ኣቦ መንበር ሰልፊ ዲሞክራሲ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ (ሰዲህኤ)፡ ሓው መንግስተኣብ ኣስመሮም፡ ብ1 ሓምለ 2017 ኣብ ከተማ ቺካጎ፡ ክፉት ህዝባዊ ሰሚናር ኣካይዱ። ኣኼባ ብዝኽሪ ሰማእታት ኢዩ ተጀሚሩ።

 

ነቲ ኣኼባ ዝኸፈተ፡ ሓው ተወልደ መሓሪ፡ ካብ ጨንፈር ኢንድያና፡ ንዕዱማት ኣጋይሽ ናይ ምስጋናን እንቋዕ ደሓን መጻእኩምን መልእኽቲ ድሕሪ ምቕራብ፡ መድረኽ ንኣቦ መንበር ሰልፊ ኣመሓላለፈሉ።

 

ሓው መንግስተኣብ ኣስመሮም፡ ከም ቀንዲ ዛዕባ ኣኼባ ገይሩ ዝተዛረበሉ ኣርእስቲ፡ ብሰልፊ ዲሞክራሲ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ (ሰዲህኤ)፡ ኣብ’ዚ ቀረባ እዋን ዝቐረበ፡ ንሓባራዊ ዕዮ ተቓወምቲ ውድባት ዝጽውዕ እማመ ኢዩ ነይሩ። ከም መእተዊ ንመግለጺኡ ከኣ፡ ነቲ ሃገር/ደውላ (state) ዝብል ኣምር ብምግላጽ ኢዩ ጀሚሩ።

 

ሃገርን መንግስትን (state and government0 ክልተ ዝተፈላላዩ ኣምራት ምዃኖም ድሕሪ ምብራህ፡ ንመንግስቲ ምቅዋም ማለት ንሃገር ምቅዋም ከምዘይኰነ ኣብሪሁ። ኣስዒቡ ሃገር ብ4 ኣካላት ዝቖመ ምዃኑ፡ ንሳቶም ድማ፦

1. መንግስቲ

2. ህዝቢ

3. ዶባቱ ዝተነጸረ መሬት (territory)

4. ኣህጕራዊ ተፈላጥነት ኢዮም።

 

1. መንግስቲ፦

ንመንግስቲ ኣመልኪቱ፡ ሓው መንግስትኣብ፡ እቶም ሰለስተ ኣካላቱ ማለት ሓጋጊ፡ ፈጻምን ፈራድን ኣብ ትሕቲ ፍጹም ምቍጽጻር ናይ መራሕ መንግስቲ ኤርትራ ከም ዝውደቑ ዝርዝር መብርሂ ሂቡ።

 

2. ህዝቢ፦

ህዝቢ ኤርትራ፡ ብስእነት ሓርነት፡ ስእነት ግዝኣተ-ሕጊ፡ ስእነት ማይ፡ መግብን መንበሪ ኣባይቲ፡ ስእነት ስራሕ . . .ወዘተ ዝሳቐ ዘሎ ህዝቢ ምዃኑ ሰፊሕ መግለጺ ኣቕሪቡ። ቀጺሉ እታ መስረታዊት ኣሃዱ ናይ ሕብረተሰብ ዝዀነት ስድራቤት ተበታቲና ምህላዋ፤ ስደት፡ መለለዪን መጸውዕን ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ኰይኑ ምህላው ድሕሪ ምግላጽ መንግስቲ ኤርትራ ንስደት ከም ምንጪ ናይ ወጻኢ ባጤራ ንኽጥቀመሉን ብስእነተ ስራሕ ክፍጠር ንዝኽእል ህዝባዊ ናዕብታታ ንምዕጋትን ኰነ ኢሉ ዘተባብዖ ዘሎ ፖሊሲ ምዃኑ ኣስሚርሉ።

 

3. መሬት፦

ዲክታቶርያዊ ስርዓት ኤርትራ ብሰንኪ ጻሕታሪ ግርጭታት ዝዀነ ፖሊሲታቱ፡ ሰፊሕ ክፋል ካብ መሬት ኤርትራ ኣብ ትሕቲ ናይ ኢትዮጵያ ክወድቕ ምግባሩ። ነዚ መሬት’ዚ ብሓይሊ ይኹን ብሰላም ክመልስ ዘይምብቃዑ፡ ንልዑላውነት ሃገር ንሓደጋ ዘቃልዐ ስርዓት ምዃኑ ኣረዲኡ። ኣብ’ዚ እዋን’ዚ እውን ማያት፡ መሬትን ሰማያትን ኤርትራ ንናይ ወጻኢ ሓይልታት ኣሕሊፉ ሂቡ ምህላውን እዚ ኣብ መጻኢ ክፈጥሮ ዝኽእል ጸገማትን እውን ኣሚቱ።

 

4. ኣህጕራዊ ተፈላጥነት፦

ብቓልስን ድምጽን ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ዝተረጋገጸ ኣህጕራዊ ተፈላጥነት ኤርትራ ጌና ኣብ ቦታኡ ዘሎ እኳ እንተዀነ፡ ስርዓት ኤርትራ ብዝኽተሎ ዘሎ ግጉይ ፖሊሲታት፡ ንሓደጋ ክቃላዕ ከምዝኽእል ድማ ኣዘኻኺሩ።

 

ሓው መንግስተኣብ ኣስመሮም፡ ብሓደ ሸነኽ ኤርትራ ከምሃገር ናብ ፍሽለት ገጻ ተምርሕ ከምዘላ፤ ብኻልእ ሽነኽ ከኣ፡ ነታ ሃገር ካብ ፍሽለት ከድሕን ዝኽእል ዝተጠርነፈ ተቓዋሚ ሓይሊ ዘይምህላው፡ ንሰልፊ ዲሞክራሲ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ኣዝዩ ዘሻቕል ጕዳይ ምዃኑ ሓቢሩ።

 

ካብ’ዚ ተበጊሱ፡ ኣድላይነት ናይ ሓባራዊ ዕዮ ተቓወምቲ ውድባት ኤርትራ፡ ህጹጽን ዕዙዝን ጕዳይ ምዃኑ ኣስሚርሉ። ቀጺሉ፡ ዝሓላፈ ተመኵሮታት ናይ ሓባራዊ ዕዮ፡ ብሰንኪ ቀዳምነታት ዘይምስራዕን ብሰንኪ ናይ ህልኽን ኣሉታዊ ናይ ምውድዳር መንፈስን ክሰምር ወይ ክዕወት ከምዘይከኣለ ኣብሪሁ።

 

ነዚ ክውን ንምግባር ድማ፡ ሰዲህኤ፡ ኣብ’ዘን ዝስዕባ መትከላት ዝተሰረተ፡ ሓባራዊ ዲፕሎማስያዊ፡ ዜናውን ህዝባውን ዕዮ ንምክያድ፡ ምስ ኵለን ተቓወምቲ ውድባት ኣብ ናይ እንካን ሃባን መስርሕ ክኣቱን ድልዊ ምህላዉ ኣረዲኡ።

