In
the brutal misery driving an exodus of Eritreans to Europe, Feruz
Werede sees both a national tragedy and a very personal betrayal.
Werede’s parents belonged to a guerrilla movement that spent 30 years
fighting for Eritrean independence from Ethiopia, finally defeating one
of Africa’s strongest armies in 1993 and propelling charismatic rebel
leader Isaias Afwerki to power.
Since then, Eritrea has had no other president, held no national
elections, and Afwerki has gone from being described by then-President
Bill Clinton as a “renaissance leader,” to being called an “unhinged
dictator” by Washington’s envoy to a country now dubbed the “North Korea
of Africa.”
The United Nations refugee agency says that some 5,000 Eritreans are
fleeing the former Italian colony each month, and outnumber other
nationalities on the Mediterranean Sea crossings that have claimed more
than 3,000 lives this year.
On a chilly autumn evening in a London café, Werede searched her
phone for a photograph of a very different time and place: her parents’
1980 wedding party in what was then a rebel-held region of Ethiopia.
The sepia-tinged image shows four young Eritreans sitting at a table.
Drinks stand in front of them and a crowd mills around behind, as two
men lean in, laughing, to talk to the bride; on the right-hand side,
chatting to the groom, sits Afwerki.
“He was the best man at their wedding,” said Werede, who left Eritrea with her mother in 2001.
“That’s how close they were. So for my parents, what has happened and is happening now in Eritrea is an absolute betrayal.”
Under Afwerki’s increasingly brutal and paranoid 22-year rule,
Eritrea has become one of the world’s poorest, most oppressive and
isolated states, in which the only one way for most of its 4.5 million
people to improve their lives is by leaving.
After Syrians and Afghans, Eritreans are the third-most-common
asylum-seekers arriving in the European Union, and almost all are
granted refugee status; a United Nations report issued in June after a year-long inquiry helped explain why.
The U.N. commission discovered that “systematic, widespread and gross
human rights violations have been and are being committed in Eritrea
under the authority of the government. Some of these violations may
constitute crimes against humanity.”
Under Afwerki’s “rule of fear,” arbitrary detention was found to be
“ubiquitous,” violence against women “perpetrated in an environment of
impunity,” forced labor so prevalent that “all sectors of the economy
rely on it” and torture so widespread that the commission concluded it
must be government policy.
All major rights groups have issued similarly damning reports on
Eritrea, with media watchdog Reporters Without Borders placing it at the
very bottom of its global press freedom index for the last eight years —
below even North Korea.
“The comparison with North Korea is absolutely fair,” said Werede.
“It’s a criminal regime that is corrupt to the core. Under its rule,
there is no chance of change. And everything we hear suggests life there
is only getting worse.”
Eritreans living abroad who are not in conflict with the regime can
return to their homeland, and summer visitors are a key source of
information on the tightly controlled country.
“People who were there recently say there are shortages of food and
electricity, even in the capital Asmara. Some think the government’s
doing it on purpose, to stop people using satellite dishes to watch news
from the outside world,” said Werede.
Telephone and Internet traffic are monitored by the security
services, so it is dangerous for Eritreans to discuss life in the
country with people abroad.
Berhane Asmelash left Eritrea in 1999 and was granted refugee status in the UK five years later.
Berhane Asmelash, a protestant pastor now
living in London who opposes the Afwerki regime, receives email messages
via proxy servers and intermediaries who can travel outside Eritrea
because they are not under suspicion from its sprawling security
services.
One recent evening, he read a message from a contact who told him
that a “friend” and his wife had been arrested after neighbors had
denounced them for holding a prayer meeting in their home — many
protestant churches are outlawed in Eritrea and dozens of Asmelash’s
fellow clergymen have been jailed for long terms.
No news of the couple had been received for two months, and relatives were caring for their children.
“The government says it is every Eritrean’s duty to inform. All taxi
drivers and hotel workers are forced to be informers, so all visitors
are under surveillance,” said Asmelash.
He recalled meeting Eritreans in a refugee camp in neighboring Ethiopia, where a man told him a story about his wedding.
“People were visiting him after the wedding, and two boys there
talked about leaving the country. Someone informed the government. They
arrested the boys and the man too, for being there and not informing. He
was put in jail for four years,” said Asmelash.
“When he got out, he took his bride and crossed the border to Ethiopia. People are jailed like that in Eritrea.”
Asmelash left Eritrea in 1999 to study in the UK, couldn’t return due
to repression of his church and associates; he was granted refugee
status in UK in 2004.
Afwerki trained and studied in China in 1966-67, and Chairman Mao’s
Cultural Revolution of the time is seen as an inspiration for his
imposition of tight state control over Eritrea’s economy, mass
conscription and forced labor.
The rebel movement led by Afwerki espoused Marxism, but he drifted
away from it with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, and now it
is not clear what political and economic vision the 69-year-old is
following for his country.
“They destroyed what we had and replaced it with nothing,” said
Asmelash, whose foreign-funded church organization ran education,
farming, medical and water projects in Eritrea until it was shut down in
2002.
“No one knows what our government is trying to do, or whether they
are still Marxists. All we see is that they are against civilization and
free thinking,” he added, describing how military-run colleges now
dominate higher education in Eritrea.
“The main feature of the regime is paranoia — anything they are not
involved in and do not control, they suspect is against them.”
