Visit the new AsenaTv Website

https://asenatv.com

Giessen Demonstration in Video: Fear Has Been Broken..The Tide of Change Is Growing , PFDJ is On The Run – – COMING SOON – For Now Click On the Pictorial Report

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_Fcc90hTx4&feature=share      

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_Fcc90hTx4&feature=share

 

 

 

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
116 COMMENTS
  • Weldit October 4, 2011

    This was one massive demo!
    Things are indeed changing.

  • Fresewra October 4, 2011

    We Eritrean have been so patient and gave the regime ample time to work it out with us. Instead what the Asmara regime do? It turned against it own people and worked tirekessly to exterminate our origin, degrade our heros, break our economic and educational systems and most of all forcing our youth to exile so that it face no resistance. The Eritrean people doesn’t deserve this and certainly a leader who cares for his own people would never do that or see it happen to them.

    Eritrean people have had enough and now the anger is spilled out to the streets of New York and Giessen. What do the PFDJ supporters do when they face Eritrean mob? Well, they either hide or run for their life because they are fake. A person who believe in some thing should stand for it at any time but PFDJ supporters are opportunistic and they go with the flow. History has thought us again and again that you can’t lead people by intimidation and supression. However, as long as mentally retarded people like Issayas come to the world, history will be repeated again and again.

  • sahel October 4, 2011

    To all
    I hope, those who say ” Abzi yeleku abti” now to choose their side and say ” Musakum alena EYSC

  • Fetawihaki October 4, 2011

    eritrawyan telailom, HGDEF sheraerae ilkin hahahaha, iti zeynatkin ziwesedkiniooo gezawiti nab wanatatu kimiles iyu, nisikatkum kea n Iseyas hizkumo nab Tigray nabta mebekolkum timilesu.

  • SHAWL MOVEMENT October 4, 2011

    The tide and torrent of change is growing every day by SHAWL MOVEMENT in side Eritrea, PFDJ are on the run, but they can’t hide. like Egypt Eritrea’s at home and diaspora are coming together to find the long lasting solution the youth to live free with out PFDJ exit Visa.

  • Temesgen Medhanie October 4, 2011

    In a pre-selected ala PFDJ modus operandi, a zombie gets up to ask Isaias a question during the supposed Q&A ‘session’. Get this or should I say have your dopamine ready to pop out as you will find yourself bracing for a long crack or laugh. The zombie goes, as much as you (Isaias) are a gebar (farmer) and aqeytay (urban dweller) simultaneously, where would you get the time to sleep or how many hours per day on average do you sleep? Of course, as soon he finished the question the rest of the zombies or as Amanuel would call them Komaro in the hall put their hands together for a loud applause. Then of course, the camera would zoom in to show us the smiling Isaias before he put out his boring and at times incoherent blabber. He said, he sleeps nine hours on average where he later reduced it to eight hours. Mind you, the zombie was selected to ask the stupid and totally irrelevant question when other pressing, timely and daunting questions were crying out loud to be addressed. To mention but a few, the case of the incarcerated high government officials, journalists and religious individuals as well. I had to fast forward the video on East-Afro where I couldn’t stand looking at a bunch of Komaros who would do anything to compromise their integrity if they had one as Isaias throws perks in their way here and there.

    • Maazza October 4, 2011

      Temesgen,

      I also found that ‘hilarious’ although it failed to achieve the intended effect because it concluded with a rather lame responce of the crowd.

      One thing that amazed me was, figuratively speaking, Isayas kneeling down at the feet of the North America crowd, trying to inflame them with how great their role is for Eritrea. Jesus multiplied bread and fish but the super Lord Isayas symbolically multiplied humans. Eritreas population was multiplied ten fold or infinite fold if I am not mistaken. He had come determined to address the numbers issue in anticipation that not many would come and he did. Had 15,000 showed up like they did during his last trip, he would have no need of saying that. It was already foreseen it would never but never match that of 10 years ago. Had he something to show for the last ten years perhaps 50,000 would have showed up wherever he would be to share an hour. He squandered that chance.

