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Eritrea: ‘The sheer numbers of people fleeing tell the story’

There is no better symbol of the failure of the Eritrean state than the thousands of refugees who abandon it every week, searching for a better life – even when escaping is often more dangerous than staying

There is no better symbol of the failure of the Eritrean state than the thousands of refugees who abandon it every week, searching for a better life – even when escaping is often more dangerous than staying put. SIMON ALLISON spoke to Dan Connell, a long-time Eritrea watcher, about the perils that await Eritrean refugees, and why they are so desperate to leave in the first place.

Outside of Eritrea itself, there are very few people that know now the country as well as Dan Connell, a journalist, an academic, and now a visiting scholar at Boston University’s African Studies Center. As a foreign correspondent for the Washington Post, he spent months in the trenches with the Eritrean freedom fighters. Post-independence he worked closely with the new government, before becoming one of its fiercest critics – his outspokenness earning him permanent Persona Non Grata status. He’s now one of the world’s leading experts on Eritrean politics, having published seven books on the subject.

 

The Daily Maverick caught up with him at the University of Pretoria. He’s here to highlight one of the many under-reported consequences of Eritrea’s decline: the vast exodus of young Eritreans into surrounding countries, looking for a better life but often falling into the clutches of human traffickers.

SIMON ALLISON: Despite its perils, many Eritreans are risking a dangerous border crossing – the army is authorised to shoot would-be refugees on sight – to escape their country. What are they fleeing from, and why in such large numbers?

DAN CONNELL: Firstly, the UN has counted some 300,000 Eritreans leaving in recent years, out of a population variously estimated at 4-5million, and there are many who are not registered and the UN doesn’t have count of. So you’re really talking a significant share of the population. What distinguishes this flow of refugees is the very significant percentage, maybe 45%, are young people, say 16-25 years. The factor that is driving most is the imposition of an indefinite program of national service, the conscription of the young people into military service and also in many cases indentured servitude to the state, working on government or ruling party enterprises. Terms that were initially defined as 18 months have turned into eight or ten years or longer and I think many of the young people just see absolutely no future for themselves. They fear the possibility that if they get out of line in the situation they’ll end up detained, perhaps tortured, perhaps killed.

Getting out of Eritrea is not a solution in itself. Eritrea’s neighbours (Djibouti, Ethiopia, Sudan, Yemen) have their own problems. What makes Eritrean refugees particularly vulnerable?

Many of the Eritreans coming out are of Christian background and particularly when they move into Sudan, a country into Islamist rule, they find themselves isolated, cut off from opportunities within the country and in some cases targeted for discrimination or worse – the human traffickingoperation. [Human trafficking] has involved the kidnapping of refugees, the transport to the Sinai in the past and increasingly now the detention within secret spots in Sudan, where they are tortured and forced to demand ransom payments from relatives living abroad, anywhere from the US to Europe to Israel or sometimes inside Eritrea. These ransoms have run into the area of $30,000-$40,000 dollars so the trade here has become a very lucrative business for the traffickers and a very ugly one for the Eritreans. I think what is remarkable about this is with the dangers of being caught up in this trafficking ring, coupled with the dangers of simply trying to cross the Sahara or to get out through other means, where so many have died trying, illustrates just how driven people are to leave in the first place.

Coming into today’s talk, I know you were concerned about possible disruption from pro-government supporters, and I know you’ve had disruptions before. Even for myself, writing about Eritrea, the comments get very personal and very threatening. What sort of issues have you faced trying to cover Eritrea?

I think the Eritrean community itself is clearly deeply divided. There are people who are passionately supportive of the country, there are also people who support the government more by default because they fear the threat of Ethiopia, and they buy the argument that they can’t criticise the government without weakening its defence of the country. On the other side, there are people who are extremely disturbed over the political repression and the lack of economic advance within the country that everybody believed was possible in the 1990s. And there’s a very large middle ground of people who really want to see everybody somehow have a chance to get back and engage with Eritrea and get along, and are the so-called silent majority in this. The two extremes are fairly passionate. The response to criticism of the regime of course inside Eritrea has been arrest, detention, disappearance, torture…it’s not really surprising that the mirror to that outside is disruption and efforts to stop conversations about opposition.

My general take on this is that the comments on articles, the shouting at events, is really from a fairly small minority of people. In the case of the event we had today, there was a set of talking points five pages long that was distributed – we heard two of the questions from the talking points asked today, I saw a copy of it before I came in [So did the Daily Maverick. Sure enough, questions from the talking points were asked verbatim]. So it was a very well-organised and orchestrated attempt…The questions that were asked obviously didn’t reflect somebody who had even listened to what I had to say. They were pre-programmed, and I think that again is an indication of how the government tries to deal with criticism. It just can’t tolerate it.

