Tag: Isaias Afwerki

  • Power, Image, and Machiavellian Survival: Emperor Haile Selassie and President Isaias Afwerki

    Power, Image, and Machiavellian Survival: Emperor Haile Selassie and President Isaias Afwerki

    Two Towering Figures–Giants and Lilliputians (Part 1) Across the sorrowful and entangled histories of Ethiopia and Eritrea, two figures loom with spectral intensity: Emperor Haile Selassie I and President Isaias Afwerki. Their shadows stretch across generations, ideologies, and geopolitical fault lines—each a master of power, each a paradox incarnate. At the outset of their reigns,

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  • The Faucet Festival

    The Faucet Festival

    A satirical take on Isaias Afwerki’s mysterious faucet sculpture, comparing it to Pharaoh Khufu’s pyramid and the Syrian comedy “Faucet Festival” to highlight Eritrea’s forced labor and cult of leadership.

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  • Penicillin Overdose Killed the Camel

    Penicillin Overdose Killed the Camel

    Dr. Abiy Ahmed keeps me thinking these days, though not in the way I wanted to. During the struggle era, when there were not enough qualified doctors, dressers and nurses became doctors by default. Their kit was modest: a few vials of penicillin for wounds and infections, chloroquine for malaria, and vitamin K and blood

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  • Nepal: A Lesson for the PFDJ and the Youth

    Nepal: A Lesson for the PFDJ and the Youth

    Every era popularizes certain names—mainly names of rulers and prominent people of the time. Since the nineteen-forties and fifties, the name of a famous person that was often repeated in newspapers and radio bulletins has become popular; parents adopt the name for their babies. My aunt, (who is my cousin, but I called her aunt

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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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  • More Reflections on Alemseged Tesfai’s Epilogue

    More Reflections on Alemseged Tesfai’s Epilogue

    This is not a proper article but rather a collection of thoughts … I started off well, but I was too weak to continue. I was very surprised when I watched a video of a group of PFDJ supporters—the Eritrean regime’s party members—welcoming Alemseged in the embassy hall in London, clapping rhythmically in a rising

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  • Dr. Abdella AlNafisi’s Thirty-year Sleep

    Dr. Abdella AlNafisi’s Thirty-year Sleep

    By the end of the 1990s, the Islamist wave had reached its ebb. In 1988 Iraq invaded Kuwait and unleashed disaster. The USA arrayed its arsenal, and allies launched Desert Storm to reverse Saddam’s invasion. That heralded the beginning of a long, unstable era for the Middle East and beyond. In 1989 Sudan’s Islamist National

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  • Eritrea’s Succession Crisis: A Nation on the Brink

    In the long arc of Eritrean history, few moments have been as ominous as the present. The country stands on the edge of a precipice—not because of natural calamities, foreign invasions, or economic collapse, but because of a dangerous void at its center: the absence of a succession plan. Eritrea’s political order is not built

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  • The Courage to Be Eritrean: Navigating a Moment of Crisis

    The Courage to Be Eritrean: Navigating a Moment of Crisis

    Eritrea stands at a precipice, a chasm in the unfolding narrative of our nation. This juncture demands not merely the reflex of action, but a descent into the very core of our being—a profound interrogation of what it means to be Eritrean. As the shadow of Ethiopia’s threatened war for Assab looms, we are compelled

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  • 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

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  • The Eritrean Regime and Its Neighbors

    The Eritrean Regime and Its Neighbors

    On May 24, 1991, Eritreans achieved their long-sought independence, formally recognized on May 24, 1993. Yet, true freedom remained elusive. The organization that became the ruling government legally solidified its hold—not through popular consent, but through brute force, injustice, and external alliances and considerations. Those early days were euphoric; few foresaw the wars and displacements

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  • “Military Communique #1: Coup d’ Etat”

    “Military Communique #1: Coup d’ Etat”

    This was a common radio announcement, preceded by martial music and read in the deep voice of an officer. Immediately, fear engulfed listeners, followed by intense discussions and swirling rumors. Most people in the so-called third world instantly recognized it as a coup d’état—usually in a country they couldn’t even locate on a map. A

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  • The UAE and the Horn of Africa – A Swirl of Interests and Alliances

    The UAE and the Horn of Africa – A Swirl of Interests and Alliances

    Last time I said I would cover the UAE… Here it is. Now, this isn’t a comprehensive history. It’s a sketch—basic pointers you can expand on. But it’s important to know where you stand and what circles surround you. People are born into families that grow into clans, tribes, regions, and nations. Let’s focus on

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  • Hail Ethiopia, Hail Peace!

    Hail Ethiopia, Hail Peace!

    “Abiy’s provocative declaration has now become a rallying cry for some Ethiopian extremists.” “No claimed ancient bloodline can legitimize ownership—leaving aside political decisions.” “You shall not covet the Eritrean Red Sea.”

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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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  • Aferkebu Bun Dereja – Stop the Empire

    Aferkebu Bun Dereja – Stop the Empire

    In Eritrean tradition, coffee is served in three rounds—Awel, Dereja, and Bereka. This is Aferkebu Bun Dereja, the second round in a conversation about empire, exile, and the ongoing silencing of Eritrean voices. We explore how authoritarian power survives in modern disguise, how dissent is criminalized, and why Eritrea today is flying on autopilot—with no…

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  • Wobbly Thrones of Tyrants and Echoes of Empires

    Wobbly Thrones of Tyrants and Echoes of Empires

    Ancient empires ruled with swords—today’s regimes rule through propaganda, proxies, and fear. From Baathist Iraq to Abiy’s Ethiopia, the playbook of power, deception, and oppression remains the same. This piece reflects on history, misinformation, and the urgent need for genuine national healing in Eritrea and beyond. #Negarit321

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  • Between Approbation and Anathema Justice Suffers

    Between Approbation and Anathema Justice Suffers

    “The past is never dead. It’s not even past. All of us labor in webs spun long before we were born, webs of heredity and environment, of desire and consequence, of history and eternity.” Faulkner, W. (1955), “Requiem for a Nun” This is a reflection on the insightful conversation between Daniel Teklai and Saleh “Gadi”

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  • Thanks to Dr. MK Omar, Inputs Enriching the Eritrean Library

    Thanks to Dr. MK Omar, Inputs Enriching the Eritrean Library

    Many Eritreans are for sure not well aware of how much poor the Eritrean library still is. Records of the colonial period were themselves scanty on top of being mostly distorted or written by less informed authors. But nothing can be done about that except regretting that it was so. Eritreans of the first two

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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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