      The way he went on and on to exalt their egoes by swelling their role to soaring heights and inflame their applause, I thought it was in poor taste . Besides, it is bockri eznina. He is at his best when he belittles and denigrates with his razor sharp tongue and true to his nature, he did that part well when he was on the attack mode. He tried his level best to please and woo and I am happy to live to see this day, when he would stoop to please. The times are a-changing!

      I have a lot more to say about this choreographed ‘seminar’ but I will stop here now.

      Haftcka

  • Temesgen Medhanie October 4, 2011

    In a pre-selected ala PFDJ modus operandi, a zombie gets up to ask Isaias a question during the supposed Q&A ‘session’. Get this or should I say have your dopamine ready to pop out as you will find yourself bracing for a long crack or laugh. The zombie goes, as much as you (Isaias) are a gebar (farmer) and aqeytay (urban dweller) simultaneously, where would you get the time to sleep or how many hours per day on average do you sleep? Of course, as soon as he finished the question the rest of the zombies or as Amanuel would call them Komaro in the hall put their hands together for a loud applause. Then of course, the camera would zoom in to show us the smiling Isaias before he put out his boring and at times incoherent blabber. He said, he sleeps nine hours on average where he later reduced it to eight hours. Mind you, the zombie was selected to ask the stupid and totally irrelevant question when other pressing, timely and daunting questions were crying out loud to be addressed. To mention but a few, the case of the incarcerated high government officials, journalists and religious individuals as well. I had to fast forward the video on East-Afro where I couldn’t stand looking at a bunch of Komaros who would do anything to compromise their integrity if they had one as Isaias throws perks in their way here and there.

  • Temesgen Medhanie October 4, 2011

    WINNIPEG – A seminar was held at Convocation Hall of the University of Winnipeg recently commemorating 20 years of detention of Eritrean prisoners of conscience.

    The Eritrean-Canadian Human Rights Group of Manitoba sought to bring the many human rights violations being perpetrated on their home country to the attention of Winnipeggers.

    A capacity audience filled the hall, including many Eritreans, but also many others, from the student and broader population.

    The seminar was sponsored by the University of Winnipeg Global College, The Canadian Museum for Human Rights, The Menno Simmons College of University of Winnipeg, Amnesty International, the Manitoba Interfaith Immigration Council, CKUW Radio at the University of Winnipeg, and The League for Human Rights of B’nai Brith Canada.

    The story of B’nai Brith’s involvement with the Eritreans is an interesting one.

    Almost a year ago, a pro-government group meeting at the Masonic Temple included Sophia Tesfamariam, who was quoted as saying, “We got to be like Jews but don’t be evil like them; don’t blow up people; don’t do things that are evil, absolutely that is our job,” (http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/local/firebrand-speaker-triggers-ban-bid-122381158.html).

    This was brought to B’nai Brith’s attention by a group of Eritrean refugees who recorded the speech. Since then, a dialogue has opened between B’nai Brith and the refugees and the local office became aware of the dire situation in Eritrea that has been virtually ignored by the international media.

    The Eritrean-Canadian Human rights Group in Manitoba focuses its attention on the terrible injustices and human rights violations being perpetrated in their home country.

    The group was founded in 2009 and advocates for the protection of human rights and democratic governance.

    Since Sept. 18, 2001, the present Eritrean regime began its massive crackdown, much like the Stalinist purges of the Soviet Union. Victims have included high-level government officials including ministers, religious leaders, elders, journalists and other dissidents. The private press has been shut down. The regime officially embarked on the road to tyranny. Some 10 years later, the whereabouts of these victims are unknown. They have simply disappeared. In fact, according to Human Rights Watch, Eritrea is becoming a “giant prison” due to its government’s policies of mass detention, torture and prolonged military conscription and due to state repression, Eritreans also constitute one of the largest number of asylum seekers in the world, with those fleeing risking death or collective punishment against their families.