1. ምዕቃብ ልኡላዊ ግዝኣት ኤርትራ፤

2. ምውዳቕ ዲክታቶርያዊ ስርዓት ህግደፍን ምልጋስ መሓውራት ጭቆናኡን፤

3. ድሕሪ ውድቐት ስርዓት ህግደፍ፡ ኣብዝሓ ሰልፋዊ ስርዓት ዝሰረቱ ህዝባዊ ዲሞክራስያዊ ስርዓት ምቛም፤

4. ግዝኣተ ሕግን ዲሞክራስያዊ መሰላትን መላእ ሓርነታትን ህዝቢ ምቕባል፤ ዝብላ ኢየን።

 

ኣብ መወዳእታ፡ ካብ ኣኼበኛታት ንዝቐረብሉ ኣገደስቲ ሕቶታት መሊሱ። ተሳተፍቲ ኣኼባ ድማ፡ ነቲ ብሰዲህኤ ተወሲዱ ዘሎ ተበግሶ ንሓባራዊ ዕዮ ደገፎም ድሕሪ ምግላጽ፡ ኣብ ከተማ ቺካጎ ዝካየድ ኣኼባታት ብሰዲህኤ ጥራሕ ብምዃኑ ፍሉይ ምስጋናን መጐስን ኣቕሪቦም።

The renewed Djibouti-Eritrea border dispute is the first ripple effect of the Gulf crisis in Africa.

18 Jun 2017 14:54 GMT |

 

Maintaining the 500-strong presence of Qatari armed troops in a remote area was a costly and largely thankless endeavour write Barakat and Milton [AP]Maintaining the 500-strong presence of Qatari armed troops in a remote area was a costly and largely thankless endeavour write Barakat and Milton [AP]

By

@BARAKAT_Sultan

Sultan Barakat is the director of Center for Conflict and Humanitarian Studies at the Doha Institute.

By

@SansomMilton

Sansom Milton is a senior research fellow at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies.

The media has been quick to associate Qatar's decision to withdraw its peacekeeping forces from the disputed Djibouti-Eritrea border with the Gulf crisis. This connection was most likely made because Qatar's decision came only days after both Djibouti and Eritrea announced that they are siding withSaudi Arabia in the diplomatic rift and downgraded their diplomatic relations with Qatar.

The withdrawal of troops, if understood as a knee-jerk reaction, contrasts markedly with how Qatar has been operating since the start of the crisis. Qatar has not reciprocated the harsh, punitive moves of the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia in a tit-for-tat spiral of vindictiveness. Nor has it reacted to countries which have reduced diplomatic relations, such as Jordan, by taking retaliatory measures against its thousands of nationals working in Qatar.

While Qatar Airways offices have been sealed off in Abu Dhabi and its senior staff harassed, no such measures have been taken by Doha. Furthermore, while food supplies through Saudi Arabia and the UAE were cut, Qatar continues to supply the latter with around 57 million cubic metres of gas daily. This shows that Qatar continues to play the long game by taking the moral high ground - a strategy that looks to have paid off given the number of international diplomatic capitals that have refused to cave into the intense lobbying of Saudi Arabia and the UAE to vilify Qatar. 

READ MORE: Africa and the Gulf crisis: the peril of picking sides

Given what we know about how Qatar has operated during the crisis, the explanation that the troop withdrawal is purely a knee-jerk reaction to the downgrading of diplomatic ties does not add up. Doubtlessly, with downgraded relations, Qatar finds itself in a difficult position as a mediator and peacekeeper between the two nations. No mediator can operate effectively with reduced representation, both on a practical and reputational level. Nevertheless, it is unlikely that the decision has been made in a retaliatory manner. Rather, there are three less evident reasons for why the decision to withdraw has been on the cards for some time and why it is now impossible for anyone in Qatar to advocate for maintaining the peacekeeping force.

The potential fallout of the crisis could have ripple waves spiralling out of the border dispute to the much larger Eritrea-Ethiopia conflict and the rest of the Horn of Africa at a time when the sub-region is facing a massive humanitarian crisis.

First of all, a fundamental principle of conflict mediation is that any third party must maintain a credible threat to walk away if the conflicting parties are not committed to reaching a negotiated settlement. Qatari troops have, for the past seven years, been stationed in the dusty uninhabited border region between the two East African countries to monitor the implementation of the terms of a ceasefire agreement brokered by Qatar in June 2010.

Despite consistent attempts to turn the ceasefire into a peace agreement, little progress has been made. A minor breakthrough was achieved in March 2016 when, in a deal mediated by Qatar, Eritrea released four prisoners from Djibouti's armed forces who were captured in June 2008 during border clashes. However, in the past year, the Eritrean negotiating team has disengaged from the mediation process despite the United Nations Security Council mandated-arms embargo on Eritrea being re-approved in November 2016, demanding that Eritrea release all missing prisoners and allow UN monitors to enter the country.

The two states, particularly Eritrea, have not heeded calls for border demarcation and have gone into denial by refusing to refer to the border conflict as a serious issue. The presence of the Qatari peacekeepers had allowed both parties to grow accustomed to the status quo of a mutually beneficial stalemate.

Second, Djibouti and Eritrea consistently engage in a geostrategic game of shifting alliances. When Qatar entered the fray, the Djibouti-Eritrea border dispute was a minor conflict with very few international actors showing an appetite for mediation. Since then Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti has expanded to become the largest US military base in the region, China has also entered Djibouti, while, in April 2015, Saudi Arabia and Eritrea signed a security cooperation agreement and the UAE is currently completing the construction of a military base north of the port city of Assab in Eritrea from where its armed forces have been operating in the military campaign in Yemen. This particular corner of the Horn of Africa is by now far too crowded for a small nation like Qatar to justify its military presence as a buffer.

READ MORE: Qatar-Gulf crisis: All the latest updates

Third, maintaining the 500-strong presence of Qatari troops in a remote area is a costly and largely thankless endeavour. While the withdrawal was doubtlessly hastened by the changes in diplomatic relations with Eritrea and Djibouti, this has more to do with the infiltration of the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia into Eritrea. This military presence clearly renders Qatari troops stationed thousands of miles away in an isolated area a soft target for direct or indirect retaliation. Moreover, 500 troops represent a significant investment of military manpower for an armed forces of around 12,000 during the most urgent crisis the country has faced in its history.

With Eritrea moving its forces into the contested Dumeira Mountain and Dumeira Islands, the temperature of the conflict has been increased and the situation is now more explosive than ever before, for all actors involved. The rapid development of the situation demonstrates the important stabilising role that Qatar had played under the radar for many years.

Moreover, the potential fallout of the crisis could have ripple waves spiralling out of the border dispute to the much larger Eritrea-Ethiopia conflict and the rest of the Horn of Africa at a time when the sub-region is facing a massive humanitarian crisis. This should serve as a cautionary note for the potential of escalation in other places where Qatari assistance has been keeping the lid on conflict, in particular, the Gaza Strip, where as a result of the increased isolation of Qatar by its Gulf neighbours we may see the end of the single most important donor to the reconstruction of the besieged territory to date. This should focus the minds of world leaders on the need to resolve the Gulf crisis amicably as soon as possible.

Professor Sultan Barakat is the director of the Center for Conflict and Humanitarian Studies at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies and professor in the Department of Politics at the University of York.

