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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.

aseye.asena@gmail.com

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45 COMMENTS
  • Temesgen Medhanie October 8, 2011

    Kalu,

    Aside the patronizing posture, your post is nothing but generalizations where it falls short of cutting right into the plight of the people. You haven’t even addressed a single issue we challenged you to ponder and respond. If I have to repeat it, the plight of the prisoners; lack of freedom of speech and worship; the relegation of the ratified Constitution into the side lines. You said, no government can sustain for a long time with out the support of the majority. I absolutely agree. However, the leader or the government could only legitimize its broad based support through government institutions or democratic institutions. Now the question still remains: do we have democratic institutions in Eritrea? The answer is obviously no. How is it possible that Isaias seems to enjoy a broad based support? It is not unprecedented or defies logic simply because before we delve into the annals of history, we just have witnessed a few months ago when a leader who ruled by intimidation and coercion over his people for forty years got thrown out mercilessly. Of course, we remember the sound bite where Gadafi blabbered when he said, “My beoble love me”.

  • Maazza October 9, 2011

    Kalu

    Part I

    You write, ‘… 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’.

    Ceaucescu, Stalin, Hitler, Mussolini, a few examples, pray tell us how they survived for decades. The havock created by Ceaucescu’s legacy is still galring in Romania. The damage is too deep. The harm resulting from Stalin’s Gulag and Siberia, seems to be depriving modern day Russia from finding its path. There is another element, an offspring of the same tyrany on the threshhold. As regards Hitler, when one watches the film ‘The Triumph of the Will’ one is overwhelmed at the unnatural command the dictator had on masses and masses of people who appear to be but one. In the end, he took the country to complete ruin. Mussolini was shot like a common criminal by the people at the end of his journey. At one point in his rule, he had the Italian wives give up their wedding rings so that he could go and gas the people of Ethiopia.

    • Maazza October 9, 2011

      Kalu

      Part II

      What did these dictators have in common, they all had one concern above anything else, absolute grip of power, an iron one, just like your Isayas. I could go on and on to illustrate that, seemingly, a despot or a dictator may look like he has the following of a majority. History will reveal otherwise. I refuse to take lessons from you about Isayas enjoying a broad based support. You scream this because you have a specific reason which we can only guess but cannot fathom. It is easier for me to believe that the earth is flat than consider any literate hgdefite in the Diaspora adoring DIA and Hgdef for nobel reasons. This of course excludes the real weak-minded who no matter how much education they receive remain fulfilled when they are prostrated in complete adoration and service of a tyrant. It is what turns them on and even makes them high. I have seen this live quite a few times.

      • Maazza October 9, 2011

        Kalu

        Part III

        What is the real reason that’s making you defend the indefensible, that is the million dollar question. If you tell us you do it because you are absolutely convinced that Isayas has demonstrated in the last 20 years (putting aside his contorted role during the struggle) that he is doing good for the Eritrean people and is the only single man who can achieve all this great achievements he is recording in these two decades, please tell it to the birds or to the naive who are blinded by the love of their homeland.

        Finally, the narration of Temesgen Medhanie in this Forum (my better half in the cyber world), is the story most Eritreans untiringly relate when they are in confidence, ‘kabzi zelenayos derghi equa yihayesh’. Thinking of our martyrs, I winced when I first heard that a few years ago, but now I got used to hearing it so much I accept it.

        • Temesgen Medhanie October 9, 2011

          Maazaa haftey,

          You could imagine how shallow and immature these people (read individuals) are. Kalu doesn’t have a sense of history at all. It is like a walk in the park to understand the systematic subjugation of people by intimidation and coercion where a feeble or a weak mind would confuse the mass hysteria or subjugation with a popular or a broad based support.

          It is kind of funny that as he responded to me he put yours in a parenthesis where he thinks you and I are the same person. I can’t get enough of the complement haftey. Or did he mean to respond to both of us? They are not only confused in their stand in the political discourse, they are confused in expressing basic things as well.

  • gasha October 9, 2011

    Temesgen
    Yes derg was better for some people who were derg members during your self and you seem one of them if you say derg yihayish. During derg time people in asmara used to eat peanuts with water for dinner and that is if you got the money to buy the peanut. during derg we use to get bani kebel max 2 for family and that is if you make it on time. There was no fuel no nothing i remember some family they broke thier windows to use the wood for fire. Shahi bikupon endasetena bani kebele endabelaena ethiopia tikdem keyfetena remeber that song temesgen as kids we use to sing that song because we use to suffer.

