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JUSTICE AND ALI ABDU

Dedicated to RAESI TESSEMA by Fetsum Abraham RAESI TESSEMA: I leave the historical details of this spiritualist icon of justice for people to learn from any possible sources. Raesi Tessema, was, however the governor of Akeleguzai once

Dedicated to RAESI TESSEMA

by Fetsum Abraham

RAESI TESSEMA: I leave the historical details of this spiritualist icon of justice for people to learn from any possible sources. Raesi Tessema, was, however the governor of Akeleguzai once upon a time in his generation where the communal justice system of the era was traditionally under the jurisdiction of his authority. This man faced a very intricate problem that tested his perception of justice as a matter of destiny: his son killed a person and his case came to his table for judgment. The appropriate punishment for such a crime in that province was Capital Punishment (“The lawful infliction of death as a punishment; the death penalty against the criminal”). As devastating as it was, this blessed gentleman delivered such a verdict by means of hanging against his son. He was said to have stayed throughout the process of his son’s death reading his Bible and praying at home.

 

One cannot bless the self with inner integrity and peace of mind higher than this mark of spirituality dear Eritreans!  Fairness is colorless and has no ethnicity and religion. This father figure gave impartial justice because that was his political philosophy: justice was his concept of life and he lived it practically by choice. He overcame the temptation of bias by arresting his ego in favor of fairness and lost a son as a result by his own judgment.

 

I am dignified to dedicate this article to RAESI TESSEMA, the figure of SELFLESSNESS and FAIRNESS especially at this point in the Eritrean experience where justice has died to defend humanity. In the progression, I remind people to be careful from passing a verdict on someone without evidence. We have to learn something from the spiritual integrity of RAESI TESSEMA on the value of a human life: that JUSTICE IS NOT UNLESS CONSISTEN!!

Fellow Eritreans;

I briefly displayed my opinion on the question of Ali Abdu in at least two of my past articles, but I felt like sharing my thoughts on this controversial subject with a better detail especially after I read the reaction of some concerned Eritreans to the following paragraph in my article “HILINA”.

 

In that article I said this:  “I can not justify the fate of Eritrean liberators Ugbe Abraha and Mahmood Sherifo who were forced to commit suicide or die in prison just for asking the implementation of our constitution. I despise to live in Eritrea where its liberators such as Dr. Asefaw, General Tekeste Haile and even brother Ali Addu can not live in because of senseless injustice. I do not want to be an Eritrean in an Eritrea that jails and kills its makers because I do not deserve it as much. I cannot do it without being selfish. I just do not want to be an Eritrean for the sake of identity. It breaks down at this fundamental contradiction of the concept in my conditionally pacifist outlook of life.”

 

•       Quiet a few good brothers and sisters did not want Ali Abdu in the list and actually expressed their honest opinions about my statement. I appreciate the positive feedback very much so and I partially justify the collective reaction with respect. Here is my GUILTY WITH EXPLANATION plea to those I promised to respond in the forum.

 

•       Let me try to get the “I despise to live in Eritrea where its liberators such as Dr. Asefaw,  General Tekeste Haile and even brother Ali Addu can not live in because of senseless injustice” out of the way first. If the notion that Tegadelti secured the Eritrean independence is either acceptable or correct, then my conclusion that Ali Abdu contributed to the liberation of the country is consistent with the hypothesis because he was a TEGADALAI. Having been Tegadalai is the only requirement here for being a “liberator” in my understanding. Therefore, Ali qualifies for this status (liberator) without a problem.

My personal opinion of Ali Abdu is negative. This man served the Afwerki regime as his best man in the circle. Many people have been hurt by his negative contribution in the Eritrean society. We know, however, that Eritrea is managed under absolute dictatorship by the worse dictator in the world: a tight political condition that does not allow any one to do anything without his approval. There is no room for modulating, modifying or amending a centralized idea that radiates from the presidential office in Asmara. The dictator has total control over the society and he alone decides what to do in the country. Under such a highly secretive and overly suspicious structure, no employee can work independently: one must follow the instructions without hesitation. This is the case to all servants of the system including the Ambassadors, Ministers and the Generals. They are restricted to only do what they are told to do. In a way, they have been robbed of their individuality substantially, but by choice: some of them conform to this humiliation and others leave the system behind when they get the chance.