Dr Sansom Milton is a senior research fellow at the Center for Conflict and Humanitarian Studies at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.

Source=http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2017/06/qatar-army-djibouti-eritrea-border-170618100118290.html

ሰልፊ ዲሞክራሲ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ብ25 ሰነ 2017 ኣብ ከተማ ዶርትሙንድ ኣብ ዝተኻየደ ፍሉይ ጉባአ ሰልፊ ማሕበራዊ ዲሞክራሲ ጀርመን ተሳቲፉ። ሰልፊ ማሕበራዊ ዲሞክራሲ ጀርመን ኣብቲ ኣብ ዝመጽእ ዘሎ 24 መስከረም ዝካየድ ናይ ቻንስሎር ምርጫ ዓብይ ደገፍ ዘለዎ እዩ።

ወ/ሮ ኣድያም ተፈራ ኣባል ማእከላይ ባይቶ ሰዲህኤን ኣብ መሰል ደቂ ኣንስትዮ ብልዑል ደረጃ እትነጥፍን ነቲ ሓደ ናይ ሰልፍና ናይ ቀረባ ፈታዊ ዝነበሮ ልኡኽ መሪሓ። እዚ ልኡኽ መልእኽቲ ምሕዝነት ኣቦመንበር ሰልፊ ዲሞክራሲ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ኣቶ መንግስተኣብ ኣስመሮም ናብ ሓለፍቲ ሰልፊ ማሕበራዊ ዲሞክራሲ ጀርመን ኣረኪቡ። ኣቦመንበር ሰዲህኤ ኣብቲ መልእኽቱ “ንሕና ሰልፊ ዲሞክራሲ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ፡ ብስም እቲ ንደሞክራስያዊ ለውጢ፡ ሰላምን ዕቤትን ከምኡ እውን ንማሕበራዊ ፍትሒ ዝቃለስ ዘሎ ኤርትራዊ፡ ጉባአኹም ኣገዳሲ ዓወት ከመዝግብ ሰናይ ትምኒትናን ናይ ምሕዝነት መልእኽትናን ከነቕርብ እንከልና ሕጉሳት ኢና።” ኢሉ።.

ምስዚ ኣተሓሒዙ ኣቶ መንግስተኣ ሰዲህኤ፡ ብ2013 ኣብ ሊያፕዚግ ሰልፊ ማሕበራዊ ደሞክራሲ ጀርመን ምስ ዝርከቦም ካለኦት መሓዙት ኮይኑ መስራቲ ኣባል ምሕዝነት ገስገስቲ ከም ዝነበረ ኣዘኻኺሩ። ከምኡ ከኣ ሰዲህኤ ኣብ ዝሓለፈ ጉባአ  ማሕበራዊ ዲሞክራሲ ምስታፉ ብሓጐስ ዘኪሩ፡ ቅድሚ 4 ዓመት ኣብ መበል 150 ዓመት ዝኽሪ ምምስራት ሰልፊ ማሕበራዊ ደሞክራሲ ጀርመን ተሳቲፉ ከም ዝነበረ ገሊጹ።

ኣቶ መንግስተኣብ ብዛዕባቲ ኣብዚ እዋን ዘሎ ዘሕዝን ኩነታት ኤርትራ ክገልጽ እንከሎ፡ ቀጻልን ንጹር ደገፍ ሰልፊ ማሕበራዊ ደሞክራሲ ጀርመን፡  ነተን ካብ ኤርትራ ወጻኢ ዘለዋ ነቲ ግፍዐኛ ስርዓት ዝቃወማ ፖለቲካውን ሲቪላውን ተዋሳእቲ  ኣብ ምርግጋጽ ሰብኣዊ መሰል፡ ደሞክራስን ግዝኣተ ሕግን ኣብ ኤርትራ ብዝምልከት ኣስፊሩ።

ኣብ መወዳእታ፡ ኣቶ መንግስተኣ ኣብ ጀርመን ዝርከቡ ኣባላት ሰዲህኤ ኣብቲ መጻኢ ምርጫ ንዓወት ሰልፊ ማሕበራዊ ደሞክራስን ሕጽዩ ማርቲን ስቹልትዝን ኩሉ ዝከኣሎም ክገብሩ ቅሩባት ምህላዎም ኣረጋጊጹ።

EPDP Attends SPD Congress in Dortmund 2ኣብ ዶርትሙንድ ዝተኻየደ ጉባአ ሰልፊ ማሕበራዊ ደሞክራሲ 600 ኣባላትን 5,000 ኣጋይሽን ተሳቲፈምዎ።

ኣብዚ ጉባአ ኣቶ ማርቲን ስቹልትዝ ሕጹይ ሰልፊ ማሕበራዊ ዲሞክራሲ ንቻንስለርነት ኣብ ዘስምዕዎ መደረ፡ ናብ ናጻ ትምህርቲ፡ ምንካይ ናይ ግብሪ ጽዕነት፡ ማእከላይ እቶት ጀርመን፡ ወፍሪ ኣብ ትሕተ ቅርጽን ደገፎም ንውህድቲ ኤውሮጳን ዘተኮረ መጻኢ መደባቶም ሓቢሮም።

 “ኣብ ዘይርጉእ ኩነታት ኢና ንነብርን ዘለና። ሎሚ ኤውሮጳ እንደጋና ክትፍጠር ይግበኣ” ዝበሉ ኣቶ ማርቲን ስቹልትዝ፡ ንኣገዳስነት ሰብኣዊ መሰል፡ምውጋድ ዓመጽን ኣብ ረብሓ ዝህብ ምውፋርን ብምጥቃስ “ኣብ ህይወተይ ምእንቲ እዚ ሓሳባት ተቓሊሰ እየ። መጻኢ መንግስቲ ነዚኣቶም ንክትግብር ብሰልፊ ማሕበራዊ ደሞክራሲ ዝምራሕ ንክኸውን ከኣ በዚ ጐደናዚ ምቕጻል ኣገዳሲ እዩ። እዚ ግብራዊ ንክኸውን ልባዊ ቃልሲ ምክያድ ዋጋ ዘለዎ እዩ” ኢሎም

The Eritrean People's Democratic Party (EPDP) attended  on 25 June 2017 the Extraordinary Congress in Dortmund of the German Social Democratic Party (SPD)  which was partly a  huge electoral rally in support of the SPD candidate for German Chancellorship elections  on 24 September this year.

Ms Adiam Tefera, EPDP Central Council member and passionate women's rights activist, headed the delegation which included one close friend of the party. The delegation handed over to SPD officials a solidarity message from the EPDP Chairman, Mr. Menghesteab Asmerom.

In his message, the EPDP Chairman said, "We in the Eritrean People's Democratic Party  are pleased to express to this Congress a resounding success and convey  to it a message of solidarity on behalf of Eritreans struggling for democratic change, peace, prosperity and social justice."

He reminded the SPD that the EPDP,  which was a founding member, together with fraternal SPD, of the Progressive Alliance in Leipzig in 2013, is today proud to be amongst the SPD in Dortmund.  He also happily recalled the attendance of EPDP  delegation at the last congress of fraternal SPD and, four years ago, at the 150th anniversary of the founding of the German Social Democratic Party.

