Eritrea shall be examined for human rights violations

UN Human Rights Council should do a study on human rights in Eritrea, similar to the surveys conducted around Syria, North Korea and Sri Lanka.

It condemned what they said was massive and systematic violations that the Eritrean government was behind, among other things, it is about arbitrary executions, journalists being imprisoned and the people trying to cross the border shot dead.

Yusuf Mohamed Ismail who is ambassador to Somalia and the underlying requirement of the investigation said the UN Council to violations of human rights in Eritrea is unparalleled and that Eritrea is one of the worst examples in terms of human rights.

UN Human Rights Council consists of 47 countries. The Council decided on the investigation without a vote, but China, Pakistan, Venezuela and Russia said they had reservations, but they did not try to block the investigation.

UN special rapporteur on human rights in Eritrea, Sheila B. Keetharuth said in a report to the Council to conscription in Eritrea could lead to forced labor for an indefinite period. People who resist can be executed on the spot.

Because of this, Eritrea is the country with the highest number of people fleeing across the Mediterranean to Europe.

Eritrea has refused to cooperate with Keetharuth and deny that they have committed crimes against humanity.

Eritrea’s representative at the meeting said that Keetharuths report was biased and unfounded and Eritrea rejected entirely the call to start an investigation. Eritrea’s representative argued that the fictional image of Eritrea had become the basis for a false crisis and blamed its neighbor Ethiopia.

He also said that it is obvious that the investigation was part of Ethiopia’s attempt to enforce UN sanctions against Eritrea. The investigation will be done by Sheila B. Keetharuth and two experts from Africa and Europe.

ኣብ እስራኤል ሖሎት ኣብ ዝተባህለ ክፉት ቤትማኣሰርቲ ኣስታት 1200 ኤርትራውያንን ሱዳናውያንን ስደተኛታት፣ ፍሉይ ሰላማዊ ሰልፊ ናብ ዶብ እስራኢልን ግብጽን የካይዱ ኣለዉ

ኣብ እስራኤል ሖሎት ኣብ ዝተባህለ ክፉት ቤትማኣሰርቲ ኣስታት 1200 ኤርትራውያንን ሱዳናውያንን ስደተኛታት፣ ፍሉይ ሰላማዊ ሰልፊ ናብ ዶብ እስራኢልን ግብጽን የካይዱ ኣለዉ።

ናይ እግሪ ጉዕዞ ንልዕሊ ሰዓትን ፈረቓን ብምድረበዳ ተጓዒዞም ናብ ዶብ እስራኢልን ግብጽን ገማግም ሲናይ ብምምራሽ እቲ ተጻዒኑዎም ዘሎ ማእሰርቲ ክለዓለሎም ብዓቢኡ ድማ ከም ስደተኛታት ተሓሪሙዎም ዘሎ ናይ ዑቕባ መሰል ክሕለወሎም ዝጽውዕ ፍሉይ ሰላማዊ ሰልፊ እዩ ዘካይድዎ ዘለዉ።

እቶም እሱራት ኣቐዲሞም ኣብ ውሽጢ ቀጽሪ ሖሎት ሰለማዊ ሰልፊ ኣብ ምክያድ ምጽንሖም፣ ነቲ መዓልታዊ ንሰለስተ ግዜ ዝካየደሎም ቁጽጽርን ወይ ፎልዮንን ካልእ ኣተሓሕዛን እቲ ቤት ማእሰርትን ንምቅዋም ዝገበርዎ ኣቐዲሙ ይፍለጥ።

ሓያሎ ተጣበቕቲ ሰብኣዊ መሰላትን ትካላት ግብረ ሰናይን’ውን ጎን ጎኖም እናተጓዕዛ ንኩነታቶም ይከታተላ ምህላወ ተፈሊጡሎ። መንግስቲ እስራኤል ብወትሃደራት እናዓጀበ ኩነታቶም ክከታተሎ እኳ እንተጸንሐ፣ ናብ ሲናይ ከይኣትዉ ክኽልክሎም ጀሚሩ ኣሎ። ዶብ ግብጽን እስራኤል ዝበጽሑ ስደተኛታት ናብ ሲናይ ገጾም ክቑርጹ መደብ ኳ እንተነበሮም፣ ወተሃደራት እስራኤል ግን ዓጊቶም 300 ሜትር ንድሕሪት ተመሊሶም ክስለፉ ከምዝሓበሩዎም ይሕበር።