There is no doubt that Ali Abdu (Former MINISTER of INFORMATION) was a dedicated servant of the Eritrean regime; probably the closest and most obedient man to Afwerki as well. Unconfirmed sources of information say that he was molded to be the most powerful politician under the president and was more important than the Generals and all Ministers combined. This Minister was, nevertheless, incapable of taking any action outside the dictator’s instructions similar to all individuals in the government.

The Minister was recently interviewed and the Eritrean political life accordingly appears like “….he and the other ministers do not have to know anything about what happened [to] Dawit [Issac] and other imprisoned journalists and politicians.”

                        In Ali’s words; “Neither I nor any other minister dared to ask what happened to Dawit Isaak. It is taboo to ask about things that are not related to one’s job to do. There is an old guerrilla culture in the country. It carries out orders without asking why, he says. Ali Abdu says it is routine to suspected dissidents arrested without court papers, without any documentation. Those who do the work, oral orders. Sometimes, there is over the phone and in coded language. They are afraid of being intercepted by Western intelligence services.

Comment

Eritrean government officials including the second strongest man of power in this discussion were and are simply symbolic puppets no better that mobile statues with a collective human mind owned by the absolute dictator, the only man that counts in the Eritrean society. The seemingly big individuals in the entire political structure of the country serve only as the boss’s material objects conditioned to transmit his mind without a say like remote controlled robots. There is no hard copy documentation in the working environment for no record should be traced in the future about the crimes done behind the screen.  One is called to do or say something by phone and he does it; and another bites the dust!!! This conclusion is in harmony with Ali Abdu’s short but precise interview.

 

The question is what the government officials do in Asmara and elsewhere at large?

 

The so-called Eritrean Cabinet of Ministers and Ambassadors are actually socio- economic parasites that get paid for the sake of formality literally without a job.

 

Here are examples to this effect:

Yemane Gebreab, is for instance the Head of Political Affairs and Presidential Adviser at the People’s Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ).  His main job is to preach Afwerkism (the political philosophy of the party). But how can he teach anyone a non-documented philosophy only known to the president?  His other responsibility is to advice the president. But how can he advice an absolute dictator who “knows every thing”  and does not want to be advised?  In short, Yemane Gebreab has nothing to do in his daily life in Eritrea except chilling around and getting paid dearly for it.

Girma Asmerom is an Eritrean Ambassador to the African Union in Addis Ababa. He is the only Eritrean politician in Ethiopia who lives isolated from the massive Eritrean people and the opposition groups there; similar to the most internationally isolated president in Asmara (excuse Bashir for his recent visit). With no contact with Eritreans, Girma has nothing to do with any type of communal or social activities in that country.

 

Clearly, Ambassador Girma’s main job is diplomacy but no foreign country wants to do diplomacy with isolated and sanctioned Eritrea that is not even allowed to be an IGAD member yet. Therefore, he does not have any diplomatic assignment to do in Addis. His role may then be waiting for AU meetings to paraphrase his boss’s messages (the monotonous border stuff) without any input and modification from his mind. This brother is chilling as well in isolation in Addis with out a job. I cannot tell you how he kills his time but he has a lot of it and money to do whatever he wants to do.

 

The same thing applies to the Eritrea’s Ambassador to the United Nations Araya Desta. All he has to do in New York is attending meetings whenever applicable and transmitting the same issue concerning the border misunderstanding with Ethiopia probably from the same document that was exhausted in the platform for the last 12 years. This brother is chilling like the others as well with nothing else to do in the City.

