Tag: Eritrean Opposition

  • 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

    Read more

  • 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

    Read more

  • OUR NATIONAL UNITY: Why Eritrea’s Political Imagination Fails Reality

    OUR NATIONAL UNITY: Why Eritrea’s Political Imagination Fails Reality

    I. The Illusion We Keep Rehearsing In recent weeks, I have been reading a series of essays on awate.on-forge.com – thoughtful pieces by Semere Habtemariam and Saleh Ghadi, attempting to stitch together a moral vision for Eritrea’s political future. They speak of unity, sacrifice, institutional maturity, historical awareness, and the enduring hope that principled action

    Read more

  • Endless Cycle Splits, Mergers, and Rebranding in the Eritrean Opposition

    Endless Cycle Splits, Mergers, and Rebranding in the Eritrean Opposition

    Fragmentation Without Disappearance: The Endless Cycle of Splits, Mergers, and Rebranding in the Eritrean Opposition In the middle of last year, I committed to writing about Eritrean national unity—both in its broad historical sense and within the specific context of the diaspora‑based opposition. As I continue gathering information on the latter, I readily acknowledge that

    Read more

  • National Unity Cannot Be Rebuilt One Community at a Time

    National Unity Cannot Be Rebuilt One Community at a Time

    Eritreans everywhere recognize the same painful truth: our nation is in deep crisis. Political paralysis, social fragmentation, and the mass flight of our youth have become defining features of our national condition. These burdens do not belong to one region or one religion. They belong to an entire people. My brother, the respected commentator Ismail

    Read more

  • 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

    Read more

  • What Has Unity Got to Do with Age?

    What Has Unity Got to Do with Age?

    Across Eritrean political discourse—especially within the diaspora—one argument has gathered unmistakable momentum: that leadership of the opposition, and indeed leadership of the Eritrean state itself, where the average age hovers around eighty, must pass to a new generation. At first glance, the demand feels not only reasonable but inevitable. Eritrea is a young nation with

    Read more

  • Eritrea’s Opposition Has Run Out of Excuses

    Eritrea’s Opposition Has Run Out of Excuses

    For more than three decades, Eritrea’s diaspora opposition has lived in a political waiting room—issuing statements, forming committees, dissolving committees, and then repeating the cycle with new names and old habits. The pattern has become so predictable that it no longer shocks anyone. Meanwhile, the regime in Asmera has ruled with total impunity: no constitution,

    Read more

  • 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.

    Read more

  • The Golden and the Tin

    The Golden and the Tin

    The Greatest Generation A year ago, or a little longer, a female Eritrean YouTube content creator interviewed Ustaz Saleh Younis, during which he disclosed his preference for the Revolution generation, calling it the greatest generation. I had to second his preference and adopt it, mainly because there is ample evidence to support its validity. When

    Read more

  • 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

    Read more

  • 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

    Read more

  • The Eritrean Opposition’s Double Bind

    The Eritrean Opposition’s Double Bind

    Read more

  • Eritrean Opposition Group Move Towards Merger

    Eritrean Opposition Group Move Towards Merger

    • “This move signals a potential end to decades of fragmentation among Eritrean opposition forces.”

    Read more

  • Eritrea’s Unanswered Question: 34 Years of Isaias Afwerki’s Rule

    Eritrea’s Unanswered Question: 34 Years of Isaias Afwerki’s Rule

    Eritrea’s Unanswered Question: What 34 Years of Isaias Afwerki’s Rule Reveal About Sovereignty and Survival In the beginning was the question—etched into the soul of the nation itself: Can Eritrea survive—and thrive—as a truly sovereign, independent state? For decades, global powers insisted we could not. Italy once tried to sell Eritrea to Belgium, citing economic

    Read more

  • Ethiopia: The Graveyard of Eritrean Opposition Movements

    Ethiopia: The Graveyard of Eritrean Opposition Movements

    Abstract: This article examines the structural, historical, and geopolitical constraints that have undermined the Eritrean opposition’s ability to bring about meaningful political change. It argues that the reliance on host states such as Ethiopia and Sudan has delegitimized opposition movements in the eyes of the Eritrean people. The article proposes a shift away from failed

    Read more

  • The Literary Works of Bereket Habte Selassie (LL.B., Ph.D.)

    The Literary Works of Bereket Habte Selassie (LL.B., Ph.D.)

    A Portrait of a Political Thinker and Freedom Fighter Ladies and gentlemen, It is a great honor to speak to you today about one of the most remarkable thinkers, writers, and freedom fighters to emerge from the Horn of Africa—Dr. Bereket Habte Selassie. A legal scholar by training, a political reformer by necessity, a revolutionary

    Read more

  • 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…

    Read more

  • Dear Brezidenti, Is The PFDJ A Fairy?

    Dear Brezidenti, Is The PFDJ A Fairy?

    Growing up, my old aunt was bedridden. I used to visit her in her room, which had a rope with two ends fitted to the opposite wall. Clothes, towels, and a host of other things were hung there. My aunt saw things we couldn’t see hanged on the string. I will return to the remaining

    Read more

  • The Eritrean Dilemma with Its President

    The Eritrean Dilemma with Its President

    Isaias Afwerki. The most mentioned. The most criticized. The most admired, and at the same time, the most despised. He’s a prominent character in most dialogues, debates and discussions among Eritreans. Some admire him as the most accomplished person because he successfully led the struggle for the independence of Eritrea. To others, he’s notorious for

    Read more