Tag: Political Reform

  • 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

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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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  • 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

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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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  • 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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  • 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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  • 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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  • 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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  • 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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