Who would be distributing the talking points?

Supporters of the government or members of the ruling party who are here in the diaspora. They are a minority. Eritreans in South Africa, I think a significant number, are here trying simply to keep their heads down and get by. Many fear public criticism will make it difficult for them to go home, difficult for their relatives who are at home, because repression is often visited on families inside Eritrea, but there is a significant contingent here of Eritreans supporting the transition to democracy, the recognition of the country’s long-dormant constitution, and some of them were also here today.

Speaking to South African diplomats, they paint a very different, a very rosy picture of what’s happening in Eritrea. What do you make of this position?

…You know, the sheer numbers of people fleeing the country tell a story itself. The people are voting with their feet, and to try suggest that a population known for its fierce nationalism would be churning people out to go elsewhere, it just doesn’t make sense. I’m sorry, when the diplomats make that argument I think the answer is alright, open up the country, let us come in and see for ourselves.

You’ve been involved in Eritrea for a long time – in the trenches during the civil war, working alongside the new government after independence. Now you’ve been madepersona non grata. You can’t go back. How does this make you feel?

I feel like a part of me has been cut off. It’s my second country in many respects…I am deeply invested in the country, I have many very close personal friends there, and I believe deeply in Eritrea’s possibility as a society and as a new kind of state in Africa. I look forward to the opportunity to go back once the regime changes, and I am hopeful that that will take place within the next 3-5 years.

That’s a very specific time frame. What’s your logic?

I think the president of the country [Isaias Afewerki] has complicated health problems. This is not the kind of country where you’ll see a popular uprising. Fear is too great. Fear not only of the regime, but also of course Ethiopia outside, and as long as they can wield that stick they will manage to keep the repressive regime in place. This is one of the reasons I have been repeatedly calling for international efforts to end the border conflict between the two countries to strip that away from the regime as an excuse to keep their heel on the population. DM

Photo: President of Eritrea Issayas Afewerki attends a news conference with European Commissioner for Development and Humanitarian Aid Louis Michel (not pictured) after their meeting at the European Commission headquarter in Brussels, Belgium, 04 May 2007. EPA/OLIVIER HOSLET

Source:dailymaverick.co.za

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Review overview
55 COMMENTS
  • Mihretu Berhe May 14, 2014

    “I look forward to the opportunity to go back once the regime changes, and I am hopeful that that will take place within the next 3-5 years.” Dan Connell. This man is very calculating,As Dan said, I am sure Isaias will go to the eleventh floor in the coming two to three years. But what we are going to do after the depart of this evil man? It’s our homework guys. There are people out there who want us to go to deep shit after Isaias left. To make them angry and hopeless we have to unite NOW NOW NOW…

  • Sraj saleh May 14, 2014

    Dan Connell ,

    No matter what kind problems we have with our government ,I think it should be left for us meaning that’s shouldn’t be your business. We probably though people like Dan Connell helped us before but that was because we didn’t know what we know about them now so Dan if you think you helped us thank you but your help will not be needed anymore. The eritrean people well aware of people like Dan Connell so please try your business somewhere else. Your dream about Eritrea will never come true but the eritrean people dream will but you will not be welcome so please think about your retirement plan instead of wasting your time trying to mess up Eritrea people. No matter what you say or write , you are wasting your time mr. None sense.

    • Wedi Mendefera May 14, 2014

      Sraj,

      You wrote: “Dan if you think you helped us thank you but your help will not be needed anymore”.

      I am not surprised. You are typical Isaias follower. Use, abuse and throw away.

      How fast do you forget Dan? He was introducing Eritrean struggle to the world probably before you were born.

      How sad!! Eritrean is going to hell with few opportunits like you

    • TwoWayStreet May 15, 2014

      Siraj, This guy worked with the EPLF during the 30 year struggle for independence. He believed in the popular struggle and EPLF sought his help in many ways. one of which was to write and talk about the Eritrean struggle, so that the whole world will know that Eritrea was waging a just war. So he wrote and spoke on the side of the Eritrean people then.

      And now that is what he is doing, talking and writing about Eritreans for the world to know and to act. We needed his assistance then and we need his assistance now. If you Siraj did not want his assistance just don’t pay attention to him, he does not want your approval to do a noble thing.
      As for Don Connell I say Keep up the good work.

      • Sraj saleh May 15, 2014

        Twowatstreet

        I know he was in Eritrea during armed struggle but I don’t think the reason he was there was to help us. I don’t know exactly who he was working for but I am sure he was working somebody else other than Eritrea people or EPLF. Anyway no matter what he was doing back then we really don’t need his help today. I don’t really have a problem if you guys want give him credit for the past but now there is no way people like him will be needed here. No thank mr. Dan Connell, your help is not needed anymore. We have a lot of well educated people who can help us bring the change we need.

