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Is the Horn of Africa facing another collapsing state?

Just as the Horn of Africa is witnessing the slow restoration of one collapsed state - after more than two decades of anarchic conditions in Somalia - it may be facing the collapse of another. The small country of Eritrea,

Just as the Horn of Africa is witnessing the slow restoration of one collapsed state – after more than two decades of anarchic conditions in Somalia – it may be facing the collapse of another.
The small country of Eritrea, only 20 years after gaining independence from Ethiopia, has emerged as one of the largest sources of refugees in Africa – as well as one of the most militarised societies in the world. It is increasingly displaying signs of withering state structures and an unsustainable humanitarian situation.
Although Eritrea is sometimes referred to as the North Korea of Africa, a more appropriate point of comparison may be Somalia and its descent into civil war. The already fragile security conditions in Eritrea’s neighbouring states means that its collapse could have major implications for regional stability.
The Eritrean state has, since a 1998 border war with Ethiopia, been caught in a negative spiral of autocracy and deteriorating conditions. President Isaias Afewerki – the only leader this young nation has known – used the threat posed by Ethiopia as a pretext to eliminate all domestic opposition and indefinitely defer implementing the constitution and holding elections. Meanwhile, Eritrean society has been almost totally militarised. An indefinite, compulsory and universal military conscription policy applies to most of Eritrea’s adult population. Its army is now one of the largest on the continent, and has the highest number of military personnel per capita in the world next to North Korea. In 2011, Afewerki took the additional step of arming a large section of the civilian population believed to be loyal to his party, the People’s Front for Democracy and Justice.
Although huge amounts of resources have been devoted to Eritrea’s military, the institution appears to be split by personal and group rivalries, both within the leadership and between the rank-and-file and the leadership. Political power is very much personalised in contemporary Eritrea, and remains largely in the hands of the president and a handful of military generals, who are rivalling and contesting each other over power, influence and control over financial resources.
Defections
The increasing number of political and military defections is another symptom of what looks to be Eritrea’s crumbling state apparatus. This includes former Information Minister Ali Abdu, believed to be the president’s right-hand man; tens of thousands of soldiers who have sought political asylum in neighbouring Sudan and Ethiopia; and the very embarrassing case of two military pilots who defected to Saudi Arabia with the president’s private jet, who were also later followed by a third pilot in April 2013, sent by the government to retrieve the plane. Other defectors include members of Eritrea’s Olympics team at the London Games in 2012, 13 players on an Eritrean football team, and artist Michael Adonai.
The growing frustration among army officers manifested itself this January with a revolt led by a colonel and members of his brigade. Their desperate actions – they occupied the Information Ministry and forced the director of the national TV station to read their demands for political reform on air – further demonstrated the emerging cracks within Afewerki’s regime.
Reliable data on the size of Eritrea’s population is hard to come by, but estimates range between 3 and 4 million people. Of these, several hundred thousand have fled over the last decade, and the United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on Eritrea reported earlier this year that the number of people fleeing every month has now reached 4,000. While the regime is in denial of the deteriorating conditions, Eritreans are voting en masse with their feet. The vast majority of the refugees are young males, and hence a significant portion of Eritrea’s productive workforce have either fled the country or find themselves indefinitely conscripted in the military.
Many of the refugees are trafficked out of the country through Egypt’s Sinai desert, where they can be kidnapped, tortured, and their families in the West extorted for ransom money by regional criminal networks. The UN Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea has identified the involvement of leading figures in the Eritrean military in these criminal networks. The participation of high-level military personnel in these activities – which also include the trafficking of weapons and forced labour – reveals the blatant role illicit economic structures have assumed in Eritrea today.
A continuation of the country’s current trajectory is unsustainable, and some form of change is inevitable in the near future – the most objective indicator of which is the country’s demographics. Given the absence of institutional mechanisms for managing a leadership change, and the mistrust and insecurities that Afewerki’s divide-and-rule strategies have generated, a collapse of the government could lead to civil war.
Lessons from Somalia
A refugee crisis, high-level military defections, a divided military, ethnic tensions, and a leader displaying irrational behaviour are some of the ways in which Eritrea today resembles Somalia in the years before its collapse in 1991. The case of Somalia also illustrates the difficulty of re-building state institutions once central authority has disintegrated and several armed factions take control.
In the event of state collapse in Eritrea, the security and humanitarian repercussions may in fact outstrip those seen in Somalia. Given the high number of weapons in the country and its near total militarisation, the collapse of state authority and civil war may lead to conflict and deaths on an extraordinary scale. Making this prospect more daunting is the deepening of the country’s ethno-religious divisions in recent years. Nearly every individual in Eritrea’s military and political leadership, for instance, now hails from Afewerki’s Hamasien tribe, and are of Christian background. This has alienated the other ethnic groups and created tensions on a sub-ethnic level as well.
Somalia and Yemen have demonstrated how terrorist groups take advantage of the absence of state authority to recruit members and plan and execute attacks. Groups such as al-Qaeda could find a fertile breeding ground among the politically marginalised and increasingly frustrated Muslim population of Eritrea, which make up somewhere between one-third and one-half of the total population.
Though Eritrea is poor and small, with few natural resources, it has a long coastline along the Red Sea, shares borders with Sudan, Djibouti and Ethiopia and is close to Saudi Arabia and Yemen – making it important in terms of global trade and security.
The Horn of Africa is one of the most conflict-prone regions in the world, and most of Eritrea’s neighbours happen to be rather fragile sates. Given the symbiotic nature of conflict and state fragility in this region most of these neighbours would be severely destabilised by the collapse of Eritrea’s state apparatus. These states are themselves overburdened by their own internal security challenges, and do not possess the resources and capacity to handle the challenge of another collapsing neighbour. Such a situation would thus require a substantial international engagement.
While Eritrea’s authoritarian system has so far proven to be surprisingly resilient, if the refugee crisis continues on its current trajectory, the regime is unlikely to survive for much longer. This silent mass exodus will, if not stopped, lead to a humanitarian and security crisis of enormous proportions.
Kjetil Tronvoll is a professor of peace and conflict studies at Bjorknes College, and Senior Partner at the International Law and Policy Institute. He has written Brothers at War: Making Sense of the Ethiopian-Eritrean War and The Lasting Struggle for Freedom in Eritrea: Human Rights and Political Development, 1991-2009.  
Goitom Gebreluel is an advisor at the International Law and Policy Institute. He has previously worked for the Norwegian government (Norad) and taught foreign policy studies at Mekelle University, Ethiopia.
The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.
Source:
Al Jazeera

