Eritrea: ‘The sheer numbers of people fleeing tell the story’
There is no better symbol of the failure of the Eritrean state than the thousands of refugees who abandon it every week, searching for a better life – even when escaping is often more dangerous than staying
There is no better symbol of the failure of the Eritrean state than the thousands of refugees who abandon it every week, searching for a better life – even when escaping is often more dangerous than staying put. SIMON ALLISON spoke to Dan Connell, a long-time Eritrea watcher, about the perils that await Eritrean refugees, and why they are so desperate to leave in the first place.
Outside of Eritrea itself, there are very few people that know now the country as well as Dan Connell, a journalist, an academic, and now a visiting scholar at Boston University’s African Studies Center. As a foreign correspondent for the Washington Post, he spent months in the trenches with the Eritrean freedom fighters. Post-independence he worked closely with the new government, before becoming one of its fiercest critics – his outspokenness earning him permanent Persona Non Grata status. He’s now one of the world’s leading experts on Eritrean politics, having published seven books on the subject.
The Daily Maverick caught up with him at the University of Pretoria. He’s here to highlight one of the many under-reported consequences of Eritrea’s decline: the vast exodus of young Eritreans into surrounding countries, looking for a better life but often falling into the clutches of human traffickers.
SIMON ALLISON: Despite its perils, many Eritreans are risking a dangerous border crossing – the army is authorised to shoot would-be refugees on sight – to escape their country. What are they fleeing from, and why in such large numbers?
DAN CONNELL: Firstly, the UN has counted some 300,000 Eritreans leaving in recent years, out of a population variously estimated at 4-5million, and there are many who are not registered and the UN doesn’t have count of. So you’re really talking a significant share of the population. What distinguishes this flow of refugees is the very significant percentage, maybe 45%, are young people, say 16-25 years. The factor that is driving most is the imposition of an indefinite program of national service, the conscription of the young people into military service and also in many cases indentured servitude to the state, working on government or ruling party enterprises. Terms that were initially defined as 18 months have turned into eight or ten years or longer and I think many of the young people just see absolutely no future for themselves. They fear the possibility that if they get out of line in the situation they’ll end up detained, perhaps tortured, perhaps killed.
Getting out of Eritrea is not a solution in itself. Eritrea’s neighbours (Djibouti, Ethiopia, Sudan, Yemen) have their own problems. What makes Eritrean refugees particularly vulnerable?
Many of the Eritreans coming out are of Christian background and particularly when they move into Sudan, a country into Islamist rule, they find themselves isolated, cut off from opportunities within the country and in some cases targeted for discrimination or worse – the human traffickingoperation. [Human trafficking] has involved the kidnapping of refugees, the transport to the Sinai in the past and increasingly now the detention within secret spots in Sudan, where they are tortured and forced to demand ransom payments from relatives living abroad, anywhere from the US to Europe to Israel or sometimes inside Eritrea. These ransoms have run into the area of $30,000-$40,000 dollars so the trade here has become a very lucrative business for the traffickers and a very ugly one for the Eritreans. I think what is remarkable about this is with the dangers of being caught up in this trafficking ring, coupled with the dangers of simply trying to cross the Sahara or to get out through other means, where so many have died trying, illustrates just how driven people are to leave in the first place.
Coming into today’s talk, I know you were concerned about possible disruption from pro-government supporters, and I know you’ve had disruptions before. Even for myself, writing about Eritrea, the comments get very personal and very threatening. What sort of issues have you faced trying to cover Eritrea?
I think the Eritrean community itself is clearly deeply divided. There are people who are passionately supportive of the country, there are also people who support the government more by default because they fear the threat of Ethiopia, and they buy the argument that they can’t criticise the government without weakening its defence of the country. On the other side, there are people who are extremely disturbed over the political repression and the lack of economic advance within the country that everybody believed was possible in the 1990s. And there’s a very large middle ground of people who really want to see everybody somehow have a chance to get back and engage with Eritrea and get along, and are the so-called silent majority in this. The two extremes are fairly passionate. The response to criticism of the regime of course inside Eritrea has been arrest, detention, disappearance, torture…it’s not really surprising that the mirror to that outside is disruption and efforts to stop conversations about opposition.
My general take on this is that the comments on articles, the shouting at events, is really from a fairly small minority of people. In the case of the event we had today, there was a set of talking points five pages long that was distributed – we heard two of the questions from the talking points asked today, I saw a copy of it before I came in [So did the Daily Maverick. Sure enough, questions from the talking points were asked verbatim]. So it was a very well-organised and orchestrated attempt…The questions that were asked obviously didn’t reflect somebody who had even listened to what I had to say. They were pre-programmed, and I think that again is an indication of how the government tries to deal with criticism. It just can’t tolerate it.