    • Sorobeti May 15, 2014

      Siraj Salih

      I think you a brother of Adam Salih, who was taking in one dark night by gangsters of DIA in 1996 and disappeared with several hundreds of faith prisoners. Siraj, is there any news of your brother Adam?

    • Genet-orginal May 15, 2014

      Sraj saleh
      This is not your real name.
      And nobody expect you to say any different, because you are pr-programmed zombie. I am sure Isaias is very proud of his perfect product. zombie is zombie, zombie, zombie until awaken.
      Genet

  • Yerhiwo May 14, 2014

    Dan Connell thank you for your relentless effort to expose the Mafia regime ruling Eritrea. No other foreigner knows them better than you! You had known and interviewed the veteran fighters who are vanished in “EraEro” prison. I know how you feel when you see failed state Eritrea now. Eritrean people have high ambition about their “liberated” country…but has changed from bad to worse. Eritrea under Dictator Isaias Afwerki, Hagos Kisha and Yemane Monkey is living by lies. People are dying everywhere in sea, desert, in jails, etc. Many educated engineers and doctors, artists, politicians, football players, have left the country. Very sad indeed!!

    As to those supporters of the regime, Yemane Monkey is responsible for organizing and inciting anti-democracy and anti-American sentiment. They are supporting a country that is lawless and under UN sanction for supporting Al-shebab terrorist group in Somalia.

    For those that disrupt meetings, the best remedy is to jail them in the spot!!! Most of them are empty who are messengers of Yemane Monkey. Many Eritreans are afraid of going to jail or to have any criminal record. This is the only solution to stop these hooligans who support a terrorist regime led by Dictator Isaias Afwerki.

    Mr. Dan Connell, the Eritrean people thank you and will thank you more when thee Dictator in Eritrea is charged by ICC. Please help Dr. Tewolde Tesfamariam (Wedi Vacaro) in his effort to take the charges to the criminal court in Hague.

  • Dala ksha May 14, 2014

    Srajo
    you don’t represent us talk about yourself ,and do not forget Dan has done better job for Eritrea than you do.

  • Bus.Zone May 14, 2014

    You do not have to be brain surgeon to know people are fleeing the BIG BLACk HOLE (ERITREA ) unless your one of those people who has to lose that much once HEGDF regimes collapse or those mouthpiece who comes in here with 50 different names ,and
    vomit their narrow-minded thought in this forms sooner or later we will make you history like your grand father( Haile Selassie ) and we will reclaim our nation.

  • Lora G/Micheal May 14, 2014

    Dan Connell, God bless you. We need all the voices that can expose the truth about Eritrea’s suffering. No doubt the betrayer mafia regime will come to an end. We just have to remain strong as usual by uniting. We can do it because history has shown that Eritreans possess an amazing resilience.

  • Hidat May 15, 2014

    AYEE BEAL DAN KOLLELLLLL BEAL NAZINET KIKARAREB KELOS GURAT EYU ZIHIZEKUM SUK ILKUM WUHATIWA

    ERITRA KEXIKA MIETAW YELEN

    • MightyEmbasoyra May 15, 2014

      hidat,
      You and Prof. Dan are in different wavelength, actually you are using completely different modulation. As you know, this fine gentleman was a true friend to Eritrea (not to isayas btw – some people confuse isayas with Eritrea), and he is till a friend to our troubled country. I wish many Eritreans care 10% of him.
      So, my advise to you is have some respect, at least for a simple reason – he knows and cares about Eritrea more than you can imagine.
      Before I forget, please try to hangout with our ladies of the house: Genet/Selemawit2/WaEro/Rahwa, etc. It will be good for your soul and brain. Why? Because I care about you.

      • rahwa May 15, 2014

        Mighty my brother,
        hidat is some kind of a fanatic, i am afraid. there is no hope for her. we Eritreans need to pity her because although she is still breathing and everything, her mind is not working properly. a woman is a mother whether she happens to have children of her own or not. and we know what a mother is, don’t we? she is not only loving and caring but she is also known and appreciated for the unconditional love she has for her children. therefore, we can conclude that hidat is not a mother not because she could not be but because she does not want to be. and that is the worst that could happen to a woman. and hidat is suffering from this type of disease. very dangerous, in deed. a mother who forsakes her children in their time of need is worse that the one who is oppressing them. it is in fact very alarming to ses Mr. Dan Connell, a man act in a perfectly motherly way towards HIS people (Eritrean people b/s he is one of us) when people like hidat are doing (in this case saying) everything they can to help eseyas stay in power while our people is suffering.

