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The concept of UNITY under arrest by the youth leaders in the Diaspora.

The concept of UNITY under arrest by the youth leaders in the Diaspora. As you know the Eritrean government has been terrorizing the Eritreans at home: Likewise, the divisive opposition forces have equally been terrorizing the

The concept of UNITY under arrest by the youth leaders in the Diaspora.
As you know the Eritrean government has been terrorizing the Eritreans at home: Likewise, the divisive opposition forces have equally been terrorizing the people from the Diaspora: Check this out:
መግለጺ ስምረት ኤርትራውያን መንእሰያት ንለውጢ ሰሜን ኣሜሪካ ብዛዕባ ርክብ ቦለኛ
Posted on August 2, 2013 by assenna
ስምረት ኤርትራውያን መንእሰያት ንለውጢ ሰሜን ኣሜሪካ፡ ኣብቲ“”ምትእኽኻብ ተሓለቕቲ ዲሞክራሲ ኤርትራውያን” “ብዝብልስም፡ ኣብ ቦለኛ ጣልያን ተመዲቡ ዘሎ ርክብ፡ ኢድ ከምዘይብሉ፡ ንህዝቢ ኤርትራ፡ ብፋላይ ከኣ ንመንእሰያት የፍልጥ።
 
Questions:
1)     Why are you telling us this? Should any group that meets another group ask your permission to do so?
2)    Is your involvement mandatory for any meeting between the so called democratic groups to be justified?
3)    If you are for the unity of the youth, why do you negatively polarize the Bolegna event for “democracy”?
4)    Do you rationally think the Eritrean people will take your appeal seriously when they can no longer sustain your monotonous division and that of the opposition forces’? If you consider me one, I humbly can tell you that what you did is against the Eritrean resistance for peace and democracy.
5)    What do you want? You call yourselves ስምረት ኤርትራውያን መንእሰያት ንለውጢ ሰሜን ኣሜሪካ:
ስምረት for what kind of change?
            6)  Your moto says ENOUGH: Enough of what? Dictatorship? And what is the solution? Division?
All the readers of the post were disappointed:  if this does not wake all youth organizations up to how destructive they have been to the Eritrean society, nothing will. Please see the following comments
Petros Haile “Whoever you are, If you are willing to work with other political groups and civic organizations [you said it in the post] why not at least extend a solidarity message or wish them success, instead of posting a press release on how different you are from them … I wish all daily declaredgroups hold some kind of forum and let us know who you are and what you stand for? We don’t know who is who anymore !!!”
Almaz Gual Asmera: “It must be a curse to see the young, supposed to be bright, open minded, ready to be changed and make change,…are following the foot print of the traditional opposition. I think the people of Eritrea needs to make a U turn to GOD/Allah (which ever applies to anyone).”
Solomon seyoum: “I heard about the disarray within bayto three or four days ago… Now I am reading this message of disagreement within youth oppositions..These disarrays are clear signals of immature oppositions….. it is just unbelievable or awful. “
Hzbi:  “EYSC, sitting in America and you are fighting for justice, pity, what have you done except calling people on the phone ?
just call a phone sitting in there and trying to make people die, then you will come Eritrea as a fighter. how shame you are !! get loss from the face of the people of Eritrea and don’t mention Eritrea either. you don’t represent Eritrean, you are prats, no one know you, you are missions of the brutal regime and you are become a barrier to the unite.”
Comment: This was an intense emotional discharge caused by frustration on the situation of the struggle for freedom and democracy in Eritrea: it signals a strong message to the youth leaders on how they are navigating the resistance.