 

 

ንዓመታ ኣብ ኤርትራ 2ይን ናይ መወዳእታን ክፋል

ንዓመታ ኣብ ኤርትራ
2ይን ናይ መወዳእታን ክፋል
28 ሰነ 2014
ረድኢ መሓሪ /ኣለና/

ኣብ ቀዳማይ ክፋል ናይዚ ሓቀኛ ታሪኽ’ዚ፣ “ፍቕሪን ብጻይነትን፤ ፍቕሪን ሓያል ዕላማን። ናይ ሜዳ ፍቕሪ፣ መርዓን መስዋእቲን ጉዳም ኢዩ። ክልቴኻ ኣብ ሓደ ኣሃዱ ትምደበሉ ግዜ’ውን ብዙሕ ኢዩ። ኲናት እናክጽዕጽዕ ኣብ ክንዲ ናይ ገዛእ ርእስኻስ ናይ ኣፍቃሪትካ ሂወት ይርኣየካ። እቲ ምንታይ ፍቕሪ፣ ስለ ፍቕሪ ጥራይ ስለዘይነበረ።” ብዝብል ሕጡበ-ጽሑፍ ኢና ተፈላሊና።

ናይ መወዳእታ ክፋሉ እነሆ፤
ንኣዲኡ ጸሃይቱ’ውን ነቲ ግጥሚ “ብሃና” እትብል ደርፊ ኣሰንዩ ኣብ ካሴት ቀሪጹ ኢዩ ሰዲዱላ። ካብቲ ብዛዕባ ብኲናትን ጸበባን፤ ምፍልላይን ምንፍፋቕን ዝተፈራረቐ ትዝታ ፍቕሩ ዝጸሓፎ ግጥምታት ዝተረኽበ እነሆ፦

ኣበባ…ኣበባ … ኣበባየ
ዎ… ኣበባ
ኣቡቺ!
ኣበባ’ዶ ኣይኮነን መጸውዒ ስምኪ
‘ሃየ’ባ በልኒ ከም ኣመልኪ
ካን’ዶ ክኢልክዮ ኣጽቂጥኪ ምድቃስ
ተኣርኒበን ኢድኪ ርእሰይ ካብ ምድህሳስ።

ካበይ ኣምጺእክዮ ናይ ጭካነ ልቢ
መን’ዩ ሓቢሩኪ ናይ ሓዋሩ መዕለቢ።

ን ህ ላ ዌ ይ!!! ንህላዌና…
ንህላወ ክብርቲ ሃገርና
ንራህዋን ፍትሕን ህዝብና…

እንተተነጻጽርዮ ናይ ቀደምን ሎሚን
ለኪምክኒ ምኸድኪ ኢለ’የ ዝኣምን
እንታይ ክተርፈሉ ብድሕሬኺ
ምስ መን ክዛረብ ብዘይካኺ
ንብዓተይ… እወ’ቲ ከም ማይ ሓምለ
ብለይቲ ጃሕ-ጃሕ በለ
ብቐትሪ ንውሽጢ ከብደይ ገማጠለ
ጥዑይ ይመስል’ምበር ተጸሊለ።

መርድእኪ ሰማዕኩ’ሞ ሕልናይ ሞተ
ኣብ ቢንቶ ብ’ዓረዛ’ዩ ወርሒ ኣርባዕተ
ዕለት 18 ንግሆ ሰዓት ትሽዓተ።

ብጋህዲ ኣይነገሩንን ተሰዊኣ ኢሎም
ግን ክመዝኖ ጸኒሐ ጥንቃቐ ቃላቶም
ኣበባ ከምዚ ኢላ… ዝነበረ ልምዶም
ምስ ምስንባትኪ ጥርቅም ኢላ ኣፎም።

ናይ መጨረሻ መርድእኪ ዝሰማዕኩሉ ከባቢ
ኣብቲ ናይ ዘየለዉ ዘበለ ዕጥቂ መአከቢ
ዕጥቆም ንከለልዩ መማጽእተይ ውጉኣት ነበር
ክሻታት ዕጥቂ ክፍትሹ ወጸ’ቲ ቁም-ነገር።