    Belle Millo, co-chair of B’nai Brith’s (Midwest Region) Jewish-Christian Roundtable, served as host and moderator for the evening. Alan Yusim, B’nai Brith’s western regional director, read David Matas’s much appreciated opening remarks (Matas, well-known human rights advocate and senior counsel to B’nai Brith, had to be in Montreal):

    “If we know nothing about Eritrea, we better learn and learn fast. The abuses Eritrea wreaks on its citizens run the risk of affecting us all. Human rights oppression is a spreading indelible stain. It never stops with today’s victims. Unless today’s victims are defended, we run the risk of becoming tomorrow’s victims.”

    Two video persentations were shown – one showing an interview of current President Isaias Afwerki claiming, among other things, that there was no shortage of food in his country but rather that food shortages existed in the US and Europe. The second was a moving Skype conversation with a 14-year-old Eritrean girl who has not seen or heard from her parents in 12 years. Living in Boston, her family sought to protect her from the truth, and she discovered that they had been arrested by googling their names a few years ago.

    Professor Mussie Tesfagiorgis, of the U of W history department, introduced keynote speaker, Dan Connell, one of the preeminent Western experts on Eritrea.

    Connell began with a short history of the country. He followed this with a slideshow of his many visits to the country, beginning in 1976 and ending when President Afwerki invited him to leave in 2001.

    A question-and-answer period followed Connell’s talk.

    Yusim closed again with Matas’s words:

    “Human rights belong to individuals, not states. Leave human rights to states and human rights will wither. Individuals must assert human rights to keep those rights alive. Crimes against humanity are crimes against us all. When crimes against humanity are committed, we are all victims. We must not be silent in the face of our own victimization, when part of our human family suffers from grave abuses.”

    • Maazza October 4, 2011

      Temesgen,

      Your above post is a sample of what all of us who follow you at these fora want from you.

      Its upsetting when you get caught in the web of the pests and dim your brilliance by honoring them with your anger. I myself find it hard to resist to ‘lash’ at them when they are insulting to you or to me or anyone who wants to register his/her indignation, but I try to resist. Many of us wait to read your post. Like Saleh, I ask you to please ignore the ‘pests’ and continue to delight us by your wide range resources.

      Haftcka

      • Temesgen Medhanie October 4, 2011

        Maazaa haftey,

        Many thanks for those kind words. And of course for the encouraging words as well. I take it to heart as you advice me not to get caught up in their petty fuss as they amount to nothing. Thanks much again haftey.

    • kozami October 5, 2011

      Temesgen

      The organizer of the above photo op nefsihere looked like this back in the days as 2003…. enjoy the walk

      “It Is A problem. Now. (Response to Saleh AA Younis)

      Ghezae H. Berhe

      This is to comment on some of Sal Younis’s recent utterings- oral, and written. Fittingly, it is more a commentary on some Eritrean issues rather than a direct response to Saleh Younis.

