a Nobel Peace Prize last year for a peace pact with Eritrea.

    The Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), which governs the region of more than 5 million people, has accused Eritrea of sending tanks and thousands of soldiers over the border to support Ethiopian federal troops. Asmara denies that.

    Tigray forces fired rockets into Eritrea at the weekend.

    A task force set up by Abiy to handle the government’s response to the crisis, said troops had “liberated” the town of Alamata from the TPLF.

    “They fled, taking along around 10,000 prisoners,” it added, without specifying where those were from.

    With communications mainly down and media barred, Reuters could not independently verify assertions made by all sides.

    There was no immediate comment from Tigray’s leaders on events in Alamata, near the border with Amhara state, about 120 km (75 miles) from Tigray’s capital Mekelle.

    TPLF leader Debretsion Gebremichael urged the United Nations and African Union to condemn Ethiopia’s federal troops, accusing them of using of high-tech weaponry including drones in attacks he said smashed a dam and a sugar factory.

    “Abiy Ahmed is waging this war on the people of Tigray and he is responsible for the purposeful infliction of human suffering on the people and destruction of major infrastructure projects,” he said.

    “We are not the initiators of this conflict and it is evident that Abiy Ahmed conducted this war as an attempt to consolidate his personal power,” he added, warning that Ethiopia could become a failed state or disintegrate.

    Fighting spreads

    The fighting has spread beyond Tigray into Amhara, whose local forces are allied with Abiy’s forces. On Friday, rockets were fired at two airports in Amhara in what the TPLF said was retaliation for government air strikes.

    Tigray leaders accuse Abiy, who is from the largest Oromo ethnic group and Africa’s youngest leader, of persecuting them and purging them from government and security forces over the last two years. He says they rose up against him by attacking a military base.

    Amnesty International has denounced the killing of scores and possibly hundreds of civilian laborers in a massacre that both sides have blamed on each other.

    The Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF) has around 140,000 personnel and plenty of experience from fighting Islamist militants in Somalia, rebel groups in border regions and a two-decade border standoff with Eritrea.

    But many senior officers were Tigrayan, much of its most powerful weaponry is there and the TPLF has seized the powerful Northern Command’s headquarters in Mekelle.

    There are reports of defections of Tigrayan members of the ENDF. And the TPLF itself has a formidable history, spearheading the rebel march to Addis Ababa that ousted a Marxist dictatorship in 1991 and bearing the brunt of a 1998-2000 war with Eritrea that killed hundreds of thousands.

    Eritrea’s President Isaias Afwerki — a long-time foe of the Tigrayan leaders — controls a vast standing army which the United States’ CIA puts at 200,000 personnel.
    Abiy once fought alongside the Tigrayans and was a partner in government with them until 2018 when he took office, winning early plaudits for pursuing peace with Eritrea, starting to liberalize the economy and opening a repressive political system.

    Source: CNN

  • Jailed Eritrean poet wins English PEN award

    The free speech organisation English PEN has given its 2020 award for International Writer of Courage to the Eritrean poet Amanuel Asrat.

    Mr Amanuel has not been seen or heard from in 19 years, since he was arrested as part of a clampdown on government critics in his homeland.

    He was the editor of the newspaper Zemen at the time.

    His brother addressed the online ceremony on Monday and one of his poems was read out.

    He was recommended for the award by the Jamaican-born British poet Linton Kwesi Johnson.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Eritrea ‘releases Christian prisoners on bail’

    The Eritrean government has released on bail more than 20 prisoners who had been in detention for years because of their faith, sources have told the BBC.

    The prisoners from Christian evangelical and Pentecostal denominations are among those being held in a prison outside the capital, Asmara.

    In Eritrea only four religious groups are officially recognised – Christian Orthodox, Catholic Church, Lutheran Church and Sunni Islam.

    Since 2002 all other religious groups have lacked the legal basis to practise their faiths publicly, including holding prayer meetings or weddings, according to the US Commission on International Religious Freedom.

    US-based Hannibal Daniel, who campaigns for religious freedom, said people imprisoned for about 16 years were among those freed.

    He said their conditional release could be linked to the coronavirus pandemic.

    The Eritrean government has not officially commented on the reported release of the prisoners, but it has previously dismissed accusations of intolerance to religious freedom.

    Campaigners advocating for religious freedom say three Jehovah Witnesses have been in prison in the country for more than 25 years.

    The US State Department estimates that there are 1,200 to 3,000 prisoners of faith in Eritrea

    Source: bbc.com

  • Eritrean president likens coronavirus to ‘sudden war’ of historic dimension

    Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki has delivered his first public address on the coronavirus pandemic since the country recorded index case on March 21.

    In a message broadcast via public broadcasters, Eri-TV and Radio Dimtsi Hafash, he likened the COVID-19 pandemic to a sudden war that the world least expected and was thus not fully prepared for.

    “President Isaias noted that the global threat posed by the pandemic (COVID-19) is analogous to a sudden war, without any parallel in our contemporary times, that has been declared without any warning or prediction by all standards,” Minister of Information posted on Twitter.

    He added that in spite of the grave danger that COVID-19 poses, Eritreans home and abroad have to ensure that it does not overwhelm or paralyze them and derail the development programmes embarked on.

    He said it was important to combine existing developmental programs with the current combat against the pandemic. He tasked citizens to do all it takes to surmount the current and existing challenges.

    As of April 18, the Eritrea COVID-19 situation report had 35 confirmed cases, all currently under treatment meaning the country had not recorded any recovery or death. A lockdown was imposed weeks back by the COVID-19 Task Force with periodic regulations being issued by the Health Ministry through the information ministry website.