Afwerki’s allies argue that strict security is essential, given what
they call Ethiopia’s continuing aggression toward Eritrea following a
1998-2000 border war, and alleged efforts by Western powers to provoke
regime change.
Eritrea said June’s U.N. rights report comprised “vile slanders and
wild accusations” aimed at destabilizing a nation that was making
progress against great odds, and claims particular success in improving
health care.
Senior Eritrean diplomat Tesfamicael Gerahtu blamed human traffickers
rather than conditions in the country for driving his compatriots to
Europe, and insisted refugees from other African states were falsely
claiming to be from Eritrea.
"The whole ideological apparatus of the Western countries has been
mobilized against Eritrea, believe it or not,” Gerahtu, Eritrea’s
ambassador to the UK, told Reuters in Geneva in July.
Eritrea and Ethiopia have not signed a peace deal to end a border
conflict that claimed 100,000 lives, and fears of renewed fighting —
constantly whipped up by Eritrean state media — give Afwerki’s military
huge power, and is used to justify a system of 18-months of compulsory
national service which, in reality, can go on indefinitely.
“The right hand of the government is the military, and President
Isaias [Afwerki] rules through different officers,” said Dr. John R
Campbell, an expert on Eritrea at SOAS, the University of London’s
School of Oriental and African Studies
“The country is divided into different zones, each commanded by a
senior officer, and they have carte blanche. Under-age children are
conscripted, and they have extended the age of conscription to include
people in their seventies. There are two types of national service: into
the military or in so-called development projects … a lot of which turn
out to be projects to the benefit of senior officers.”
“People are paid a very low minimum wage, on which they can just
about survive but, when all the farm labor has been conscripted, the
people in rural areas, the older people, just cannot survive,” Campbell
explained.
“There are regular round-ups, called giffa, ostensibly aimed at underage youth to recruit them into the military. Conscription into the military is indefinite,” he added.
“Between the conscription drive, extremely low wages and very
depressed national economy — as well as the political repression —
people have just decided they’ve had enough.”
Eritreans from all sections of society are leaving — in October, 10
players on the national soccer team sought asylum in Botswana after a
game.
The U.N. says more than 300,000 Eritreans — about 7 percent of the
population — are now refugees; more than 100,000 have fled to both
Ethiopia and Sudan, from where many strike out for Europe on a voyage
that can take years, and claims many lives.
“I saw no chance in life, because it seemed they would never release
me from the army,” said Teame Frewengel, who spent 20 years — half his
lifetime — doing national service “in the army, factories, construction —
wherever they made me work.”
“They do everything by force, with violence. They move you around
from place to place, living in a tent in the desert, with no home. They
put me in prison a few times too, because I defied their orders. It’s
like they own you, as if you are their property. So I had to do
something — I had to go.”
In July 2014, Frewengel did something that happens often now in
Eritrea: when he was stationed near the border on guard duty, he just
dropped his weapon and started walking through the desert towards
Ethiopia.
He asked for asylum once there, but like most refugees soon moved on,
using cash sent by relatives to pay people smugglers to move him
through Sudan and Libya, and onto a rubber boat that took him and about
80 others to Italy.
Now he lives in the Netherlands, where he hopes to receive asylum, find a job and be reunited with his wife and three children.
“It is just getting worse and worse in Eritrea,” he said.
“Living there, you might as well be dead.”
The trust and credit that Afwerke earned from his people by leading
their fight for independence is dwindling, and young Eritreans do not
have the same bond, forged through war, which older generations share
with him.
Despite their suffering, Eritreans are still deeply patriotic, and it
stung them to hear how the then-U.S. envoy to Asmara described the
country that they fought for, and for which so many died, in a 2009
cable that he sent to Washington.
“Young Eritreans are fleeing their country in droves, the economy
appears to be in a death spiral, Eritrea's prisons are overflowing, and
the country's unhinged dictator remains cruel and defiant,” Ronald
McMullen wrote.
Six years on, that summary seems truer than ever, but Werede and
Asmelash, like Eritreans all over the world, still feel great nostalgia
for home.
“It’s a small country with everything: mountains, forest, desert and
seaside,” Asmelash said in a London café, as locals hurried past in the
early evening gloom, heads bowed under autumn rain.
“Asmara is at nearly 8,000 feet, but the seaside is just 70 miles
away, and the drive is beautiful. We had good infrastructure, well built
towns, roads and hotels, and great Italian food even in small towns,”
he recalled.
Feruz Werede left Eritrea with her mother in 2001.
“It’s impossible to live there now, but I really miss my country.”
Werede also longs for Eritrea’s “Italian architecture, palm trees,
pastries and cappuccino”, and remembers the joy that came with victory
for the rebel forces of Afwerki and her parents.
“On independence day, when the rebels entered Asmara, I was woken by
people shooting into the sky with happiness. There was euphoria,” she
said.
“I think we were blinded, and we didn’t realize what was going on
until the border war erupted in 1998. We are very patriotic, and we
trusted the government.”
Unlike Asmelash however, Werede believes she will go home, and that
her three children will experience all the things that she and her
parents love, and miss, about Eritrea.
“We have learned our lesson. We got independence the hard way and then we got betrayed, big time,” Werede said.
“I think that when we finally get our country back, we’ll do things right.”
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