Tag: Eritrea Politics

  • The Anatomy of State Failure in Eritrea

    The Anatomy of State Failure in Eritrea

    I. The Origins of Authority States do not fail in a single dramatic moment. They unravel slowly, beginning in the quiet spaces where no one imagines politics is taking place. The earliest fractures appear not in ministries or parliaments but in the daily negotiations of ordinary people. A fisherman trading his morning’s catch for a

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  • The Elephant in the Room

    The Elephant in the Room

    I. The Meteor We Pretend Fell From the Sky There is a comforting story circulating in Eritrean political discourse – a story repeated so often, and with such ritualistic conviction, that it has become less an argument than a reflex. It tells us that the dictatorship is an alien force, a meteor that crashed into

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  • The Forgotten Blueprint: How Eritrea’s 2001 Party Proclamation Could Rebuild a Nation

    The Forgotten Blueprint: How Eritrea’s 2001 Party Proclamation Could Rebuild a Nation

    Eritrea’s political crisis did not emerge from a vacuum. It is the cumulative product of abandoned institutions, unimplemented laws, and a governing elite that systematically dismantled even the limited frameworks it once claimed to uphold. I use the term elite loosely here, for in the Eritrean context it connotes power without the accompanying attributes of

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  • Delusion and Confusion: Awet NeHafash or Awet Nwedi Afom

    Delusion and Confusion: Awet NeHafash or Awet Nwedi Afom

    Isaias Afwerki vs. Reality: A Speech Drenched in Delusion. That was illustrated in his last public appearance to deliver the Independence Day speech. As usual, it was a speech drenched in delusion. Listening to Isaias Afwerki’s speeches should be classified as punishment. They are stale, tedious, and laced with bitter pronouncements that parch the tongue.

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  • Excuse Me PFDJ, I’m Sorry

    Excuse Me PFDJ, I’m Sorry

    Rumors about Isaias Afwerki grooming his son, Abraham, to take over the presidency of Eritrea. Is it just a father passing down his legacy, or does it reflect a broader trend in global politics where dynasties and nepotism take center stage? Should Abraham be blamed for his father’s actions? The political system in Eritrea, along…

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