Sad anniversary for Eritrean press freedom

Dawit Isaak, a journalist with Swedish and Eritrean dual nationality who used to work for the Eritrean newspaper Setit in Asmara, is spending his 5,000th day in prison today. He has never been sentenced or even charged.

And he is not alone. Other journalists such as Seyoum Tsehaye, Temesgen Gebreyesus and Emanuel Asrat were also arrested in September 2001, when the government closed all independent media in Eritrea. More have been arrested since then. A total of seven Eritrean journalists have died in prison.

This makes Eritrea Africa’s largest prison for media personnel. It has been at the very bottom of the Reporters Without Border press freedom index for the past seven years.

“The international community must confront the Eritrean government,” said Clea Kahn-Sriber, head of the Reporters Without Borders Africa desk. “It is unacceptable that the European Union, a union based on respect for democratic values, supports this regime and tolerates its awful human rights record.”

In Sweden, Isaak’s European home country, many events are being organized today to mark this sad anniversary.

Isaak’s eldest daughter, Bethlehem Isaak, has spent the night in a mock-up of the completely dark cell in which the authorities are believed to be holding him.

In an op-ed published today in Sweden’s biggest morning paper, Dagens Nyheter, the Swedish section of Reporters Without Borders has criticized EU plans to triple aid to Eritrea despite its shocking human rights record.

Read the op-ed (in Swedish) here

Drafted with the support of the Kampala-based East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders Project, it accuses Asmara of reaching outside the country in its determination to suppress freedom of expression. Eritrean journalists who have fled to nearby Uganda and Sudan continue to be persecuted by Eritrean government agents. Eritrean exiles have been threatened and even beaten up government supporters in Sweden and Italy for criticizing the regime.

This evening, a broad coalition of Swedish civil society groups, including the Swedish section of Reporters Without Borders, is organizing a public gathering in Stockholm that aims to attract at least 5,000 participants to draw attention to the magnitude of the 5,000 days that Isaak has been unlawfully detained.

Let’s not forget humanity in a Refugee crisis

Human lives matter more than geopolitics. That is why the whole world should take action when thousands of refugees drown at the doorstep of Europe. Not just Italy. Not just Germany. Not just the European Union. Every country with the resources to do so should step in.

First, a quick geography lesson. The Mediterranean Sea is one of the world’s most deadly migration routes. It is almost completely enclosed by land and surrounded by Europe, Asia and Africa. The sea has historically been of vast importance as a route for travelers and merchants during ancient times and as a food source. Nowadays, it seems like there are more bodies being pulled out of the water than fish.

Due to wars tearing apart Syria, Afghanistan, Sudan and Iraq and poverty in Eritrea, Egypt and many African countries, millions of people are fleeing for their lives. In 2015, we have already seen the biggest boat tragedy ever in the Mediterranean with over 800 lives lost on April 20. This figure is only a guess though. We will never know exactly how many people died while trying to cross the ocean since only estimates were given of how many passengers were on board. The authorities quickly had to give up finding more survivors – and more bodies.

In life as well as death, refugees have their humanity taken away from them. They are not named or sympathized with equally to, for example, the people of the MH17 Malaysian flight because there are no records of their existence. The pictures of their lifeless bodies are used as a shameless plug by media outlets. When their deaths are discussed by politicians, they are considered a nuisance because of the economic and social pressure they are putting European nations under. Meanwhile, in the United States, the refugees are brushed off as being Europe’s problem despite the fact that the US spurred many of the conflicts to begin with, especially in the Middle East. If we disregard the reasons behind the many conflicts for a moment, it should not matter where in the world there is suffering. When there is a humanitarian crisis, countries should forego differences and political concerns and help those in need. Seeking asylum is a human right and just because we are privileged enough not to be in the need of it, it does not mean we should turn our backs on those less fortunate.