Maluque: “what is the reason behind not participating in the meeting of Bologna? and why do they care about the name more than the objective of Bologna meeting? we just need peace and reconciliation in our country. it should be the sole national objective. what is behind giving different names and slogans to the movements for change. get united for the common objective first then you strive on becoming a focal point for the different political views. Join everybody whom you think , will have a contribution in realizing the dreams. it is not a matter of competition. it is of being pragmatic, nationalist, tolerant, forgiving, optimism and the like. try to win hearts and minds….what u have posted is really childish…”
Comment: Thanks Moluque for your very descriptive expression. It is about relating not competing. None of you has a better democracy than the other and neither of you has the mandate to represent the Eritrean people. You are equally important to us and you need to check out your ego and hallucination and get back to reality and sit down with your brothers and sisters to construct the national priority, UNITY, if you really respect your people.  There is one concept of democracy and true believers of democracy apply it in action not in words.
Further:
Ghenet: “We all need to come out of our selfish shells and open up our minds and hearts to the demands and trust of the Eritrean people. If we cannot take off our pride-hats and bow to our people’s needs, we have to keep our mouth shut and not become spoilers. If we are not up to the task that demands commitment and magnanimity to work together by accepting our differences and focusing on our common points and goals, there we are done as a society and as a nation.
Here is another case in point of terrorism against the resistance:
“ዓገብ ንበሎም ንመራሕቲ ባይቶዓገብውን ንበሎም ንመራሕቲ ግንባር ሃገራዊ ድሕነ Posted on August 1, 2013 byassenna “ኣነን ሓጺሩኒ እብል ንሱን ተደቢሩ ይስዕስዕ” ከም ዝበሃል፤ ንሕናን እዚ ዝሓለፈ ክልተ ዓመት እንታይ ዝጭበጥ ኣድማዒ ነገርይገብሩልና ይኾኑ እንዳበልና ከም ዘይተጸበና ንሳቶም ከኣ ኣብ ዝተኣከብሉ ግዜን ቦታን ኣብ ቆይቍን ኣብ ምስሕሓብን ጥራይ ግዜኦምከጥፍኡ ከሎዉ የስደምመካ። እቶም ኣብዚ ባይቶ ተስፋ ኣሕዲርና ዝነበርና የዋሃት ኣብ ሰለስቲኡ ኣኼባኦም እንታይን ክንደይን ከምዘሳለጡ ንግምግሞ ኢና።  ሕጂ ከኣ ዝገደደ መስደመም ኣብ መወዳእታ ሰዓት (11th hour) ንጉባኤ ብእንቃራረበሉ ግዜ ንኣቦ መንበርምድስካል ወይ ምብራር እንታይ ኣድለየ። ርግጽ እዩ ነቲ ጉባኤ ዘድሊ ኩሉ ተቐሪቡ እዩ ይበሃል። ኣብ ቀረባ ስለ ዘየለና እቲ ዝርዝርኣይንፈልጦን ንኸውን፤ ግንከ ዝርዝር ብዘየገድስ፡ ሓቂ ብሓቂ ንህዝቢ ኤርትራ ዝተሓልየ እንተኾይኑ (እቲ ንባይቶ ዝኽተል ህዝቢኣብዚሰዓት እዚ ከምዚ ዝመሰለ ቅልውላው ከተእትውሉ ኣድላዪዶ ኔሩ?”
Comment: I seriously do not know what is going on because of lack of effective communication between the Baito and the people. As you know, articles or radio broadcasts are hardly available from our forces and let alone foreigners we Eritreans in the resistance cannot understand what is going on in this situation. What is sad is that the youth is faltering within itself and the Baito scuffling it out behind the screen for things beyond our reach (only if the news is correct) at the wrong time, folks when a national conference is underway soon to take place in Addis.
And then another very sloppy goodie to the surprise of any sensible person closely monitoring the Eritrean melancholic drama:
August 04, 2013:Toronto Demonstration at Sheraton Hotel; Down Town JOIN US!
“WHAT: Demonstration outside the Sheraton Hotel Down Town in solidarity with the Eritrean Sinai Victims and other refugees detained in Libya, Egypt, Yemen and the Sudan. We will speak on behalf of the Eritreans who came under barbaric, unprovoked attack by the Authorities of the Government of Eritrea and Human traffickers the Bedouins and Rashaidas. The protest will include photo exhibits of those who lost their lives due to the organ harvesting scheme and torture at Sinai. Informational flyers will be handed out to the attendants and the public.”