      • Genet-orginal May 15, 2014

        Brother Mighty and sister rahwa
        You guys are great! Mighty, when I read your comment recommending, miss nut-job hidat to hangout with us, I thought what have we done to deserve that kind of punishment? But I know, you meant well. I know hidat here at Assenna. For the most part, I intentionally ignore her. She doesn’t really bring any substance to any discussion or topic. She tend to concentrate on the person not on the issue. rahwa, you brought a good point about “hidat”, how emotionally void she is. For any Eritrean woman, voluntarily to support Isayas and his PFDJ network is unconscionable. hidat is a victim herself. A victim of a very bad man, who possessed her spirit and soul. She is not a man or woman. She is this “thing”. She has no respect for any one. No Eritrean with a right mind will open his/her mouth to defend a dictator. A dictator with no conscious is not supposed to be supported. For any Eritrean woman to support this dictator, the enemy of our people, the worst enemy of Eritrean women and children is not normal, to say the least. I wonder if hidat comprehend the significant of any woman loosing her infant baby while drowning. She has the audacity to come here and defend the indefensible crime of all time.
        I don’t think rehabilitation will do any thing for her, because she is a lost soul.
        Genet

        • rahwa May 15, 2014

          you are so right Genet-Original. she is a thing. thank you for finding the right word for her. she is so out there. what a zombie!

          • MightyEmbasoyra May 16, 2014

            Sisters Genet and Rahwa,
            Don’t underestimate your comments here at Assenna. I believe you are converting many isayas followers to have independent thinking and I still have a hope for our sister to join you. Keep doing your best to pull he in. One act of random kindness at a time!

          • MightyEmbasoyra May 16, 2014

            meant to say “Keep doing your best to pull her in”

  • Semira May 15, 2014

    Congratulations Dan Connell for exposing the tyrant dictatorand his blind followers.
    You stood for what you believe in. You represented Eritrean people and you stood against the mad dog tyrant dictator Isayas, his blind followers HIGDEF and his burned flag.
    We will liberate our land and our people.
    Let freedom ring in Senhit, Keren!
    Let freedom ring in Akeleguzay, Adi keyih!
    Let freedom ring in Denkel, Asseb!
    Let freedom ring in Barka, akurdet!
    Let freedom ring in Sahil Nakfa!
    Let freedom ring in Seraye, Adi Ugri!
    Let freedom ring in Hamassien, Asmera!
    Let freedom ring in Semhar, Massawa!

    Eritrea will be free soon.
    Our original Eritrean Liberation Flag, our martyrs flag, the flag of our forefathers, the flag that represent all our provinces and our nationalities will be allover Eritrea and allover the world and at the United Nations!

    Shighey abbey ala?
    Washington besiha ala!

    • Sraj saleh May 15, 2014

      Semira

      You sound none sense because Dan Connell doesn’t know anything about Eritrea or the dictator but we have a lot of eritrean who knows all that we need to know but we have no respect for them. Just because Dan Connell is a white man doesn’t mean he knows all about every country in the world so please let’s start respecting ourself and let’s mr. Dan and other foreigners stay away out off our business. Why do you think mr. Dan Connell spent so much time in eritrean politic? To help Eritrea , I don’t think so . I think by now most of us know what his life time mission is and he will never win in Eritrea but about getting rid of the dictator it might take us some time but we will bring change our self with out help from people like Dan Connell .

  • Yoel Lino May 15, 2014

    In a free and democratic Eritrea, Dan connel is an Eritrean. No one has the right to be more Eritrean than him. Those who r attacking them r those who have been attacking G15 and the rest pro justice Eritreans.

  • Natu May 15, 2014

    @Dan Connell,

    I would like first to mention it, that I am not the friend of the dictatorial regime in my beloved country. Further I find it ridiculous whr now Mr Connell tries with his whole power, whether direct or indirect to destroy a country he has brought from the beginning of the Gedli time till the independence so far.

    Obviously we Eritreans want to get rid of the bustard Dictator and his cronmies who are regning with cruelty. BUT people like MR Connell have to search here nothing more!!!! They (CIA) let the dictator in the past grow so far until the U-turn is reached. Now, they catalyse the proces to their target – the evil secrets already designed in the past.

    This is now an Eritrean home work, no matter whether we fail to remove the dictator or not. One thing is sure, a change comes! Also when we don’t succeed, it is just natural that a new generation wants a new developed system.

    Mr Connell, what have you solved yet as an American (the most powerfull nation), though you could? The situation now has a direct relationship with the interference with the intelligences from outside, like you.

    Therefore The failure of the Eritrean state now is the product of your achievements and the cause for the Leaving of the thousands of refugees every week, searching for just not a better but another life, belong to the milestones of your old secretive project still running. You and your likes have set our country in state, where there is neither a government nor a functioning opposition, so ready to take for ” mama Ethiopia ” !

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