Visit the new AsenaTv Website

https://asenatv.com

ምልካዊ ስርዓት ኢሳይያስ ወረቐት ካብ ዘይብሎም ብንግስነት ስዑዲ ዓረብ ዝህደኑ ዘለዉ ኤርትራውያን ናይ ጉልበት ሰራሕተኛታት ገንዘብ ይምእርር።

እቲ ንግስነት ስዑዲ ዓረብ ቅጥዒ ብዘይብሉ መንገዲ ወረቐት ዘይብሎም ኤርትራውያን ዜጋታት ክገፍፍ ከሎ ቅንጣብ ሓልዮት ዘየርኣየ ስሱዕ ምልካዊ ስርዓት ኢሳይያስ፣ ሃድን ንግስነት ስዑዲ ገና ዘንጸላልዎም ዘሎ ወረቐት ዘይብሎም ኤርትራውያን ናይ ጉልበት ሰራሕተኛታት ዝነብሩሉ ርሑቕ ሓውሲ

እቲ ንግስነት ስዑዲ ዓረብ ቅጥዒ ብዘይብሉ መንገዲ ወረቐት ዘይብሎም ኤርትራውያን ዜጋታት ክገፍፍ ከሎ ቅንጣብ ሓልዮት ዘየርኣየ ስሱዕ ምልካዊ ስርዓት ኢሳይያስ፣ ሃድን ንግስነት ስዑዲ ገና ዘንጸላልዎም ዘሎ ወረቐት ዘይብሎም ኤርትራውያን ናይ ጉልበት ሰራሕተኛታት ዝነብሩሉ ርሑቕ ሓውሲ ከተማታትን ከባቢታትን ኣለልዩ ኣብ ኤምባሲኡ ዝሰርሑ ሃሱሳቱ ብምውፋር፣ናብ ኤርትራ ክትምለሱ Less passé ከነውጽኣልኩም ብዝብል ምኽንያት ካብ ሓደ ሰብ ካብ 300-400 ርያል ስዑዲ ይምልጥጦም ከምዘሎ ምንጭታት ኣሰና ካብ ስዑዲ ዓረብ ሓቢሮም።

ብመሰረት’ቲ ሓበሬታ፣ እቶም ካብ መሳኪን ኤርትራውያን ገንዘብ ክምእርሩ ተላኢኾም ዘለዉ ሓሱሳት ተዋፊሮምሉ ዘለዉ ከባቢታት፣ዓሲር፣ ኣብሓ፣ ከሚስ ምሸት፣ ጀዛን ዝኣመሰሉ ከተማታትን ሓውሲ ከተማታትን እዮም።

መንግስቲ ስዑዲ ዓረብ “ዘይሕጋውያን ሰራሕተኛታት” ብዝብል ምኽንያት ግፋ ኣብ ዝጀመረሉ እዋን፣ ናብ ስዑዲ ደዊልና ብተለፎን ዘዛራረብናዮም ናይ ዓይኒ መሰኻኽር ከምዝሓበሩዎ፣ ኩሎም መንግስታት ናይቶም ታርጌት ኮይነን ዝነበራ ሃገራት ብዜጋታቶም ተገዲሶም ላዕልን ታሕትን ክብሉ ከለዉ፣ እቲ ሕጂ ገንዘብ ኣበራቢሩዎ ሃነፍነፍ ዝብል ዘሎ ምልካዊ ስርዓት ኢሳይያስ ነቶም ኣብ ጀዳ፣ ተርሒል ዝብሃል ግዝያዊ መእሰሪ ተዳጕኖም ዝነበሩ ኤርትራውያን ቁሊሕ ኣይበሎምን።

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
42 COMMENTS
  • ERITRAWIT November 23, 2013

    Let’s not forget the blood saker asked 150 EURO from our brother and sister dead body so let’s not surprise what ever Isaias does.

  • Bereket and Wedi negash 2 November 23, 2013

    Issais might ask for their DNA as well to maximize his income. He is always doing illgal things so he might charge more and more. The government of Ethiopia is taking its citizens and so far they took about 16 000 people. Eritrea doesn’t care about its people but their money is important for hgdf.

  • true November 23, 2013

    I dont get itt this news.still dont like hgdef but if they try to get them out thats the most important thing. Isnt it ethiopian s blaming their goverment they didnt act to get them out from sudia. So if they act to get them out thats great.we want the government of eritrea to be responsible for their people. Lets make sure eritreans are safe thats all Amniel.