Labeling the Mediterranean migration as a humanitarian crisis is no exaggeration. This year alone, an estimated 20,000 migrants have reached Italy while over 1,800 have died. Between July 1 and September 30 in 2014, over 90,000 people crossed the Mediterranean while at least 2,200 lost their lives. At the current rate, the death toll could amount to a staggering 30,000 by the end of 2015, as estimated by the International Organization for Migration. To make matters even more depressing, in 2014, the number of people displaced or seeking asylum reached over 50 million people for the first time in the era of post-World War II.

All of this is happening far away from the United States and other prosperous countries and thus only reaches us when it makes the news. Once it stops being news and coverage ceases, so does our attention. Although, the issues might not be present in our minds anymore, it does not mean that the 50 million are doing any better. Awareness is urgent because even when faced with this life or death choice, the leaders of the world are stalling.

So what are the solutions? Ideally, the reasons behind the massive displacements would be solved so people would not have to flee. That would mean solving war, poverty and discrimination. Probably not going to happen, is it? The next best option would be to give refugees safer routes to travel by and help those traveling across the sea by organizing humanitarian efforts. As for what regular students such as us can do: we can sign petitions, donate money and inform others. Essentially, we can show care for our fellow human-beings.

ዲፕሎማሰኛ መንግስቲ ኤርትራ ኣብ ሕብረት ኣፍሪቃ፣ ነቲ መንግስቲ ብምርሕራሕ ፖለቲካዊ ዑቕባ ሓቲቱ !

ኣብ ኣዲስ ኣበባ ኣብ ዝርከብ ቀዋሚ ወኪል መንግስቲ ኤርትራ ኣብ ሕብረት ኣፍሪቃ ካብ ዝርከቡ ሓሙሽተ ዲፕሎማሰኛታት ሓደ ነቲ መንግስቲ ብምርሕራሕ ፖለቲካዊ ዑቕባ ሓቲቱ።

እቲ መሓመድ እድሪስ ያዊጅ ዝተባህለ ዲፕሎማሰኛ፣ ካብ ግዜ ብረታዊ ቃልሲ ኣትሒዙ ኣብ ማሕበር መንእሰያት ብምጥርናፍ ብደረጃ ዝተፈላለየ ሓላፍነት ዘገልገለ ምዃኑ’ዩ ዝጠቕስ።

እቲ ኣባል ህዝባዊ ግንባርን መንግስቲ ኤርትራን ምዃኑ ዘመልከተ ኤርትራዊ ዲፕሎማሰኛ፣ ኣብዚ እዋን’ዚ ነቲ ኣብ ኣዲስ ኣበባ ዝርከብ ቀዋሚ ወኪል መንግስቲ ኤርትራ ኣብ ሕብረት ኣፍሪቃ ዝተዋህቦ ተልእኾ ብምርሕራሕ፣ ፖለቲካዊ ዑቕባ ዝሓተተሉ ምኽንያት፣ ዕላማ ቃልሲ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ሸትኡ ብልክዕ ክሃርም ብዘይምኽኣሉ’ዩ ኣስሚርሉ።

ዝተቓለሰሉ ዕላማ ክትግበር’ዩ ብዝብል ብተስፋ ክሳብ እዚ እዋን’ዚ ምስቲ አንግስቲ ክቕጽል ከምዝጸንሐ ዘመልከተ ኣቶ መሓመድ እድሪስ ያዊጅ፣ ሕጂ ግና ብዛዕባ ፍትሕን ደሞክራሲን ኣብ ኤርትራ ተስፋ ኣብ ዘቑርጽ ደረጃ ብምብጽሑ፣ ነቲ መንግስቲ ክርሕርኽ ከምዝወሰነ የረድእ።

A Saudi war fought with Eritrean troops?

Analysis: Saudi Arabia has been cosying up to Eritrea, leading to reports the African nation will join Senegal in offering troops for the war in Yemen, says Mohammad Abu Fares.

