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Kathryn Cameron Porter

Kathryn Cameron Porter

Posted: March 1, 2011 05:56 PM

Eritrea, one of the youngest countries on earth, is quickly emerging as one of the largest violators of human rights. Born in 1993 out of a brutal and hard-fought 30-year war with Ethiopia, Eritrean President Isayas Afewerki wasted little time in rewarding his beleaguered nation of five million people with a regime based on violence and oppression.

Following a border-war flare-up with Ethiopia in 1998 that lasted two years, President Isaya Afewerki abruptly initiated swift and immediate actions to consolidate his power and eliminate any independent civil society and rule of law. Top government officials were immediately thrown in jail -- where they remain today, if any are still alive. All independent media organizations were shut down with the immediate arrests of all journalists and media members. This policy continues today, effectively eliminating all freedom of speech.

The soldiers who fought long and hard for most of their lives under President Afewerki have all been compensated with indefinite national service until the age of 55. Secondary-level students spend the last year of school in war camps preparing for a lifetime of military conscription and government-assigned labor. Paid meager salaries that do not provide for basic necessities, desertion is common despite that fact that it is punishable by death and imprisonment. The families of deserters suffer as they lose their land to the government and face heavy fines and imprisonment.

There are no elected officials or semblance of political representation of any kind. Anyone suspected of dissent or any form of government opposition is promptly arrested. This results in an atmosphere of paranoia in which no citizen is safe from random arrests at any point in time. If caught without proper papers from the government approving of their location and actions, all citizens are subject to arrest. Freedom of movement is prohibited within Eritrea.

Religious freedom in Eritrea is also almost non-existent, with the government approving only four religions and their practices: the Eritrean Orthodox Church, the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Eritrea, the Roman Catholic Church and Islam. When President Afewerki outlawed all but these four religions, any and all property of suspected members of non-approved religions became in immediate danger of government seizure. Bible burnings and house raids in the middle of the night, in which suspected worshipers are arrested, are now commonplace. Even the approved religions must get permission from the government to distribute material while the government manages all of their financial assets.

Furthering the despondency in Eritrea is also the reality that once arrested, sentences are arbitrary to the actual crime, and prisoners are often held indefinitely without trial, representation, or court. The fate of those arrested and their prison sentence is completely subjective, as it is most often determined by the commanding officer of the particular jail, a practice lacking any prospect for justice. The charges range from anything that the government believes to be a threat to national security to the previous mentioned "crimes."

Most of the firsthand accounts from refugees point to random arrests and time served in jail. Political prisoners, military deserters, and anyone suspected of practicing outside of the four registered religions seem to be the most common "criminals," although it is difficult to gauge. Any act interpreted as seditious or upholding dissent can result in years of imprisonment or execution.

The jails, as you would expect, are notoriously inhumane, if one can even find them. There is no way to tell the exact number of jails in Eritrea, as many of them consist of underground pits and caves in which prisoners rarely see the light of day for months at a time.

Extreme temperatures and overcrowding within jails cause disease to be rampant among the prisoners with no medical aid. While serving time in an Eritrean jail one can expect to be beaten, tortured, tied up, and forced to work without adequate food and water. Reportedly, every method of physical and psychological torture has been inflicted. Further, in order to hold the increasing amount of prisoners, Eritrea has become infamous for their brutal methods of holding prisoners. Metal shipping containers with no air circulation or windows have become the most common method of holding the prisoner overflow. Left out in the oppressive East African temperatures day and night, prisoners are locked inside these metal boxes for almost 24 hours a day in overcrowded and cramped conditions.

It comes as no surprise that the dire conditions in Eritrea have produced some of the highest refugee numbers in the world. However, exiting Eritrea can be difficult and dangerous. Exit visas are only granted to older citizens who are no longer of age for military conscription. At the border of Eritrea there is an official "shoot-to-kill" policy against anyone attempting to flee the country.

