Combating human rights violations in Eritrea
(Opening remarks prepared for an Eritrean Seminar, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, 18 September 2011) by David Matas Many people here are neither Eritrean nor from the Horn of Africa. They do not speak the Tigrinya language.
(Opening remarks prepared for an Eritrean Seminar, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, 18 September 2011)
by David Matas
Many people here are neither Eritrean nor from the Horn of Africa. They do not speak the Tigrinya language. They know little of Eritrean culture. Eritrea is a new country not much in the news.
Most people in Winnipeg I suspect would have difficulty locating Eritrea on a map, naming its capital (Asmara), identifying its flag, naming its President (IsaiasAfwerki), recognizing its governing party (People’s Front for Democracy and Justice), or stating its date of independence (formally 1993). Many places have human rights violations, including Canada. Why should we be concerned about Eritrea?
British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, by the Treaty of Munich in September 1938, agreed with Hitler, Mussolini and French Prime Minister Édouard Daladier to give part of Czechoslovakia (the Sudetenland) to Germany. Czechoslovakia had no say in the matter. In the House of Commons the same month, Chamberlain justified his appeasement of Hitler, saying about Hitler’s claims that Czechoslovakia was mistreating its ethnic German minority, that it was a “quarrel in a far away country between people of whom we know nothing.” That is a description which could, for all too many people in Manitoba, easily fit Eritrea and the quarrels amongst its peoples.
Chamberlain’s appeasement of Hitler in a quarrel in a far away country between people of whom Neville Chamberlain and many of his British colleagues knew nothing led less than twelve months later to World War II, over 400,000 British deaths, a global conflagration and the Holocaust. If we know nothing about Eritrea, we better learn and learn fast. The abuses Eritrea wreaks on its citizens run the risk of affecting us all.
Human rights oppression is a spreading indelible stain. It never stops with today’s victims. Unless today’s victims are defended, we run the risk of becoming tomorrow’s victims.
Violators divide to conquer. They attack the most vulnerable, counting on the indifference of those who could help by playing on the difference between the victims and the outsiders. We must combat that indifference by convincing outsiders of their unity with the victims.
Regrettably, in combating human rights violations, we have a wealth of choices. In choosing which violations to combat, first priority should go to the worst violations. We need to help victims in those countries who cannot help themselves.
In Canada, there are all too many victimized individuals and communities. We owe them our solidarity and our help. Yet, at least these victims have media access. They can go to court and get judgments from independent tribunals. They can raise their concerns during elections. They will not be jailed, tortured or made to disappear simply because they report on or protest their victimization.
None of that is true in Eritrea. If you become a human rights activist in Eritrea, you run a grave risk of becoming a human rights victim yourself. Outsiders must help Eritreans because only outsiders can do so from the vantage of safety.
Protesting the violations of brutal regimes abroad may seem forlorn; the regimes may seem so firmly entrenched that nothing will budge them. Yet, the experience with South African apartheid, the Communist Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, the national security states of Latin America and more recently the tyrannies in Egypt and Tunisia shows the contrary. The very inflexibility of these regimes means that they are brittle. Press against their violations bit by bit and eventually the regimes shatter.
In any case, our primary audience when we protest violations is not the perpetrators but the victims. Whether our protests move the violators they surely move the victims. For many victims, the worst part of their victimization is their despair at being unnoticed and abandoned. By standing with the victims, we say we know what is happening and we object; our very protests are for the victims remedies in themselves.
We must be there because they are here. Both the victims and the perpetrators have come to Canada, the victims as refugees, the perpetrators as spies and fundraisers and agitators. If we want to help the refugees in our midst, we should attempt to remove the root causes which led them to flee, the human rights violations back in their home country. We should make whole the welcome we give refugees here by combating their victimization in their home country.
Human rights belong to individuals, not states. Leave human rights to states and human rights will wither. Individuals must assert human rights to keep those rights alive.
Crimes against humanity are crimes against us all. When crimes against humanity are committed, we are all victims. We must not be silent in the face of our own victimization, when part of our human family suffers from grave abuses.