Eritrea could be the second non-Arab African nation to contribute troops to the Saudi-led alliance against Houthi rebels in Yemen.

Eritrea’s president Isaias Afwerki visited Riyadh last week to meet King Salman and other leading Saudi officials. This has led many to believe that Eritrea could follow Senegal’s lead – the West African nation announced earlier this week that it would send 2,100 soldiers to join the Saudi alliance.

Sources in Asmara revealed to al-Araby al-Jadeed that talks between Eritrean and Saudi officials has brought them to a common understandings on a number of strategic and security related issues.

Sources expect an announcement on military cooperation between the two states, which would allow the alliance to use Eritrean airspace and seas.

It is also being said that Saudi is hoping to capitalise on the capabilities of the Eritrean armed forces.

Strategically important

Eritrea occupies an important geographically location on the Horn of Africa.

It lies just over the water from Yemen, looking over one of the most strategically important sea corridors in the world – where the Red Sea leads to the Suez Canal.

Eritrea would be an obvious launchpad for amphibious attacks if Saudi Arabia wanted to being a ground war.

Saudi Arabia has built good relations with three other Red Sea states share maritime borders with Yemen – Djibouti, Somalia and Ethiopia. Eritrea was the fourth piece in the jigsaw and has hosted foreign troops before.

Israel and Iran have military bases in Eritrea, but as the tide turns against the Tehran-backed Houthi militias in Yemen, Asmara appears to be cutting ties with these countries.

”Afwerki’s controversial relations have continued to be a source of angst for Saudi Arabia, which is just a strip of sea away from Eritrea,” said one Arab diplomat who wanted to remain anonymous.

 ”Saudi Arabia worries when Eritrean-Israeli relations progressed, which led to… the presence of Israeli bases in Dahlak and other Eritrean islands just off the Saudi coast. Relations between the two countries hit their lowest level.”

Eritrea was said to be, secretly at least, on the side of ally Iran and the Houthis during the Saudi-led assault on Yemen.

However, observers believe that Afwerki’s visit to Riyadh has turned the tables and that Eritrea might be sending signals to the US that it is eager to be friends.

Influential groups in Eritrea have been suspected of supporting Somalia’s al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabaab.

Some African diplomats were not surprised by the turnaround. Gulf nations were said to have been heavily involved in negotiations with African countries allied to Asmara in the build up to the visit.

Qatar has been effective in leading talks between Eritrea and some of its hostile neighbours.

The diplomats believe that the talks with Saudi Arabia is an attempt by Asmara to break its international isolation.

This has been enforced through UN resolution 1907, which imposed sanctions on Eritrea over its role in Somalia and refusal to pull its troops out of Djibouti.

With 200,000 soldiers and 12,000 naval personnel, and commanders experienced from Eritrea’s war with Ethiopia, the country could provide the backbone of a coalition invasion force.

The fact that they are ruled by an absolute dictator and dissent in the country has been crushed, then Eritrea would not be faced with a repeat of the Pakistani parliament’s refusal to engage in Saudi’s war in Yemen.

This article is an edited translation from our Arabic edition.

AL-Araby

Young African Migrants Caught in Trafficking Machine

ZAWIYAH, Libya — The no-money-down offer was too tempting for the children to resist.

Smugglers had offered the boys and girls transportation out of the refugee camps along the Eritrean border, across the African deserts and the Mediterranean Sea, to a new life in Europe. There, they could quickly win asylum and bring along their parents, the smugglers assured them. Payment could come later.

By the time the smugglers had conveyed the boys and girls to Libya, however, the offer had become an ultimatum. The children, some as young as 8, called their parents to relay a demand from the smugglers for more than $3,200. For parents, failure to send the money meant abandoning their sons and daughters to the chaos of Libya.