 

What appears to be going on is that the president is stretched to the limit controlling everything and the officials are idly sitting around draining their brains. They may then go to the office to do whatever they want to do (probably playing cards, computer games, taking naps or even boozing a bit) and go back home when the time is up. As this mode of operation deeply infiltrates the group, one may not have to go to work all together since there is nothing to do except waiting for orders from above, which can be done with the help of wireless telephones from anywhere in the city (Café, Bar, etc)

 

It is a comfortable life out there folks in terms of rest and money! Plenty of time to enjoy life and to sleep around, but this comes with a heavy cost in terms of mental deterioration; chronic sense of uselessness specially when they are not allowed to read books and discuss things that do not conform to Afwerkism. What do you do without the freedom to read and write? Where do you enhance your creativity in the absence of these rights? For how long can you rationally live in such a condition and how much boozing can the body sustain? Life loses its essence without motion, the brain rusts and the duplicative mind becomes unproductive making the victim a walking zombie without purpose.

 

In such a setup Ali could have only been used as a transmission medium of instructions from the president to other officials under his superficial authority. One would still guess though, that Ali Abdu would be the first person to know the most sensitive matters of the country by virtue of being the INFORMATION MINISTER and the closest man to the boss! But this assumption was contradicted by his recent interview to the surprise of many observers. The extremely secretive nature of the regime would not allow this: On the burning issue of Dawit Issac, for instance, Ali Abdu said that;

“..he is sorry about what happened Dawit Isaak and other journalists. But it is only the president himself and his closest security that has information about Isaak. Not even the police chief know anything about it.”

            Comment

            This testimony discloses the extent this most important Minister of his time was irrelevant in the Eritrean political arena, ladies and gentlemen!

Ali finally left the regime that stole his intelligence and conditioned him to work against the people for many years. This defection should naturally situate him in the side of the resistance by default logic in my opinion. It at least qualifies him for AMNESTY in future Eritrea through a procedure by which the concept is practically reduced to reality. “Repentance for Forgiveness” is one factor that should play a big role in our society’s forward mobility drive (like in many other societies with similar experience), should it be found relevant to Ali Abdu’s situation. It can even get to the point of serious contradiction between him and the society should there be questionable violations relevant to the issue. In any case; Amnesty and Reconciliation will take care of justice in his case in transparent Eritrea (I hope everyone understands the necessity of RECONCILIATION to the Eritrean society, although this crucial process has also been suppressed by this president for so long.)

            JUSTICE

            •  A civilized justice arrangement must be fair to the two opposing sides under its jurisdiction. Here is actually where the integrity of a given justice system is measured in reference to objectivity. Someone states the following to that effect;

 

Aside from the related requirement of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, the presumption of innocence is largely symbolic. The reality is that no defendant would face trial unless somebody—the crime victim, the prosecutor, a police officer—believed that the defendant was guilty of a crime. After the government has presented enough evidence to constitute Probable Cause to believe that the defendant has committed a crime, the accused need not be treated as if he or she was innocent of a crime, and the defendant may be jailed with the approval of the court. Nevertheless, the presumption of innocence is essential to the criminal process. The mere mention of the phrase presumed innocent keeps judges and juries focused on the ultimate issue at hand in a criminal case: whether the prosecution has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed the alleged acts. ”

 

Human life is a serious issue and civilized societies deal with its activities in such a civilized manner. In short, an accused is innocent until proven guilty by a fair justice system or until an accuser proves him guilty in a fair justice system. It cannot be clearer than this. This perception is the mark in so far as Eritrea Vs Ali Abdu is concerned. Our individual feelings and opinions on this brother do not matter unless we substantiate his crimes materially. One cannot do this without being an Afwerkist where ANARCHIC JUSTICE can subjugate any citizen in the country for no reason or without explanation; a proof, any other rational means of understanding or documentation.