Mr. Menghesteab wrote about the current sad situation in Eritrea  and expected concrete support from SPD for "the promotion of human rights, democracy and the rule of law in Eritrea through non-state political and civil society actors in exile that are opposed to the repressive regime in Eritrea."

Finally, he expressed the readiness of EPDP members in Germany to do all what they can to help SPD and its candidate, Martin Schultz,  in the campaign for success in the upcoming German elections.

EPDP Attends SPD Congress in Dortmund 2

The SPD congress in Dortmund was attended by 600 delegates and 5,000 guests

Speaking at the huge gathering, Mr. Martin Schulz, the SPD candidate for Chancellorship, outlined his programme focused free education, reducing the tax burden on low- and middle-income Germans, investing in infrastructure and fostering a united Europe.

“We are living in a time of upheaval. Now Europe must be founded again,” said Schulz, stressing the importance of human rights, disarmament and investing in digital infrastructure. “I have fought for these ideas through my life. It is worth going onto the streets for these ideas, to make sure the next government is a Social Democratic one which will make them a reality. For this idea it is worth fighting with a passionate heart,” he stressed.  

This cable, made public by Wikileaks, was sent by the then Ambassador to Ethiopia, Don Yamamoto on 24 April 2007. Although dated, it is still of considerable interest.

Classified By: AMBASSADOR DONALD YAMAMOTO. REASON: 1.4 (B) AND (D). 1. (U) Post responses are provided per ref A. A. (S/NF) WHAT ARE ETHIOPIA’S PLANS AND INTENTIONS FOR DEALING WITH ERITREAN PRESIDENT ISAIAS AND THE BORDER IMPASSE?

PERCEPTIONS OF ERITREA

2. (S/NF) Prime Minister Meles and the hard-core elements of the ruling Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) view Eritrea as a state in collapse whose population, if supported by the outside and encouraged by open internal dissension, would revolt against Isaias. The Prime Minister and his cabinet view going to war with the people of Eritrea as a waste of limited resources that would achieve very little. At this time, Meles opposes any war with Eritrea as a futile effort with little benefits, distracting Ethiopia from more pressing issues: Somalia and Sudan.

3. (S/NF) Dealing with President Isaias and the border impasse are two distinct yet interrelated problems. Further, how Ethiopia and its leadership view Isaias and Eritrea, two separate issues, also influences how they will deal with Isaias specifically and Eritrea generally. Perceptions by Meles and his leadership, whether correct or not, have become more emotional and more firmly negative toward Isaias, and have shaped the approach, whether wise and logical or not, that Ethiopia is taking towards Isaias.

PERCEPTIONS OF ISAIAS

4. (S/NF) President Isaias is viewed by Meles and his government as an extremely dangerous, hostile, and evil individual whose sole goal is to make Eritrea the dominant power in the Horn of Africa and to promote Isaias’ role as paramount leader in the region. Ethiopia stands in the way of Isaias’ desire for dominance in the region. Meles and the TPLF leaders believe Isaias has no “death wish” but that Isaias’ self preservation does not merely mean survival, but forcing others to make sacrifices, from enduring great economic hardship to even the pain of death, to ensure Eritrea’s continued existence and eventual elevation of Isaias as primus inter paris leader in the region. Meles and others firmly believe that Isaias knows that he lacks the military might to confront Ethiopia directly. Isaias’ strategy, Meles believes, is to attack Ethiopia by expanding the battlefield to include destabilizing Somalia and using Sudan to conduct attacks on western Ethiopia (e.g., Gambella); increasing tensions between Djibouti and Ethiopia over use of the port of Djibouti, the main lifeline for landlocked Ethiopia’s access to the Red Sea; training anti-Ethiopian rebels; supporting internal political divisions in Ethiopia; planning terrorist attacks on public areas and assassinations of Ethiopian leaders; and keeping the international community off-balance to minimize criticism and sanctions of Eritrea. In our conversations with Isaias over the years, he has made it clear that any future conflict with Ethiopia would be “war by other means” and not a direct military battle of “interior lines” of both forces.

DEALING WITH ISAIAS

5. (S/NF) Meles and his leadership believe that dealing with Isaias directly or indirectly is dangerous and detracts from more pressing and immediate challenges. For Meles and his leadership, Ethiopia’s national strategic interests lie in stabilizing Somalia, eliminating extremist threats, and establishing a government in Mogadishu that has wide clan support and is closely aligned with Addis Ababa. The other ADDIS ABAB 00001275 002 OF 007 threat is Sudan. As Meles deeply fears that an unstable Sudan potentially poses a greater threat to Ethiopia’s security and to regional stability, he looks to the international community to stabilize Sudan. Between these two pressing and dangerous situations is Isaias. Isaias hosts 30 different opposition groups, and his more effective management of groups opposed to Ethiopia, in contrast to Ethiopia’s clumsy and ineffective efforts to support groups antagonistic to Isaias, underscores Isaias’ potential to add to regional instability. Historically, Meles’ approach was to carefully keep Isaias in a “box” by strengthening Ethiopian forces along the border, neutralizing Eritrea’s influence in Somalia, and increasing Eritrea’s isolation in the international community.

6. (S/NF) But now, Meles sees that this approach must be modified to include more vocal criticism of Eritrea as a “rogue state” sponsoring terrorism and seeking to destabilize the region. The Foreign Ministry has pressed the international community to openly criticize Eritrea, and wants to introduce UN Security Council resolutions and African Union Peace and Security Council (PSC) communiques condemning Eritrea as a state sponsor of terrorism. Further, Meles has elevated Eritrean opposition groups in Ethiopia, designating GOE State Ministers, rather than office directors, to deal with them. Meles is also carefully working the Sanaa Forum and IGAD to increase pressure and isolation of Eritrea: Eritrea’s recent decision to suspend participation in IGAD followed an April 13 IGAD Ministerial communique endorsing Ethiopian actions in Somalia as “fully consistent” with the region’s goals. Meles has commented to us that he is in a “bind”. He does not want, nor can he afford, to go to war with Eritrea, because it will divert resources from the more important goal of stabilizing Somalia for now and perhaps Sudan down the road. For now, Ethiopia will not go to war with Isaias and will not take any extraordinary measures to neutralize him, but expects the international community to pressure Isaias on his destabilizing activities. We have assured Meles that we recognize Eritrea’s unhelpful activities, but that Meles should focus on our mutually shared efforts in Somalia: providing force protection for AU Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) troops, support for Somalia’s Transitional Federal Government (TFG), and security at the airport and seaport and for the upcoming national reconciliation conference.

