Category: Articles

  • Forto 2013: A Matter of Perspective

    Forto 2013: A Matter of Perspective

    There has recently been a spate of articles about the recent rare phenomena that occurred at Forto Baldisera, the building that houses the Ministry of Information of the current ruling class, the PFDJ. The stories are varied and many and variously categorize the incident as an “attempted coup d’etat”, “A putsch”, “a supplication to the

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  • Perspective On Forto 2013

    Perspective On Forto 2013

    Eritreans For Democracy, Justice and Equality (EDJE) There is no doubt that the event of January 21, 2013 in Asmara will remain one of the most important and most controversial in the Eritrean political arena for a long time to come. This is due to its uniqueness, quantitatively by the involvement of a far greater number

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  • Isaias Afwerki Deals With His Regime’s Suicide Note

    Isaias Afwerki Deals With His Regime’s Suicide Note

    The goal of all authoritarian leaders is to create a state that does not have alternative power centers or breeding grounds for a leader to emerge and to challenge them. In Eritrea, the institutions which incubated emerging leaders were traditional, religious, civil society, and the military. After a 50 year-long assault by secular fundamentalists, social

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  • Eritrean Women, March 8 And NUEW

    Eritrean Women, March 8 And NUEW

    March 8, the International Women’s Day is approaching. Invitations for numerous upcoming events have been published in “governmental” and opposition websites. International Women’s Day is celebrated since the mid seventies (in ELF and EPLF areas) and was established as a public holiday after independence of Eritrea. On SHEMONTE MEGABIT (March 8) many Eritreans top styled with their

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  • Waiting For An Eritrean Spring Or Making It

    Waiting For An Eritrean Spring Or Making It

    Between waiting for the Eritrean spring and making it: An attempt to find a new approach to change in Eritrea Preface: More than two decades after the liberation of Eritrea, it seems that the chances of change in the Eritrean political scene is diminishing, not because there are significant new conditions in favor of the regime

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  • Some Eritrean Wonders Of 2012

    Some Eritrean Wonders Of 2012

    The year 2012 was not in short supply of Eritrean wonders, I chose a couple of these wonders and tried to put them under the microscope trying to dissect them and see what they really are. The subjects discussed are not new subjects, they have been thoroughly discussed and researched, but what this article brings

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  • Unfiltered Notes: How Much Do Eritreans Love Their Country?

    Unfiltered Notes: How Much Do Eritreans Love Their Country?

    Boundless love is what most of us believe we have for Eritrea. But our tendencies to embrace the king of the day (znegese ngusna)no matter how harsh the sacrifices seem to suggest otherwise. Judging by the only measurement that matters – our collective inability to remove what has turned out to be a modern day

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  • YG’s Dilemma: A Compass Can Only Draw A Circle

    YG’s Dilemma: A Compass Can Only Draw A Circle

    Yes, Eritrea is in perilous condition. Its economy is stagnant…. Inflation is soaring and people are suffering. The youth, the military, and the population are all fed up, and rightfully so.  The so-called leaders failed and failed miserably. Our political order is non-existent and we blame no one but ourselves. This is our mistake, our

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  • The Political Chess-Game To Tame The Woyanes

    The Political Chess-Game To Tame The Woyanes

    Well, well, well… Why I’m I not surprised? Deki-Ere – it’s happening again. History is in the making. It is a brand new day in Eritrea; and it is a dawn of a new era in Ethiopian politics. In Addis deep from its inner core, the ground is shifting along its geological fault lines. And

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  • Theorizing Hamid Idris Awate In A Postmodern World

    Theorizing Hamid Idris Awate In A Postmodern World

    The recent trend, in the opposition block, on the contestation of Awate’s Eritrean symbolism is epic. The imagery of an afro-nilotic hero on a horse back, with a bandolier diagonally crossing his protruded chest, with a dangling sword in a holder, proudly slinging a simonova rifle , as if, projecting an appeal to our inner

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  • The Eritrean Revolution: The Way Forward (P2)

    The Eritrean Revolution: The Way Forward (P2)

    This is a continuation of Part I. The Eritrean regime is crumbling fast after sowing so much mistrust among us. Instead of  respecting  our diversity and building on its positive aspects,it has worked hard to deepen and escalate the  ethnic, regional and religious difference. The urgent question we need to address is: how we are going

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  • Have You Seen This On The Mainstream Media?

    Here is a clip that shows  the mighty Israeli army terrorizing civilians who have become aliens in their own land. Here is technology at work, tax dollars at work bombing Gaza indiscriminately. This is the story of an elephant complaining of a cub. Indeed CRY FREEDOM! And here is the similarity when Ethiopian forces sung “Embi

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  • The Eritrean revolution: A circular Or A Linear Journey?

    The Eritrean revolution: A circular Or A Linear Journey?

    I was in 1952, on the same year that Eritrea was federated with Ethiopia; I am as old as federal arrangement that Haile Sellassie unilaterally dismantled 12 years later. During my sixty years of life I have experienced many things and Eritrea has also grown up with me and affected me all my life. Born

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  • A First: Qatari Prime Minister Visits Ethiopia

    – The Qatari Prime Minister: “Ethiopia is important to us and we seek to enhance cooperation with it.” – Qatar Affirms its support for the Syrian people – The Ethiopian Prime Minister hails Qatar’s efforts to promote peace in the region Addis Ababa (AlSharq) Nov. 5, 2012, Report by Mohammed Taha Tewekel On Sunday evening,

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  • Eritrean Churches: Mute And Without opinion

    Eritrean Churches: Mute And Without opinion

    “The church must be the guide and the critic of the State and never its tool.” writes Dr Martin Luther King Jr, outraged by the silence of many churches regarding racial injustice of his time. The church, or any religious institution for that matter, should not hope to earn favors or avert scorn from government

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  • Zenawi: Memorable Personal Landmarks

    Zenawi: Memorable Personal Landmarks

    Melles Zenawi the Ethiopian Prime Minister was snatched by death on August 20, 2012 at the age of 57; he is survived by three children.  The Ethiopian government has announced that a state funeral ceremony will be held on the 2nd of September. Over the years I have met Melles repeatedly, the last of which was

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  • R-E-S-P-E-C-T!

    R-E-S-P-E-C-T!

    A popular beer advertisement in my Country goes like this: “My name is Joe and I am Canadian!” Molson, the company that produces the beer “Molson Canadian” has cleverly crafted a commercial that can appeal to many Canadians. This is the sort of nationalism I can drink for, hypothetically speaking of course. I might even

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  • Dear Prime Minister Meles

    Dear Prime Minister Meles

    I wish I could discuss the contents of this letter with you in person; unfortunately, that is now impossible because of your untimely death. Dear Prime Minister, in 1991 soon after your triumphant arrival inAddis Ababa, I watched you debate the question ofEritrea’s independence with Professors Endrias Eshete and Mesfin Woldemariam and another academic. I

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  • Meskrem.net’s Mantra: Sympathy For The Devil

    Meskrem.net’s Mantra: Sympathy For The Devil

    “Two monks were on a pilgrimage. One day, they came to a deep river. At the edge of the river, a young woman sat weeping, because she was afraid to cross the river without help. She begged the two monks to help her. The younger monk turned his back. The members of their order were

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  • Meles Zenawe : A Matter Of Perspective

    Meles Zenawe : A Matter Of Perspective

    Meles Zenawe is dead. Long live Meles Zenaw! Looking back at his life one can with no exaggeration say that Meles was no ordinary human being. Meles was an institution. With the exception of the great Mandela, Meles had no intellectual equal inAfrica’s leadership pool. He was not only a visionary in what he wanted

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