Who would be distributing the talking points?
Supporters of the government or members of the ruling party who are here in the diaspora. They are a minority. Eritreans in South Africa, I think a significant number, are here trying simply to keep their heads down and get by. Many fear public criticism will make it difficult for them to go home, difficult for their relatives who are at home, because repression is often visited on families inside Eritrea, but there is a significant contingent here of Eritreans supporting the transition to democracy, the recognition of the country’s long-dormant constitution, and some of them were also here today.
Speaking to South African diplomats, they paint a very different, a very rosy picture of what’s happening in Eritrea. What do you make of this position?
…You know, the sheer numbers of people fleeing the country tell a story itself. The people are voting with their feet, and to try suggest that a population known for its fierce nationalism would be churning people out to go elsewhere, it just doesn’t make sense. I’m sorry, when the diplomats make that argument I think the answer is alright, open up the country, let us come in and see for ourselves.
You’ve been involved in Eritrea for a long time – in the trenches during the civil war, working alongside the new government after independence. Now you’ve been madepersona non grata. You can’t go back. How does this make you feel?
I feel like a part of me has been cut off. It’s my second country in many respects…I am deeply invested in the country, I have many very close personal friends there, and I believe deeply in Eritrea’s possibility as a society and as a new kind of state in Africa. I look forward to the opportunity to go back once the regime changes, and I am hopeful that that will take place within the next 3-5 years.
That’s a very specific time frame. What’s your logic?
I think the president of the country [Isaias Afewerki] has complicated health problems. This is not the kind of country where you’ll see a popular uprising. Fear is too great. Fear not only of the regime, but also of course Ethiopia outside, and as long as they can wield that stick they will manage to keep the repressive regime in place. This is one of the reasons I have been repeatedly calling for international efforts to end the border conflict between the two countries to strip that away from the regime as an excuse to keep their heel on the population. DM
Photo: President of Eritrea Issayas Afewerki attends a news conference with European Commissioner for Development and Humanitarian Aid Louis Michel (not pictured) after their meeting at the European Commission headquarter in Brussels, Belgium, 04 May 2007. EPA/OLIVIER HOSLET
Source:dailymaverick.co.za
Smerrr2012 May 15, 2014
This great man invested his time and money, with passion and dedication for the freedom of this country, unfortunately those YPFDJ dogs of the regime who even not done0.01 % of what Dan did to Eritrea .Who are these YPFDJ(Dogs).. children of Hademti whose parent left Eritrea in time of Eritrea needed them, came to Europe and America , produced these useless individuals who can’t say or do something make sense at all but shout like dog anytime someone say something about the brutal regime . The only thing what they can do is go to Sawa , dance and drink like crazy. Some of the YPFDJs’ are children of the Ambassadors and consulates who lie day and night for the regime. They just defend the job of their fathers not to be food stamps collector once these uneducated individuals left office. Did I tell you exactly my baby PFDJ cockroaches.. tomorrow will come to be judged by your action you losers.Soon we will post your names with your pictures. .face of shame..
Tes May 15, 2014
Dear Dr Connell,
I have no words to thank you enough for what you have done and stilling doing to help the people of Eritrea. I am sure you will be remembered for ever and ever in Eritrea. You got the highest place in our hearts and we are really appreciate your dedication in our time of need. True friend of Eritrea and God bless.
As for those brainless few Eritreans what can I say shame on them. They are paid to do dirty work of HGDEF and they may even sell their mothers for petty recognitions. Please ignore them and keep up your good work. They are mercenaries who knew what they are doing but don’t care. Eritrea miseries is wide open anyone to see. Yesterday BBC report from Libya is evidence in hand. 13 &20 years old forced to leaving behind their family and to wonder to any where but to get out off the hell no matter what you will encounter. This is the present Eritrea…God have mercy!
thanks again Dr Dan Collen
selamawit2 May 15, 2014
Dear Dan Connell,
i’d like to accompany Tes:
THANK YOU VERY MUCH AND GOD BLESS YOU!
Warsai Yikaalo May 15, 2014
Thank you Don for what you do for Eritrea! WE love you…thanks to your writing I know a lot about my country. I am great full to you…I hope we meet in Eritrea in 3 to 5 years!
Hidat May 15, 2014
MIGHTY
DAN COLLEN NAY 1976 DIKA TIZAREB ZELEKA WALLLA IZI NAY HIGI 2014?
