Refugees and migrants line up to board the passenger ship
"Eleftherios Venizelos" heading to the port of Piraeus, at the port on
the island of Lesbos, Greece September 7, 2015. Eritreans make up the
third largest group of people fleeing their home countries for Europe.
Image by: REUTERS
Here's why:
Eritreans have endured President Isaias Afwerki's
iron-fisted dictatorship for 22-years. Conscripts are forced into
decades-long military service, then exploited as slave labour for the
state.
So desperate are ordinary young people to leave they crawl
under razor wire, tiptoe across minefields and sneak past armed border
guards in their bid for freedom.
In the past, entire Eritrean
football teams have absconded while playing in tournaments abroad and
fighter jet pilots have escaped in their aircraft.
Eritrea
regularly features at the bottom of world lists for political and media
freedoms, freedom of expression and human rights.
Political
opponents are routinely arrested, tortured, locked-up without trial or
simply disappear. The government routinely spies on citizens.
In
2014, independent watchdog organisation Freedom House gave the country a
rating of 94 for press freedom - with 100 being the worst.
This year's Reporters Without Borders World Press Freedom Index placed the country plum last, behind North Korea.
A
June report by the United Nations human rights office -- dismissed by
the Eritrean government - spoke of systematic and widespread "gross
human rights violations," including mass incarceration of political
opponents, extrajudicial killings and torture.
Isaias, 69, took
power in 1993, two years after winning a three-decade long independence
war with Ethiopia. He founded and still heads the country's only
political party, the People's Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ).
A former US ambassador described Isaias as an "unhinged dictator" who is "cruel and defiant".
There is no political opposition, no elections and no independent media. Even religious freedom is curtailed.
This
year's annual report by the United States Commission on International
Religious Freedom reported that "systematic, ongoing and egregious
religious freedom violations continue in Eritrea".
A new, multiparty constitution was ratified in 1997 but never implemented.
Even
before the imposition of UN sanctions in 2009, the economy was in the
doldrums and Eritrea remains one of the world's poorest countries. The
economy - like everything else - is tightly state-controlled.
Isaias rejects foreign aid while the mining sector accounts for scant foreign investment.
Eritrea's
troubles are not restricted to its own borders. Bad blood remains with
Ethiopia, going back to a renewed border war in 1998, while 2008 saw
skirmishes with Djibouti.
Isaias is widely accused of sponsoring
regional rebels including Al-Qaeda affiliate the Shebab, which operates
in Somalia and Kenya. Asmara has always denied those claims.
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