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101 COMMENTS
  • Tesfom February 3, 2014

    ዓገብ ዓገብ በሉ ህዝቢ ሓማሴን ዓለት ኢሳያስ እናበልኩም ኣይተጸልሙ ሓማሰን ምስኩሎም ኣሕዋቶም ብሰላም ዝነብሩ ዝተጋደሉን ዘጋደሉን ምስኩሎም ብሔራት ኢሳያስ ሓማሰን ኣይግድሶ ወላ ካልእ፡፡ እዞም ሕንጊጉ ሕማም ኣውራጃ ዝለከፈኩም ብተዘዋዋሪ ንስኩም ኢኩም ኢደ ብዛ ናቱ እቲ ዝደልዮ ዝልትፍጽሙሉ ዘለኩም ፡ እዞም 3 ደናቁር ጀነራላት ቁሸቶም ዝየመሓይሹ ሓማሰን ህዝቢ አርትራ ኣይዉክሉን እዮም፡፡ ዸቂ ሓማ ጀጋኑ ናጽነት ምስ ኩሎም ኣሕዋቶም ዘምጽኡ ተዳጉኖም ኣለዉ፡፡ ስልጣን ኢሰያስ ብምንታይ ተናዊሑ ተበልኩም ሑሕ ሕንጉጉ ኣውራጃነት ጥራይ እዩ፡፡

    • Suleiman Salim February 3, 2014

      anta kebti ms zey mesatuKa aytSaref::

  • Godamat February 3, 2014

    Isn’t this the same post from last October?

    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2013/10/horn-africa-facing-another-collapsing-state-201310611177564655.html

    Boy, Amanuel Eyassu is so fucked up guy!