      Pax EthiopiaNa

      Saleh had this interview with, fellow Eritrean Dr., on VOA-regarding the war in Iraq. The last question was about their view of Alliance and the Axis pact of war against Eritrea. Since the interview was cut off before Saleh’s whole answer was aired, it is hard to decipher what he really said. The way he started out your argument is though telling, if I may say. He said it was like what happened in mid to late 90’s in the Sudan. Which was the Sudan being surrounded by Trio, Ethio-Eri-Uganda-alliance.
      True factually. But sounds like he supports what is happening to Eritrea today (he can correct me if I feel him wrong). This cold analysis, deliberate consideration, is baffling to me, if at least the for the ‘status’ for rationalism given to such dangerous and unjustifiable idea. Hello, these guys get me say; we are talking about your OWN COUNTRY, not your neighbor country, not anyone’s country. What is the value of the nation of one’s own, its privileges, and its excesses? Where is the transcendental selfishness when it comes to your OWN NATION? Like parents give love, care, and emotion to their own flesh and blood, so does a nation expect from its people. The American “Ayt’tenkufuley Ayt’tenakufuley” attitude to their own nation is basic instinct in nationalism….which though most needed is most lacking these days in cyber Eritrea. Thanks cyber is not real.
      Yes Eritrea is in a mess. Yes we messed up big time. And we are damaged goods.
      In spite of our foolishness, our cruelties, our unpredictability, our plundering though, we sigh-this time of hope- one more time because we remember one thing: THAT we still own a nation of our own. For good or for bad (regardless), not for effects, but for efforts, we can claim meaning and satisfaction. That means our problems are integral part of us; they are as inalienable as our skin color. They are ours. MEANINING no need of outside help; not in terms of military help; not especially from the ancient enemy. From the DeGau’s and Drogognatats. Not from the nuts that brought the houses of Tesseney, Senafe, Tsorona, and Barentu down to rubbles just a few steps back in time. Not from the whoever inhabits south of shining sun of Badme. Not from the ‘Dagamawi’ people. Still Embi N’dagmawi megza’Eti vieled as “gallant Alliance Defense Forces”. If there was one reason to keep PIA in power, it is for symbolic reason. To tell the enemy of South that we are our own king-makers, never them; that we would never change our leader to appease them. In fact the more they hate him, the more we want to keep him. That is an exercise of sovereignty with aggressiveness and fullness, tipped to us by us after half a century relentless quest.
      Back to Saleh. I can’t fathom and I believe we can’t afford cold analysis, rationalization or attempt at it when it comes to neighboring interference in national issues. Remember how you and your friends called for Eritrean pull-out of the Sudan ‘internal’ issue. How many ways do I love thee…let me count the ways. SPLA out. Now Out of Eritrea. We sympathize with your right to self-deter…but out. Stop supporting South Sudan, you said. But you went mum with the help coming from South of Eritrea. What is this then we are talking about? Abbysinian problem?

      A Neo Con Eritrean-American? “Shock and awe”

      An astute and exaggerating journalist would be tempted to call this the “biggest discovery from East African peoples after Lucy” though Hawna Saleh is in WEST COAST of America. But then…Hmmmm! An Eritrean in favor Richard Perle!
      Saleh, I am talking of course about stand on supporting Iraqi war: I never thought you would be controversial. But you are Eritrean, one of the unpredictable breeds….so…one of the handful minority of world citizens supporting this war. If you support that as an American, that is a totally different story. I perfectly read why Americans love ancient Romans (I mean those Americans who know about such old civilization :). A republic at home, and yes you know it, an empire abroad.
      But on the sites, it is as Eritreans we speak, right? And an Eritrean supporting the war would be anomalous for many reasons. But one big thing you forget in your thesis grades your analysis incomplete if not immature. And sort of exercise of middle-brow.
      It is against the belief that the end justifies the means that humans got their best tool invented for; THE LAW. The law, the only rational gold-standard-sort-of absolute- that humans created against themselves so that it can be for them, cares little about the end….”B’fthi zteqortset id…darga zela”. I am sure you have known and have eloquently spoken for the total obedience to the rule of law in the past years. For example, we never bought what the G-15 said in entirety; we never took up their cause because we believed they did nothing wrong. We took up their cause because they were incarcerated WITHOUT LEGAL PROCESS. Ember NeAna deA kulom Hade. If they were given fair trial, their case may be over by now. It is against the system where the rule of law subsided bottom did we yell against.
      Thus arguing the aggression against sovereign nation is justifiable because post-Saddam Iraq is gonna be better than his Iraq is for the down right ‘end-justifies-means’ apostle. In this line of argument and ‘logical’ sense, you might be thinking twice before calling Elias back home. He and many others support PIA for they see sort of Castro, Deng Xiaoping, or pertinently, Senior Minister Lee in him. He may trample civil rights, mock the courts, the neighbors, the region, the continent, the football, even the sheep, he may abhor any l-a-w thing, but he can get us close where we need to be most–alleviation of poverty, and you-can-have-more-bread-now-land. And they are right in many ways. In that sense, Elias need not come Home. He is Home. And strangely enough, you guys have yet to discover that you are well, roommates. Saleh, meet your roommate.
      I believe the Iraq of tomorrow is gonna be much better than Saddam’s. Hope so. But remember that it is against international law, and majority of world opinion that Americans did it. And that is the weakest point of your thesis. You never mentioned the struggle and failure of American efforts to seduce even their closest allies at Security Council. Criminals, like Saddam, may take advantage of the international law; but that is the price humanity is willing to pay for its noble reverence to law. You wage war using U.N. at least you may claim sort of international politics, behind you. You wage war- by yourself. You are technically war criminal- which George W. Bush is. You don’t want to be a supporter of war criminal. Do you?