መጀመርያ ካብቲ እሳር መሰስ ዝበለት
ነገር ዝዓደመት ክፉፍኪ ደኣ ኮነት
ወይዛ ክፉፍ ፈገር
ምሳኺ’ኸ ዘይትቕበር
መን’ዩ ክዓጥቃ እንታይ ኢያ ክትገብር?
መስዋእትኺ ክትነግር
ዓወት ተረኺቡለይ ያኢ
መሰስ ትብል ከም ምሩጽ ዘርኢ
ወይ ብስክሊት እንቋዕ ኣይትርኢ
ንብዓተይ ብዕትሮ ሓዘነይ ብገንኢ።

በታ ታርጋ ዕጥቅኺ
ፈለጥኩኺ ኣለለኹኺ።

ተቢዐ ናይ መን’ያ ኢለ ክሓትት
ብኳሬንቲ ከም ዝደንዘዘ ተኾርመኹ ኣብ መሬት
ኣይተጠራጠርኩን ፍጹም ኣይሰጋእኩን
ሂወትኪ ከም ዘብቅዐ ደጊመ ኣይሓተትኩን።

ንምትራፍ ንስኻ’ባ ንስኺ’ባ
ከም ዘይተበሃሃልና ኣብ ሓደ ሩባ
ስእሊ ሒዝካ ካብ ምትራፍ ኣድሕነኒ
ኣማን ብኣማን ኣምላኽ ወጺዑኒ ።

ኢሰያስ ንኣዲኡ ብደብዳቤ ናብ ድግድግታ ክትመጾ’ኳ እንተሓተታ፣ እዋኑ ጸላኢ ባጽዕ ንምምላስ ብሙሉእ ዓቕሙ ናይ ሞት ወይ ሕየት ኲናት የካይድ፤ ጅግና ተጋዳላይ ድማ ባጽዕ ንምዕቃብ ኣብ ግንባር ጊንዳዕ ዓሪዱ ብጽንዓት ዚከላኸለሉ ዝነበረ ግዜ 1990 ብምንባሩ፣ ኣብቲ ኩነታት እቲ ንወዳ ክትረክብ ስለዘይከኣል ኣይተበገሰትን።

ካብ ባጽዕ ናብ ዓዲ-ቀይሕ ዘራኽብ ጽርግያ ሩባ ሓዳስ ተሰሪሑስ ዓዲ ቀይሕን ሰገነይትን ናጻ ምስ ወጸ ግን ጸሃይቱ ንልዕሊ ዓሰርተ ዓመታት ዝተፈልየቶም ቤተ-ሰባን ዓዳን ከምኡ’ውን ንወዳ ክትርኢ ኢላ ተበገሰት። ኣብቲ ግንባር ምስ በጽሐት ኣቀባብላ መራሒ ክፍለ ሰራዊት 52 ስዒድ ፈረጅ ደስ ኣይበላን። “ቅድም ክርእየኒ ከሎ በየን መጺእኪ ኢሉ ዝሕጎስን ወጃዕጃዕ ዚብል ዝነበረን ብዛዕባ ወደይ ዘጻውተኒ ዝነበረን፤ ዘረባ ኣቋሪጹ ዝን ምስ በለ፣ ብዛዕባ ኢሰያስ ወደይ ኣይሓተትኩን።

ጸሃይቱ ‘ወደ’ውን ተሰዊኡ ኢዩ’ ኢላ ስለዝገመተት፣ ኣበየናይ ቦታን በየናይ ዕለትን ከም ዝተሰውአ ንከተረጋግጽ ናብ ቤት ጽሕፈት ክፍለ ሰራዊት 52 ከደት። ሓሰን ንዝበሃል ተጋዳላይ ብላዕሊ ኮይና፣ መስዋእቲ ወዳ ከም እትፈልጥ ነገረቶ። መዓስን ኣበይን ከም ዝተሰውአ ከኣ ሓተተቶ። “ክድዓትን ሕማቕ ታሪኽን ናይ ወደይ እንቋዕ ኣይሰማዕኩ’ምበር ተሰዊኡ ምስ በሉኒ ተሓቢነ እየ።’’ እናበለት ደጋጊማ ተዛረበቶ።