BORDER IMPASSE

7. (S/NF) Despite occasional public statements to the contrary, Meles and other GOE principals do not want the UN Mission in Ethiopian and Eritrea (UNMEE) to go away, because it serves as a useful tripwire, and its departure would eliminate the last remnant of international community commitment to avert war. Further, Meles views UNMEE as an important element, if not necessarily an effective mechanism, in tracking Eritrea’s encroachment into the Temporary Security Zone (TSZ) and serving as a challenge to Isaias who has imposed numerous restrictions on UNMEE. Both the current UNMEE Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General (SRSG) and his predecessor have consistently hailed Ethiopian cooperation with UNMEE, and the GOE’s relative transparency in declaring Ethiopian troop movements. Meles will maintain a sizable force along the border but primarily in defensive positions ready to repel Eritrean aggression. Meles believes that resolution of the border conflict depends on addressing the fundamental issues that divide both countries. Even acceptance of a demarcated border would not end the dispute; Meles believes that Isaias would only find another issue to antagonize Ethiopia. Meles will continue to seek international support for normalization talks, pointing to the support by the Witnesses to the Algiers Agreement of 12 December 2000 (i.e., Algeria, the AU, EU, the United States, and the UN; see S/2006/126 of February 2006) as a critical condition to ensure the peaceful resolution of the border dispute. B. (S/NF)

WHO ARE PRIME MINISTER MELES’ MOST INFLUENTIAL ADVISORS AND WHAT ARE THEY TELLING HIM REGARDING THE BORDER?

8. (S/NF) After the assassination of his security chief, Kinfe, and the 2001 firing of the CHOD, Lieutenant General Gebretsadkhan Gebretensae, there are few who have the intellectual depth to stand up to Meles’ keen insights into problems. Meles seeks advice from a wide variety of people with divergent views, even antagonistic to his own, in order to ensure that he fully understands all sides. He does not want to be isolated or confined to one single approach. Meles does not stand on protocol and readily invites visitors to meet with him even after our Embassy would not normally make such a request.

9. (S/NF) Meles is an avid reader, with books and reading materials throughout his private home. He is deeply inquisitive and constantly asks questions, verifying information with a variety of sources. He has even called the Ambassador in for private discussions on politics in the U.S. Meles is also very interested in knowing people, who they are, their background, and how they came to have certain ideas and views. But of importance is that Meles constantly challenges set views and policy ideas. The most revealing insight into his flexibility and ability to change positions was his November 2006 conversation with General Abizaid. General Abizaid spoke of lessons learned in Iraq and the importance of understanding your advisors and what goals were to be achieved. He dissuaded Meles from targeting only “technicals” as a waste of time and resources with little benefit, and said that a comprehensive approach was necessary. That conversation, and Meles’ own propensity to think differently, influenced Meles’ approach to Somalia during the initial stages of the conflict, and also the approach in trying to stabilize Somalia. An avid scholar of history, he looked at how other leaders faced challenges and how they responded to crises of faith as well as security threats. Interestingly, Isaias shares some of Meles’ traits (the same inquisitiveness), though perhaps not the flexibility of thought that Meles so keenly possesses.

10. (S/NF) While National Intelligence and Security Service (NISS) chief Getachew and CHOD Lieutenant General Samora Yonus (General Tsadkhan’s successor) formally head Ethiopia’s security services and military respectively, they are not believed to be among PM Meles’ closest advisors. Currently, Meles’ main advisors include: TPLF founding member Seyoum Mesfin, who has served as Foreign Minister since 1991; Public Relations Advisor (with rank of Minister) Bereket Simon (AKA Mebratu Gebrehiwot), a founder of the Amhara National Democratic Movement (ANDM), the ethnic Amhara wing of the ruling Ethiopia People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), who also serves as EPRDF spokesman; and a number of other TPLF/EPRDF members. But Meles is changing and moving to new people. TPLF founding member Sebhat Nega’s (AKA Woldeselassie Nega) influence may be waning, while London-based businessman Abdul Aldish’s may be rising. The old TPLF standard-bearers have argued that Meles stopped too soon and should have gone to Asmara. Meles still believes that would have been disastrous in terms of international criticism and also the prospect of being bogged down in a long guerrilla war with Eritrea. The new faces in the EPRDF and TPLF leadership are technocrats with a vision for a new prosperous Ethiopia, e.g., Health Minister Tewodros Adhanom. For these advisors, the border is a distraction, drawing energy and resources away from more important ventures. Ultimately, however, Meles heeds his own counsel. C. (S/NF)

TO WHAT EXTENT HAS THE RECENT SUCCESS IN SOMALIA INFLUENCED THE DECISION TO RENEW CONFLICT WITH ERITREA?

11. (S/NF) It is in the Ethiopian character to never dwell on limited or temporary tactical military successes on the battlefield. Rather, it is the final result which will determine success. Citing Ethiopia’s large ethnic Somali population, shared contiguous border with Somalia, and a delicate balance within Ethiopia between Orthodox Christianity and Muslim ascendancy, Meles and the leadership view stabilizing Somalia as a “critical” national security interest but a work still in progress. The operation is ADDIS ABAB 00001275 004 OF 007 expensive, has cost many lives, and the prospect of failure increases the longer Ethiopian troops remain in Somalia and the longer it takes the TFG to stabilize Mogadishu, the center of gravity in the conflict in Somalia. Meles has always made it clear that Ethiopia, the TFG, and the international community have no more than six months to make a significant impact on Somalia’s future stability. If they do not get the “formula” correct now, the prospect for insurgent battles in Mogadishu, and for Somalia becoming an even greater base for foreign extremists and homegrown terrorists, will make Somalia even more destabilized and that much harder to correct.

12. (S/NF) Tactical military successes in December 2006 and January 2007 in Somalia may have forced some Eritrean “advisors” out of Somalia, it has not stopped Eritrea’s efforts to continue to destabilize Somalia. The presence of former Council of Islamic Court (CIC) members in Asmara, and Isaias’ support and hosting of conferences of groups opposed to Ethiopia and the TFG, is a direct threat to stability in Somalia. Further, while angered by the Eritrean “advisors” who helped prepare CIC extremists for conflict with Ethiopia, the Ethiopians are equally disappointed with the Kenyans, who the Ethiopians believe allowed the fleeing Eritrean military advisors to return to Asmara. Eritrea continues to be a negative factor in Somalia, but Meles’s approach is to neutralize Eritrean influence, not to prepare for direct conflict with Eritrea. He still expects the international community to share the same goals of stability in Somalia, and to believe that Eritrea is a threat to this end state. Severe international criticism and cutting off Eritrea from the outside remains Meles’ current approach to Eritrea. D. (S/NF)

TO WHAT EXTENT HAS THE RECENT INCREASE IN ETHNIC INSURGENT ACTIVITY NEAR THE BORDER INFLUENCED THE DECISION TO RENEW CONFLICT WITH ERITREA?

13. (S/NF) Ethnic insurgent conflict has increased, particularly in Ethiopia’s Somali (Ogaden) and Oromiya regions, which host the two main rebel groups, the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) and the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF). The GOE has been reportedly ruthless in rounding up suspected supporters and fighters for these groups, which has increased the tensions in these two areas. Eritrea’s support in providing military training and advice has only fueled growing dissension between these groups and the central government. While not viewed as controlling or directing these groups, Eritrea’s influence is significant. Eritrea’s demonstrated activities supporting the ONLF and OLF is not, however, enough to trigger war plans against Eritrea by Ethiopia. The approach by the GOE has been sharp and at times brutal, in neutralizing anti-GOE elements as the best way to minimize Eritrea’s influence.