Zackarias Hilo, 19, the oldest of about 40 Eritrean boys held by the authorities here at the time of a recent visit, said his father had initially exclaimed that he was too poor to pay. “Then I am dead!” Zackarias replied.

 young-african-migrants-caught-in-trafficking-machine2So to come up with the payment, “my father went to the old city to sell all his goats,” Zackarias said.

“It was the same for all of us,” he said, surveying the younger boys. Adult refugees who traveled with them confirmed their accounts, which aid workers said were common. In the case of one 8-year-old, a father in Eritrea and a sister in Norway provided corroboration as well.

There are about 80 Eritrean boys and girls now imprisoned in two detention centers here. Ill prepared to evaluate the smugglers’ offers, such children are among the most innocent victims of the human smuggling machine that is now sucking so many African migrants into the Libyan maelstrom and out onto the Mediterranean waters.

Out of roughly 170,000 migrants arriving in Italy by sea from Libya last year, more than 13,000 were children traveling alone, and 3,394 of those were Eritrean, according to the International Organization for Migration, an intergovernmental agency based in Geneva. In just the first few weeks of this year’s peak sailing season, about 30,000 have crossed, including more than 5,000 so far this month and a total of more than 1,680 unaccompanied minors.

More than 50 children, including some traveling with their parents, are believed to have drowned along with 700 others when their overloaded boat capsized in April. On Tuesday, aid groups said that as many as 40 other migrants had drowned as well, and last year, hundreds of children died the same way.

The families being extorted by the smugglers are invariably already impoverished. In Eritrea, the average per capita income is about $550 a year, according to the most recent World Bank figures, so meeting the smugglers’ ransom can consume the savings of a whole village or more.

“The smugglers are very creative,” said Meron Estefanos, an Eritrean rights activist in Stockholm who works with migrants. “Once the smuggler gets the children to Libya, the parents have no option but to send money, because there is no return.”

If the children reach Europe, she said, “the first thing they ask me is always, ‘Can I bring my parents?’ ”

The unaccompanied children come from many countries, including 1,481 from Somalia, 1,208 from Gambia and 945 from Syria last year, according to the International Organization for Migration. In some cases, parents may consciously send children in the hope that they will be more likely to win asylum.

But the largest number of unaccompanied children come from Eritrea, a dictatorship so severe it is sometimes likened to North Korea. Western countries grant asylum to almost every arriving Eritrean. And the Eritrean children, aid workers say, often slip away without the knowledge of their parents.

Eritrea drafts every man and woman as young as 18 into a brutal system of military service that frequently lasts many years and can amount to slave labor at state-run industrial projects. To escape, hundreds of thousands of adults have fled, often to refugee camps across the hilly border with Ethiopia. Each year, hundreds of unaccompanied children following the same footsteps walk into Ethiopia. The camps currently house more than 1,500 without their parents, aid workers say.

“They are referred to as ‘orphans’ inside the camps,” said John Stauffer, founder of the America Team for Displaced Eritreans, a nonprofit group.

Efrem Fitwi and Hermon Angosom, 8-year-olds at the detention center here, appeared in an earlier New York Times article about migrants in Libya. “I saw what happened to my brothers; I saw my future,” Efrem said when asked at more length about his journey.

“We don’t have any education,” he said, squatting on the dirt courtyard of the detention center and speaking Tigrinya, a language native to Eritrea and Ethiopia, while Zackarias translated. “My brothers and sisters don’t have any school. So we want to go to Ethiopia.”

Most children who make the trek without telling their parents regret it as soon as they arrive, aid workers say. But Eritrea considers them defectors and criminals, barring any return. “They get stuck there in the camps,” Ms. Estefanos said. “It is very common.”

The camps are also where the smugglers trawl for passengers. Efrem and other Eritrean boys in the Libyan detention center said their smuggler was Ermias Ghermay, an Ethiopian who is wanted by the Italian police for the drowning of 366 migrants off the coast of Lampedusa in 2013.