Comment: It is not clicking Folks as we witness history today where the Eritrean opposition forces are in complete disarray because of their obstinate and rigid mode of existence acquired probably from their experience, greed, stupidity or from their culture. You cannot emotionally dwell on the Eritrean issue without getting sick, thank God I have decided to resist without deeply personalizing the show as if it was a movie.
What happened in Canada according to the information was exclusive concentration of the participants on the effect without simultaneously giving attention to the root cause of the problem (division). Thank you for the great contribution from humanistic point of view but sorry for the worthlessness of your effort from practical solution point of view. I predict that you went home after the demonstration with no follow up assignment and congratulations for your consistency with the visionless Eritrean style of doing political business.
What do you lose including the burning question of UNITY of the forces and youth organizations in the activity? In what way would doing this contradict your mission of helping the Eritrean victims in Sinai? Don’t you think it would help you get better attention and stronger internal unity to swiftly get rid of the problem once and for all? Is not the Eritrean government the cause of all these problems? Is not UNITY the only way to change the situation in Eritrea and that of the victims’ you protested for? If this is the case, are not our divided forces and youth organizations the root causes of the problem because of their refusal to unite? Should not your responsibility be pressing all opposition forces to unite?
WAKE UP CALL: Are not you tired of psychologically and emotionally dying again and again by the leaders of the youth in the opposition camp? Dear Eritreans, it is time to think about this situation and find a solution immediately to get out of this cyclic failure.
I SUSSPECT A FOUL PLAY
Do the youth leaders read us in the websites by the way? Why are all demonstrations refusing to includethe question of unity alongside their issues in street demonstrations? Tens of demonstrations everywhere could not have missed shouting for UNITY with their grievances by accident! Folks, all the demonstrations that have been conducted did well tirelessly exposing the governments and the tragic situation of the people on timely basis but none of them so far did anything about pressurizing the forces and youth organizations to unite in public. The only issue that has been denied attention in our all inclusive demonstration is the priority of our people; UNITY.
I am sorry but I think we are all being taken for a ride by the youth leaders!!!Please do not make the government responsible here because it will do anything to keep on dividing us: I am questioning about the integrity of the Diaspora youth organizations and keen Eritreans should seek explanation to this mysterious negligence.
Do not expect anything more than this from me: I have been openly crying for unity in my capacity as an ordinary Eritrean and here I am doing it again. But, you have a serious challenge in front of your faces that you can no longer ignore. However way you may tackle the challenge is your business but something is wrong from within the leaderships of the youth organizations in the Diaspora that has stood in the way of the Eritrean zeal for freedom and democracy. The concept of UNITY has been intentionally arrested by the youth leaders in the Diaspora.