    And look who is the main contributor of the article:

    “…Goitom Gebreluel is an advisor at the International Law and Policy Institute. He has previously worked for the Norwegian government (Norad) and taught foreign policy studies at Mekelle University, Ethiopia….”

    God, I hate idiots!

    • Suleiman Salim February 3, 2014

      I could almost hear the daughter of Emmanuel Iyassu saying : ” baba ‘zi de’a zey nay qedem ‘yu. “

      • Godamat February 3, 2014

        I am sorry for his children, if he has any children, that is. Imagine having a woyanie-ass-kisser, like Amanuel Eyasu, for a father! ayired!

        Imagine having an anti-country, anti-people individual who is selling his soul to any bider, committing treason on none nation, like , amanuel, for a relative.

        Ayired!

        But the fact of the matter is, the fact that this idiot is diving into past archives scavenging for any thing bad about Eritrea, is a clear indication that he and his group are on their dying bed

        • Genet February 3, 2014

          Godamat weld-DEMHIT
          You are worshiping a man; worshiping a dictator who is in his last breath. It is over for your. You know dictators are eliminated in a dramatic fashion. You can’t even think for yourself, but you have the nerve to insult Amanuel. Think first without being told what to think.
          Genet

    • Tes February 3, 2014

      Godamat,

      Anta Adgi!!does it matter when this was posted? It doesn’t it reveals the current state of Eritrea. Rather than trying to find solution to the current affair you are trying to undermine the good intellectual who are advising us to do something before it will be too late. This is a red warning and it is high time to do a bit.

      • Suleiman Salim February 3, 2014

        By TesfaNews,

        A group of British businessmen led by former UK Conservative Chairman Michael Howard have arrived in Eritrea to explore investment opportunities in the exploration of hydrocarbon and natural resource in the country.

        The visit was followed soon after another UK-based exploration and development company, Ortac Resources, announced an arrangement to acquire up to 42.2% of shares in UK-based Andiamo Exploration, which has a portfolio of advanced-stage high-grade copper and gold projects in Eritrea.

        Eritrea’s potential in natural resources – especially gold and base metals – have been confirmed by a multitude of exploration and mining companies that are currently operating in the country.

        Although there are reports of possible oil fields off of the coast of Eritrea and a natural gas reserve of some considerable scope, the government doesn’t seem to be too interested in exploiting them – at least for now.

        Recently, Oilprice.com Energy Intelligence Unit claimed that Eritrea, a country located in one of the few unexplored places left in the world, has virtually sitted on a massive oil and gas reserve than any other country in the region.

        An Eritrean official who confirmed the visit, however, said that “Eritrea treads very carefully as investor’s (big, medium-sized) interest in its oil and gas potential intensifies.”

        A Chinese joint venture company, Defba Oil Share Company, has been exploring for hydrocarbon off the coast of Massawa for quite some time though results of its development have been kept confidential.

        Last year, a company owned by Mr. Michael Howard has signed a contract with the Federal Government of Somalia to collect data on onshore and offshore oil exploration rights after it secured an equity investment of $50m from British investment company Winter Sky.

        Meanwhile, a diplomatic delegation from the European Union is also in the country to discuss development partnership, regional peace and stability.

        Eritrea’s growing economic linkage via mining and energy with the west will help narrow the political and diplomatic gaps as it involves the investment partners engage in economic lobbying on behalf of Eritrea.

        • MightyEmbasoyra February 3, 2014

          What happened to the hyped news of Gold? Your master told you not to mention about Gold anymore, on his last interview.

          • Genet February 3, 2014

            Mighty
            Didn’t you hear? People in Eritrea are afraid to say “Gold”. I am not making this up. It started last year a friend of mine went to Eritrea and said that when he start asking about the Gold in Eritrea. People told him don’t say Gold they were afraid he may go to jail. Sofia. T can says how Gold is booming in Eritrea, she didn’t mean for Eritrean people, she means for PFDJ’s leader and Isayas.
            Genet

        • Tamrat Tamrat February 3, 2014

          First they incourage you to become like the land of Somalia then they measure how desperate you are then their invesrot ‘slave master’ come and take all what they want for a price of there pices of bread a day. When they start Production they stop giving you the refugee status cause by then Your country is already a democratic land. But always to do this you need an ass in Caliber of Mengistu or isaias.