His name resurfaced recently in Italian news reports about a police recording of a telephone call in which smugglers discussed where to invest their millions in profits.

“They say I let too many people board the boats,” Mered Medhanie, a 34-year-old Eritrean smuggler nicknamed The General, reportedly said. “But they’re the ones who want to leave right away.”

From the refugee camps in Ethiopia near the Eritrean border, Mr. Ghermay’s crew packed the children in the back of a truck with a dozen other migrants to drive west to Sudan and then north to Libya, children and adult passengers said. Hermon and several other boys and girls said it was in Sudan that they first called their families.

Hermon called his older sister, Haben, 22. She had recently traveled a similar route across the Mediterranean and had finally reached Norway, where she applied for asylum, she said in a telephone interview.

Having experienced the journey’s perils, she pleaded with Hermon to turn back or stay in Sudan — anything but continue to Libya — and she initially persuaded him, both said.

But after they hung up, Hermon felt afraid to stay alone in Sudan and unsure how to go back, he said in an interview in the detention center.

“We don’t have friends in Sudan, we don’t have family there, and I am small and I am scared,” Hermon said. “I missed my mother and my father, so I wanted to get to the outside.” He allowed the smugglers to carry him on despite his sister’s warnings.

The smugglers held Hermon captive in a squalid “collection house” somewhere in western Libya — neither the boys nor the adults who traveled with them knew where — until his sister in Norway could send enough money, about $1,600 for the ride to Libya and another $1,600 or $1,800 for the boat ride into the Mediterranean. He waited four weeks while she begged for money from family and friends.

young-african-migrants-caught-in-trafficking-machine3Finally, in the dark of night, the smugglers put Hermon and Efrem in an inflatable dinghy to carry them out to a fishing boat packed with more than 200 others. The engine failed almost immediately, so they were pulled back to shore and arrested.

Now, at the Libyan detention centers, the boys and girls spend most of their time caged in concrete bunkers — the boys on thin pads on the floor, the girls on rows of beds that fill the floor space. The food is little more than rice and macaroni.

There are few opportunities for recreation and no chance of education. The United Nations refugee agency has largely withdrawn from Libya because of the escalating violence. So have most other international aid groups.

Each of the centers held more than 400 adults as well as about 40 children, many apparently younger than puberty.

None of the boys and girls knew where they were or how they might get out. Many of the children speak only limited Arabic in an Eritrean dialect, and none of the guards speak Tigrinya.

Hermon was stoic at first. Then a visiting journalist said he had reached Hermon’s father in Eritrea, who was glad to hear news of his son. At that, Hermon hid his face to weep, uncontrollably.

Later, Hermon was given a phone by a visiting journalist and allowed to call his mother. But his guards insisted they stay in the room, and then mocked him for crying.

“There he goes, crying and fussing to his mama, but his parents are the ones who sent him,” a jailer said, accusing him of fabricating stories of mistreatment.

Had he told his parent he was well treated, another asked, threateningly. “I told them I am in Libya,” Hermon said in Arabic. “I told them I am in prison.”

Another boy of about 8, Filimon Burust, was allowed to speak by phone to Ms. Estefanos, the rights activist. He alternated between childlike terror and adult suspicion, she said.

“I am not going to tell you where my father is,” he told Ms. Estefanos, warily. “Just tell my mother to tell my father where I am — she knows where he is.”

Hermon’s sister, Haben, had lied to her parents, assuring them that Hermon was safely on his way, but her lie was exposed when Ms. Estefanos reached his father.

In reality, Haben said she had previously spoken only with the smuggler, Mr. Ghermay. He demanded another $600 for a bribe to secure Hermon’s release from detention, then put him back on another dangerous boat.

Is my sister doing anything to help me, Hermon asked in a phone call with Ms. Estefanos. Was the price of his release in American dollars or Libyan dinars?

“You just concentrate on taking care of yourself,” Ms. Estefanos said she told him.

The New York Times