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42 COMMENTS
  • Sawa September 9, 2013

    Dear MR Fitsum Abraha
    personally I need to have your idea on both cases the interview of Mr Afework specialy part three and Assab and Badme cases. thanks in advance we have to focuses on the general modernization on the population but we have to address the crosscutting issue of the countries that could hinder the sustainable development of the nation.
    As Mr. President Esayas Afeworki repeadtly feels the separation of South Sudan from sudan and the appreciate to get the one Somalia with 5 stars , he must feel the same is true with Ethio-Eritrea. By the way our leader his Excellency Mr Afework has a great potential to analysis the current situation of the world specially the third interview with Eritv personally he has talent to forward and predict the political situation of the world. So from this point of view he should think to unify Ethio-Eritrea
    Ethiopia should revoke the Algiers Agreement:
    Former air force general Abebe Teklehaymanot
    Ethiopia should revoke Algiers Agreement: Air Force general Abebe in office when he was commander of the Ethiopian Air Force
    The Ethiopian government has the legal right to revoke the “Algiers Agreement” which has become invalid because of Eritrea’s violation of the security zone, and the government should demand for the international recognition of Ethiopia’s right of access to the sea, a former air force general has said in an interview.
    Former Major-General Abebe Tekle Haimanot, who was commander of the Ethiopian Air Force during the 1998-2000 Ethiopia-Eritrea War told Dehai, a Tigrinya-langauge publication, that there were ample opportunities – from legal perspectives – for the government to address the vital issue of respecting Ethiopia’s right of access to the sea.
    A law instructor at Addis Ababa University, Abebe said the Algiers Agreement was a slap in the face that it treated the aggressor and the aggressed on equal footing. But more than everthing else, he added, the Algiers Agreement was an accord that handed over Ethiopia’s victory to the enemy.
    Asked what he expected after the war, Abebe said the agreement should have forced the Eritrean regime to acknowledge that it a) has invaded a sovereign country b) would never try to attack again c) would only have a small army, pay war compensation, and of course recognize Ethiopia’s right of access to the sea.
    Abebe, who studied intenational law at Georgia University in the United States, said the last straw that broke the camel’s back was basing the the Algiers Agreement on colonial treaties that Italy had violated and become defunct several decades ago.
    The following are excerpts from a very long interview in Tigrinya:
    Why was the Algiers Agreement signed then?
    I wouldn’t say the government signed the agreement to help Eritrea. But rather I’d say the Algiers Agreement was the product of our ignorance and arrogance. ‘Ignorance’ because we didn’t examine existing international laws; ‘arrogance’ because we dehumanized Ethiopian scholars as “chauvinists, Assab-seeking war mongers,” and kept them at bay.
    Though some intellectuals were provocative than trying to engage us, I’d say mainly it was our own problem. If one is ignorant but has the desire to learn, one can make progress. But if one is both ignorant and arrogant, that is hopeless.
    Abebe said the knowledge of TPLF central committee members was limited that they were raising hands for approval whatever the politburo passed down as laws or directives. There may be a few individuals who had read well but that was insignificant to effect change across the TPLF board, he said. I, for one, like most others, had concluded Assab as Eritrea’s. But when I went to school, and studied law, particulary international law, I found the whole story completely different. I’m now convinced – and this is not to settle a political score but from a pure international law perspective – that Ethiopia has a legal right of access to the sea.
    When the United Nations federated Eritrea with Ethiopia in 1952, three of the most outstanding criteria were first the decision was based on the interest of the Eritrean people, second it was based on Ethiopia’s right of access to the sea, third it was meant to ensure lasting peace in the region.
    After the end of the Second War War, there were occasions when the Allied Forces wanted to divide Eritrea in two or three regions. But all had one thing in common: they ensured Ethiopia’s right of access to the sea. Therefore, if Eritrea had to break away from Ethiopia, it should have been carried out while considering Ethiopia’s right of access to the sea. Here comes the reason to revoke the Algiers Agreement.
    Back to the war. How was the role of the Ethiopian Air Force (1998-2000)?
    The war came abrupt. We were taken by surprise because we never thought Eritrea would attack us. For that matter, Eritrea had no potential to invade such a big country like ours. But above everything else, we never expected invasion from post-independent Eritrea. We were expecting cordial relations. We had military agreement as well. Once war broke out, however, there were two things that helped those of us in the Air Force: that we’ve been training people, and that we were able to recall experienced veterans of the Air Force to duty.
    Abebe during graduation at Georgia University in the United States
    I’d say members of the Air Force – both former members as well those from the ranks of the EPRDF, defended their country heroically. Both shed blood in defense of their country. Therefore, after the war, we abandoned profiling members as “former members” and “rebels” (tegayoch). The war provided us with many lessons. During the war, it was not an issue of what is useful or what was not. We were invaded, and everyone was determined to win the war, and the war was won.