14. (S/NF) Our efforts to promote a comprehensive approach of assistance and development have so far fallen on deaf ears. Should tensions and conflict in Oromiya and Ogaden increase, and if the GOE does not heed international approaches for more engagement, there is the possibility of increasing blame on Eritrea for Ethiopia’s failed policy approach to these two areas. But we doubt that this would be sufficient to launch any attack on Eritrea. Ethiopia’s problem remains one of manpower and the inability to commit troops and resources to multiple battlefronts. Somalia and internal dissent in Ethiopia remain the focus for Meles. Another war over the border would be impossible to handle. E. (S/NF)

TO WHAT EXTENT WILL ETHIOPIA LOOK TO THE U.S. FOR INTELLIGENCE, MILITARY, FINANCIAL, AND OTHER SUPPORT BEFORE A NEW CONFLICT?

15. (S/NF) If war were imminent with Eritrea, Ethiopia would not/not look to the U.S. for assistance, primarily because the U.S. is far too slow and has yet to fulfill normal promises made to the GOE in response to simple requests such as C-130 repair (seven years and still counting). Further, the U.S. would not support any preparation by Ethiopia or Eritrea for conflict. The primary source for Ethiopia would be the same countries that helped Ethiopia in the last ADDIS ABAB 00001275 005 OF 007 conflict with Eritrea: the Chinese can provide guns and jeeps, the Israelis maintenance necessary, and Russia and Ukraine would likely provide pilots and spare parts. Due to their competitive pricing, North Korea can also be expected to provide materiel to Ethiopia. The Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF) is currently using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) of Israeli origin. But Ethiopia and Eritrea have used the past seven years to restock their military supplies and reposition troops, rendering any international arms embargo useless.

16. (S/NF) Ethiopia does, however, want U.S. intelligence on positioning of Eritrean forces along the border, an early warning of imminent Eritrean attack, as well as information on the extent of Eritrean support for the OLF and ONLF, and activities in Somalia. They would also want information on Eritrean operatives or elements supported by Eritrea planning terrorist attacks in Addis or in other areas of Ethiopia. Ethiopia would likely seek USG satellite imagery on Eritrea, as it did on Somalia. F. (S/NF)

TO WHAT EXTENT ARE THE ETHIOPIANS CONCERNED ABOUT INTERNATIONAL CRITICISM IF THEY INITIATIVE HOSTILITIES WITH ERITREA AND HOW DOES THAT INFLUENCE THE WAR DECISION?

17. (S/NF) As underscored by Ethiopia’s current intervention in Somalia, international criticism (e.g., EU allegations of suspected war crimes) will not sway Ethiopia’s plans if Meles assesses there is sufficient support in alternate international fora or among key allies/donors. Ultimately, Meles will do what he wants. It would be extremely important for the U.S. to take the lead in unifying the Witnesses in sending a consistent and very strong message that war is unacceptable. No country can convey any different message. More important, unlike the previous conflict, no country can either provide support to, or undercut any arms embargo on, both countries during a conflict. Those countries whose nationals support either country must stand firmly and vocally in opposing any assistance and should take action, even if it proves to be ineffective, to prosecute their nationals for violating the arms embargo. At the same time, we need to be clear to Ethiopia that it plays an important role in promoting regional peace and stability and that the international community supports Ethiopia. Criticism without expression of Ethiopia’s value would only antagonize the Meles government. For Eritrea, as well, the message of hope for a more prosperous future for its people must also be conveyed. Finally, the most compelling action we can take is to cut off the money from the diaspora to both countries. While probably ineffective in the short term and almost impossible to implement, it would send a powerful message to both countries that the consequence of war is financial disaster. Meles and his government, as well as President Isaias, clearly understand this point. During discussions, the cutting off of diaspora funding was raised as one consequence of renewed conflict. Isaias was furious and Yemane Gebreab conveyed to us privately that this action would be tantamount to a declaration of war. Since this hit such a raw nerve, it was never mentioned again by the U.S. G. (S/NF)

TO WHAT EXTENT WILL ECONOMIC FACTORS INFLUENCE THE DECISION TO GO TO WAR WITH ERITREA AND WHAT ARE THEY?

18. (S/NF) Eritrea alone could not inflict any economic reasons for Ethiopia renewing conflict with Eritrea. Given Eritrea’s growing economic isolation, Ethiopian officials assess that maintaining the status quo favors Ethiopia in the long term. There must be two parallel and corresponding conditions for Ethiopia to go to war for economic reasons. First, as the eighth-lowest ranked country in the world, according to the UN Human Development Index, Ethiopia remains largely dependent on foreign donor assistance. Should the U.S. and other donors decide to cut off or severely limit assistance to Ethiopia specifically to punish Ethiopia on the border and show that we clearly favor Eritrea, then Ethiopia would reevaluate its relations with the outside world. Second, international action alone, however, is not enough for Ethiopia to go to war. What would be essential in conjunction with any international action against Ethiopia ADDIS ABAB 00001275 006 OF 007 would be Eritrean action to cut off Ethiopia’s lifeline to the Red Sea, the port of Djibouti. Losing port access is one of landlocked Ethiopia’s redlines. In actuality, making Djibouti close operations to Ethiopia would require support from the international community and would signal a clear intent to isolate and sanction Ethiopia, and to hurt Ethiopia economically. However, if Ethiopia assessed that Eritrea were responsible, then this could trigger conflict. H. (S/NF)

HOW WILL THE ERITREA ETHIOPIA BORDER COMMISSION (EEBC) DECISION TO REMOTELY DEMARCATE THE BORDER IN NOVEMBER 2007 CHANGE THE ETHIOPIAN DECISION TO GO TO WAR?

19. (S/NF) Like Eritrea, Ethiopia rejects the EEBC’s authority to demarcate the border by coordinates. Should the EEBC decision be finalized but with no further action, this would not precipitate renewed conflict with Eritrea. However, should the international community determine that the border is demarcated, and then impose sanctions and economic restrictions specifically and primarily targeted against Ethiopia without discussion or any effort to bring both parties together, then Ethiopia would reevaluate its position. If Eritrea then proceeds to move troops towards Badme by force, with the consent or non-opposition of the international community, then conflict would commence immediately.

20. (S/NF) The EEBC decision potentially holds the greatest threat to pushing the parties to renewed conflict. It goes against their original guidance on physical demarcation, and on discussion and agreement with the parties to bring both sides to discuss and mutually agree on the placement of the pillars. It also ignores the informal private discussions with the EEBC by the Witnesses on measures to avoid conflict and promote the parties dealing directly with each other on areas of contention. In the rush by the EEBC to finalize the demarcation by any means and conclude the EEBC’s work, they may be inadvertently sowing the seeds of dissension and potential renewed conflict.

21. (S/NF) The international community, specifically the Witnesses, must carefully coordinate a consistent and unequivocal position with the U.N. Security Council and the EEBC, that is conveyed clearly and unambiguously to the parties themselves. Non-action by the international community or the sending of a vague message could potentially increase tensions and have the unintended consequence of pushing one or both parties towards conflict. The Witnesses should be meeting on the EEBC decision immediately, if we are serious about eliminating any potential for war. Our message should also be consistent with the last Witnesses meeting chaired by Assistant Secretary Frazer in February 2006, and with the U.S. negotiated approach on normalization talks to eliminate tensions. I. (S/NF)

HOW WILL MELES PREPARE THE ETHIOPIAN PUBLIC AND THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY FOR WAR?

