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¨Isaias sees problems in independence and does not want to rush and create difficulties for himself¨ late Prime Minister Meles Zenawi.

A vital document that exposes Isaias Afewerki’s hidden agenda in his outlook about the fate of Eritrea is uncovered. It was the late Prime Minister of Ethiopia, who divulged such a vital secret in exceptionally

A vital document that exposes Isaias Afewerki’s hidden agenda in his outlook about the fate of Eritrea is uncovered. It was the late Prime Minister of Ethiopia, who divulged such a vital secret in exceptionally candid interview with Paul B. Henze, former CIA and national security specialist in 1990.

For many Eritreans the still unanswered question is ¨why does Isaias hate the Eritrea people this much, why is he systematically destroying the country? According to late Pm Meles, it is because Isaias doesn’t believe in the very entity of Eritrea in the first place. Twenty three years later when we connect the dots, we can clearly see, where the country is heading. Meles explicitly stated ‘Isaias wants Eritrea to stay as part of Ethiopia, but he lucks the support of his people.’ If that was the case then the people have to be submitted, if not they should get removed from that entity to see that dream alive.

The endless support Isaias to different Ethiopian opposition groups and the change of Eri-tv into unofficial Ethiopian-tv also says something. How long will it take for Eritreans, who support the regime to continue deceived? This is an eye opening document.

PBH: What is your position on separatism?

MZ: We are not separatist. We want a united Ethiopia. But we do not want a centralized Shoan-dominated Ethiopia. I just read the speech you gave to the Eritreans here a couple of weeks ago. I support everything you say. I agree with you that the Ethiopian state is valuable. It should not be destroyed. It should be put back together on a democratic basis and with guarantees of freedom and autonomy for all its peoples, so it can develop economically. Federation is the only way this can be done. We are in favor of federation. This is the only way the damage the Derg has done can be repaired.

PBH: This brings us to Eritrea and the EPLF. How are your relations with the EPLF? Do you talk to Isaias Afewerki?

MZ: I talk to Isaias often. We have no disagreements now. During the 1970s we worked together and had no serious disagreements with them. In 1984 we broke relations. The break was over different understandings of the Soviet Union. They still believed the Soviet Union offered a model for the future and that it could be reformed. They argued that the Soviets were misled on Ethiopia. They wanted to persuade the Soviets to support them instead of the Derg. They thought the Soviet system was a model they could apply in Eritrea. We thought this was foolish because we had learned in Tigray that we had to develop our own model and apply our own system in accordance with our own conditions and practical experience. We watched all these talks where the Soviets tried to use the Italians and the East Germans to bring the Derg and the EPLF together and we always thought nothing could come of them. We were right.

So we had very poor relations with the EPLF for four years, 1984-88. Then we worked out an agreement again. They came to see the Soviet Union the way we did. They gave up their illusions. They saw what was happening in the Soviet Union under Gorbachev . After their great victory over the Derg at Afabet in early 1988, we both began to cooperate again. They have given us help, but we are still a very independent movement. We are not dependant on them. We control all of Tigray now. We would not want to be dependant on anybody from the outside. We won our battle at Enda Sellassie with our own strength. If they had not helped us, it might have taken longer, but we would still have won. But that does not mean that we see everything the way EPLF does. I want to assure you of that.

PBH: What are your differences?

MZ: The EPLF has a much more difficult situation than we do. Many of our differences result from that, and we have an understanding and sympathy for their position. In Tigray we have a united people. No more than 10% of our people are Muslims and our Muslims are Tigreans first and Muslims only second. That is not true in Eritrea. The population is much more divided. The Eritrean Muslims themselves are divided. There are at least three groups among them. They don’t see things the same way the Christians do. The EPLF has some of them with it and its policies have been sensible — it is trying to make the Muslims part of a united movement. But that is not possible and the closer the EPLF comes to taking power in Eritrea the more dangerous this issue becomes. There are serious tensions between Eritrean Christians and Muslims in Sudan. This will become apparent in Eritrea when the Derg’s control is gone. We do not have this problem among Tigrean refugees. They all stick together – the Christians do not resent the Muslims and the Muslims do not feel oppressed by the Christians.

PBH: And separatism – how do you see this issue in comparison with the attitude of Eritreans?

MZ: The EPLF has the problem that the population hates the Derg so much that it has all become separatist. The population wants independence to be declared as soon as the EPLF takes Asmara. Isaias understands some of the difficulties of this because he has thought a lot about it in the past year. But he has terrible pressures from his people. It is a difficult issue for him.

PBH: Are the Eritrean highland Christians as strongly in favor of an immediate declaration of independence as Muslims?

MZ: There are different opinions on this, but we think that the whole population wants independence. They may not understand what it means. These people were once strongly in favor of unity with Ethiopia. The Shoan Amharas destroyed that feeling. The highlanders are getting more impatient than the leadership of the EPLF. Isaias sees problems in independence and does not want to rush and create difficulties for himself, but he doesn’t have full control over this issue.

PBH: What would be your preferences?