    • Maazza October 9, 2011

      gasha

      Please ellaborate. Was it the whole population suffering the things you outline in your post? I was not there then, but I heard from some poor people themselves in Asmera that ensuring the housing concerns and providing basic food rations to the poor was the number one item in derghi’s agenda. The system being taylored in the image of the then soviet union style, it made sense. As a matter of fact, this is the only positive deed one heard about the derg. Today, the poor and housing in our country is not a number one priority of hgdef, is it? Diaspora people have the absolute priority, I would say.

      gasha, you guys need a bit of coherence. Up to now Temesgen was a Woyane for you guys. According to your post, he was a derg member. Woyane (in their history they are jeganu warriors – check that out), kicked the derg and put them in the dust bin of history. So far you have put him in two opposed camps, except what he really genuinely is: and Eritrean to reckon with.

    • Temesgen Medhanie October 9, 2011

      gasha,

      As a kid I sure remember the dreadful era as well. Nobody is saying here Derg was a saint. However, the times that you’re alluding to was the ramifications of a protracted famine that had swept the entire nation. The kind of drought that is taking place in Eritrea may not be compared with the famine of those years simply because it is prudent to keep in mind that, drought and famine are two different aspects of an essentially the same thing. They differ in magnitude. Here is the deal: as much as the famine affected almost every family, Dergue didn’t hide it from the rest of the world and shone NGOs and other humanitarian agencies as they tried to help out and provide basic foods to the people. In a sharp contrast, Isaias is kicking out every NGO (Non Governmental Organizations) from the country as he is haunted with a paranoia where they are taken for foreign agents who are there to take him out. Moreover, as the entire nation and people put their trust on Isaias during the struggle and after, it sure is a downer and utterly disappointing to see him putting the country in this kind of misery. And we would be left to long for the Dergue era even though it was a lesser evil.

      • Temesgen Medhanie October 9, 2011

        Maazaa haftey,

        I am still laughing. They keep confusing me. I am losing track of my label. Some days they take me for a Weyane and other days for Derg. I will have to call my lawyer to sue them for mental anguish. PFDJ thugs b’jeka tserfi kali’E ayfeltun eyom. No wonder Isaias is having an easy time to have them bend over or as you have aptly put it prostrate for him as if there is no tomorrow.

        • Maazza October 9, 2011

          Hawey natey Temesgen,

          At least since DIA’s visit to NY, some of us really know what your stand for and we are mighty proud. Their mistaking you for this or that is their big loss as our compatriots.

          • abdi October 10, 2011

            Maeza hawa natan
            Rasen be Rasen kalaqolametkugn man yeqolamtegnal new,
            it doesn’t matter whether eritreans or Agames,what matters is both of u are paid agame’s agents, hence you are here all the time and u are the first to comment and defend woyane,Ethiopia more than u defend Eritrea.what do expect to be called patriots?No way i’d rather call you duruzat sheytti hzbom.

  • gasha October 9, 2011

    Temesgen
    Yeah one think is for sure unlike you temesgen and amanuel eyasu the one you trying to be friend with because you want go to addis abeba on his next trip so bad Derg never called Eritrean people Komaro.

    • Temesgen Medhanie October 9, 2011

      gasha,

      Why would Derg call the Eritrean people Komaro? There is no reason to call them as such simply because they were not. They were nationalists, patriots who fought against the Derg for a noble and right cause where they astonished the entire world as they rendered Eritrea an independent nation. What we see today in New York, Germany and Sweden are Komaros of the highest taste and top of the line. If anyone has perfected it (m’khumar), it is the good for nothing zombies who are shouting in support of a tyrant.

  • gasha October 9, 2011

    maaza
    I was in asmara i know people ate peanuts for dinner with a glass of water if that sounds good to you i dont know majority people in asmara survived because of money coming from jeddha italy and so on not from derg and people in asmara they share what so ever they have. Derg never build a single house in asmara but derg took houses from hard working eritrean individuals. I remember as kid there was the best house in asmara brand new and every one in asmara was waiting to see that house to be finished guess what derg took it and put zemach for couple weeks and the owner went crazy paid what ever money to get back his villa. There is no comparision between asmara during derg and asmara now. the derg members they can tell you now that they enjoyed the beutiful villas in tiravolo never paid a dime of it, even the rushans they used to live in a building in the middle of asmara not to far from nyala hotel this particular building owned by eritrean and he never made a penny out of it then derg took it and gave it for the soviet uninon junta.