 


CONCLUSION

Apparently, emotional discharge is something that understandably takes place because of what is happening in the country, but giving a verdict based on it is a crime. I cannot convict Ali Abdu without evidence and a due process no matter how I feel about him. Once I trespass this line of fairness, I have voluntarily given up my right to defend myself from any accuser. Neither can I vindicate him from the charges without a due process that asserts his innocence but every step in this issue has to be legalized to be JUST and to acquire popular validity. Time will tell the answer!

The fact remains that every judgment I pass on an individual directly affects my individual right. If I convict Ali Abdu without evidence, I will automatically lose my right to defend myself whenever I am accused including my right to complain about being at the mercy of anyone that wants to hurt me by means of unsubstantiated accusation. We cannot promote democracy and human rights without defending the essence of fairness, since democracy does not work in the absence of justice.

As the subject stands at this point in time, I fully believe Ali Abdu deserves the benefit of the doubt and his accusers carry the burden of proof, consistent to the most fundamental theory of NEUTRAL JUSTICE that we are trying to achieve in Eritrea. Ali Abdu, therefore stays innocent until proven guilty. Should the people of Eritrea establish a criminal case against him, they must prove it in court first where he can defend himself lawfully and leave the rest to the justice system. This is what we expect to see should his case materialize in democratic Eritrea. For now, I think we will benefit more by accepting him to the Resistance. Please use your democratic right to participate and comment on this article in accordance to how it grabs you in the mind!!!!

Ali Abdu’s Quietism

              Other than that, I am surprised by Ali Abdu’s brief exposure to the public and his disappearance then after. He may not have too much to tell based on how his working condition had been but I believe this man can help the resistance a lot and can even vindicate himself from the clouds of doubt through fearless participation in the struggle for freedom from the grip of dictatorship. I appreciate the information he gave on the fate of Dawit Issac, a sad story of a young Journalist who disappeared without trace in Afwerkist Eritrea, but what is next? Why is he quiet at the time we are waiting to hear more from him? I do not think this is a constructive approach. To me, his silence after defection is more bothersome than his servitude to the dictator when he was under. Once again, patience is a virtue!

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
139 COMMENTS
  • Mohammed February 11, 2013

    Dear Fitsum,

    A nice words merely could not acheive the real justice and democracy that we are looking forward in Eritrea. Yes, forgiveness is our main culture, which enable us to live in peace and stablity. However, defecting the HIGDEF regime only could not set anyone free, as justice must be served.Have mentioning this short introduction, I would like to raise only one question. How come a single person in this world can quenquer nation of whole the country? Is it possible for Aforki to make suffer whole Eritreans without systematic colaboration from some pupets around his reign? Look you dictated us that Ali Abdu was one of the main segments for the president. So, in the country where all citizes have dirven to the permanent prison centers, how come someone like Ali Abdu come innocent?

    Mohammed

  • Amanuel February 11, 2013

    Hi Fitsum
    I think you are getting a head of your self. Ali Abdu has’t confirmed that he he has left the goverment on his own words. The so called interview was through his brother. Don’t get surprised but Ali may go back to his adopted father(PIA). No one knows for sure why he is abroad. To talk about reconciliation and forgiveness is premature now, first we need to hear from Ali that he is no more part of the goverment and sorry for what he did when he was working for PIA in his own words.

    • Zebib February 11, 2013

      Amanuel,

      His own brother at Awate.com has declared, in writing, that the Government of Eritrea has put in detention the father, the daughter AND the cousins of Ali Abdou. It would be sureal if Ali Abdou would go back to his adopted father at this point in time. May be before this action, one could have speculated so but now it is the most unlikely thing to happen, in my view.