BETA NIZIKRI ABEBAN NIKULEN MIENTI NAZINET HIWETEN ZIBEGEWA ERITRAWIAN DEKENSTYO ZIXAHAFA”AGAINST ALL ODDS TIBL MEXIHAFU KINZIKRO INA
AB ZIHALEFE XUHFU
UFATU BZEBA IZOM KAB HAGER ZIWEXU ZELEWU MENESEYAT KIGELIX KELO NMENGISTI ERITRA KESISU BMIKIXAL KISAB NABTOM NIGAZAFI ZIHIGIZU ZINEBERU BTEWAREG ZIXEWUUU BEXIHU ……….ENTAY NIMBAL EYU? BUZUH ZIBHAL NEYERU”
“HAVE SOME RESPECT” ILKANI NIMEN
NETOM NIAYEN NIAKAN ZEBAISU
NETOM NERITAN MIS ETHIOPIA KUNAT ZESAWIRU
NETOM SOMALIA MIS ETHIOIA KENYA HINFISHFISH ZETWU
NETOM NSUDANAWIAN AB LIELI AHWATOM SUDANAWIAN ZETAFANENU …………MISMENMO?
FITO ZILAEE ZIBELKA BELENI KAB NIDAN COLLEN YIKUN MESELTU NABAKA ZELENI ” RESPECT” YIABI
HANTI GITMI ZEKIRE INTEYZEITEGAGYE KAB MEXHAF “YISAK YOSEF”
MIGHTY HAWEY AMENA AITAASHU
XAEDA TEMEN ENTE NEKISU
DELALIKA AYRIKEBIN EYU FEWSU…..
NETOM NSOMALIA MIS ETHIOPIA ZEBESU
NETOM NSUDANAWIAN MIS SUDANAWIAN HAWI ZETWU
rahwa May 15, 2014
hidat,
anti nskis abey iki bokilki? n Mighty tray zeykone nkulna abi Assenna zelena ko lbna ahbitkna. xaada temen entenekisu dma tbli aleki? entay xaada xelim? menfes hibri yeblun hiray do? menfes entay malet mkuanu ke tfeltyo diki? entefelitkyo natki nay hidatn naytom eseyas wey mot ilkum ab lieli resa ahwatnan hagernan tdblu zelekum weytotat menfes xelim iyu. nay kulom deleyti fitihi nay Dan Connell hawiska kea xaada iyu. slezi hagerna zremese mendelay temen hakuifkis nDan Connell xaada temen ktbli kehfreki iyu zelewo. hizbna ab wshti adi entetezaribu yeser iyu. hji nDan Connell kitasruwo zeymkalkum dyu kndzi teraaa zeblekum zelo? eseyas ko seb mber amlak aykonen. geben yfxm. ynkef kea. kitrbshi nab Assenna kem tmexi ko nfelt ina gn nhna zeykemaki sebat hasabom kgelxu naxnet alewom ilna namn demokrasyawyan deleyti fitihi slezkona ina nxawereki. nskum gn hasabu zgelexe nzasr sltan gebitu hzbi zedmi zelo melaki kitkelakelu afkum dem wexiu. nsu kea nfelto ina kem amelu kem mastika shkorkum mexiu tuf kblekum iyu hade mealti.
Bloko May 15, 2014
Hidata,
I am not sure he understands Tigrigna.
Yuo have to address him in Tigrigna.
Hidat May 15, 2014
MIGHTY
BETA NIZIKRI ” ABEBA” TIBL “NIZIKRI BIXEITI FANAN….TEARIMA ALA .ETI AB TAHTI TEXAHIFU ZELO WU´` BGEGA EYU ETI KILTE MESMER.
rahwa May 15, 2014
Mr. Dan Connell’s efforts have helped the Eritrean armed struggle in many ways. and he had a dream when he saw our brothers and sisters in the trenches fighting a gigantic enemy: THAT ERITREA THIS COUNTRY OF THIS BEAUTIFUL AND COURAGEOUS PEOPLE WOULD TURN OUT TO BE A HOME TO ITS OWN PEOPLE AND AN EXAMPLE TO OTHER AFRICAN COUNTRIES WHEN IT COMES TO DEMOCRACY AND RULE OF LAW. HE HAD A DREAM. HIS DREAM WAS OURS, TOO. it breaks my heart every time i see him. because i know his heart must be breaking to see a dictatorship in Eritrea. i am grateful to him for not forgetting us. i also would like to urge him to go on fighting against injustice wherever and whenever. he shouldn’t lose heart b/s some fanatics acted as such. and i would love to see him in the streets of my beloved towns after eseyas is gone in a few years time.
Sraj saleh May 15, 2014
Entay tbli guale, kemaki lebam seb si yelen. Abey dea tnebri ezi kulu libi hizki
Gideon May 15, 2014
Sraj saleh,
You sound more and more like the desperate leader of the Islamist terrorist BOKO HARAM’S.