      Diary of Mad Nation

      Here is final repetition: we shouldn’t justify the means by its end-not at least in legal and moral sense. Otherwise what is telling in your half-heard opinion on VOA can be construed to mean as you also support Alliance’s more than ogling with “our American in the Region -TPLF” on the allegation that PIA is most evil–as Saddam is. I hope not so.
      Nations like Eritrea are like kids. They both are new. Are both selfish. Foolish. Immature. Effort-not-result oriented. We are ardent believers in this foolish-wise proverb: “Someone else’s legs will do us no good in traveling”. We don’t care about the stub of the finale-but the pains, the bliss, the intensity and the depths of the process—and there is priceless and enormous comfort we take at knowing all this mess, all this scene, this senselessness, this morbidity, this lie, this manipulation and bullying, this ” A’W ilka Adeye Adeye” or this “Siq ilka Iyu Adye-Adeye”, this march-d-endetro-, this turtle trip, this stupidity, this ‘aferkbu’, this famine, this savage twinkling hope, this cyber, this PIA, this Awate, this Eritrea is ours. And ours only. The comfort and pride is so huge and so bewitching that we don’t want to barter it with other thing, what so ever—like democracy spiced in land that is not rightfully ours, even if it would work out perfectly for us.
      Self-help, self-medication, is our motto how much inexperienced, dilettante we may be. Sorry, we just can’t go to fine connoisseurs, to psychiatrists though we definitely are going nuts like Gogol. We just can’t. We say we will medicate our own wounds even if that means it is going to be worse, it will take us for ever, we will never make it, and even die from it. And then, we even insist we bury our dead souls in the desert called “Meqabr Harbegnatat”. We don’t care how long it takes us to cross the desert of now before we get into the Promised Land. Funny thing is we may never get there. We don’t use modern transport; we travel on foot, turtle steps. We aint’ gonna back to Egypt though. We fight to death to those who want to take us back to Egypt by claiming they are going to take us to land of democracy and honey. Sure, the overall results, of our own efforts, may be awfully, disappointingly, less-than-zero. But we just love it. Rather exactly that is the point. The effort is all. Aren’t we crazy? Don’t you just love us?
      And the Alliance-ELFers decided to sleep with the enemy to bear us a new ‘Natsla’ a baby Eritrea. Strange bedfellows (militant Islam with Abyssinian Orthodoxy, among others). It is match made in the blazing quarters of hell. Like all diqalas, it was denied vehemently. Then the Hours toll showed. Dqi. Tnsi. Then they changed their mind. They admitted of the indecent proposals, more than one night-stands, and scandalous liaison. They said the baby is gonna be cute, full of grace, and democracy. Ohhh…well, Hmmm, wake me up for the delivery.
      Seriously though, like the brave but long-gone-mad Virginia Woolf said and did with ‘the last hours’ of her life, we are intently looking the face of alliance and their sympathizers. Look them real good. At last know this Eritrean group that has been around us for more than 42 years for what they are. And then put them away. Their hours are over. And it is suicide for them. And homicide for their abnormally-conceived baby.
      Self-inflicted wounds, painful may be, and of course are, can’t be healed by mélange of impotent politicians, or by Federal-Doctor a ‘la Zenawi, or “operation Eritrea-freedom” or even “Eire” covered up with “meAr”, specious and hypocrite theme of ‘reconciliation’ masterfully, and dangerously presented by the now-we-are-independents, now-we-are-ELFers, but never-EPLFers (even mistakenly), group, The Awate Team, a team with full of identity crisis patients spin doctoring, and prescribing for the Eritrean malaise. We have seen their true color. And now we know better.
      There are ways out for our own benediction, absolution, and final redemption. To invite other stake holders to your own prescription is not one of them. It is a problem. Any time, for example now. In fact it is more than a problem. It is a crime. It is treason. In Eritrea. Now.