22. (S/NF) Prime Minister Meles would have an extremely difficult time gaining popular support and preparing the Ethiopia public for war. Few want renewed conflict, and most view the past war as a conflict by Tigray and the Meles government, not of the Ethiopian people. While the conflict in Somalia is a strategic issue, renewed conflict with Eritrea is seen as a personal issue between two leaders trying to settle private scores. Despite the dominance of state-run media, mere rhetoric on the threat from Eritrea would have little effect in swaying the vast majority of the Ethiopian population. There would need to be a multiple series of actions by Eritrea to incite general support for renewed conflict: e.g., assassination of leaders in Addis Ababa, terrorist attacks against the general Ethiopian population, and a limited and specific military attack by Eritrea against Ethiopia along the border. No one action is sufficient to renew total conflict by Ethiopia against Eritrea, except to respond to “total” war by Eritrea.

23. (S/NF) Preparations for conflict would likely include large-scale mobilization of reserves, and deployment of key ADDIS ABAB 00001275 007 OF 007 military units, such as the Agazi (special forces) commandos. On the economic front, measures could include introduction of rationing on consumer products and/or fuel, the imposition of special surtaxes, and raising the price of state-controlled commodities. 24. (S/NF) Should Ethiopia determine that Eritrea poses a clear and imminent threat, Meles and his government would want international support prior to any conflict (and especially domestic support). As it did prior to intervening in December 2006 in Somalia, Ethiopia would likely seek support in international fora, such as IGAD and the African Union, where it holds a prominent seat as one of 15 members of the AU Peace and Security Council, and is able to galvanize support from throughout the continent. Further, Ethiopia would begin to signal not only hostile anti-Eritrean rhetoric but also, more important, messages that conflict is likely. (The current rhetoric by Ethiopia against Eritrea is troubling, but thus far we have been consistent in our approach that such rhetoric is unhelpful.) In such a scenario, it would be extremely important for the international community to be unified and to express to both sides a consistent and strong message that conflict would not be tolerated. In 2001 in our resumption of discussions with both parties over the border, we delivered strong messages of the consequences of renewed conflict, intentional or unintentional. Both parties understood clearly what our message was, and that the witnesses stood firmly behind the U.S. The problem now, is that we hold very little leverage over Eritrea, they do not listen to us, and even the benefits of not going to war (debt relief and reconstruction funds) may not be important to Isaias. For Ethiopia, our message in 2001 still holds sway over this government. YAMAMOTO

Source=https://martinplaut.wordpress.com/2017/06/27/usa-for-ethiopia-going-to-war-with-eritrea-a-waste-of-resources-that-would-achieve-very-little/

ሕጊ ወይ ስርዓት ሰፊሕ ትርጉም ኣለዎ። ኣገዳስነቱን ዝህቦ ኣገልግሎት’ውን ከምኡ ሰፊሕ እዩ። ብውሑዱ ግና ናይ ሓደ ትካል ኣካላት ናይ ሓባር ዕላምኦም ንምዕዋት ብሓባር ክጐዓዙ ዘኽእል መጥመሪ እዩ። ተልእኾ ሕጊ እዚ ኮይኑ፡ ከከም ደረጃ ናይቲ ዝግልገለሉ ትካል ዕምቆቱን ስፍሓቱን ክፈላለ ይኽእል። ኣብ ክሊ ሓደ ዓብይ ትካል፡ ኣብ ታሕተዎት ኣካላት ዝስርሓሎም ሕግታት ኣብ ሕድሕድ ክናበቡን ከሳንዩን ናይ ግድን እዩ። ንኣብነት ኣብ ሓደ ሃገር ቅዋም ናይ ኩሉ ሕግታት ዝለዓለ እዩ። እቲ ካልእ ፖለቲካዊ፡ ምምሕዳራዊ፡ ቁጠባዊ ይኹን ፍርዳዊ ሕግታት ከኣ ምስዚ ቅዋም ዝጻረር ክኸውን ኣይፍቀድን። እንተተፈተነ’ውን ኣፍራሲ’ዩ። ኣብ ሰልፍታትን ውድባትን እንተመጻእና እውን ሰልፊ ይኹን ውድብ ዝምረሓሉ ቅዋም ብጉባአ የጽድቕ። ድሕሪኡ ብዝተፈላለዩ ጽፍሕታትን መዳያትን ዝወጹ ሕግታትን መምርሕታትን ምስዚ ቅዋም ከም ዘሳንዩ ኮይኖም ክሕንጸጹ ግድን እዩ።

ሕጊ ናይ ብሓቂ ሕጊ ንክኸውን ክሓልፎ ዝግበኦ መስርሕ ኣለዎ። ሕጊ ምስ ኮነ ዝመርሕሉ ኮነ ዝምርሕሉ ኣካላት፡ ኣብ ምፍጣሩ ንበሎ ምጽዳቑ፡ ይሳተፉ። እቲ ኣሰታትፋ ከከም ምርጫ ናይቲ ነቲ ሕጊ ዘጽድቕ ትካል ወይ ውደባ ቀጥታዊ ድዩ ዘይቀጥታዊ ክፈላለ ይኽእል። ቀንዲ ሕመረት ናይቲ ተሳትፎ እቶም ተሳተፍቲ ሕጊ ኮይኑ ምስ ጸደቐ፡ ክቕየድሉ ስለ ዝኾኑ ኣቐዲሞም ናትና  ክብልዎን ፈትዮም ክኣትዉዎን እዩ። ኣብዚ ዘይዝንጋዕ ቀንዲ ባህርያት ቅዋም ምግዳድ እዩ። ቅዋም “ከምዚ ክግበር ይግባእ” እንድሕሪ ኢሉ ከምኡ ይትግበር። “ከምዚ ክግበር ኣይግበኦን” እንተይሉ ድማ ኣይትግበርን። እዚ ኣብ ወለንታ ዝምርኮስ ኣይኮነን። ንኣብነት ኣብ ብዙሓት ሰልፍታት “ዝኾነ  ኣባል ንሕግታትን መምርሕታትን ሰልፊ ምእዙዝ ይኸውን፤” ዝብል ዓንቀጽ ንረክብ። እዚ ናይዚ ሰልፊ ኣካል ኮይንካ ንክትቅጽል ኣገዳዲ እዩ።