“በሊ …’’ ኢሉ ዘረብኡ ጀመረ ሓሰን። “ብሓቂ ጌርናዮ ኣይንፈልጥን ኢና። ንስኺ ግን ጽንዕቲ ኣደ ኢኺ። መስዋእቲ ኢሰያስ ንዓኺ ጥራይ ዘይኮነስ፣ ንውድብ’ውን ዓቢ ክሳራ ኢዩ፣’’ ኢሉ ብ 8 ነሓሰ 1990 ኣበይን ብኸመይን ከም ዝተሰውአ ገለጸላ። ሽዑ ጸሃይቱ “ከም ወላዲት ወደይ ክፍለየኒ’ኳ እንተዘይደለኹ፣ መስዋእቱ’ውን ሎሚ’ዶ ጽባሕ እናበልኩ ይጽበዮ ስለዝነበርኩስ ኣይሰንበድኩን። ከብደይ ገጥ ኢሉ፣ ኣነ ምስኡ ኣብ ሜዳ ስለዘለኹ’ምበር እቶም ካልኦት ስድራ ድኣ እንታይ ኢዮም ክብሉ? ንኹሎም ስዉኣት ዘኪረ ድማ ኣይነባዕኩን። ኢሰያስ ኣብ ዱሮ ዓወት ኢዩ ተሰዊኡ፣ ካብቶም ቅድሚኡ ዝተሰውኡ ንሱ ይሓይሽ ኢለ ተጸናናዕኩ።’’ እወ! ንወላዲ ስዉእ፡ ኣምላኽ ኢዱ የንብረሉ!! ዝሓለፈ ምስ ሓለፋ ከኣ፡ ንዓመታ ኣብ ኤርትራ ክንራኸብ ኢና።

ብድሕሪ’ዚ ሓሰን ደብዳቤ ሂቡ ናብ ሓለፍቲ ኮር ንክትከይድ ሓበራ። “ምስ ከድኩ ወዲ ስሑል ኣደ ኢሳያስ ምዃነይ ስለዘይፈለጠ ተቐቢሉኒ እምበር እቶም ካልኦትሲ ረርእዮሙኒ ኢዮም ሃዲሞም። ኮኮል መጺኡ ነታ ሓሰን ዝሃበኒ ቡስጣ ምስ ሃብኩዎ ነቢዖም። ሓቃቶም! ኣነ ግን ጨካን ኮይነ ድየ ኢለ ንነብሰይ ሓተትኩዋ። ንብዓት ኣይመጸንን፣ መዓናጦይ ዝሕልሕል ክብል ግን ተፈሊጡኒ” ትብል።

“ንመጀመርያ ግዜ ኢና ንሓንቲ ኣደ ወድኺ ተሰዊኡ ኢልና ንነግር ዘለና፣ ጽንዓትኪ ስለዘተባባዓና ኢዩ።’’ ኢሎም ከኣ ሙሉእ ታሪኽ ሂወት ወዳን ጅግንነቱን ተወፋይነቱን ዘርዚሮም ኣዕለሉዋ። ካብ እመት ስድሪ ኣላታ ግን ቦታ መስዋእቲ ወዳ ሓንሳብ እምባ ክብርቲ፣ ሓንሳብ ድማ ኣብ ሕክምና ማዕረባ ምስ በጽሐ ተሰዊኡ ዝብል ዘረባታት ምስ ሰምዐት፣ ከም ወላዲት መጠን ንከተረጋግጽ ኣብ ሰገነይቲ ንዝነበራ ኣዲኣ መንቀሊኣ ከይነገረት፣ ክዛወር እየ ኢላ ናብ ማዕረባ ከደት።