        • Genet February 3, 2014

          Isayas has DEMHIT as police forces
          Genet

  • msgna February 3, 2014

    ab dege ykun ab wishti hashloklok zblu hamasien tray eyom gdi yeblkan tesfom hgdef kemzi nay hamasen tray eu zmeslom

    • Suleiman Salim February 3, 2014

      hgdef nay kulu Hafash ‘ya::

      • Nahom February 3, 2014

        Sulaiman Salim

        I remember in mid ninetieth the gangsters of DIA kidnaping several hundreds of Islamic religious teachers, one of them from Keren whose name was Salim Abdu and he had a son called Salman. These people were all killed by the regime of DIA. Did you know the story of these victims?

      • Genet February 3, 2014

        Suleiman
        HGDEF is Isayas’s property. HGDEF is an instrument to oppress and demoralize all Eritrean people. HGDEF is allowing DEMHIT to run wild in our streets. EPLF is Eritreans’ party. Get it right. HGDEF is a system which created by Isayas to advanced his dream to remain in power while killing Eritrean. Shame on you Suleiman for supporting not only a dictator, but the killer of Eritreans. I don’t know how you live with yourself. It doesn’t even matter whether you are Eritrean or not, you are human being. You are Muslim according to your name. Isayas is HARAM. You are working for HARAM. May Allah forgive you. The Eritrean people not so much.
        Genet

  • Eretrawit February 3, 2014

    definitely woyane sponsored website!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • Genet February 3, 2014

      Eretrqawit??
      Definitely not Eretrawit!

    • Eriteawit February 3, 2014

      Ere trawit–anti hasawit. you are woyane yourself.
      don’t ever use my nick name again, and you are misspelling it anyways. lol.

  • rezene kidane February 3, 2014

    ተኽላይ ስነ ስርዓት ግበር። ኢሳያስ ሓማሴናይ ወይ ኤርትራዊ ኣይኮነን። ሳልሳይ ወለዶ እዩ። ኣባሕጐእይ ሰብ ቀቲሉ ካብ ትግራይ ናብ ኤርትራ ድሕሪ ምምጻእ ኣብ ድርፎ ሰፊሩ። ድሒሩ ናብ ጸሎት ብምምጻእ ከም ዕሱብ ክነብር ድሕሪ ምጽናሕ ንኣቦ ኢሳያስ ወሊዱ። በዲኡ ድማ ብመንገዲ መድህን በራድ ፍርቁ ትግራዋይ ኢዩ። ስለዚ፡ እቲ ኣፈላላይ ኣብ ሓማሴን ኣይኮነ ኣብ ሰራየ ወይ ኣከለጕዛይ። ኢሳያስን ሰዓብቱን ኮነ ኢሎም ብሰላሕታ ዘካውሱዎ ናይ መቓቒልካ ግዛእ ሜላ እዩ። ምስ ጸሓፋይ ናይዚ ዓንቀጽ እዚውን ኣየሰማማዕን እየ። ምኽንያቱ ኤርትራ ትበታተን እንተ ትኸውን ኣብ ኣርባዓታት ምተበታተነት ነይራ። ሽዑ ልዕሊ ሸሞንተ ሰልፍታት ነይረን፡ ብፍላይ እስልምና ክርስትና፡ መታሕት ከበሳ ዝብል ኣፈላላይ ኣብ ጥርዚ በጺሑ ነይሩ። ምስዚ ኩሉ ግን ኤርትራ ናብ ሱዳንን ኢትዮጵያን ክትምቃቐል ምስ ተባህለ ህዝቢ ሕራይ ኣይበለን። ብተወሳኺ ኣብ ግዜ እንግሊዝ ኣብ ማእከል ኣስመራ ሱዳናውያን መተሃደራት ዝወልዑዎ ናይ ኣመንቲ ምስልምናን ክርስትያንን ምቅትታል ተኸሲቱ ነይሩ። ኣብ መጨረሽታ ግን ብዓበይቲ ኦኣዲ ብዕርቂ ተደምዲሙ። ኣብ ግዜ ተሓኤ ደቂ ክርስትያን ደቂ ከበሳ ብመራሕቲ ተሓኤ ብቃጻ ይቕተሉ ነይሮም። እዚ ግን ናብ ምብትታን ኣየምርሀን። ፍቶ ጽላእ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ሰላም ዝደሊ ኣብ ጐነጽ ዘይኣምን ህዝቢ እዩ። ከምኡ እንተ ዝኸውን ካብዚ ኢሳያስ ዝገብሮ ዘሎ ዘስካሕክሕ ጭፍጨፋ ዝኸፍእ ስለ ዘየሎ ድሮ ኣንጻሩ ተላዒሉስ ደምሲሱዎ ምሃለወ። ስለዚ፡ ምስ ህዝቢ ሶማል ክተነጻጽሮ ከለኻ ግጉይ ገምጋም ከም ዝገበርካ ክሕብረካ እፈቱ። ንእግረ መንገደይ ኣብ ኣስመራ ዝነበሩ ሶማላውያን መራሕቲ ተቓውሞ ውድባት ሶማል ብዓቕልን ትዕግስትን ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ኣዝዮም ይድነቑ ከም ዝነበሩ’ውን ክሕብረካ እፈቱ። ሶማላውያን ጐረቤቶም ከይቀደሞም ከሎ ክቐትሉዎ ኣለዎም። ኣብ ሶማል እቲ ናይ ቀቢላ ምፍሕፋሕን ውድድርን ኣዝዩ በሊሕ እዩ። ስለዚ፡ እዚ ፈይልድ ስተይት ወዘተ ዝብል ዘረባ ብወገነይ ሃጠው ቀጠው እየ ዝብሎ።

