Wedi tkabo used the opposition to just get his green card and kept quit I wonder what his next move will be. He seems to be opportunist ,I just hope he will not go back to hgdef.
During his lousy interview, wedi tkuabo said that hi is neither with the opposition nor with the govt. He told you guys that he is not a ball.
I have more respect for HGDF supporters than people like him that he is in the middle. You can’t be in the middle, unless you are a selfish person or the country doesn’t belong to you (which is in that case, you don’t care).
So, for that reason, I am not going to the party.
Nothing wrong if someone says I
am independent with no political
affilation like many of us .
Our common ground is to fight
against dictatorship to bring change .
Well, he told you he is not against the dictator and he is not with the opposition. Basically, he doesn’t care.
He didn’t say that he hates HGDF but opposing independently.
So we are going to dance while our people are in dire situation and our young are dying in the sea, the worst kind of death? WE WILL KEEP DANCING TIL THE LAST ERIRTEAN STANDS!!
Sinai torture industry captured in haunting new documentary
The power of ‘Sound of Torture’ stems from the disembodied-but-human voices it features of asylum seekers brutalized in camps in Sinai.
By Liat Schlesinger Jun. 13, 2014 | 8:00 AM | 1
“Hello?”
“Please, Meron, my sister, hurry up! Hurry up! Please! Rescue us tonight!”
– From the opening scene of the documentary “Sound of Torture”
Sinai desert, high noon. Human footprints are embedded in the burning yellow sand. The sound of a crying woman is heard in the distance. The opening scene of “Sound of Torture” thrusts the viewer into an uneasy journey. It is a deeply unsettling trip, amid voices of people who are reaching out by telephone from captivity – an entry into the nightmares of others, people undergoing physical torture. The brutalized people on the line are crying out, begging for their lives. The film moves between conversations and fragments of testimonies.
“If I ever get out of this hell, it will be like being reborn,” one person says. The call is abruptly cut off. “Two people died here tonight! Please! Send help!” another voice pleads.
Meron Estefanos, an Eritrean woman living in Sweden, broadcasts these voices over the radio and interviews the torture victims. They are voices that no one wants to hear. The voices of broken people, who break a little more every day, ground into the dust by savage abuse. Many of the voices heard in the film belonged to people who are no longer alive.
Israeli-born Keren Shayo’s filmmaking debut, “Sound of Torture,” was shot in Israel, Sweden and Egypt. It follows Estefanos, who has interviewed (by phone or Skype) thousands of Eritrean captives in torture camps in Sinai
Wedi Tikabo is just a Single person with a Normal Krar so dont give him a damen, simply say I have more Respect for an Ignorant HGDEF than a person who is A Langa Lang,,,, I so hate for the ppl whom are not Deleyti Fithi or not Tekawemti
Negasi September 20, 2014
We will have a good
weekend with wedi Tikabo!
Thanks Minnesota.
Smerrrrrrrr September 20, 2014
Wedi tkabo used the opposition to just get his green card and kept quit I wonder what his next move will be. He seems to be opportunist ,I just hope he will not go back to hgdef.
ghezai September 20, 2014
How do you get yours?
Geja September 20, 2014
most likely Smerrrrr got his Green Card by “falling in love” with a Southern Sudanese refugee girl. 🙂
yodit September 20, 2014
his trash the country no one they think his in the world down with lestro woyane
Anbesit September 20, 2014
wedi tkabo tebelatsi.
Simon G. September 20, 2014
During his lousy interview, wedi tkuabo said that hi is neither with the opposition nor with the govt. He told you guys that he is not a ball.
I have more respect for HGDF supporters than people like him that he is in the middle. You can’t be in the middle, unless you are a selfish person or the country doesn’t belong to you (which is in that case, you don’t care).
So, for that reason, I am not going to the party.
ahmed saleh September 22, 2014
Nothing wrong if someone says I
am independent with no political
affilation like many of us .
Our common ground is to fight
against dictatorship to bring change .
Simon G. September 23, 2014
Well, he told you he is not against the dictator and he is not with the opposition. Basically, he doesn’t care.
He didn’t say that he hates HGDF but opposing independently.
birmigham September 20, 2014
well done wedi tekabo
Mehret September 20, 2014
So we are going to dance while our people are in dire situation and our young are dying in the sea, the worst kind of death? WE WILL KEEP DANCING TIL THE LAST ERIRTEAN STANDS!!
What a joke we are!
Kombishtato September 20, 2014
Sinai torture industry captured in haunting new documentary
The power of ‘Sound of Torture’ stems from the disembodied-but-human voices it features of asylum seekers brutalized in camps in Sinai.
By Liat Schlesinger Jun. 13, 2014 | 8:00 AM | 1
“Hello?”
“Please, Meron, my sister, hurry up! Hurry up! Please! Rescue us tonight!”
– From the opening scene of the documentary “Sound of Torture”
Sinai desert, high noon. Human footprints are embedded in the burning yellow sand. The sound of a crying woman is heard in the distance. The opening scene of “Sound of Torture” thrusts the viewer into an uneasy journey. It is a deeply unsettling trip, amid voices of people who are reaching out by telephone from captivity – an entry into the nightmares of others, people undergoing physical torture. The brutalized people on the line are crying out, begging for their lives. The film moves between conversations and fragments of testimonies.
“If I ever get out of this hell, it will be like being reborn,” one person says. The call is abruptly cut off. “Two people died here tonight! Please! Send help!” another voice pleads.
Meron Estefanos, an Eritrean woman living in Sweden, broadcasts these voices over the radio and interviews the torture victims. They are voices that no one wants to hear. The voices of broken people, who break a little more every day, ground into the dust by savage abuse. Many of the voices heard in the film belonged to people who are no longer alive.
Israeli-born Keren Shayo’s filmmaking debut, “Sound of Torture,” was shot in Israel, Sweden and Egypt. It follows Estefanos, who has interviewed (by phone or Skype) thousands of Eritrean captives in torture camps in Sinai
http://www.haaretz.com/life/movies-television/.premium-1.598419
——————–
Merhawi September 20, 2014
Wedi Tikabo is just a Single person with a Normal Krar so dont give him a damen, simply say I have more Respect for an Ignorant HGDEF than a person who is A Langa Lang,,,, I so hate for the ppl whom are not Deleyti Fithi or not Tekawemti