We who are neither Tigrinyan, nor Eritrean, nor African must protest human rights violations in Eritrea not in spite of the fact that we are neither Tigrinyan, nor Eritrean, nor African but because we are neither Tigrinyan, nor Eritrean, nor African. By leaping across the geographical, cultural and linguistic divide we affirm our fundamental unity, our solidarity with all humanity, our common human bond.
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David Matas is an international human rights law, immigration and refugee lawyer in Winnipeg.
Temesgen Medhanie October 8, 2011
Part I
The other day I went to visit a friend of mine whose uncle had come from Asmara a week ago. My friend and I have known each other since childhood and I have known his uncle who adopted and raised him for that length of time as well. It sure was an exciting moment to see him after a long while where an old age is taken for a blessing as opposed to a ‘burden’ to a society in this party of the world. His uncle has always been well put and has garnered a considerable respect as he did well with his life financially and in terms of leading a dignified life as well. But of course, one can not escape the kind of tired and fearful looking eyes as one spends more time with him and listens to what he has to say as he has lived through different systems of governments where the contrast is glaring when hopes and aspirations seem to titter on a verge of a downtrodden abyss.
Temesgen Medhanie October 8, 2011
Part II
No matter how one tries to evade or dodge the topic of politics either in a social event or in a mere paying visit to loved ones, eti ellal (chat) would always lead to the political situation in back home. Of course, the rather depressing scenario would start with a low tone and a sluggish voice where it goes: “Entay elkayo ekha nay ad’na neger siq tebelka y’Hayish”. Of course the temptation to let it out or pour it out in a therapeutic medium seems to override the option to evade or pass it in a complete silence. The troubled heart and the curious mind on my end would be at a lose where to start or what to ask the uncle as the clear and present danger is multifaceted. But of course, as the uncle has always been apolitical, he would jump right into the economic aspect of the nation. He would go, seb t’miet tewediU. Waga nay kulu neger kebiru. In a middle of the rather a downer talk, he would give us an example where he says, for instance as much as my wife and I are the only people including four our children living in the house, the government would allow us to get only six loafs of bread (one for each) a day from the stores. And he goes on to say that, “we have to be at the store on time to get the six loafs of bread for the store owner would make an excuse to take them for himself if we got there late.”
Temesgen Medhanie October 8, 2011
Part III
As he seems to have lost in a sea of thought, he would sigh and he would say, b’Aserte shiH Dergi m’Hashena neiru. Dergis ekua y’ch’qunena entenebere z’b’laE ay’saAnin neiru. He said, he was astounded to hear Isaias saying in an interview that, there was no drought in Eritrea. He goes on to say that, one doesn’t have to go far to see that, you can see it in the confines of Asmara. People don’t trust each other; they are suspicious to each other. He went on to say. It gives you an eerie sensation as people are terrified and suffocated in a bloated self where saying any dissenting views would land one in a prison cell where the lawyer, the judge and the prosecutor is none other than PFDJ. He went on to add. The joke of the town is: if one is to spot an Eritrean in a crowd, one needs to look into the fingernails of the crowd for Eritreans have lost their fingernails as their motto is: “B’ts’fr’na”. But of course, as Isaias tells them to build the nation by subtraction, one would expect Eritreans to lose not only finger nails but the arms and the forearms as well. Ohh Eritrea, my own private Eritrea, what’s happening to you?
Ahmed Saleh October 8, 2011
Temesghen
(B’aserte shih Derghi ms-hashena) I can’t bring nothing out of it , just to feel sad and sorry. Sometimes it makes you
sense feel guilty for a reason you don’t understand. We love our people, we can’t rest peacefully till their sufferings
stops .
Temesgen Medhanie October 8, 2011
Ahmed hawey,
ZeH’zin neger eU. Some of the stuff they tell you would put you in a surreal moment where you say, it would have been remotly entertained if not impossible twenty years ago to remain in a nostalgic mood where you say, if Dergue was to come back. But as they say, n’khulu gizie alewo.