ኩላቶም ዝፈልጡዋ ደሃይ ወዳ ከይትሓትት ረርእዮማ ስለዝተሓብኡ ግን ዝቕበላን ዘዕልላን ሰኣነት። “ዓቕለይ ምስ ጸበበኒ ንጓል እገ ብሰብ ጸዊዐ ከም ትረኽበኒ ገይረ።’’ ጓል እገ ጸሃይቱ በየን ከም ዝመጸት ስለዘይፈለጠት “ኢሰያስ ወድኺ ኣሎ ኣይተሰውአን፣ መን’ዩ ተሰዊኡ ዝብለኪ’’ ብምባል ከምቲ ኩሉ ተጋዳላይ ዝገብሮ ዝነበረ መግናሕቲ ዝተሓወሶ የእምን’ዩ ዝበለቶ ዘረባታት ኣስመዓታ። ከም ዝተነግረት ምስ ኣዕለለታ ግን፣ ንሳ’ውን ነብዐት።

ዝወደቐላ ታባ ከርእዩዋ’ሞ፣ ነታ ታባ ንመዘከርታ ክትስእላ ኣጥቢቓ ለመነቶም። ጽንዓታ ስለዘተባብዖም ድማ ነታ ታባ ጥራይ ዘይኮነስ መቓብር ወዳ’ውን ኣርኣዩዋ። “ቅሰን’ዚ ወደይ ናብ ኣፍደገ ዘብጻሕካዮ ዓወት ኣነ ኣዴኻ ክዛዝሞ’የ!’’ ብምባል ድማ ንዝዓጠቐታ ካላሽን ናጽነት ኤርትራ ከይተረጋገጸ ንከይትፈትሕ ኣብ ልዕሊ መቓብር ወዳ ኮይና መሓለት።

ብድሕሪ ናጽነት ኣስከሬን ናይቶም ኣብ ግንባር ደቀምሓረ ዝወደቑ ሰማእታት ኪእከብ እንከሎ፣ ጸሃይቱ ንኣስከሬን ወዳ ኢሰያስ ባዕላ ኢያ ኣውጺኣቶ። ነቶም ዝተረፉ ተጋደልቲ ደቃ ሒዛ ናብቲ መቓብር ብምኻድ፣ መቓብር (ኣስከሬን) ሓዎም ርእዮም ንዝወደቐላ መሬት ንክከላኸሉላ ቃል ኣእትያቶም። ኣብቲ ግዜ እቲ ኢሰያስ “ተጋዳሊት’’ ኢሉ ስም ጓል 18 ዓመት ሓብቱ፣ ጸሃይቱ ንሽክና ኢሰያስ ሒዛ ምስ ረኣየታ፣ ሕማቕ ተሰሚዑዋ በኸየት። “ኣይትንብዕለይ… ኣስከሬን ወደይ ባዕለይ እየ ዘውጽኦ’’ ብምባል ጸሃይቱ ኣስከሬን ኢሰያስ ወዳ ባዕላ ኣውጺኣ ምስ ኣስከሬን እቶም ካልኦት ጀጋኑ ሓወሰቶ።

ካብ መስረትቲ ህ.ሓ.ሓ.ኤርትራ ስዉእ ተጋዳላይ ኣብርሃም ተወልደ “ጽንዒ! ምስጢር ዓቅቢ…ንኩሉ ሽግራት ሓሊፍና ክንዕወት ኢና፣ ንሕና ክንስዋእ ኢና፤ ዳሕረዎት ግን ሰላም ኪረኽቡ ኢዮም” ዝበለኒ ወትሩ ኣብ ልበይ ስለዘላ፣ ደቀይ ጅግንነት ናይቶም ቀዳሞት ብምውራሶም ብዕልልታ ቀቢረዮ’’ ትብል ሓርበኛ ጸሃይቱ።

ኢሰያስ ኣብታ ኣበባ ዝተሰዋኣትላ ዕለት፣ ወርሒ – ወርሒ ዝክረ ሰማእታት ገይሩ ጾሙ ንክውዕል ኢዩ መደቡ። ጀሚሩዎ ድማ ነበረ። እንተኾነ ንሱ’ውን ከምቲ ኣበባ “ጽቡቕ ኣይገድፈልካን’ዩ በሰላ ፍቕርና፣ እናዘመርካ ጥራይ ኣርክበኒ… ደርፊ ሃና… ሃና!’’ ኢላ ዝተላበወቶ፣ ነታ ኣበባ ዝተሰዋኣትላ ራብዓይቲ ወርሒ’ውን ብሓንቲ መዓልቲ ቀዲሙዋ፤ ድሕሪ ሰለስተ ወርሕን ዕስራን ትሽዓተን መዓልታትን ኣርኪቡዋ።

ሓወልቲ ኣብ ልብና!
ዘለኣለማዊ ዝኽሪ ንስዉኣትና!
28/06/2014
ንዓመታ ኣብ ኤርትራ ክንራኸብ ኢና

 

UN agency to probe rights violations in Eritrea

GENEVA, Friday

The UN’s top human rights body launched an investigation on Friday into widespread abuses in Eritrea, including extrajudicial executions, torture and forced military conscription that can last decades.