    Even today, given the geopolitics of the region, including the geopolitics of the Nile, I’m of the conviction that Ethiopia should have a powerful defense force. But what does this mean? An Ethiopia that doesn’t have a strong economy cannot have a strong military. We have to balance our economy and military buildup. In the case of the war with Eritrea, for instance, we had taken the economic issue to the extreme – to the point of ignoring the army – because we thought if we build a powerful economy, we can manage to build a powerful defense later on. Though it is correct in principle, but building an economy at the expense of the military had also unwanted consequences.
    Again about the war with Eritrea. Ethiopia had an uppherhand in the war. Given that you were a ranking member of the defense forces, what was your position as far as finishing the war with Eritrea was concerned?
    Our stand was the stand of the Central Command. The decision was to destroy the Eritrean army completely. Here there was no ambiguity over Eritrea’s sovereignty. Eritrea is an independent nation, but the stand of the Central Command was that Eritrea should be stopped being a threat to Ethiopia. To ensure this, most Central Command members agreed the Ethiopian Defense Forces should destroy the Eritrean army as much as they can. The outcome was not as we had expected. We had to continue the war to the finish, and we had the potential, the means to carry on the war to the end.
    “Why did it stop?”
    History will answer that, though it was very clear we had the power to finish it.
    You had a good name in the Air Force. And what were your goals for the Air Force?
    Thank you for the compliment, but I used to think that all pilots should be encouraged to be trained as flight engineers. Accordingly, we prepared a curriculum to help train the pilots. I was also in the process of training the technicians, particularly senior technicians, to be trained as engineers. We had other goals as well but were disrupted because I was out.
    How did you learn that you had lost your job?
    From the national radio. I was at home with [former chief of staff] Tsadkan [Gebretensae]. We were waiting to go to the review session known as gimgema.That was about the war with Eritrea. In the meantime, we were listening to the news on the radio. We heard the news that we’ve been removed. After half an hour, I received a letter that I’ve been purged.
    How did you feel?
    We were aware that at one time we had to step aside. We [Tsadkan and I] said let’s slow down because the country is in danger [due to the conflict among TPLF leaders]. We were saying let the country first stabilize, and then we will go about our plans. When the order came suddenly, we were a little surprised. When I requested resignation earlier, my request was that the TPLF dissidents should not be mishandled; they deserve proper treatment. Later on, the trust was being eroded fast, and our resignation would have been inevitable. We were waiting for mass review (gimgema), and it was about Eritrea. We had finished another review session (gimgema). We were waiting for the gimgema over Eritrea. Suddenly the radio broke the news that we have been expelled, and the letter (that we’ve been removed) also arrived within a difference of half an hour.
    Were you expecting that type of dismissal?
    It was becoming clear there was no trust between us the army and the commander in chief [i.e. Meles]. If there was no trust, we had to resign. But the conditions in the country were volatile. We thought it was wrong to leave the country and army in that precarious situation. Otherwise, our resignation was a matter of time because of the differences we had with the PM. It shouldn’t have been the way they did it though.
    Have you ever tried to talk to them in person?
    We have been fighting together for a long time [i.e. pre-1991 rebel days]. But later on, it was clear we had become friends and enemies. Our political culture became nasty even our social ties were destroyed to the point you seeing each other as enemies. I’m blaming both sides [therefore, there was no need for talk].
    Question: The politics of TPLF has become dangerous that it judges you either as a friend or enemy. The current situation reflects this serious trend. But here we are young folks; we want to learn lessons from our seniors like you. What can we expect from the older generation? How is it possible to change what you described us a “nasty political culture?”
    Members of the young generation shouldn’t wait for instructions from us. For instance on campus, I see young students have a culture of tolerating differing views. This is a positive development indeed. It is unlike my generation on campus. Ours was kind of monolithic thinking, saying I’m right and those having different views are wrong.
    What is gratifying is the young generation is well educated, and has better technological help (like the Internet for research etc). Young Tigrians should join their fellow Ethiopian compatriots, form groups, and conduct debates. TPLF was formed to conduct a guerrila war, not to run a country. When TPLF split in 2001, the reason is because the organization was stagnant; it couldn’t move forward. It had finished its lifespan. It was suspicious of outsiders, and for that reason, never invited intellectuals to change itself for the better. The time now is for the young generation to assume new responsibilities for a better tomorrow.
    The young generation should discard the scare tactic that Tigrai is sandwitched between Eritrea and hostile chauvinists in Addis. This is very highly dangerous. This doesn’t mean there are no exremist, hateful individuals. There are. But look at the big picture: the majority of the Amhara, Oromo and other Ethiopian people. The young generation should discard the dangerous notion of saying Tigrai would be wiped out if Meles resigns. This is like telling you Tigrai was created after TPLF.
    God bless Ethio-Eritrea