    • Suleiman Salim February 3, 2014

      anta kebti zey tfelTo aytzareb:: ISSAIAS AFEWORKI wedi rstn wedi merietn ‘yu::

    • Genet February 3, 2014

      Dear rezene Kidane
      you are making a lot of sense. However, we can’t take anything for granted. Isayas and the PFDJ’s system made a lot of damage to our society. We need to come together and solve our differences. We need to respect each other. I remember during the Lampadosa tragedy in Italy, there were all Eritreans from all walk of life calling for unite. There were Muslims and Christians’ leaders praying together and mourning their dead. let us work hard to respect each other, then our unite will save us and our nation.
      God bless our People and our country!
      Genet

  • tekle peter February 3, 2014

    Tnis is nosense article who wrote his mentally of wenaye.we eritrean very very proud people we aren’t going or look at the back eritreans we will know what is happening in the future. We trust our government and our people.we have guarantee bright and colors future.
    We are together stronger than any country in east africsWe are bright future of Africa. We are never kneeldown.your dream is vacuum. And your mentally thinking below zero.Eritrea to eritreans only we doing our homework by ourselves.

  • bilen February 3, 2014

    zkheberkum tesfom, msgna & eritrawyan
    nhna eritrawyan hanti knfelTAn knmeharan zelena entekhoyna, nay hamasen nay kalE enabelna bzaEba Alet nenhdhna mnshaw ngdefo bejakhum bejakhum. isaias ganin entay aelwo ab hamasien? hade nkulna faHbtn keEtwelna kem deki zagra? kulna eritrawyan akele, hamasenay, serewetay, senhit, barka, setit, semhar, sahl & denkel bzengi nay zi nseb zeyhafr n Amlakh zeyferh sheytan Telami ngref alena. Bejakhum kab gegana teArimna kab dkhamna ntensE.

    ms bzuh selamta

    • Suleiman Salim February 3, 2014

      anta kebti ms bSotu koynu teQalisu naSnet nzemSe’e seb ganien aybehaln ‘yu:: donqoro ‘nte koynka temahirka mSa’::

  • sarah February 3, 2014

    Aybelnakumun do. Asena have woyane agenda, Amaniel ILU is paid by the woyanes, for sure his origin is Tigray wanna be Eritrean.
    He’s posting an article wrote by woyane agents long time ago, this Amaniel thinks Eritrean are dump. By the way happy birth day kibur president Isaias Afwerki wedi afom the lion of Nakfa.

