Tag: tyranny

  • Trust Over Terror: Unity Built on a Minimum Agenda

    Trust Over Terror: Unity Built on a Minimum Agenda

    Accra, Ghana. The very air here reminds me of what could have been for Eritrea. In the early 1990s, two nations stood at a crossroads. Ghana chose democracy, and today it stands as West Africa’s most stable and consolidated democracy. Eritrea, tragically, chose tyranny and has become a cautionary tale of what is broken in

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  • 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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  • Crossed Over and Met Seyoum 

    Crossed Over and Met Seyoum 

    [I wrote this article more than  12 years ago (April 25, 2006). I remembered it when I was talking with a friend two days ago and read it. I am republishing it because I think it is still relevant.] I was always intrigued by the idea of talking to the dead. It is even more

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  • Zerom The Liberator

    Zerom The Liberator

    Now that the endless “silver jubilee celebrations in Eritrea are over, and the epic trip of the torch that remained the only featured star on PFDJ’s media for about five months is over, I felt of sharing the following chapter, “The Liberator”, from my latest book “Miriam Was Here”. Consider it my way of expressing the human and

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