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Eritrea and the Responsibility to Project

Article: Edward Miller "From the standpoint of justice, the opinions of the Eritrean people must receive consideration. Nevertheless, the strategic interest of the United States in the Red Sea basin and considerations of security and

Article: Edward Miller

“From the standpoint of justice, the opinions of the Eritrean people must receive consideration. Nevertheless, the strategic interest of the United States in the Red Sea basin and considerations of security and world peace make it necessary that the country has to be linked with our ally, Ethiopia.”
~John Foster Dulles, 1950.

The chronic drought that has engulfed the Horn of Africa this year is a perfect storm of climate change, failed economic policies and financial speculation, with enormous national security implications. While the world watches developed countries like the United States, Australia and Canada frustrate a comprehensive climate deal in Durban, the latest round of sanctions imposed by the United Nations Security Council upon Eritirea threatens the national sovereignty of one of Africa’s poorest countries.

The Sanctions

The primary factor driving these sanctions has been the persistent security situation in Somalia and Asmara’s alleged support to Al Shabaab militants that control the Southern regions of Somalia, as well as other groups in Djibouti, Ethiopia and the Sudan. A July 2011 report from the Security Council’s Monitoring Group in Somalia and Eritrea details support for armed opposition groups by “a small but efficient team of officers from the National Security Office, the Eritrean military and the PFDJ [the People’s Front for Democracy and Justice] leadership under direct supervision of the President’s Office, ” in violation of the arms embargo imposed by a previous sanctions.

Resolution 2023 passed 13-0 (with Russia and China abstaining, as they did during successive rounds of sanctions against Libya) on 5 December and serves as a reminder more than anything else. Following on from Resolutions 1844 (2008) and 1907 (Christmas eve, 2009) that prohibit the supply of arms or other military hardware to Eritrea and prohibit Eritrea from supporting armed groups in the region, this resolution compels countries to “undertake appropriate measures to promote the exercise of vigilance” over individuals and corporations engaging in business in Eritrea.

Penned by Gabon, these measures have been watered-down from those originally proposed that would have strangled the nascent mining industry of investment. The vast majority of Eritreans are engaged agriculture, and, despite the government exercising options to purchase stakes in the mining projects, there is virtually no trickle-down effect and it is thought that much of the national budget goes towards military expenditure (the government of Eritrea does not publish budget statements).

The world’s mining giants have begun to sinking their teeth into the resource rich country, with Canadian gold producer Nevsun Resources expecting to pull 1.14 million ounces of gold, 11.9 million ounces of silver, 821 million pounds of copper and over a billion pounds of zinc out of the enormous Bisha Project, where commercial production began in February 2011. Australia’s Chalice Gold Mines was also recently granted two new exploration licences close to Bisha. As well as Eritrean minerals, the Horn of Africa is also seen as a key chokepoint for the world economy, since 30% of the oil supplied to the West must sail past its shores.

Drought Patrol

Eritrean nationals are beset on all sides by persistent poverty and threats to their safety. Postcolonial independence was frustrated in the wake of World War II and the region was entrusted to the tutelage of Ethiopia in 1952; under Ethiopian sovereignty Eritreans enjoyed little formal recognition. The Eritrean War of Independence (estimated to have claimed the lives of two or three members of every Eritrean family) lasted for 30 years from 1961, and as the Cold War thawed the US brokered peace talks. A UN-administered referendum established Eritrea’s independence and recognition of their formal sovereignty commenced on 28 May 1993. The paternal legacy of colonialism and continuing interference has lent Eritrea’s ruling regime a deep distrust of its neighbours, especially along the still-disputed Ethiopian borders, where continuing conflict claimed 70,000 casualties between 1998 and 2000.

While the government of Isias Afwerki continues to adhere to its dogma of self-reliance and vehemently refuses international aid, drought and famine remain omnipresent threats in the region. Two consecutive poor raining seasons, increasing demand for land and water for commercial agribusiness (especially in Ethiopia) and aid practices oriented around market-friendly but water-hungry cash crops, have made 2011 a very difficult year for the Horn of Africa. When coupled with soaring commodity prices on international markets, the result of financial speculation by the world’s biggest banks and hedge funds, famine, malnourishment and infant mortality has become commonplace throughout East Africa.

It is unclear what the impact of this drought has been on Eritrea. The Eritrean government has protested that the humanitarian situation there has not deteriorated and they are largely immune to the drought’s impacts due to a bumper crop earlier in the year. Still, we must remain very careful about the information that comes out of Eritrea, given the government’s reputation for arresting foreign journalists (recently outranking North Korea in journalist imprisonment in a Report by the Committee to Protect Journalists) and the nationwide ban on foreign media that has earned Eritrea the lowest national press freedom ranking of any country (Reporters without Borders). Some international agencies have even accused Eritrea of hiding the victims of the drought, however little information appears to permeate outside national borders.