Senait October 8, 2011
Thank you Temesghen for sharing with us the sobering and sad ellal (chat).
Temesgen Medhanie October 8, 2011
My pleasure haftey. Thank you.
Kalu October 8, 2011
Temesgen,
Good news for the Weyane tags, the strength of nationalism & determination which is part and parcel of our culture never extinguished by the enemies of our beloved nation. Again last week’s sparkle of New York flamed in Sweden. Congratulation brothers and sisters in Sweden and relay the torch to Germany. The lies of the “Unionists” exposed, shame for them.” Ste’. mam Hade derfu”, human right, press,hunger, I can’t believe how some people like Tmesghen were and are far from the life of their people and praising Derg and the atrocity committed.
Senait October 8, 2011
I feel sorry for you and people like you. Your understanding of political realities or societies is so shallow and childish. I think you need some learning moments to mature.
In Tigrinya, they say: መለበምን ኣይግበርካ፡ መለበምን ኣይኽላእካ.
Not too long from now and most likely in the near future, you will understand the context and content of this message. You seem too comfortable worshipping a dracula (Issais Afewerki) and his cruel and murderous partners-in-crime.
Temesgen Medhanie October 8, 2011
Kalu,
What is it that you are so excited to congratulate them about? Please help me understand. You don’t have to look for an enemy who is putting a wedge in-between your supposed unity when Isaias is the elephant in the living room who is doing the bidding. The people who had come out to support Isaias in New York, Germany and Sweden sure know that, they go to bed at night with a guilty conscience when people are going hungry in Eritrea; when people are kept in prisons for years; when people are in a constant fear of being hurled to prisons if they say anything remotely dissenting; when people are subjected to pay fifty thousand Naqfa if they are accused of sending their kids across the border. When the said grim among other realities are the talk of the town, when the said gloomy realities are people everyday wake up to, again I implore you to help me understand. What is it that you are so excited to congratulate the herds and komaros who are shouting their pathetic hearts out in support of a tyrant?
Ahmed Saleh October 8, 2011
Kalu
Once you said WEYANE THUGS
Ahmed Saleh October 8, 2011
Kalu
Once you said weyane thugs, discussion is over. If you want to coment do it respectifully. We are tired from this streetwise
languages in our website .
Maazza October 8, 2011
Test
Maazza October 8, 2011
Kalu
It is either your lucky day or one loses the post when one clicks your reply button. I had a thing or two to say regarding your jubiliation about these two crowds, NY and Stockholm and I lost my substanatial stuff twice.
If the NY crowd was a source of shame because to display joy and shouting and screaming was out of place considering the deaths and attrocities befalling our youth in the eyes of the whole world, the pro-tyranny demonstration tonight in Stockholm was adding insult to injury. Because of these two episodes, Eritreans risk to be seen not only as an uncaring and unfeeling people, but much worse as unthinking as well.
All those people have no intention to relocate to Eritrea now (it most certainly did not happen during the last 20 years). But when DIA and Co. are gone and the rule of law is established and the welbeing of the Eritrean people will be the first thing in the agenda, may be not their children, but they will be rushing back like lightening in order to grab the front seat, opporunists that they are.
Kalu October 8, 2011
Temesghen(Maazza),
There is nothing that excites me than exposing the lies and conspiracies concocted against Eritrea. The fact is no government or a leader survives without the support of the super majority; no any government survives without transforming the society for better and protecting the benefit of the people. That is why the super majority of Eritreans inside and abroad support their government. It had been proven in the last 21 years and repeated by the enthusiastic supporters of New York and Stockholm. This will continue until the paper tigers fading from spreading confusions that sustains 24hrs lifespan. People like you, who their main goal is spreading poison of hate amongst Eritreans are giving blind eye to the truth. As I commented in the past on the hosting website, do not confine yourself on narrow circle of Assenaism mentality. You sound bright man anxious political rookie, but don’t wage your ideas by siding to fallacious information. Give a chance to yourself to explore the other side a place of the broad mass. Do not use Assena as your main source of information.