  • Selino Asmarino November 23, 2013

    ሓሳዊ ፤ ኣበይ ዘለኻ ሓሳዊ ኢኻ ንስኻ ፣ ብሓቂ ክትምክት ፈትን። ቀዳማይ ነገር እዚኣቶም ኢትዮጵያውያን እዮም ፤ ካልኣይ ነገር እዚ ስእሊ ባዕለይ ዝሰኣልክዎ ስእሊ እዩ ፤ ካብ መርበብ ሓበሬታ ድሬ-ቱብ ድማ ኢኻ ሰሪቕካዮ። ሳልሳይ ነገር ኣብ ስዑድያ ብዘይ ፍቓድ ዝነብር ኤርትራዊ ዳርጋ የለን ክበሃል ይከኣል ፣ እንተዝህሉ ኸማን ከምኡ ዝተባህለ የለን። ኣብዚ ዝነብር ኤርትራዊ ግቡኡ ኣማሊኡ ዝነብር እዩ። ኣብዚ ክፍለጥ ዘለዎ ፣ ኣብ ስዑድያ ከምቲ ኣብ ኤውሮጳ እርዳታ (welfare) እንዳበልዐ ብኾፉ ከይሰርሐ ብሃለውለው ዝነብር ኤርትራዊ የለን። በቲ ኾይኑ በቲ ኣብዚ ንቕመጥ ኤርትራውያን ፡ ሰብኡትና ፣ ኣንስትናን ደቅናን ተደማሚርና 50 ሽሕ ኣይንበጽሕን ኢና። ብኣንጻሩ ክሳብ ሎምመዓልቲ ናብ ዓዶም ዝተፋነዉ ኢትዮጵያን ብዝሒ ድማ 43 ሽሕ በጺሑ ይርከብ። እቲ ዝገርመኩም ኣብ ስዑድያ ዝቕመጡ ኢትዮጵያውያን ነቶም ሕጋውያን ወሲኽካ ብጠቕላላ 920 ሽሕ (ዳርጋ ሓደ ሚልዮን ዝበጽሑ) ምዃኖም በዚ ኣጋጣሚ ኩሉ ክፈልጦ ይግባእ ፤ ብሰላም ምስ ስድርኦም ክሕወሱ ድማ ንምነየሎም።

    • Asghedom Woldeghiorghis November 23, 2013

      Stupid analysis, eritrean have problem and ethiopians too. Aye rritreaein kulu gezie hateftef ekum tfetu. In this case solidarity is necessary than eritreans in saudi Arabia are sll of them ok. Ee know your stupied situstion. Ertreans= layers

    • Dawit November 23, 2013

      Anta telmeden poletikgna
      Meas cadre HGDEF almidomka
      Nska hade kbtom keyserhu bekofom
      HGDEF zebleom eka aberktoka
      Dema 03 mnzah eyu.
      Dagmai Ali Abdu azekirkani.
      Dawit wedi keren

  • Paradiso November 23, 2013

    @ Selino Asmarino,

    ጡስጡስ ከልቢ ዓረብ። ካብዚ ሓሊፉ ደኣ ከልቢ ዓረብ እንታይ ክብል። ሓብቱ ጓሉ ሰበይቱ ፣ኣብ ሃገራት ዓረብ ከም ጤል እንዳተሸጠት፣ ብዕስለ ዓረብ እንዳተዓመጸት፣ ድቓላ ዓረብ ብዘይፍታዋ ከትዕቢ እተረግመት፤ ኣሕዋትካ ኮላሊቶም ተመዝሒቑ ናብ ሃብታማት ዓረብ ኣንዳተሽጠ፣ ርጉም ዓረብ ንባርነት ሸይጡ ከይኣክል ካብ ድኻታት ኤርትራውያን ኣሽሓት ገንዘብ እንዳመንዘዔ፣ ከምዚ ከማኻ ከልቢ ዓረብ ከይሓፈረ ” ኢትዮጵያውያን ወያነ ” እዮም ይብል። ዋሒድ ከልቢ ዓረብ ሙሽሙሽ።

    • ahmed saleh November 24, 2013

      Do you need to insult the whole Arab race because of the few wrong doers?
      You do not differ from those who generalize their hate toward Ethiopians also because of the few wrong doers .
      We are our own enemy by generalization of blame the whole population as our enemies inviting confrontation .
      Hatred is destructive , we rather find a way intellectually to narrow the gap for common interest . In fact , we Eritreans are tired from conflicts with neighboring countries . No more energy left , tired and done .

      • i and i November 25, 2013

        ahmed
        no ethiopians think any wrong doers against HIGHLANDER eritreans on the contrary ethiopians believe a lot of wrong doers by the eritreas.

  • halengi November 23, 2013

    dawit sahsah amsaya girm tigrna.

  • Kabbire November 24, 2013

    Saudi Arabia doubles down on abuse
    By Dawit Giorgis, David Andrew Weinberg

    November 23, 2013

    Saudi officials claim that the Ethiopians instigated this episode by throwing stones at cars without any provocation, but a reporter for the Wall Street Journal talked to locals who had a different view. They said “Saudi security forces had come to the neighborhood the night before to declare that all illegal African migrants had to leave… immediately. Pakistani laborers began trying to help police by catching African workers, and clashes began”.