MZ: We look at this from the viewpoints of the interests of Tigray first, and then Ethiopia as a whole. We would like to see Eritrea continuing to have a relationship with Ethiopia. We know that Tigray needs access to the sea, and the only way is through Eritrea. Whether Eritrea is part of Ethiopia or independent, we need this access and, therefore, must have close ties. There are many Tigrayans in Eritrea. They are concerned. They don’t want to be treated as foreigners there. There has always been close connections between Tigray and Eritrea for the highland people are all the same. They have the same history. We are worried about Eritrea because we are not sure that differences among different groups can be kept under control. Everything could be destroyed there if people begin fighting each other. When the EPLF takes over Asmara, they will have a difficult job, because they have to keep the people together. Some of the Muslims will favor separatism but there is no strength in unity among them on this issue. The ELF has no active strength in Eritrea now, but it still exists in Sudan and there are many Muslims who sympathize with it.

PBH: I have the impression that the situation in respect to Asmara is similar to that with Gondar – the Derg’s ability to hold out there is steadily eroding. Eventually the city will fall to the EPLF. Perhaps before that happens the Derg forces there will work out some sort of deal with the EPLF. Do you think this is likely?

MZ: You know that during the coup attempt last May we were in contact with the Derg forces in Asmara and offered a ceasefire and collaboration, just as the Eritreans did. We thought we could work out a truce and lay the basis for a new relationship in the region. We could have done that with the people with whom we made contact. But elements loyal to Mengistu got the upper hand. They thought Mengistu could do wonderful things for them. He probably made all sorts of promises of promotion to them. We think these elements still control Asmara and we have not seen evidence that their control is weakening yet. No one has tried to contact us. The EPLF is moving up the escarpment. If they take Ghinda and Embatcala, they can bring up their heavy artillery – – which they captured from the Russians two years ago – – and strike at Asmara airport. That will be a serious blow against Derg forces and will shorten the time they can hold out.

PBH: But what next? Conditions of life in Asmara are already said to be difficult – no electricity, little water, no fuel for civilian transportation, no fuel for cooking. Surely something will have to give way?

MZ: We don’t know. We would like to see everybody get together and set up a provisional government so that this kind of situation can be avoided.

PBH: Would you expect the EPLF to participate in a provisional government in Addis Abeba?

MZ: We don’t know. We think they could play a constructive role. We would really like to see Eritrea retain a relationship to Ethiopia, but we don’t know if Isaias can work out the situation to make this possible. Our own position is very delicate. We have to have good relations with Eritreans, so we recognize their right to self-determination, going as far as independence if they want it. We endorse their proposal for a referendum because we don’t think there is any other solution for the situation that has developed. But we really hope that Eritrea can remain part of a federated Ethiopia. I agree with what you have written about the advantages for the Eritreans themselves.

Read the whole article http://www.esai.org/myESAi/viewtopic.php?t=4269&sid=0ed4c4bf9f4f0f67bee2de680088df72

aseye.asena@gmail.com

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78 COMMENTS
  • Zola April 12, 2013

    What a candid interview. Meles, even after he is gone, still rocks.

  • senay April 12, 2013

    After reading the PM Meles Interview, I now know why the regime is torturing Eritreans. What an eye opening document, thank you Asena. I hope every could read tgis.

  • Medhanie Yousief April 12, 2013

    M/z doesn’t matter what we ertireans thing about him, what we know is that meles zenawi what he promised to his people he did it in realitly, his people they live in peace working together and go forword, they have some problems they r fighting to stop and solve those problems but they get they’r fredom and live in peace. how about Isayas Af cherki, he just talking and talking lots of lie, he have only control and fight for his own power and never fight to make it better for his people and nation really fill sorry for my beloved people, but with the matter of time he will fall down

  • samuel April 12, 2013

    Meles Zenawi, what a great SPIRIT, a great Human Being.

  • ማሊሻ April 12, 2013

    I don’t think the core issue as you it put above is “¨why does Isaias hate the Eritrea people this much …” Issaias only cares, and loves about his power in Eritrea and the region. He only loves the people who agree with his dream. He has spent toiling and organizing more than 40 years because he wants to stay in power. The only way he could stay in power and keep the Ghedli narrative alive is through sheer power, nothing else.
    Eritrea’s problem goes beyond Issaias, the core being the elusive Ghedli dream.
    If you can not see the problem, it is unlikely you will envision the solution.
    Having said this, Meles was right on his assessment. In my view, Eritrea is so broken beyond repair, it will unlikely survive as a worthy nation state.
    I just came back from a six week visit to Eritrea and I am glad to answer any of your questions. Except the older generation and the older women, most of the young Eritreans that I spoke share my views above.

    • samuel April 12, 2013

      tell us what is happening in Eritrea….