Your first shit business or concern should be to release those 100-200 traumatized
school girls abducted in Nigeria by your organisation. Then you are advised to stay
away from the Eritrean businesses. You and your likes always use the stinking Arabs
colonized rat brain. Unlike you, genuine Eritreans know who their ‘real’ friends and
enemies are and Dan Connell is not only a friend but a SON of Eritrea indeed. In a very
near future Dan (Daniel Anbessa) will be given the Eritrean citizenship while you will
be stuck with your rootless jihadist BOKO HARAM nationality. You guys are just utter
failures, because of your twisted beliefs you are genetically inferior so stop your bullshit.
Last, “KeyteAdeme zimetses keytsegebe wetse” eyu negeru natka’mo, get lost to your Nigeria paradise.
Awet May 15, 2014
Don:
You truly are the white brother I never had. What you have done for the people and country of Eritrea is beyond your call of duty. Thank you and may God bless you!
Tamrat Tamrat May 15, 2014
When half the world fell under the West led by usa and the other half fell under the East led by Russia, Dan Connell must work for his usa to crash communisim and russia in each front. And there is no other best way to help shabia to crash mengistu and his communist party which was the right hand of Russia in Africa. (For those of you who thought the fight between shabia nad mengistu was only about unity and cessesion /or Freedom and slavery then read again the history of Cold war. Ethiopia and Eritrea lost millions fighting the East/West war while the very east west have done the bloodiest war With out a drop of blood.)
The west won, shaiba too, communist lost mengistu and his party too. What shabia has not learn so far is that communism has lost the battel means not only for mengistu and all the looser communists parties and leaders but for shabia too. The west has used even islamist to toppel communist (ex Afghanistan) but that doesnt mean they support islamist. They would be dealt after the devil communism or russian hit first. Shabias communism was not that a big deal as long as they workded hand in hand With tplf and crash the communist. Taht mission done superbly, from the usa point of view. The west managed to change the tplf path of communisim to a total free market policy or tplf manged to transform itself from Albania communism to the market policy (With one exceptional idiocy trying to monopolize the market under one ethnic based firm called EFFORT which is alarming) and failed to change shaibias communist path. The consquence of sticking to shabis communist policy is the isolaiton of shabia government and the distraction of Eritrea for 23 years.
So Dan Connell has not changed his view on Eritrea. He only sticks to his principle. He believes in free market policy and that can be done only throug Democracy, delcaring constitution, allowing freedom of Speech etc which shabia thinks this would never be allowed before shabia’s and its policy destroyed once and for all though a change through time save hundred thousands Young old lives.
What we need is eritreans wo do for eritreans like what Dan Connell does for usa With a firm principle which doesnt shake depending on personal pety advantage.
Sorobeti May 15, 2014
Tam
I agree with you in the eightieth the West (CIA) has used TPLF and EPLF to fight communism in the Horn, but Shabiya and Weyane were using Marxism and Leninism as an instrument to deceive the poor peasants and workers to join them whilst the leadership had its own vision for governance.
Tamrat Tamrat May 15, 2014
I am not sure on that. What i know is my uncle was a communist, he thought only mengistu and his party were only corrupts and couldnt excersice communism because of their greed for Power and materirlist view. In his belief if Ethiopia were following real communism from the first day land was given for the mass til forward, we could have achived Our goal. Until mengistu’s last day i used to think communism was right and ethiopia got it wrong. Soon after wards i have learnt communism is just bullshit. Now i dont know which one is worse wheather isayas is cheating by the name of communism or realy he is a communist. In anyways that man and his followers are spycopaths and that affects millions in and around Eritrea in daily bassis.
Abraham Haile May 15, 2014
Mr Dan Connell
I believe we had similar wish on the future of Eritrea and its people, unfortunately it was hijacked by the aliens to suit their ego and create a new identity based on hate and evilness. I read the questions you asked Mr. Meles Zinawi why does he hate the Eritreans? The answer was very simple if I was to answer it. He had a plan beyond the land of Eritrea and and its people. It is true that he had indeed plan atleast to destroy us and create Eritrea of his own. Every thing happening to the Eritrean people were carefully planned and he is executing it in a minute detail. The plan now exposed openly to the majority of the people and will never be successful as long as one Eritrean remain on the face of the mother earth. Majority are aware of it but afraid or else to confront the one wagon regime. Mr. Connell, you are part of us and I am confident you going to fight him side by side with people you loved and respect and I envy you for every help you gave us. Thank you.
Haqi tezareb May 15, 2014
Here is the video clip to watch about the sad fate of the so called “Independent Eritrea” soon to celebrate its Day of Slavery, as one commentator said.
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/europe/140512/location-video-migrants-converge-post-war-libya
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