Along with much of Africa, Eritrea faces challenges of severe hunger, drought, and economic difficulties. The government of Eritrea compounds these challenges by rejecting much-needed international humanitarian aid. The government suspended the World Food Program and placed restrictions and taxes on all non-government aid organizations, effectively eliminating their presence within the country. In 2008, the European Commission on Humanitarian Aid deemed a Global Acute Malnutrition rating of over 15% in parts of Eritrea, far above an emergency level. For the citizens of Eritrea, the lack of food is a daily reminder of the self-inflicted pain the government is imposing on its people.

The situation in Eritrea wasn't always this dire, but the future doesn't look bright. Immediately after the 1993 independence, there appeared to be hope as a glimmer of representative government and basic freedoms were present. However, after the two-year war with Ethiopia ended in 2000, paranoia overcame President Afewerki and his government. This paranoia has led to a government committed to maintaining an entire population mobilized for war and a president whose policies are rooted in heavy-handed dogma's used to control all aspects of life with force, violence, and fear.

Considering the strife and unrest arising in fellow African countries -- Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Algeria, and Yemen -- it is only natural to question Eritrea's future. The youth-heavy population is unhappy with its leaders and the absence of freedoms is equally as prominent. A key factor in the stability of Eritrea is the future of their relationship with Ethiopia, a relationship that is always contentious. The people of Eritrea have only known bloodshed and war with Ethiopia for the past 50 years, and exhaustion from constant war and violence consumes them. This said, it will be interesting to see if and when the mobilized citizens of Eritrea finally turn their aggrieved attention away from Ethiopia, and towards the more structural issues within their own government under the leadership of President Afewerki.

 

Follow Kathryn Cameron Porter on Twitter: www.twitter.com/kathryncporter

 
 
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04:27 PM on 03/02/2011
I applaud Mrs. Porter for the candid and insightful commentary on current Eritrean situation. By all measures the article is fair and balanced, if not a little meek and mellow. Because let us see, Eritrea under its current leader:

--The only country that has no constitution, no independent judiciary, no election since 1991 and no plans of elections for future (to boot!)
--The only country that has no private press in Africa.
--The biggest jailor of journalists in this planet we call earth.
--One of the biggest violators of religion. More than 3,000 Pentecostals and members of other minority religions in jail.
--More than 300,000 youth under servitude for indefinite period of time.
--tens of thousands political prisoners languishing in detention centers.
--Second biggest refugee producing country (per capita) in the world.
---A security and regional destablizer that is slapped with UNSC santions for its support for the Al Shabab militias.
----There is no arrangement for succession of power, what so ever. It is that messed up.

The record of Issais as a leader is unique in history. It is hard to imagine how a leader could fail this miserably at every level. Eritrea is just a political unit that happens to miraculously continue. Period. It is continuing miraculously, as a friend said, "in spite of, what the ruling party is doing it."

In short, as one person said it all: In contrast, " Egypt, Tunisia, Libya had dictators. Eritrea doesn't have a dictator. It has Monster!"
06:50 PM on 03/03/2011
My Eritrean brothers, as much as I like us to be critical of our government and administration, outsiders like this do no good but tremendous harm to our unity. History can be our lesson. Where were they when UN denied us of our independence from colonialism? Where were they when we were forcibly annexed to a nation we didn't want to be with? Where were they when we fought for 30 years getting bombed by illegal weapons of mass destruction such as Napalm and Cluster bombs? They were on the other side coz it served their interest. Now when we became free, on our own, they started poking around. And got us into war with our neighbor/s.

Now that they started loosing that battle, they're using privately owned media in the hopes condition us. Yes let's question and challenge our leadership. Let's not give them what they want. We have a resource rich country that their criminal friends in wall street are really eying on. Let it be ours!

Learn more from the likes of Noam Chomsky, John Perkins, Naomi Klein and "The Zeitgeist" movie.