Earlier in the year malnourished Eritreans were reported to be crossing the border at a rate of 900 a month and weather-mapping technology indicates that Eritrea has suffered from similarly low rainfall as other countries in the Horn. The USAID agency Famine Early Warning Systems Network have estimated the need for emergency relief at 1.9 million (out of a total population on 5.1 million), warning in September that poor rainfall would likely soon result in a total failure of long-cycle crops and below average harvest of short-cycle crops. Other aid organizations have made different pronouncements, such as the German Terra Tech which argues that Eritrea has avoided famine thanks to the implementation climate-sensitive irrigation systems. Aid worker Gordon Peters from the World Development Movement goes further, claiming that Eritrea’s practice of self-sustainability has forced it outside the officially sanctioned discourses of development. Given USAID’s vested interest in seeing international aid projects enter Eritrea, especially those sanctioned by the Bretton Woods institutions, and Asmara’s hostility towards the West, it is difficult to know exactly where the truth lies.

Constructing the Responsibility to Project

The pretext for a further round of sanctions has been, unpredictably, the continuing threat of terrorism from radical Islamic extremist groups. Critical readers will quickly see this as a window for the projection of power, which, when coupled with the pressing moral dilemmas of disaster relief, creates a compelling sense of responsibility for intervention. Eritrea’s demonization has primarily stemmed from its support for Al-Shabaab, the designated terrorist organization that has gained increasing notoriety in light of its ban on Western aid groups operating in territories under their control. Yet it is important to understand the rise of al-Shabaab as a product of failed Western policies in the Horn of Africa to defend its economic interests.

Somalia’s last stable government, led by Marxist despot Siad Barre, crumbled under its own weight in 1991 and the country entered a chaotic power vacuum and ongoing civil war, punctuated by the infamous “Black Hawk Down” incident and the wholesale withdrawal of Western influence from the region. Tribal warlords provided some structure (if not stability), but it was the ascent of sharia-based Islamic courts that filled this vacuum; initially settling disputes, they subsequently developing other services such as healthcare, education and localized policing. The courts became more respected by locals and organized into the Islamic Courts Union, proving to be the most stable arrangement in Somalia since Barre.

Despite an official policy of denial from the Eritrean government, jurists and political leaders from the ICU admitted to receiving assistance from Asmara. The warlords that controlled Mogadishu united in reaction to the ICU’s growing power (forming the Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism), but by mid-2006 the ICU had claimed control of Mogadishu and surrounding areas, cleaning up the streets and re-opening Mogadishu airport. Most warlords had either fled or been captured.

As the ICU increasingly won popular support, the UN- and US-sponsored Transitional Federal Government based in Baidoa (northwest of Mogadishu) was established in 2004. Washington’s opposition to the ICU’s rise was aimed at the ICU’s limited connections with al-Qaeda and the protection it provided to three individuals involved in the 1998 Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. A JSOC Task Force of 900 was assigned to Camp Lemonier in Djibouti, while many of the warlords that remained in Somalia were progressively bought off by the West.

Through their East African fortress power Ethiopia (which receives US$7 billion annually in aid from Washington), the US began a proxy invasion of Somalia, sending Ethiopian troops into Somali territory from mid-2006 onwards, with heavy fighting breaking out in December with a force of 40,000-50,000 troops. US airpower gave the Ethiopian forces a strong military advantage. It was a bloodbath peppered with extrajudicial killings, as the Ethiopian troops were determined to stop the spread of what they had been sold as a global jihadist agenda. Skirmishes through the month led to the fall of Mogadishu in December 28 and the withdrawal of the ICU to the Jubba River area, while leaders vowed to continue their struggle through guerilla tactics. While moderate members of the Union that had fled to Eritrea and Djibouti reentered the fold as the TFG assumed official control of the country, uncompromising Islamists factions splintered off, of which al-Shabaab is the largest. As investigative reporter Jeremy Scahill explains:

“Although there was certainly a small Al Qaeda presence in Somalia before the United States launched its operations—and Islamic militants did carry out assassinations, including the killing of four foreign aid workers in the relatively peaceful Somaliland region in late 2003 and early 2004—the actions of [secular war-lord] Qanyare and his fellow CIA-backed warlords gave the Islamic militants fodder for an effective propaganda and recruitment campaign.”

al-Shabaab’s focus has been on the Southern and Western areas of Somalia, and indeed their claim to territory is much greater than that of the TFG (who really only hold Mogadishu). Their calls for jihad against the Ethiopian invaders and the TFG began in early 2007, and by August 2008 they had achieved a military victory over TFG forces at Kismayo. They have claimed responsibility for a huge number of atrocities throughout Somalia, as well as the 2010 Kampala attacks, and have sought to expel all Western influence from the country, including aid organizations sent to Somalia to deal with the drought, is seen to encompass a double agenda.