  • Deki adi September 23, 2013

    Dear Mr Fitsume I am interest to here from you on the following issues of our identity. We shall join together this is God will.The typical tigay tigrigna written by Portugess pop of the 17 centureis assure that ታሪክ ራሱን ይደግማል እንዲሉ ከአፄ ዮውሓንስ ሞት በኋላ ግማሽ አካለችን የሆነው ከምጽዋ እስከ መረብ ያለው አገር ዳግም ላይመለስ ተቆርሶ ሂዷል:: ጣልያኖች እና ምኒሊካውያን ኢትዮጵያን ማሸነፍ የሚቻለው የትግራይን ህዝብ እርስ በራሱ በማጣላት ካለሆነ በጦርንት እንደማይሆንላቸው በማወቃቸው ጥንታዊት ኢትዮጵያን ለሁለት በመገዝገዝ ግማሹን በጣልያን እጅ የተቀረው ደግሞ በሸዋ እጅ እንዲሆን የተሳካ ሴራ ጠንስሰው ኣሳክተዋል:: ከአድዋ ድል በኋልም የድሉ ባለቤቶች የነበሩት ራስ አሉላ አባነጋ: ራስ ሓጐስ ምርጫ (የኢሳያሰ አፈወርቂ ቅድመ ኣያት) እርስበርስ ተባልተው በመሞታቸው እነዲሁም ራስ መንገሻ ዮውሓንስ ወደ ሸዋ ተወስዶ ባልዋለው ውንጀላ በመገደሉ ምክንያት ትግራይ ያለ ተቆረቋሪ ኣባት (በዘይ ኣያ) ቀረታለች:: ይህንንም ተከትሎ በሸዋ ሰዎች አሻሸጭነት ሰራየ እና አካለ ጉዘይ በ 5 ሚሊዮን ሊሬ እንደተቸበቸበ ታሪክ አንብበን እብረዳ:: የሽሬ ኣካል የነበረው የአሁኑ ባርካ: የኣጋመ ኣካል የነበረው ደንከል ከትገራይ ተቆረጠው ወደ ትግራይ የነፍጥ መተላለፍያ ቀዳዳ ለመዝጋት በምስጠራዊ ውል ያለ ትግራይ መሳፍንት እውቅና ለጣልያን እንደተሰጡ እንረዳ:: ወልቃይት: ፀለምቲ: ፀገዴ: ታሕታይ አርማጭሆ: ሰቲተ ሑመራ: ጋሽ ሰቲት: ተሰነይ: ከሰላ ግማሹ ለጣልያን የተቀረው ከተከዜ በስተደቡብ ያለው ምንም ታሪካዊ ትስስረ ወደ ሌለው የቤገምድር ግዛት እንደተጠቃለለ ኣንርሳ:: እንዲሁም ከመስዋእቲ እስከ አለዋህ ያለው የትግራይ መሬት በወሎ ክፍለሃገር ስር እንደተደረገ እናስታውስ:: ውንድማችን የሆነው የዋግ ህዝብ ቋንቋውን እና ብሄራዊ ማንነቱን ትቶ ሳይሆን ኣማራ የሆነበት ሰበብ እናሰተውል:: ልብ እንበል እውነት ለመናገር እኔ ከአሉላ በስተቀር ከላይ የተዘረዘትን የትግራይ መሳፍንት በእኔ እበልጥ ለጠላት ስላጋለጡን ኣልወዳቸውም: ኣለከብራቸወም:: በእርግጠኛነት የምናገርው ግን መንገሻ ዮውሓንስ በህይውት እያለ ወንሞቻቸን የሰራየ እና አካለ ጉዘይ ሰዎች ኣይሸጡም:: ባይሳካ እንኳ ሙሉ በሙሉ በጣልያን እጅ ወድቃ ኣንድነትዋን ጠብቃ ነፃ ትሆን ነበር:: ቀድመው በውጫሌ ውል ኣንቀፅ 3 መሰረት ለጣልያን የተሰጡት ሓማሴኖችም መጨረሻ ይመለሱ ነበር::
    ስለዚህ በኛ መካከል ለሚፈጠር አለመስማማት እዳው አንተም እኔም እንደምንሸከመው አንርሳ:: ስለዚህ ቢቻል የአንድ ሸሕ ዘመን የባርነት ዕዳ ያራገፈልንን ህዝባዊ ተጋድሎ ከንቱ እንዳይቀር ጠንቀቅ መሪዎቻችንን እንምከር:: በመጨረሻ የእስራኤል መሪ ቤነጃሚን ኔትንያሁ ባለፈው ዓመት የዒራን ሐገረ ፋርስ የኒኩሌር ውጥን ኣስመልክቶ በተመድ ጠቅላላ ጉባዔ ያለውን ላስታውሳችሁ “history will not give second chance to the Jew people; this is a chance that we have gotten in 2000 years, therefore we should not let the Iranians possess the devastating weapon” ብተመሳሳሊ ትግራይውን ታረክ ኣብ ሓደ ዘመን (1000 ዓመት) ዝረኸበቶ ዕድል ብከንቱ ከይኣጥፋእና ኣብዙርያ ጥንክርቲን ምዕብልቲን ትግራይ ንሓገረ ኢትዮጵያ ዳግም ንሀድሳ እብል:: ትግራይ ምስትደክም ኢትዮጵያ ሓቢራ ትደኽም: ትግራይ ምስትጥንክር ኢትዮጵያ ብምልእታ ትነቓቓሕ::
    ————————————–ወስብሐት ለእግዚአብሔር

  • Deki adi September 23, 2013

    Are you getting information the resolution of Ethio-Eritrea by concerned people of both countries and influential countries on this case.

  • slum November 1, 2013

    Said on
    are you tigryan? please don’t come here if you are even half. you sound like you are half-tigraway. you know eritreans are ok with some of you half-cast agame identify your self as Ethiopian but coming here in Eritrean fom and talk a shit is not good.
    by the way, I saw some of your post and you argued about jeberti, hummmm… jeberti are Eritrean’s and this is not current issue.

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