Tag: Eritrean future

  • The Day After: Preparing Eritrea for its Most Dangerous Transition

    The Day After: Preparing Eritrea for its Most Dangerous Transition

    There comes a moment in the life of every nation when denial becomes a luxury it can no longer afford. Eritrea is approaching such a moment. Tick‑tock. The eventual death of President Isaias Afwerki—whether tomorrow or years from now—is not a political prediction but an unavoidable biological certainty. What follows will determine whether Eritrea survives

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  • The Eritrean Opposition Must Renounce Violence — Or Remain Irrelevant

    The Eritrean Opposition Must Renounce Violence — Or Remain Irrelevant

    The Eritrean opposition in the diaspora faces a credibility crisis so deep that it has become politically paralyzed by it. For more than three decades, it has positioned itself as the alternative to Isaias Afwerki’s rule. Yet inside Eritrea, even citizens who are profoundly dissatisfied with the government remain unconvinced that an opposition‑led transition would

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  • Unity or Irrelevance: The Eritrean Opposition’s Moment of Truth

    Unity or Irrelevance: The Eritrean Opposition’s Moment of Truth

    Eritrea is no longer governed; it is controlled. The state has collapsed into one man. Eritrea is Isaias Afwerki. After more than thirty years in power, the ruling system has not only failed—it has stopped changing. Its thinking is stuck in the Cold War. Its actions are shaped by a past that no longer exists.

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  • The Echoes of Stagnation: Reclaiming Eritrea’s Future

    The Echoes of Stagnation: Reclaiming Eritrea’s Future

    Through Internal Reckoning and Diaspora Strategy Unity has long eluded Eritreans. The word is invoked so frequently—and so casually—that it has lost much of its moral and political gravity. Yet its overuse does not diminish its necessity. Our repeated failure to achieve unity does not render it obsolete; it simply reveals that our methods have

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  • Why the PFDJ Is Afraid of Us: The Strategic Threat of Nationalist Unity

    Why the PFDJ Is Afraid of Us: The Strategic Threat of Nationalist Unity

    The ruling People’s Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ) has not endured through popular consent. It has survived through an engineered system of fear, fragmentation, and narrative domination. Its silence toward nationalist movements is not indifference—it is apprehension. Unified, principled nationalists threaten the regime on every front: politically, strategically, philosophically, and historically. Unity as Memory—and

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  • Eritrea at Year’s End: Between Endurance and Exhaustion

    Eritrea at Year’s End: Between Endurance and Exhaustion

    As another year closes—the thirty‑fourth since independence—Eritrea stands as a nation defined by contradiction. It is a country that endured colonial rule, international machinations, a short‑lived annexation disguised as a “UN‑supervised federation,” Cold War rivalries, a brutal thirty‑year liberation struggle, a devastating border war, and repeated regional upheavals, yet still struggles to define peace on

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  • When Liberation Becomes a Cage: Eritrea’s Unlearned Lessons

    When Liberation Becomes a Cage: Eritrea’s Unlearned Lessons

    Eritrea’s tragic trajectory—after one of the most heroic and costly struggles for independence in modern African history—remains one of the continent’s most heartbreaking stories. By 1991, when Eritrea finally achieved freedom, the lessons of post‑colonial governance were no longer abstract. They had unfolded across Africa and the Global South in full view. Yet, despite these

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  • Emperor Haile Selassie and President Isaias Afwerki – Part Six

    Emperor Haile Selassie and President Isaias Afwerki – Part Six

    Giants and Lilliputians: Power, Image, and Machiavellian Survival Emperor Haile Selassie and President Isaias Afwerki – Part Six 1 —  Introduction The Two Propaganda Campaigns The Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF) became the target of a sustained campaign of political defamation—first from Emperor Haile Selassie’s Ethiopia, and later, far more powerfully, from the Isaias-led People’s Liberation

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  • A Shepherd, A Tiger Cub, and A Village

    A Shepherd, A Tiger Cub, and A Village

    A shepherd boy, bored while tending his goats on the edge of a village, cried, “HELP! A tiger is attacking me!” The villagers rushed, swords in hand, to save him—only to be mocked when he admitted it was a joke. Angrily, they returned home. He repeated this again and again. But the fourth time, when

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  • The Eritrean Opposition’s Double Bind

    The Eritrean Opposition’s Double Bind

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