    This harsh crackdown comes as part of a longstanding Saudi effort aimed at increasing the proportion of citizens employed in productive sectors of the economy. However, it is also the result of a pervasive legacy of racism and religious discrimination experienced by African Christians in the Kingdom.

    Saudi Arabia only abolished slavery in 1962, under heavy pressure by Washington and the UN. The best estimates suggest that the Kingdom held approximately thirty thousand slaves at the time.

    But the Wahhabi religious establishment was reluctant to see the institution go. Just a decade ago, a member of Saudi Arabia’s highest religious body was caught on tape preaching that “slavery is a part of Islam”. He elaborated that “slavery is a part of jihad, and jihad will remain as long as there is Islam”.

    In this insidious mindset—which, of course, is rejected by many Muslims—a hierarchy of races could be seen as a religious obligation. Due to what Saudi dissident Ali al-Ahmed calls a “culture of slavery” that “pervades the country,” even dark-skinned men and women who are Saudi citizens have been blocked from positions in a range of prestigious professions.

    There are an estimated nine million foreign workers in Saudi Arabia, mostly doing jobs that Saudis themselves do not want to take. And so far, the sudden crackdown is mainly just causing disruptions to Saudi Arabia’s national economy. According to a story in the Saudi Gazette, twenty thousand schools in the country are now short of janitors, and 40 percent of small construction firms have stopped operations. One observer even counted thirteen facilities for the religious ritual of washing dead bodies that had been shuttered in Jeddah because the workers responsible for this thankless task had been forced to flee.

    Many illegal immigrants have wanted to go home but were unable to do so. Hundreds of Filipinos have been camping out in front of their country’s consulate in Jeddah because they needed official support to get exit visas and purchase expensive airplane tickets home.

    Saudi Arabia’s kefala labor system facilitates human rights abuses, “sometimes amounting to slavery-like conditions.” The system gives companies enormous power over their foreign employees, including the ability to block employees from flying home if they are unhappy with their work conditions. That is why such rights groups and the Economist have called on Riyadh to abolish the kefala system.

    Overlaid with this system of discrimination and exploitation is Saudi Arabia’s chauvinistic repression of Christian residents. Many African workers in the country are Christians, but absolutely no churches are officially allowed. As recently as this April, Saudi Arabia’s Grand Mufti declared that all churches in the Arabian Peninsula must be destroyed.

    In February, Saudi Arabia’s religious police raided a private religious gathering of fifty-three Ethiopian Christians, shutting down their prayer group and making mass arrests. Just half a year earlier, authorities deported thirty-five others for participating in a similar Ethiopian prayer group. And in 1997 two foreign workers were beheaded for conducting Bible study meetings and prayer groups in prison.

    But no aspect of these abuses is more chilling than the examples of bodily harm experienced by some foreign workers in the Kingdom. Many of the individuals returning to Ethiopia have scars or fresh wounds from beatings by employers or police, and one man claims the officer who beat him even stole the shoes from off of his feet. According to the UAE paper Emirates 24/7, “scores of Asian and African domestic workers have been reported to have committed a suicide in Saudi Arabia over the past years because of mistreatment and other factors”. Chilling images keep surfacing on the web of Ethiopian maids who were so desperate with their circumstances in Saudi Arabia that they hanged themselves.

    Over the years, numerous videos have surfaced showing angry, entitled Saudis beating and verbally abusing foreign workers—although to their credit, many Saudi citizens called out for a criminal investigation in one recent case. A study by the Committee on Filipinos Overseas found that 70 percent of Filipino domestic workers in Saudi Arabia reported instances of physical or psychological abuse.

    Ethiopia’s ambassador to Riyadh, who obviously wishes to maintain good relations with his Saudi hosts, actually claimed that twenty-three thousand of his countrymen “handed themselves in” after Manfouha. They are being deported in large numbers at this very moment.

    How bad must it become for economic migrants when suddenly tens of thousands of them are allegedly begging for a way out? And at what point does the international community have a responsibility to say loudly and emphatically enough is enough?

    Dawit Giorgis is a Visiting Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and a former senior official in the Government of Ethiopia. David Andrew Weinberg is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation.

  • Abdu November 24, 2013

    The dectator he will be in Kartum Sudan to meet his his friend Besher tomorrow

  • ahmed saleh November 24, 2013

    I feel sorry for those Eritreans in Saudi Arabia to find themselves in this kind inhumane situations .
    The Ethiopians , Egyptians , Sudanese and others have alternatives to return to their family back home but
    for Eritreans is different and difficult to imagine going back on that hellish land they escaped in first
    place . Because they know the authority would not leave them alone once their landed in the country .

  • Dawit November 24, 2013

    Eritrea: Situation on the Ground Report Part 2 – Rumors, secret meetings and possible scenarios
    asmarino.com

    Dawit keren

Post a Reply to Keren Cancel Reply