Support for al Shabaab is not the only limb of the agenda to discredit the Eritrean regime and establish the responsibility to project American power, and a recent wikileaks cable has shed some light on one of the more sinister elements. Recently released US State Department cables have shed more light on the secret campaign the US and Ethiopia have embarked on together to discredit al-Shabaab and the Eritrean state. There an embassy source revealed that a September 2006 bombing in Addis Ababa that was publicly credited to the Oromo Liberation Front and the the assistance of the Eritrean government, “may have in fact been the work of the GoE [Government of Ethiopia] security forces.”

The latest round of sanctions exists largely to reinforce the proposed threat from the Eritrean regime. And while many criticisms can be leveled at the Eritrean government, our responses to these must be couched in a manner that does not hand the country and its people over to international agribusiness and mining firms whose only interests lie in extractive endeavours, with scant regard for the Eritreans themselves who suffer at the hands of both an oppressive government and an oppressive international response.

ENDS

Scoop Independent News

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
17 COMMENTS
  • Weldit December 18, 2011

    “From the standpoint of justice, the opinions of the Eritrean people must receive consideration. Nevertheless, the strategic interest of the United States in the Red Sea basin and considerations of security and world peace make it necessary that the country has to be linked with our ally, Ethiopia.”
    ~John Foster Dulles, 1950.
    This is the quote the PFDJ loves to quote to explain the causes of the current standoff with America.

    • ahmed saleh December 18, 2011

      This all political scenario in horn Africa is man made induced problematic venom
      which has root all the way to 40-50 years back. It sad to observe some politicians
      to repeat same stupid mistakes just for the aim to strengthen they own agendas.
      Those leaders failure on dealing on their foreign and internal political affairs let the
      countries to scramble on this unfortunate atmosphere. Unless the situations couldn’t be upturned, innocent civilians particularly children and elderly wuold become valnurable for sufferings. What we need is a lasting answer for our demand of democratic reform and a new democratic nation of Somalia. By then we might have a little peace of mind on that region.

  • MEHRETU HABTE December 18, 2011

    Although ,I am no friend of ,PFDJ ,AKA SHAIBIYA , on the famine issue ,I tend to believe more ,the North Korea of Africa, AKA,ERITREA , that “there is no famine “. One of the strong sides of the bandits in Eritrea /PFDJ, is economic planning at a basic level ,not considering economic growth. Even when they were Guerilla /Gorillas ,they distributed to the villagers in a very efficient manner.
    PFDJ /.MUDADA /SHAIBIYA, does malnourish it´s 5,000,000 slaves /people .however ,I am not sure it has reached the way it is suspected by the media, to the famine stage. With famine , the slaves can not dig a trench ,or guard prisons .THERE IS A FAMINE OF COMMONSENSE ,IDENTITY & TRUE COMPASSION.

    • eritrawit December 19, 2011

      MEHRETU HABTE

      please have respect don’t call names if u are Eritrean of course. other wise leav us alone, we will deal with our dictator and crazy pfdj supporters.
      WHAT ARE U TALKING ABOUT ??? slaves ? and shabia is not PFDJ. I belive our liberation and free nation Eritrea is hijacked by PFDJ in 1991.

      • Ahmed saleh December 19, 2011

        Mebrahtu
        To discredit Shaebia is not acceptable, do not forget they paid their
        Life dearly to our freedom. Most of us lost members of our own
        Family under umbrella of the front. So, we suppose to show them
        respect. PFDJ is ruling party who destroy SHAEBIA. It is important
        to understand what we are opposing for in civility & respect.

        • Ahmed saleh December 19, 2011

          Sorry I mean Mehretu not Mebrahtu.

      • Abnet Tesfai December 19, 2011

        eritrawit
        well done… I appreciate
        Shabia and PFDJ are two different bodies. shabia refers to the true Eritrean fighters during the armed struggle and all who continued to serve their people regardless the obstacles from the dictator as shabia means Hzbawi in arabic. therefore, Issayas/PFDJ has abducted the Eritrean liberation, killed and imprisoned Eritrean fighters, chased the new generation to exile. finally he became dictator #1 in the world.
        thus it is wise not to mention shabia and PFDJ interchangeably.