  • sarah February 11, 2013

    Hi Fitsum.
    Reading your article half way I stopped and cried and cried for Eritrea!!! I am a mother educated enough and had to walk (with my kids) out of my country because of people like Ail, of ministers and educated officials who would not do their the right thing not because the dictator told them but because they chose to. Now when these people choose to leave the country and the regime, they will say we followed orders! But believe me they were doing what they did just because they wanted to and had the power to and just because there is no accountability. They are not children, they are adults who know the difference between good and bad. So my friend, are you saying that we should not pay for the choices we make? When you choose to take something that does not belong to you, you go to prison; when you decide to kill a person you lose you liberty for life? That is called justice!
    When does a crime become a crime for you? When it comes home? In the first place this is not the time to write such an article. We have people in Eritrea in dire situation we should focus on them not on Ali and colleagues. But then it seems you are trying to lay the ground for Ali’s exoneration. I do not understand! You are telling the young people who suffered under Ali that they have to forget and forgive just because he is a liberator. To me the liberators are the martyrs, the liberators are the ones who are sharing the suffering of the people , the liberators are the ones who refused to be part of this monstrous gvt and left early and spoke and exposed it as early as they could. Not the ones like Ali who left when they have had enough of power, blood and blood money in their hands! Not the so called generals and colonels who fled to a better life and are still protecting PIA or do nothing to help the people! I would strip them of the utmost honour title of ‘tegadalai’. They must had had a different motive other than to liberate erirtea!
    Eritrea was their child, when parents kill their child, they cannot be free just because they gave birth to their child!!!!
    AMNESTY IS FOR PEOPLE WHO REPENT AND MAKE UP FOR THEIR MISTAKES AND CRIMES! NOT FOR THE ONES WHO ACTAULLY HIDE AND LIE!
    Ministers do not know? Oh my friend they do! They have their little governments in their own ministries where they govern just like Issayas! Aren’t these mini Issayas’? Do you think Issayas has a supernatural power to does everything without anyone knowing or check what they do with each simple case? I don’t think so!
    RECONCILIATION comes only when people admit their guilt and honestly and genuinely regret and say sorry. And their victims are in a better situation and they say ‘it is all over now thank God and we have to move on and get over it’. Other mothers and children were not as lucky as I am and they are languishing in refugee camps and running from traffickers to protect their children. The tears of the mother who lost their children in the sea and Sinnai have not yet dried! Our mothers are lining up at around 3-4 in the morning for ‘lamba and enda methan etc’ for God’s sake!!!!! These are women who should be taken care of women by the children they raised; mothers who should be going to church to thank their creator of whatever he gave them. Many young people do not know where to turn to! Many children are eating once a day! WHEN DID YOU ACTUALLY LOSE SIGHT OF THEM AND DECIDE TO WRITE ABOUT THE SORRY CREATURES OF HUMAN BEING LIKE ALI!
    YOU ARE MAKING ALI BIGGER THAN THE CAUSE AND IT IS WRONG!
    I do not want to say more except this is not the time and Fitsum, do not get on the wrong side of the victims whose suffering you have forgotten in your article to talk about the ‘poor ministers’ knowingly or unknowingly!
    And by the way why are you and Younis writing and speaking for him. He could speak to protect Issayas, can’t he defend himself or he has nothing to say to the Eritrean people.
    THIS IS NOT THE TIME! THESE KIND OF ARTICLES TEND TO BE DIVISIVE AND FOSTER GRUDGE!

    • korem February 11, 2013

      Thank you Sarah. Nothing could have said it clearer. Peace.

    • Dayan E. February 11, 2013

      Dear Sarah – Great comment. Absolutely correct,logical and sensible explanation of what justice is and what it’s not!

    • fetsum abraham February 11, 2013

      A crime becomes a crime to me when it is proven in due process my dear. I understand ur idea and I have said it in the article: fainess or justice is the only way to go otherwise we will kill each other for personal reasons. I am sure u are a victim of the collective mentality in the circle of Afwerki but let fairness or justice take care of business. That is all i am saying here in order for the people to adapt lawfulness and democracy. I am not saying Ali adu is innocent but only that he is one un til proven guilty.