      Ghezae H. Berhe
      Montreal.”

      • kozami October 5, 2011

        Also, back in 2001, the same nefsehere organizing the above seminar, unlike fast forward to 2011 where he is threatening Eritrean’s with deportation, accusing them: of antisemitism, of terrorist fund raising, entering Canada as inadmissible persons…, said the following when a certain dehaier by the name Hellen

        “… No Eritrean is stupid enough to prioritize internal squabbles for external aggression… When I am writing these lines, I am listening to Kahsay Berhe’s ‘shiDa’ wrote by a friend Samuel Almede. And I remembered the Shidas of these old Y’keAlos who marched in our revolutionary sands along with PIA since 1968. I shudder. Those who gave him the hand in establishing the H’zbawi Hayltat, those who braved the S’duh Ella, the W’ngobo’s, the Gereg’r Asmera, the plains of Ala, the Weki-Zager, and above all Jesus! Above all… the miracles of Our Great Sahel and all the secrets that it harbors…”

        ghezae Hagos Berhe (xxx@hotmail.com)
        Date: Fri Aug 24 2001 – 05:07:24

        • Temesgen Medhanie October 5, 2011

          Qozami,

          I am losing you. Help me out. I am not sure what to make of this. Incidentally though, the other day, somebody asked me if I am Ghezae. I am sure you’re not alluding anything to that effect. As much as I have read his articles on Awate.com, I must say, the above doesn’t seem to have been penned under his fingers. Simply because, his ideas seem to fly here and there incoherently.

          • Tsahaye October 6, 2011

            Temesgen Medhanie,

            Some say politics can be muddy and at times pretty dirty, but you love to play it rotten and stinky. Could you show us your proof that I applauded the PFDJ supporters who had gathered in NY to meet their president? Let me borrow PIA’s favorite question, “Where is the evidence?”

          • Tsahaye October 6, 2011

            Temesgen Medhaine,

            I am sure you are enjoying the attention you dearly crave for, and unfortunately, I am giving you a lot of it. As a committed woyanay that you are, you are trying to twist my statement. I still believe that those who support the regime are as patriotic as any Eritrean, and you have the temerity to call that “a blabber”. I understand your pain. This is what is giving you an excruciating migraine.

            My friend, why don’t you mind your own business and leave Eritreans alone to deal with their own problem. The barbarians’ websites’ such as aiga and walta are still open for you. Stop inflating your self-ego beyond your size. It may kill you by bursting.

        • Tsahaye October 5, 2011

          Kozami,

          You are very merciless. They tried their best to shut you up, they attacked you from all directions, but now it seems that you have built up the momentum and have started hunting them down one OOSUB at a time. You are digging deep down to uncover the shameful past of these former PFDJ loyalists.

          I am disgustingly amazed with the characters of these individuals. It seems that these people live in multiple colors. The only reason why they are now against their former boss is not because the PFDJ is dictatorial but because they have found a much greener pasture. They also seem they are in a hurry to make up for the lost time that they had spent serving their former boss: the PFDJ regime.

          Keep up the good work, and I believe that you have the right to express and defend what you believe in as much as the tragic OOSUB has the right to serve the woyane barbarians for whatever reason.

          • Temesgen Medhanie October 6, 2011

            Tsahaye,

            You’re not only confused but irrelevant as well. I sure have a great respect for Qozami for he holds his grounds firm albeit I disagree with what his stands for. Moreover, his believes and stands are clear where you’re stuck between a rock and a hard place as you seem to oppose PFDJ and in the mean time you applaud the very people who had come to New York to see Isaias. If that is not a confusion, I wonder what is.