Mrs. Porter might also be a victim of the system as well. So, learn people, learn...
05:08 AM on 03/02/2011
Wow, of all the vitriol blatantly anti-Eritrean propaganda that has been spewing out of the media over the last 10 years, this piece clearly takes the ‘cake’.
What truly makes Mrs. Porters article really laughable is the fact that most of these lies were rebuffed, years ago, not by the government and not just the voices of the Eritrean people living outside of Eritrea; but also by every measurable index of human development, which has clearly shown Eritrea to be top performer in sub-Sahara Africa all in less than 20 years of state hood (how long did it take for women to be given the right to vote in the U.S.?). Yeah, our government may not be perfect, nor did they ever claim to be, but as an Eritrean-American I am proud of my country.
As a side note, how does a person like ‘Eri-hope’ who has purportedly been in the west for only “a couple of years” have such a great command of the English language, were it not for the wondrous Eritrean education system?
05:55 AM on 03/02/2011
Are you talking about Reporters Without Borders? Last time I remember, it even beat North Korea as the worst country for media, with many journalists dead and imprisoned and no independent media at all. Or are you talking about the last Africa’s President Index which came out just last January? Again, not only did your beloved President made it to the “Morgue” category for all the horrors that he has committed, but was also made it to the prestigious category of “Coconut Heads of the Year” for his immense stupidity. Over all, for governance Eritrea got the lowest score in Africa with 12.14 from a score of 100! The score was so bad that a new category has to be created to accommodate it – the “morgue” category, one that has gone way beyond Intensive Care. Or are you talking about Human Rights Reports of various organizations? I have yet to see a single report that says a single good word about Eritrea. As usual though, in the Orwellian world that the regime’s foot soldiers are living, everything is seen in inverse.
11:50 AM on 03/03/2011
Yosief, Obviously, “Eri-Love” was talking about all “measurable index of human developmen¬t” like life expectancy, malaria extermination, HIV control, etc., What are you smoking, dude? You are so hell-bent on hoping against hope of seeing the Eritrean President removed that your sense of logic & fairness has been warped beyond repair.

Keep hoping on the hapless Woyanne/Meles Zenawi to realize your dream of a different Eritrea (even though that is one cruel remark on my part because such an impossible scenario is sure to make a “morgue” out of you sooner). Expecting Meles to “save Eritrea” is like expecting a killer-kick from a dying horse. It could happen, by a freak accident, but I still would not put my money or a second on that I were you.
04:35 AM on 03/02/2011
If anyone can squeeze in an the endless abuse the Eritrean people have been subjected to under their so-called “liberators” in one or two pages, then you have done it – and thanks very much for that. As much as I would like to see an Eritrean uprising, I doubt that it will happen on its own. This is a very evil regime, and has done everything possible to prevent the kind of uprising we are witnessing now in the Arab world. To mention just one: it has evicted almost the entire youth out of the cities, and forced them into internal and external exile. The youth are now to be found in: prisons, concentration camps, training camps, military camps, refugee camps, etc. Serving in the indefinite National Service only, there are hundreds of thousands of them. Hundreds of thousands more have left the country for good. To understand the extent to which this regime can go to hold the youth at a safe distance, note this: it has dismantled the only higher institution in the capital city (Asmara University), and replaced it with make-shift colleges away from the city, run by illiterate colonels. Under this condition the only way change would come is through outside intervention. A meaningful sanction would do it. But if not, a military intervention even by its archenemy Ethiopia is preferable than the horror the Eritrean people are living under now.
07:06 PM on 03/01/2011
I am an Eritrean and left the country a couple of years ago by crossing the heavily militarized border for the same reasons mentioned in this article. My friends did the same too. Why didn't we try to change the system in stead of being refugees in various countries? our dictator is way harsher than any leader in Africa, he leaves nothing to chance! All the measures he took as this article presents were precisely meant to prevent any sort of dissent. There is no space for public dissent. In a space of 7 years of my young adult age, i was ordered and forced to stay in various military training camps, summer campaign program centers, prisons, political education camp, and rehabilitation center. This is not a special case, it is the experience of almost any Eritrea youth. I couldn't stay for a solid one year in one place either with my family or friends. The regime keeps everyone in a state of fear and mobility to the point were they can't plan anything!

Thanks to huffingtonpost for bringing forth the plight of Eritreans! Let the world know our suffering. With enough publicity of our suffering, I am sure we will be able to make a change in the long term.