Eritrea’s culture of fear – Washington Post
WHEN PEOPLE risk their lives to evade armed border guards or pack rickety boats at sea, you can be sure the conditions they are fleeing are frightful. This is as true for the persecuted Rohingya
WHEN PEOPLE risk their lives to evade armed border guards or pack rickety boats at sea, you can be sure the conditions they are fleeing are frightful. This is as true for the persecuted Rohingya Muslims of Burmawho set sail on packed vessels in the Andaman Sea as for the escapees who manage to flee the horrors of North Korea’s prison camps. And it is true for people fleeing Eritrea, a country that won independence from Ethiopia in 1993 and has become a human rights disaster.
Listen, for example, to a woman who fled last year. Her husband had been arrested in 2009 outside their home, she told the U.N. Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in Eritrea . She went to the prison to find out why. “For years, I was going once a week. I took food and some clothes. They never told me how he was doing.” After a few years, the prison refused to take the food and clothes. She lost hope. “I haven’t seen my husband in seven years and don’t know if he is alive or not. I searched for him, but the authorities finally told me just don’t bother coming back, there’s no point.”
She joined the flood tide of people leaving Eritrea and attempting to cross the Mediterranean Sea on flimsy rafts and boats. According to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees , the global number of asylum seekers and refugees from Eritrea as of a year ago stood at 444,091, about 12 percent of the country’s official population count of 3.6 million. (Unofficial totals are 6 million to 7 million.) Eritreans accounted for 24.7 percent of all Mediterranean arrivals by sea to Italy last year, the largest number from a single country of origin.
An explanation is contained in the latest report of the U.N. Commission of Inquiry , published Wednesday, which found reasonable grounds to believe that “crimes against humanity” have been committed against the population. The report urged a referral to the International Criminal Court. The crimes include indefinite national service, arbitrary detention, torture, enforced disappearance, persecution on ethnic and religious grounds, rape and murder. They are a powerful indictment of the rule of President Isaias Afwerki, who has been in power since 1991.
The U.N. Commission, which Eritrea did not permit to visit, conducted 833 interviews from outside and documented a “general climate of fear.” Many of the abuses are centered around the military in a heavily militarized society. Soldiers are conscripted, made to serve indefinitely in abusive conditions — sometimes The commission’s report leaves no doubt why people would flee Eritrea. Committing crimes against humanity is a serious charge — and so are the abuses described in this devastating report. Those responsible must be held to account.as forced labor in state-owned companies. Torture is extensive and methodical in civilian and military detention facilities. Rape in military training centers, in the army and in detention is committed with impunity, and soldiers are not punished for rape in society.
Ghirmay solomon June 11, 2016
That is true. For Eritreans it is kind of telling our daily news. The crime has been done long time and the period of charging the authoritarian regime is overdue. COI is working so hard to bring the dictator to the court.
kerenlaelay June 11, 2016
It is time of judgment of the cruel people of PPFDJ.
k.tewolde June 11, 2016
The irony is the abused suffered quietly under this barbaric rule,and it took outside intervention to bring the case forward and still the very fathers,mothers,brothers,and sisters of the abused are trying to defend the abuser.That is the grim picture that left the world community aghast.
eriman June 11, 2016
If we were all to object at the first incident of human rights violation at the initial years of independence around 1991 by saying in-justs to one is in just to all and stood by the side of victims of human rights abuses, irrespective of who that is, we would not have arrived at this appalling situation. We are the ones who emboldened the current rules to just do things at their whims. Anyways It is better late than never.
Haile June 11, 2016
Representatives of the Eritrean regime have tried to downplay their role in the creation of the circumstances that have resulted in Eritreans risking injury, death and far worse to leave their country of birth. According to them, those responsible are (a) Ethiopia, for failing to abide by the final and binding boundary decision which has forced Eritrea to maintain a large army for the purposes of war readiness; (b) the US and the UN for failing to compel Ethiopia to abide by the ruling; (c) the West for creating such an “attractive magnet” that the youth find irresistible.
This negates the fact that the Eritrean monster DIA has publicly stated that he doesn’t care if Eritrean youth leave the country because he can, thanks to globalization, always replace them with people from India and Philippines. He made this speech to Eritrean university students in Durban – South Africa in 2002.
Massawa June 11, 2016
Who in his or her sane mind thought after sixty years of Ghedli that Eritrea will be a land of slavery? I will not be surprised of Saudi Arabia, Libya, Sudan, Mauritania, Niger or Yemen living and harbouring slave or trading in humans they call “Abids” but Eritrea that had proud Higi-Endabas that even had protected animals and trees — which the U.N. Commission found reasonable grounds to believe that “crimes against humanity” have been committed against the population.
Funny the retards in Ghedli were calling the emperor Haileselassie as “Feudal”. The idiots who repeat non stop about a Shifta and the fiction of “The Spark, the Fire and the Torch” should think twice now because Eritrea has become a land of slaves in it own and the land of Abids in Libya and Egypt in the hand of the Ghedli leaders and the Arab slave drivers.
Massawa June 11, 2016
In my opinion the estimated number of Eritrean asylum seekers in the last seven years is more than this because there aren’t any young Eritreans left in Eritrea right now except children. Most of the refugees arriving in Ethiopia, Sudan, Libya and Sudan are children as young as ten years of age.
Eritrea is dying slowly. No nation or identity can survive from such sudden huge out ward no return influx.
Massawa June 11, 2016
“According to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees , the global number of asylum seekers and refugees from Eritrea as of a year ago stood at 444,091, about 12 percent of the country’s official population count of 3.6 million.”
yikaalo habte June 11, 2016
Please let’s not be judgmental to the fathers or mothers of the abused in Eritrea. This regime has mastered the psychology of fear for over 50 years. This regime has refined its skill of evil. They are the devil reincarnated!
Solomon Mehary June 12, 2016
The arrogance of these morons is beyond belief. They think we are all stupid. Monkey, in his long and incoherent press release at Shabait said:
“The COI has likewise ignored Eritrea’s significant achievements in political and civic rights. These include:-
• The setting up of a commission to undertake the process of drafting and ratifying the country’s constitution;”
Notice that he is referring to what his lunatic boss promised us a couple of years ago. Few paragraphs later, and unaware of the fact that he is contradicting himself, talks about the drafting of the other now “dead” constitution (1997) as an achievement:
“Two years later, in a referendum observed by the United Nations and many countries and organizations, and which they described as a national festival, 99.8% of Eritreans, inside and outside the country voted freely for independence. The following years saw impressive progress in all areas-political, economic, social and cultural, including the drafting and ratification of a national constitution in a widely consultative popular process.”
If the 1997 constitution was in fact drafted in a widely consultative popular process, why the hell did they kill it and why are they now promising to give us another one?
I don’t know which planet these barbarians came from. God save Eritrea from these criminals.
newusername June 12, 2016
Eritrea appears sweet and alive in the minds of regime supporters. thanks to the non stop propogandizing by PFDJ, but in reality it is turned into hell and on its death bed. PFDJ and the YPFDJs supporters, please wake up, what the COI found out is nothing strange…It is sure thing you know it is true, but your obsession with ghedli era image of eritreanad EPLF is preventing you from accepting the current reality.you want to believe the EPLF (PFDJ) would turn a monster, and abuse its own. It is enslaving and abusing the very nation that supposedly helped free from the outsiders. It is very sad, its is hard to accept, but the fact remains the same. PFDJ is a monster we had never seen before, and may not see same in the future. It is time to stop the stupid mekete to cover the undefendable,PFDJ must go and its leaders get the appropriate measures upon them for the crimes being commited in Eritrea.