Tag: JusticeForEritrea

  • Sept. 18, 2001: The Day Memory Was Criminalized

    Sept. 18, 2001: The Day Memory Was Criminalized

    Eritrea’s Day of Infamy: The Day Liberty Died Some days do not merely pass into history—they haunt it. September 18, 2001, is one such day: a wound unhealed, a silence unbroken, a betrayal unforgotten. It is Eritrea’s Day of Infamy—the day memory itself was criminalized. It is the day the regime drained the oxygen of

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  • Reframing Eritrea’s Post-Independence Paradox

    Reframing Eritrea’s Post-Independence Paradox

    For more than three decades, the story of Eritrea has been told in a narrow and predictable register. It begins with the extraordinary military triumph of 1991, moves quickly to the UN-supervised referendum of 1993, pauses briefly on the promise of constitutional drafting, and then hammers home the familiar conclusion: a descent into authoritarianism and

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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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