“The human rights crisis in Eritrea has been forgotten for too long and the scale of violations is unparalleled, putting the country among the worst human rights situations worldwide,” Somalia’s representative to the UN in Geneva, Yusuf Mohamed Ismail Bari-Bari, told the council.

The UN Human Rights Council adopted a resolution tabled by Somalia and France establishing a one-year special commission of inquiry into the situation in the autocratic Horn of Africa state.

China, Pakistan, Venezuela and Russia refused to join the consensus, but the resolution passed without a vote, calling for the creation of a three-member investigation team to probe “all alleged violations of human rights in Eritrea.”

RESOLUTION SLAMMED

The team will include the UN’s current monitor on the rights situation in the country, Sheila Keetharuth, and is set to present its findings to the 47-member council during its February-March session next year.

Eritrea’s representative on the council, Teestamicael Gehrahtu, slammed the resolution which he said was made up of “fabrications, wrong perceptions and baseless assumptions” used to create the illusion of a “fake crisis.”

He accused Eritrea’s arch-enemy Ethiopia of orchestrating the resolution in a bid to raise international pressure on his country.

Keetharuth told the council last week that brutal government repression and Eritrea’s system of open-ended conscription of all men and women at the age of 18 was driving nearly 4,000 Eritreans to flee the country every month.

She told reporters that many in Eritrea are forced to toil for hardly any pay in the military and other state jobs, including in ministries and schools, until retirement age.

MILITARY TRAINING CAMPS

Friday’s resolution equated the system with “forced labour.”

It said children are forced to complete their final year of school in military training camps, and deplored the “intimidation and detention of those suspected of evading national service in Eritrea and their family members.”

Friday’s resolution also strongly condemned other serious rights violations committed under the iron-grip rule of President Issaias Afeworki, including “cases of arbitrary and extrajudicial executions, enforced disappearances, the use of torture, arbitrary and incommunicado detention without recourse to justice, and detention in inhumane and degrading conditions.”

Eritrea is also ranked last in the world for press freedom by the rights group Reporters Without Borders.

 

 

 

Eritrea’s Communications Disconnect

Three years ago, a ship carrying African migrants sank off the coast of Libya. More than 200 drowned, including dozens of young people fleeing their repressive, impoverished home country of Eritrea. Few noticed. “The accident wasn’t broadcast at all,” says Selam Kidane, a human-rights activist and Eritrean expatriate in London. At that time, all eyes were on the Arab Spring; after the ship disaster, Kidane and other expats resolved to try to change the status quo in their homeland, too. “We were trying to look at ways of giving that kind of revolution a chance in Eritrea,” she says. “Then we realized that we were lacking the infrastructure that was in Egypt or Libya. Or anywhere.”

Most of Eritrea’s citizens had no idea the regimes of nearby countries were crumbling—or that a ship full of their countrymen had gone under. That’s because Eritrea, a Pennsylvania-size nation of 6 million, is the least connected country on earth, according to data compiled by the United Nations’ International Telecommunication Union (ITU). For the past six years, Reporters Without Borders has ranked Eritrea the world’s worst in terms of press freedom. During the Arab Spring, Kidane and other activists began using radio signals to broadcast news into Eritrea. Libyan President Muammar “Qaddafi was one of Eritrea’s most loyal supporters, and [the government] still hasn’t reported on his death,” she says.

On Africa’s east coast, bordered by Sudan, Djibouti, and Ethiopia—from which it declared independence in 1993—Eritrea is a preindustrial country run by a 21-year-old dictatorship. Holding its citizenry like hostages, it’s known in the international press as the North Korea of Africa. Officials at the Eritrean Embassy in Washington and the president’s office in Asmara declined to comment for this story.