    • Maazza October 9, 2011

      gasha

      You have surprised me by stating your argument point by point without one word of insult. I read your post trying to follow your reasoning. Whether we agree or not, please let us keep the tone that way and we can all be free to express our understanding of matters. Personally, what I am dreaming is for a system that will allow you and me to express our opinions freely. You may not believe me, but I would want an Eritrea that will allow you to say, long after it is dead and gone, that as far as you were concerned, the best system for our country was Hgdef and Isayas FREELY. No one should force you to believe what you do not want to. I will go further, in a free and fair democrtaic exercise, under the rule of law, we should all be free to choose the type of system we want. In today’s South Africa, there are elements (Nazi like) who surpass what Aparthaid was, free to work for their vision of SA. BUT this is done under the rule of law. They are not a threat to the majority.

      What pushes me to say the derg may have been better is because after the steep price paid by our martyrs and people for our FREEDOM, merely for expressing my opinion, I can end up in a shipping container for the rest of my life.

      Finally, that the Derg pretended to be a friend of the poor and therefore did some window dressing along these lines cannot be denied 100%. But I must admit that your post is pretty convincing.

    • guest October 9, 2011

      Gasha,

      Let me clarify what u put , this is a period where Asmara,was besieged by EPLF&ELF,within seven km territory so the situation force people, because of the fire towards Asmara, people ca not move from and to Asmara, in addition to suffocate the city, ELF, did not allow any thing (not only grains but also fire wood) as a result people forced to use their cabinets to cook food.This is the period where Derg was fighting with Somalia and white and red terror, so this situation even is not caused by famine rather by fighting b/n different faction group.Was only temporary until EPLF &ELF retreat to Sahel.After that Asmara maintains stable life and low price until 1991, even after the capture of Massawa Derg tried its best to supply the city with all its necessity.The things u mention is a very short time probably less than 5months.

      • Maazza October 10, 2011

        guest

        Thank you very much for this additional clarification. We are better informed. Thanks.

  • gasha October 9, 2011

    Temesgen
    I was in asmara on may i had a good time and i had a good time in New york and i will do it again if I get the chance and you can call me names that is all you can do behind your computer. Shaebia forever!!! By the way Eritrean people they dont deserve to be called a name no matter what the case is especially by you temesgen since you keep preaching tserfi newri eyu. If you talk the talk walk the walk stop name calling Eritreans.

    • Weldit October 9, 2011

      Being in Asmara as a visitor is indeed a pleasure – I was there myslef last year – so I believe you when you said you had a good time and I believe you would do it all over again. I mean who wouldn’t? I myself would do it.
      When you actually live there is where things come to bite you. If you live in Eritrea, first of all, you wouldn’t be in Asmara – rather you would be somewhere in the wilderness doing “national service”. Secondly, even if you happen to be in Asmara, you will need menqesaqesi to go out with friends to have a cup of tea or watch a movie. Thirdly, if you have a valid menqesaqesi for few days, you won’t really be doing much because your ‘pocket’ salary may have already been spent on laundry soap, buying your parents coffee beans, sugar or other very basic things.
      So yes it is enjoyable for a ‘beles’ to go from here for few weeks and have plenty of fun in Asmara. No one is disputing that.
      The question is on how things are for our people inside Eritrea, instead of how things are for us when we visit Eritrea or when the Presidents vists us in NY.
      But I do agree that calling names is not cool. No matter how stupid and ignorant the pro-government folks are, at the end of the day they all are our blood brothers and sisters and we should refrain from calling them bad things.

  • gasha October 9, 2011

    test

  • gasha October 9, 2011

    maazza
    Derg have done a lot of damage in asmara and never was a friend to asmara. Let me tell one worst thing derg did in eritrea they went to a village called Ona which is couple milles outside of keren and killed all the villagers for doing nothing father ,mother, brother,sister,son, doughther, cousin, neghbor, friend were perished in one ugly night.

    • Maazza October 10, 2011

      gasha

      What I said was different than what you claim. I said ‘Derg pretended to be a friend of the poor’ because their political policy was similar to that of the Soviet Union. Now, you either are unable to understand clearly what one says or you nevertheless give it a meaning of your own which is not related to what is being said. This amounts to cheating. I just never said Derg was a firend of Asmara. It is despicable to put words into someone else’s mouth. A person is judged by that. If it was inadvertent, you owe me an apology. Failing that, you should make a greater effort to be articulate about the subject being discussed and refrain from offending sensibilities.

  • gasha October 9, 2011

    I met a guy who survived that dark night he was 3 years old all he knows is that his mother shielded him. And I met some one who used to work in a school near Ona at that night the school was the only shcool for the deaf in Eritrea and that night said the man all the students were sleeping but there was a lot of shooting

  • gasha October 9, 2011

    and lot of noises woman man everyone shouting for help no one helps them instead the shooting and killing got worst and the man and his coworkers was very scared dont know what to do with thier students they dont know if the shooting is coming towords them or not.

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