  • Fanko December 18, 2011

    Mr T’s questions are valid
    Here are the questions that I have been asking for the last two weeks:
    1. Why was Daniel Tewelde denied of participating in the meeting while those who violated his rights were allowed?
    2. Why were highland Eritreans who reside in Australia, the Sudan and the Middle East not represented in the meeting?
    3. Why were the names, political affiliations and place of residence of the 600 souls who participated in the meeting not revealed to the Eritrean people?
    What are you afraid of?
    So is the link
    http://www.harnnet.org/images/stories/rmicn/National%20Congress%20in%20the%20Name%20of%20People!/index.html

    \

    • ahmed saleh December 19, 2011

      Who make it valid? why do not lost from this forum both of you cowards.
      You were Haki Tezareb yasterday and your friend was Tsehaye. I told you
      before, we real Eritreans are straight forward and we don ‘t like dishonesty.

      • Huluf December 19, 2011

        Ahmed Saleh,

        I completely support your disagreement point of view to Fanko, but it is dangerous to chase him out and we need to be unafrad to hear other’s point of view however riduculous we seem to think.
        You can not be an advocate of free speech and fear one that you do not like or want to hear it. How is he waging a war by asking as to why someone or an Eritrean or the Daniel he mentions was not participant? It is an inforamation he has and you have and that I do not. Those like me need and deserve to hear both sides.
        The danger is you give an impression there is an agenda you target than an objective. We all must chase with objective for our country i.e equal justice, equal freedom and equal representaion. No games, no agenda. No one and none I repeat will be able to do be better as an organization to do better in acieveing an agenda like HGDEF. DIA is one of world’s best in organizing t oachieve an agenda. Agenda’s out date not objectives. I urge you to be as accepting no matter your beliefs. Toleratn. I do not want Abdi, Kozami, Gasha to leave this forum. I want their agenda to dlute while my agenda wins but with the highest agenda winningi.e OBJECTIVE for all.

        • Kibrom T. December 19, 2011

          Huluf,

          It is not news to you that such pen names as Tsahaye, Fanko, Mr. T, Tezareb, Kozami, etc. do not represent honest individuals or groups. If Isaias burn Asmara (may happen if we do not act sooner) tomorrow, they will still support him. Opinions coming from these sold out monkeys are not worth responding to but we are doing it anyway. You and Ahmed and thounsands of other Eritreans are the hope to free our people.

    • ahmed saleh December 19, 2011

      I am warning you so called BARENTU, Do not declare political
      war in here. You will regret your self.

      • ahmed saleh December 19, 2011

        Huluf
        My problem with these two guys is not about their arguments
        but their name changes and corrupted and ill willed ideas. I as
        Ahmed do not accept people with reactionary agenda to participate
        in discussion at this stage because we are not kids and we are
        matured and well informed about our country. It is good to be humble but at same time to be alerted assure your safety. Abdi, gasha and others are harmless as far as I observe their posts.
        Why I mention political war may be you didn’t follow my last posts,
        check Barentu,Haki tezareb, Fanko, —— cicero, my message is to
        this guy, you can check his last posts to understand what I mean.
        I like openness.

        • ahmed saleh December 19, 2011

          If we want have educational, responsible and progressive forum to everybody especialy our young to be informed and learn their country’s political affairs, it is up to us to protect and preserve this forum. In the name of democracy we can not allow some ill-fated individuals get access to advocate their ideology to prey on innocent readers. For me I am better off than wasting my energy and time from progressing forward. Particullarly for those who bring
          religious and regional issues repeatedly I can not stand them. Sorry may be I took it too personal in that case.

          • Alex December 19, 2011

            I support to the idea to not have them in our discussions. We will not miss their bad ambitions.
            The good men who write are good enough . Send them to hgdf web.

  • dude December 19, 2011

    There is a clear lack of integrity in this article. For starters, Ethiopia does not get $7bn from US annually, I mean even Egypt gets $3bn annually. Next is the claim that every Eritrean family lost two to three members to the civil war when the accurate figure is around 65,000 which is 3.5% of the population so unless there are a 100 people in each Eritrean family, there is no way this claim can be accurate. Third, while it is true that the US supported the Ethiopian invasion of Somalia it is the alignment of common geopolitical interests that brought about this support and not Ethiopia advancing the interests of the US. Would not Eritrea have done the same thing if an armed insurrection was forming a government in Ethiopia that was laying claiming Assab port as Ethiopian property? minew minew minew

  • Gebre December 20, 2011

    This is absolutely rubish. The writer must be absolutely egnorant of the region or some one from the people who are “serving the truth” many would prefer to call them “starving the truth”.
    best wishs

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