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By some measures, Eritrea’s technology is worse than that of Kim Jong Un’s benighted fiefdom. Eritreans are permitted to place international calls and to access the Internet, uncommon privileges in Pyongyang. But only 1 percent of Eritrea’s population have a landline, according to ITU data, and only 5.6 percent have a mobile phone—the lowest share in the world. In North Korea, 4.7 percent of people have a landline, and 9.7 percent have a cell phone, not counting phones capable of making international calls that have been smuggled in from China.

tech_eritreachart27Eritrea’s sole telecommunications provider, Eritrea Telecommunication Services (EriTel), is a government-controlled entity that can be difficult to deal with. To obtain a mobile phone, customers must pay 200 nakfa ($13.29) to apply for permission from the local authorities. They then pay EriTel $33.60 to get up and running, plus at least $3.65 every time they add talk credits to their SIM card. In a country where the average annual per-capita income is about $504, the fees add up fast. Those Eritreans who are fulfilling compulsory national service aren’t allowed to own cell phones.

The country’s first unofficial e-mail service was set up in the mid-1990s by Robert Van Buskirk, an American Fulbright scholar determined to stay in touch with his girlfriend back in the States. With help from Craig Harmer, an old high school friend, he connected a computer at the University of Asmara to one in California, using international phone calls to pass along e-mail messages. “For a couple years, we were running the whole country’s e-mail through Craig’s little private domain name: punchdown.org,” recounts Van Buskirk, now a program manager at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Today, fewer than 1 percent of Eritreans go online, according to ITU. The Internet is available in a handful of places, including Asmara, the capital—but it’s almost always via dial-up and requires Zen-like patience. “Even after waiting half an hour, you might not get to the page you want,” says Salem Solomon, an Eritrean-American journalist who attended college and worked as a reporter in Asmara. “Connectivity is very, very, very, very bad.” Eritrea was the last country in Africa to get a V-SAT (very small aperture terminal) connection linking it to the World Wide Web and remains one of the continent’s only two coastal nations without fiber-optic connections. There are only 146 fixed-line broadband subscriptions in the entire country. A handful of residents get dial-up connections at home for about $200 per month, says Tes Meharenna, who runs the diaspora site asmarino.com.

Eritrea has roughly 100 Internet cafes, Meharenna says. Most have 10 or fewer computers and are outfitted with waiting rooms. A typical hour of use costs $1.34, the equivalent of seven loaves of bread. At night, when the shops are closed and online traffic is down, some cafe owners download American movies and TV shows, such as Prison Break and Grey’s Anatomy, which they screen for a fee.

tech_eritrea__02There’s little evidence Eritrean officials censor the Internet, perhaps because high costs and inefficiency have hamstrung its use as a tool of dissent. In an effort to reduce load times, some early political sites omitted videos, images, and ads so that “people with outdated hardware and software and limited bandwidth [would be] able to have access,” says Victoria Bernal, a professor at the University of California at Irvine and author of the forthcoming book Nation as Network: Diaspora, Cyberspace, and Citizenship. One Eritrean, who spoke on condition of anonymity to protect his family, says smugglers who help citizens flee the country often coordinate with low-bandwidth Yahoo! (YHOO) Chat.

Using an Eritrean phone book, the expat Kidane and her diaspora group began robo-calling Eritreans in 2012, telling them to protest the government by staying home on Fridays. They converted the contact numbers into a spreadsheet and raised $33,600 to finance a series of calls. “We would tell them we’re worried about them, worried about what’s happening in the country, and that we wanted people to start resisting the government,” Kidane says. Many were receptive. Some were afraid simply receiving the call could put them in danger. In May, the government blocked a batch of calls scheduled to coincide with Eritrea’s independence day celebrations, she says.

Kidane’s group has also started an online antigovernment newsletter, which in-country contacts help print and distribute. “We know it will take time, but we want to keep the spirit of resistance alive,” she says. The economically struggling government, she says, has incentives to strengthen communications technology: “The government wants the economy to improve. They want mining to improve and tourism to improve. For that to happen, they’ll have to create infrastructure.”

 

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