      • sarah February 11, 2013

        It at least qualifies him for AMNESTY in future Eritrea… . I know it is your opinion but it is wrong. Being tegadalai burdens one with more responsibility; it does not give one a right or licence to harm or maltreat eritreans. By now the real tegadelti are supposed to be writing history of the Gedli era, chronicles of war. However, many are suffering in Eritrean. And many are languishing in prosins. If you really respect tegadelti then you should think about them as well. People like Ali used them as a ladder to be where he was and is.
        Abdu, therefore stays innocent until proven guilty Then the same goes for Issayas. Why do you write about Afewerkism. Why do you blame him? Why don’t we wait until a democratic gvt rains and we take him to court? If a glass is half full, then it is half empty as well.
        In fact you are the one who keeps insisting about Ali’s innocent. We, on the other hand, are responding; we have not yet taken him to a court? Whether you like it or not, to Eritreans Ali and his colleagues are criminals along with Issayas. I just hope that a day will come when we will all be following the court proceedings. And then the case of PFDJ will be closed and will be written in horror story books for our children.
        Thereafter, the VICTIMS will forgive them and we will ALL move on.
        All I am saying is you have no business defending people like him and trying to insinuate they are victims rather than perpetrators. Most of all, this is NOT THE RIGHT TIME.
        I hope I have not hurt your feeling. I look forward to your articles on how we can work together to bring down this ghastly system!!

    • belay nega February 11, 2013

      SARA
      YOU ARE THE BEST KEEP IT UP

    • Abraham February 11, 2013

      I can not agree more!

    • SABA February 12, 2013

      KISSES TO YOU SARAH… I learned now a more things from you!!! Your sister SABA in Germany

  • korem February 11, 2013

    Dear Fitsum,

    Your “…innoncent until proven guilty” mantra must also be extended to Isayas. If so, all the articles you write about the regime in Eritrea focusing on the dictator are all bullshit and presumptious. If you are advocating for a fair trial to all HGEDFites, that should include also Isayas, you should not be writing articles that describe them as culpable. You might unnecessarily influence the trial of these alleged culprits in the future. All are innocent until proven guilty, you say. Well, the problem is that it would be too late for the yesterdays and tomorrows victims of Isayas and Ali. We could cheat ourselves by playing with such nice law jurgons. They only work in societies where the killer and the victim have equal rights. In a society like Eritrea where innocent people disappear daily under the orders of Isayas and his chronies like Ali, these words are hollow, inbalanced, and nonsense. You cannot advocate for the fair trial of mass killers who in their own will have forfaited their rights by denying others to live a normal life. According to your logic nothing should be done. We should wait until justice downs in Eritrea. Lets these mad dogs free and see them kill and torture our people. And then, we will put them in fair trail some time in the future when, and if, rule of law is established in Eritrea. Until then let them cause the damage they can. Excuse people like Ali who have served the dictator well enough and then finally, who knows, stashed some cash and abseconded at the 11th minute. This is naivitee at its best. Nothing less , nothing more. For me dictators don’t commit thier crimes by themselves. Lackeys Ali, Monkey, Charlie, Kisha, and the generals do the dirty work. What isayas has to do is just ink his order or give it via the phone. Someone with a conscience, love of citizens, will not recieve orders to kill or torture. What is disgusting is trying to defend Ali’s and others crimes by raising thier contribution in the struggle as an excuse. He was Tegadalay. That is one thing. Being a killer or messenger of a killer is another thing. Period. We are talking about the blood of hundred of thousands of innoncent Eritreans. For me every General, Colonel, Minister, Cadre, etc of PFDJ is criminal. The thing the world knows about Ali is that he was laughing at, accusing in world media, congradulating the Security apparatus of PFDJ, legitimazing the killing and imprisonment of our brothers and sisters, fathers and mothers. That is crime enough for me. This man had ample opportunity to dissociate himslef from the criminal gangs way way back. He did not for a simple reason. And that is because he was one good member of the gang. Nothing absolves him. No excuses. He was more a catholic than pope isays in so many occassions. Please spare us these bullshits.
    Cheers

  • Zebib February 11, 2013

    My dear brother Fetsum,

    Again you grace us with an article that will make us reflect on several grounds and hopefully generate a lot of healthy debate.