  • Ahmed April 12, 2013

    Who care about what meles chanawi said . I am glad he is dead before he see Abay Tgray. And let’s just wait and see what is about to happen to His Tgray

    • solo April 12, 2013

      Who care? the people love Eritrea care.ብባህልና እንኴይዶ ንጹቡቅ ዝሕስበልካን ዝገበረልካን ንጸላኤካ ውን እንኴዕ ሞተ አይባሃልን እዩ ግን ህግደፍ ከምዚ ከማካ ረሳሕ ሓንጎል ዝሾካዓሎም ሒዙ ነቀይ ነቀይ እንዳበለ ሃገርና፥ ባህልና ክብረትናን ሓበናን ሒዝዎ ይጸድፍ ኧሎ ዓሻስ ሓደ ደርፉ ዲዩ ዝባሃል ህግደፋውያን እዛ ብድዐ እንዳ አኮምሳዕኩም ሃገርና ናብ ደልሃመት ሂዝኩምዋ ትጸድፉ ኧለኮም ፣ እንተ እቶም ትንዕቆም ዘለካ ጎረቤትናን ኧሕዋትናን ግን ካብ ድክነት ንክወጹ ይውንጨፉ ኧለዉ

    • Zola April 13, 2013

      Ahmed, that is rubbish of you, to say the least. Meles is a man of his words. He died doing exactly what he aspired to do: lay a foundation of a stable, democratic and civil state. We now have a stable and civil country for sure. Let alone conscription to the army, to see a military in towns is becoming rare. We have already begun practicing democracy, with its shortcomings obviously. Government power goes in line with a revered Constitution, not only at the center but also in regions. The economy if getting okay and diplomatic success is at its pick. Our people live in harmony and are working hard to get things changed, slowly but surely. You may brag ‘hade lebi hade hezbi’. My prayer being ‘yegberelekum’, however, Eritrea is yet to test how it fares on this when you begin giving people freedom of all sorts and answer questions of self governance, and justice to past deeds. Also don’t get it wrong when you see many opposition groups abroad. Remember, we in Ethiopia, went through a bloody civil war, while Eritrea never did. We are very diverse, but still striving in the right direction.

      Talking of Tigray, I don’t think that is your concern after all. But for your information here are some facts. For the last three years, the productivity per hectar, has been the highest in Tigray compared to anywhere in Ethiopia. Hard-work is paying off. We know we have been poor and the only way out is to work hard. We are doing just that. We have three well functioning airports (Mekelle becoming international and with three daily flights to Addis!), three universities with about 70k students, dozens of public and private colleges, a health post and at least two health workers for every village of more than 100 households, dozens of private weeklies, businesses, big and small emerging everywhere. I can go on and on. I would never understand what ‘Abai Tigray’ would mean if this is not Ebe’yet 

      Of course, I sincerely wish good luck for the good people of Eritrea.

  • Dawit Meconen April 12, 2013

    Paul B. Henze, retired CIA, now dead, was the enemy of Eritrea from the get go. Whatever he writes, therefore, has no crediblity. Both of these conspirators are now dead, and many are to follow because nobody touches Eritrea and lives.

    • Gebez April 12, 2013

      Yes they are dead(natural death) after succesfully accomplishing their jobs but don’t you know that ERITREA, as a nation, is already long dead? Do not believe in illusion.Just accept it and stop crying hater.

  • Yemane Johar April 12, 2013

    No wonder Isaias ordered the Eritrean deference forces to abandon the Asab front! and what about the Haileselasie and q’agnew station (CIA) conspiracy….! Something is fishy!

  • Zerai April 12, 2013

    How can we prove this interview was 1990 !? i want to critize about the date but not the interview,
    Because in 1990 Eritrea wasn’t free from Derg, in 1990 only Bats’a was free, Eritrea freedom was in 1991 in May.

    However, looking at the interview regardless the date, if the interview was within the dates 1990-2000, it is acceptable. Because in these years, Eritrea was needing change in policies and governance but Isaias had a hidden agenda, He is deliberately become dictator, there were no law or constitution within the parity.

  • solo April 12, 2013

    @Dawit Meconen and Ahmed
    Who care? the people love Eritrea care.ብባህልና እንኴይዶ ንጹቡቅ ዝሕስበልካን ዝገበረልካን ንጸላኤካ ውን እንኴዕ ሞተ አይባሃልን እዩ ግን ህግደፍ ከምዚ ከማኩም ረሳሕ ሓንጎል ዝሾካዓሎም ሒዙ ነቀይ ነቀይ እንዳበለ ሃገርና፥ ባህልና ክብረትናን ሓበናን ሒዝዎ ይጸድፍ ኧሎ ዓሻስ ሓደ ደርፉ ዲዩ ዝባሃል ህግደፋውያን እዛ ብድዐ እንዳ አኮምሳዕኩም ሃገርና ናብ ደልሃመት ሂዝኩምዋ ትጸድፉ ኧለኮም ፣ እንተ እቶም ትንዕቆም ዘለካ ጎረቤትናን ኧሕዋትናን ግን ካብ ድክነት ንክወጹ ይውንጨፉ ኧለዉ

    • Dawit Meconen April 13, 2013

      As they say, ” If Wishes were Horses, Beggars would Ride them”.

      Just recall the wishes of Haile Selase, Mengistu Haile Mariam and Meles, where are they now? This is the future of any one who touches the Home of The Braves, I guarnatee it.

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