          • Temesgen Medhanie October 6, 2011

            Tsahaye,

            Below is what you had to blabber a few days ago.

            Smart people learn from others. Politicians adapt and learn from their opponents weaknesses and strengths. Eritreans, however, neither learn from others nor do they learn from their opponents. It is an established fact that the PFDJ regime has a support base that is a thousand times stronger than the woyane-financed and ethnically oriented opposition movements. It is also obvious that those who support the regime are as patriotic as any Eritrean who loves his/her country.

            It is time the warlords and the tragic OOSUB do serous self-evaluation and learn from those who support the PFDJ regime. It is time you stop deceiving yourselves. You cannot bring down the PFDJ regime by simply insulting its countless supporters. The PFDJ supporters are Eritreans, and it is just a pipe-dream to try to change the regime without including them in the struggle. They are determined and willing to defend the regime as much as you are determined to keeping your noises louder from the safest place on earth. Your story has become the story of “although they have managed to taking the cows away, we have tried our best to throwing any imaginable insults at them.”

            Amanuel Eyasu, it is only a few years since you have left the regime. The only reason why the regime sent you abroad is because you were more loyal than the PFDJ loyalists that you are now calling them names. Unfortunately, they are not willing to serve the woyane barbarians for a meager stipend like yourself.

            May God save Eritrea from PFDJ’s dictatorship and woyane’s barbarism.

  • gasha October 4, 2011

    “ህዝቢ ከዲዑና እዩ።” ኣባል ኮሚሽን፡

    ንምንታይ’ሞ እዚ ኹሉ ጸርፊ ኣድለየ። ኣብ ኒውዮርክ ኣኸባ ንኽሳተፉ/ፉ ዝኸዳ/ዝኸዱ ኮማሮ ኢልካ ጽርፊ፡ መለክዒ ሓያልንትዶ ወይስ ናይ እንጽርጽሮት ምልክት። ነቲ፡ በብዝተፈላለየ ምኽንያት ኣብ ኣኸባ ምስ ፕረሲድነት ኢሰያስ ክሳተፍ ዝመጻ/ጹ ከምዚ ጌርካ ጸርፊ ንጸሓፊኡ ከፅግም እዩ። ኣማኒኤል አሰና፡ ንደቅናን ኣንስትናን አደታትናን ኮማሮ ኢሉ ጽሪፉ ናብ ኣሜሪካ ምምጽእ ኣይክጥዕሞን እዩ ዝበሉ ብዙሓት ኣለዉ ይበሃል።

    ምስ መለስ ስለ ዝተሰኣልካስ ክንድዚ ድፍረት?

    ናይ ፖለቲካ ሕቶ ስለ ዘለካ፡ ከም ድላይካ ንህዝቢ ኤርትራ ብኣልማም፡ እሞ ኮማሪት፡ ከም ሸራሙጣ ንፍሱ ዝሸጠ፡ ኢልካ ምጽራፍ ብፍጹም ክምኽነይሉ ዘይክእል ጉጉይ ፖለቲካ
    እዩ።

    ወይ ከኣ፡ ነተቓውሞ ምስ ህዝቢ ኣጻልእዎ ዝበል ሓዲሽ ዝተማህዘ ፖለቲካን መምርሕን ስልትን እንተኾይኑ ኸአ ንገሩና።

    ንተቓውሞ ምስ ህዝቢ ኣጻሊእካ ህዝቢ ኣብዬና እዩ እሞ ተሰፋና ካብ መለስ እዩ ንዝበል ዘሎ ወፈራ ንምርጓድ?

  • gasha October 4, 2011

    Temesgen
    I couldn’t believe what you said . Because amanuel said something and you have to follow you seem such kind of guy keep saying haftey hawey sikilka borokrok. Let me tell you mr temesgen i have said it before i would say it again in the meeting there were eritrean mothers sisters doughters and so on how dare you call them komaro?

POST A COMMENT