    • Nahom February 3, 2014

      Sarah

      I think you are one of those who were having romantic time with DIA in Sharock and other Bars of Asmara.

    • Suleiman Salim February 3, 2014

      I appreciate your love for Eritrea and the Eritrean people. I join you with your HAPPY BIRTH DAY message to the president.

      • Genet February 3, 2014

        Suleiman
        I hope this is his last birthday, for the sake of Young Eritrean and their future.
        Genet

        • Suleiman Salim February 4, 2014

          Geneta,

          kab azmadki gele bmengsti Eritrea zte’asre seb alo dyu?

          • Genet February 5, 2014

            Sulemiman
            If there are, does that bother you at all? I mean as an Eritrean.
            Genet

      • Genet February 3, 2014

        HARAM, HARAM, HARAM, HARAM!

    • Genet February 3, 2014

      sarah let- DEMHIT
      I think there is a high volume of PFDJ’s zombies on Assenna this days. Then I remember, It is their master’s birthday. The worst day of Eritrean people. How can the Tigray people dump this soul less devil on us is just beyond me. So, He send them to do his dirty job. Sarah let-DEMHIT, Eritreans are smart, but your are the dampest parasite ever existed. How are you feeling now days? I am sure very safe, while being protected by DEMHIT. DEMHIT are the worst kind of Woyane. You and your master the dictator are in bed with the worst type of Woyane, DEMHIT. You are saying, Woyane this Woyane that, you are sleeping with enemy dear. Wakeup ZOMBIE. You are dirty, lousy and disgusting. You are filthy, filthy, filthy little girl. You are predictable and filthy mouth. What is the matter there is no forum for PFDJ’s zombies any more. Get the hell out.
      Genet

  • Suleiman Salim February 3, 2014

    By TesfaNews,

    A group of British businessmen led by former UK Conservative Chairman Michael Howard have arrived in Eritrea to explore investment opportunities in the exploration of hydrocarbon and natural resource in the country.

    The visit was followed soon after another UK-based exploration and development company, Ortac Resources, announced an arrangement to acquire up to 42.2% of shares in UK-based Andiamo Exploration, which has a portfolio of advanced-stage high-grade copper and gold projects in Eritrea.

    Eritrea’s potential in natural resources – especially gold and base metals – have been confirmed by a multitude of exploration and mining companies that are currently operating in the country.

    Although there are reports of possible oil fields off of the coast of Eritrea and a natural gas reserve of some considerable scope, the government doesn’t seem to be too interested in exploiting them – at least for now.

    Recently, Oilprice.com Energy Intelligence Unit claimed that Eritrea, a country located in one of the few unexplored places left in the world, has virtually sitted on a massive oil and gas reserve than any other country in the region.

    An Eritrean official who confirmed the visit, however, said that “Eritrea treads very carefully as investor’s (big, medium-sized) interest in its oil and gas potential intensifies.”

    A Chinese joint venture company, Defba Oil Share Company, has been exploring for hydrocarbon off the coast of Massawa for quite some time though results of its development have been kept confidential.

    Last year, a company owned by Mr. Michael Howard has signed a contract with the Federal Government of Somalia to collect data on onshore and offshore oil exploration rights after it secured an equity investment of $50m from British investment company Winter Sky.

    Meanwhile, a diplomatic delegation from the European Union is also in the country to discuss development partnership, regional peace and stability.

    Eritrea’s growing economic linkage via mining and energy with the west will help narrow the political and diplomatic gaps as it involves the investment partners engage in economic lobbying on behalf of Eritrea.

  • rezen February 3, 2014

    “Is the Horn of Africa facing another collapsing state?”

    There is no need to read the article. Unless the meaning of the word “collapse” is different from Dictionary Definition, the Horn of Africa has already accepted [without choice] the total breakdown of “Eritrea” — it is synonymous to mental breakdown.

    • Suleiman Salim February 3, 2014

      Rezen,

      You are not Eritrean.

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