ERITREA: BACK TO THE DARK AGES
This information comes from sources with direct contact with people living in Eritrea. It gives a unique picture of life under a regime that tolerates no independent media coverage – national or international. Note: the
This information comes from sources with direct contact with people living in Eritrea. It gives a unique picture of life under a regime that tolerates no independent media coverage – national or international. Note: the unofficial exchange rate is 70 – 75 Nakfa to the £.
Life in Asmara today
It has been almost two weeks since there has been any electricity supply in Asmara and those who have no access to generators are in the dark.
Their mobile phones are dead too…
Scarcity of petrol and diesel means public transport is difficult. Horse drawn carts and wheel-burrows have returned to the streets.
People use their carts to transport water. In many areas of the city taps have run dry.
People queue for hours to get water, filling jerrycans and barrels and carting them off.
There is also a scarcity of domestic fuel for cooking. Kerosine is supplied once or twice a year in the government shops.
Every family gets 5-10 liters. When that runs out people use coal.
Real hardship
Bread is so scares and is only supplied intermittently.
Each person gets one loaf. When it is available the bread is good quality and cheap so people are happy when there is a bread delivery.
Every month 5 liters of cooking oil is provided per family.
The only cereal supplied is sorghum which people use as a staple in place of wheat and taff.
Sorghum is supplied every other month and a family of three gets about 15kg.
Additionally a packet of teabags and 3 kg of sugar is also sold every month. but sometimes the tea bags are not available.
Fresh produce is sold in open markets but the prices are so high a single meal can cost an national service recruits his or her entire salary, of 450 nakfa.
1kg of Potatoes cost 50 nakfa, tomatoes cost 40 and onions 25. Meat is a luxury that many only dream about – it costs 250 nakfa per kg.
A medium sized chicken costs 400 nakfa, a goat will set you back 600 nakfa.
The people who are suffering the most are the educated middle classes who may earn 1,500-2,000 nakfas.
Most are expected to support not only their immediate families but their extended families as well. Many single young men are fleeing the country to avoid this fate.
An email from a relative: “Please send me any cloths that your children don’t need anymore. We use all our money on food and rent (my mum now lives with us as my two brothers are in Juba, South Sudan now). My three children are literally running around in rags.”
Please note: If you believe that any of this information is inaccurate, please let me know. If you have any further anecdotes about life in Eritrea, please sent it to me.
Updates: I have received these responses since the item was posted.
1. Hospitals are suffering because of shortage of electricity. A blood laboratory result could take more than 10 days. Means if ur sickness is critical ur family will accept the result paper days after ur funeral.
2. I am writing this from Asmara. The statements you wrote about electricity, mobile phones etc are fake. How come I was able to charge my phone of there was no electricity in Asmara for 3 days?
3. Do not believe in those who say those are lies. They are all regime supporters. The government gave just 2hours electricity in the last two days. All u wrote is the dramatic truth!
4. “….a goat will set you back 600 nakfa” I am sure this is wrong. When I left Eritrea 3-4 yrs ago, lamb cost 3000-6000 nakfa.
5. All is true. Also, the authorities do not inform (even unofficially) citizens why power is out. They never do. The fact that this is normal practice tells you how oppressed the people are and how much they don’t know about how their country is run.
6. By the way, power has been going out most of the day for the past months, It only got worst the last two weeks with 0 to 2 hours of electric power per day.
SOURCE: MARTINPLAUT
sidiabd@gmail.com July 15, 2013
Denen can you tell us what is happening in Eritrea from your perspective. May be there is something we can learn from you other than your hatred of WOYANAE which you seems to associate the misery of Eritreans. We beg to differ.
Tes July 15, 2013
Denden,
what a headless chicken you are! Always blaming you neighbour for incompactness of your master in Asmara. No wonder the evil is ruling in Eritrea because there are many more like you who simply take any thing given to them by ERTV. I think you are better off if you leave this forum and go to Meskerem or Alenalki. you will be more comfortable there with your HGDEF idiots cheering at each other nonsense. I am sure you have retarded brain and you need many many years to be qualified to give comments. Fool is always fool no matter what is the subject in hand.
belay nega July 15, 2013
To the writer
Whatever you said may be is exaggerated but is not impossible. Life is getting harder wherever you are.
But the worst part of our nation problem is that we always jump to the consequences by denying the real cause,to this end we heading our people from bad to worst.
Zeray July 15, 2013
A history of backwardness is called Dark Ages. Even though dark ages mostly refers to the middle ages, now all those repressive governments who fight against any sign of democracy leave their people to live in an era of dark ages. Moslem extremists led by some extremist Imams, and the PFDJ system led by Issayas Afwerke and supporters fall into this category. The former believe in absolute theocracy and the later cult believe in oppression as means to fight democracy. And the people sadly live in darkness – for Eritreans it is now symbolized by the scarcity of electrical power.
Forto July 15, 2013
Everything is bullshit. Your bullshit, my bullshit it is all the same bullshit.We see bullshit because we don’t do anything about it. Even now I am spitting pure bullshit. I can only see there being no bullshit when people are completely honest with themselves and others–but were always going to think that they’re bullshiting simply because we let out bullshit ideas control how we think about things. The time for talk is over. it is time for action.
Kombishtato July 15, 2013
The title says it all. Eritrea: Back to the Dark Ages
The last time I checked in the Horn of African history, the period referred as the “Dark Ages” was the times after the collapse of the Aksumite Empire and before the rise of the Zagwe dynasty.
Does this foretell that the next Eritrean or Horn African leader is going to be a Bilen speaking man or woman from Zoba Anseba? Only history will tell. Most likely this person is plotting hidden in Halhal, Ila Beraed or Tinkulahas.
Kalighe July 16, 2013
“E , stands for Evil, R, stands for retarded , I, stands for insane ,, T , stands for trouble some , R stands for ruined, E stands for epileptic , A stands for arrogant bitch….spells Eritrea.”
Weysebdeqey Mahbula (aka NEW HOPE ERITREA)
https://www.facebook.com/weysebdeqey.mahbula
efrem July 16, 2013
it is 100% wright , what to do with this sadist government, thinking always negative and they will not belong to our nation like monkey wedi berad
jose July 16, 2013
That is what these mafia or gangs are good at. that is how they planned to build the African singapoooooooor. these morons made the Eritrean brother nation pay a lot. the small Djibouti signed a 2 billion dollar agreement to buy electric power from Ethiopian two weeks ago. Shabia are really stupid. Unbelievable !!!!!!!!
However, they are the leading exporters of prostitutes and human organ in the world. Ethio is thankful to God for taking away these nekersa ppl.
Mike Wedi Massawa July 16, 2013
Just came back after 2 weeks in asmara, life is very tough however it seems a norm not to have electricity, all the years of suffering has made my eritrean ppl tolerant and it breaks my heart when the same eritreans abroad support the suffering for our brothers and sisters by supporting a blind dictator..sorry I meant criminal because dictators like Gaddafi took care of their people..I pray everyday for a change.