    Part I
    Justice and Raesi Tessema: Evolved democratic societies recognize the importance of such towering historical figures in their history and write biographies, plays and researched documentations that would play as a powerful light in the social foundation of the past, present and future of a nation. Raesi Tessema’s unflinching stand in the face of justice is a collective lofty treasure that elevates the society to its highest potential of democratic and just expression.

    We are desperately seeking to find ways and means to peacefully get rid of DIA and Hgdef simply because, through our free and unhindered expression, we can neither celebrate our exemplary great personalities of the past nor get to know the role played by great selfless and heroic martyrs who are the essential donors of our independence. When the time comes, we will get to know that giants who were endowed with wisdom and fairness left us legacies that will make us proud as people from here to eternity. Since the advent of ‘Afwerkism’ to borrow from your coinage, we have no heroes but him, we have no history but him (like belay nega believes). DIA’s megalomaniac and blind grip on all aspects of society (including what they should eat! he was hallucinating about calories at one time!!) from the second half of 1970s up to now (a good 40 years), has not only drained us of our creative and positive energies, but has robbed us of our history and growth as a collective. He leaves no stone unturned to deny and deprive us of EVERYTHING!

    Con’t

    • Zebib February 11, 2013

      Part II
      Ali Abdou: Agreed that he should have his day in court and be able to defend himself in future Eritrea. But what about the other court? the society? We grew up witnessing the keen attention our elders paid to acceptable or inacceptable behaviour. An adult person was ‘judged’ not by what he/she says alone but by his/her actions. Society, depending on your actions and comportment placed you either high or low in the scale of social assessment . This did not always depend on you economic stature. If you were well to do but unworthy, rich as you may be, most people nurtured a low esteem on your regard. By the same token, although a person may be of a very modest means, the society elevated him/her to a very high level for the nobility of his/her being. In this regard, before the advent of ‘Afwerkism’, be it highlanders or peope from MetaHt, we had nothing to learn from others. We had a social fabric, the envy of others. Raesi Tessema’s story lends support to this claim.

      Togo back to Ali Abdou, although his silence may be understandable becausee he may be under blackmail (his family members are now detained), in due course he can play a positive role by letting it all hang out! He can let us in as a people to the ‘inner chamber’ of DIA and himself so that we can be immune from being trapped under similar nets. He would have to disclose his and his adored master’s cunning and cruel ways thus freeing himself from the burden of guilt and shame and elevating himself and us as a society to a more knowledgeable ground as goes tyrants and their evil ways.

      cont’d

      • Zebib February 11, 2013

        PART III
        As regards Yemane Gebreab (Monkey), I think that he is no less responsible than Issayas Afewerki in carving the society to where it is today. He is the real power behind the showy prima donna DIA. He brews and cooks all that is being consumed as a way of being a citizen in Eritrea. If Issayas’s rule is evil, Yemane Gebreab is one of the sources of evil. There is not an iota of good in this man, brilliant as they say he is. He keeps a low profile and ensures that oppressive ways are fed to people (particularly the youth in Diaspora) in sugar-coated pills. I take him to be a man devoid of compassion and goodness. I do feel sorry for his children because they will carry his sins inevitably.

        I will disagree with you in exonerating top personalities in Hgdef who had their chances to leave the system and be on the right side of history and their people instead have indulged in the use and abuse of power for its own sake. Is society to forgive and forget the Kishas and Monkeys, who do not seem to have a discerning soul even if they abandon Issayas now? They most certainly should be allowed their day in court in future Eritrea but not only their likes (but may be their off-springs) will be stigmatized and held in very low esteem for generations to come (even after they pass away). Many sons and daughters of top Nazi offenders changed their names in today’s Germany.

        No Fetsum, your paradigm of forgiveness will appear as a luxury in the eyes of those who are directly burned out by the system (which I believe is the whole Eritrean youth who are passing their most productive and creative years in trenches digging away with NO milk, eggs, fish on their table at the end of the day!)

        Thank you my brother Festum and I have now seen your email account and will be in touch.

        End

        • fetsum abraham February 11, 2013

          hi Zebid; i agree with u in that there has to be exceptional cases may be in monkey’s and other cases but the whole struggle is not to accuse and hurt people for personal matters and to bepend in law to do justice.

          tnx

      • fetsum abraham February 11, 2013

        dear Zebit,
        u made one point in my heart clear, that he can let it out no matter what happens to his family for the people. he can be an example of defying such a fear because many people has been silenced by such a fear or blackmail. he can set a reference action by which other become immunue to such a blackmail. thanu my dear.
        pls drop me a line at fetsum.abraham@hotmail.com tnx

    • fetsum abraham February 11, 2013

      Zebid
      very eloquently said. TNX

  • Fessaha February 11, 2013

    Dear Dr Fitsum
    Your words are words of wisdom. Your thoughts pour water on burning fires. Your spirituality is touching. Your spirit of forgiveness is refreshing. Our Eritrea can only be saved through your kind of forgiving spirit. As you intelligently insist, people like Mr Ali Abdu must be forgiven for their past crimes committed by coercion from above. But
    Mr Ali Abdu must also speak out and ask for forgiveness.
    It is disturbing to note that whoever escapes pfdj remains silent. And they are many.I think they are terrified by the depth of evilness that they were swimming in and their conscience refuses to detach itself from that evil pool.
    Bitterness and hatred beget destruction and Eritrea is full of it. Eritrea is also fortunate to beget people like you who inspire in face of monsters who spit fire.
    March on , Dr Fetsum. We will follow you. We will build Eritrea from the ashes of bitterness and hate that pfdj let us in. No! We will follow the spirit of our ancestors who instilled love,forgiveness and respect just like Raesi Tesemma.
    I cannot thank you enough

    • Zebib February 11, 2013

      Fessaha,

      I very much enjoyed reading your beautiful piece! Thank you. As they say, all the beautiful things you say about Fetsum emanate from your own heart and you see it reflected in him. You are the owner of the same beauty of peace and forgiveness, as otherwise you would not be able to see it in Fetsum or anyone else.

      • ahmed saleh February 12, 2013

        What ? Forgiveness ? AYTIBKE INDYU ZEBKIYENI ZELO !
        Who the hell you think your are to sideline the families of his victims . Always bunch of cowards
        who do not know better but only stupid politics far from real life . LEKHBATAT !

  • eden February 11, 2013

    In fairness to Assena- Ali Abdu has indeed defected. Ambassador gerhatu has indirectly addmited to press tv that Ali Abdu has indeed defected. He tried to minimize the impact by saying that his govt. relies heavely on its people not on shoulders of individuals.

  • mona February 11, 2013

    from the brief interview ali abdu gave through his brother all i could understand was that he only cares about his family. he made it clear that he does not regret anything that happened to our society while he was the information minister. it was obvious that he feels his family deserves special treatment because he feels superior to all Eritrean families. i don’t see why. he was the information minister for years but all he wants now is to be left alone. and he tells us he is shocked and worried about his family! i am also sad and angry. but not because of my family. i am so angry and so sad because many bright journalists and writers and reform seekers are languishing in pfdj prisons. ali abdu apparently could not care less about those and tens of thousands other political prisoners. Mr. Festum ali abdu as such is not important to me. it is his former role as a pfdj machine that interests me. and i don’t think that he was not enjoying his role.

  • myth February 11, 2013

    in fairness to assenna????? really eden? where do you live? i mean what exact are you implying here? you sound so out of touch with reality.

  • wediere February 11, 2013

    Fetsum,
    Your story about Raesi Tesemma bravery and honesty was very moving. But in my opinion he made a big mistake by sending his son to the gallows. He should have recused himself for reasons of conflict of interest and let others judge the son objectively. What he did was unjust to his son because for fear of being accused of nepotism he may have been too harsh to the son.

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