ኣብ መስርሕ ምትግባር መደባት ናይ ሕጊ ኣገዳድነት ቅድሚት ኣይመጽእን እዩ። ብዝከኣል ጉዳያት ብድሌትን ናይ ሓባር ስምምዕን ንክትግበር እኹል ጻዕሪ ይግበር። ንሓደ ጉዳይ በዚ እንተዘይወዲእካዮ ግና ብሕጊ ክውዳእ ናይ ግድን እዩ። ምኽንያቱ ናብ ናይ ሓባር ስምምዕ ንምብጻሕ ዘይጻዒ ክትሓቁን ምንባር ስለ ዘይከኣል። እዚ ሓደ ካብቲ ኣድማሳዊ ባህሪ ኣጠቓቕማ ሕጊ እዩ።  ናይ ሕጊ ሴፍ ክትምዘዝ እንከላ ነቶም ኣብ ሓደ ጉዳይ ናይ ሓባር መረዳድኢ ክፈጥሩ ዘይከኣሉ ኣካላት ማዕረ ምቓረት ኣይትህቦምን እያ። ንገሊኦም ብዕግበት ንገሊኦም ድማ ብቀይዲ እያ እትሕዞም። ነቶም ነቲ ውሳነ ዓጊበምሉ ዘይኮነስ፡ ምእንቲ ሕጊ ከኽብሩ ዝምእዘዙ ይመሮም እዩ። ግና ድማ ብዘይካ ብመራራ ምቕባል ካልእ መተካእታ የለን። ካብዚ ወጻኢ እንተኾይኑ ሳዕቤኑ ሕማቕ ስለ ዝኸውን። እዚ ክበሃል እንከሎ ግና ኣብ ሓደ ኣጋጣሚ ብሕጊ ትግደድ ኣብ ካልእ ኣጋጣሚ ድማ ብኣንጻሩ ንስኻ ትዓግብ እቲ ካልእ ወገን ድማ ይግደድ። እቲ መስርሕ ብክብ ለጠቕ ይቕጽል። ኣብዚ መስርሕ ተፈቲንካ ክትሓልፍ ካብ ኣነነት ወጺእካ ምራቕካ ውሒጥካ ዕጉስ፡ ጸዋርን ልዕልና ሕጊ እትግንዘብን ክትከውን ግድን የድሊ።

ቅዋም ብሓፈሻ ዘገድድ ተባሂሉ ዝሰፍር ጥራይ ዘይኮነ ንዝተፈላለዩ ኣካላት ነናቶም ናይ ሓላፍነት ደረት ይምጥን። ውሳነታት ካብ ላዕሊ ንታሕቲ፡ ለበዋታትን መተሕሳሰብታትን ድማ ካብ ታሕቲ ናብ ላዕሊ ከመይ ከም ዝውሕዙ ብንጹር እዩ ዘስፍር።  ኮታ ግደን ሓላፍነትን ላዕለዎትን ታሕተዎትን ኣካላት ሰልፍን ውድብን ይድርት። ካብዚ ሓሊፉ ሰባት ኣብ ሓደ ዛዕባ ብኣረዳድኣ ክፈላለዩ ከም ዝኽእሉ ኣብ ግምት የእቱ። ካብቶም ብሓሳብ ዝፈላለዩ ገሊኦም ብዙሓት ገሊኦም ከኣ ውሑዳት ክኾኑ ባህርያዊ እዩ። ኣብዚ እውን ናይ ብዙሓት ይኹን ናይ ውሑዳት ግደን ሓላፍነት ይንጸር። ከም ኣብነት ናይ ብዙሓት ሰልፍታት ቅዋም እንተተወከስና “ኣቦ-መንበር ሰልፊ ኣብ ቅድሚ ሕጊ ዕላዊ ተሓታትነትን ውክልናን ኣለዎ።” ዝብል ዓንቀጽ ንረክብ።

ካብዚ ዝተጠቕሰ ከም እንርደኦ ኣድላይነት ወይ ግደ ቅዋም ገኒኑ ንቕድሚት ዝወጽእ ኣብ ኣረዳድኣ ጉዳያት ምፍልላይ ወይ ምፍሕፋሕ  ከጋጥም እንከሎ እዩ። ገለገለ ሰባት ግና ኣብ ናይ ርኢቶ ፍልልይ እንተበጺሕካ ደኣ እንታይ ሕጊ ኣሎ ዝብል መስሓቕ ዘረባ የምጽኡ እዮም። ሓደ ኣካል ሕጊ ኣኽቢሩ ዝበሃል እቲ ሕጊ ዝሃቦ ደረት ሓላፍነት ከይጠሓሰ እንተ ብዕግበት ወይ ብሕጊ ብምቕያድ ኣብቲ መስመር ገጥ ክብል እንከሎ እዩ። ኣብቲ ዝቕየደሉ ውሳነ ዘይዕግበትን ትዕዝብትን የብሉን ማለት ኣይኮነን። ብኣንጻሩ ሕጊ ጥሒሱ ዝበሃል ልዕሊ እቲ ሕጊ ዝሃቦ ናይ ሓላፍነት ክሊ ክምጠጥ ዝህቅንን ጉዳያት በቲ ነዓይ ቅኑዕ ኮይኑ ዝረኣየኒ ጥራይ ክተሓዙ ኣለዎም ዝብልን ወይ ንጉዳያት ባህ እንተኢለሙኒ እምበር፡ ባህ ተዘይኢሉኒ ኣይቅበሎን ክብል እንከሎ እዩ።

ንኣብነት ብመሰረት ቅዋም ሓያሎ ሰልፍታት “ኣቦመንበር ሰልፊ ኣብ ቅድሚ ሕጊ ዕላዊ ተሓታትነትን ውክልናን ኣለዎ።” ዝብል ብንጹር ዝተቐመጠ ኣሎ። ናይዚ ትርጉም ድማ ካብ ኣካላት ሰልፊ ናብ ኣቦመንበር ማለት ላዕለዋይ ኣካል ዝቐርቡ ናይ ምግዳድ ባህሪ ዘየብሎም ለበዋታትን መተሓሳሰብታት እምበር ንሓላፍነቱ ጅሆ ዝሕዙ ኣይኮኑን ዝብል መልእኽቲ እዩ ዘመሓላልፍ። ኣቦመንበር ብስም መሪሕነት ሰልፊ ናብ ታሕቲ ዝወርዱ ውሳነታት ግና ናይ ምግዳድ ባህሪ ኣለዎም። ምናልባት ኣቦመንበር ነቲ ዝተዋህቦ ሓላፍነት ብዘይግቡእ ክጥቀመሉ እንተፈቲኑ እዩ ኣብ ሕጋዊ መድረኽ ዝሕተት። ኣብ ተመኩሮ ደንበ ተቓውሞና ዝረአን ጠንቂ ምፍልላይ ዝኸውንን ግና እቲ ሓቀኛ ድሌት ካልእ እንዳሃለወ ብሕጋዊ ጥሕሰት ኣመኻኒኻ ንገዛእ ርእስኻ ናይ ሕጊ ተሓላቒ መሲልካ ክትቀርብ ምፍታን እዩ።

ሓደ ቅዋም ወይ ሕጊ ጸዲቑ ኣብ ግብሪ ክውዕል ምስ ጀመረ ካብቲ ዝተጸበኻዮ ወጻኢ ድሌትካ ዝዓግት ክኸውን ይኽእል እዩ። ንስኻ ድማ ካልእ ዝያዳ ንድሌትካ ዘንጸባርቕ ትብህግ። እዚ ግና ነቲ ኣብ ኢድካ ዘሎ ሕጊ ብምጥሓስ ዘይኮነ፡ ኣብ ሕጋዊ መድረኽ ንኣብነት ኣብ ጉባአ ብኻልእ ሕጊ ብምትካእ ጥራይ ኢኻ እተረጋግጾ። ባህ ንዘይበሉኻ መራሕቲ’ውን ከምኡ። ካልእ ኣቋራጭ ብስምዒትን ውልቃዊ ድሌትን ዝድፋእ ምርጫ ግና መንገዲ  ደሓን ኣይከውንን።

ኤርትራ ሃገርና በብዓይነቶም ዕምበባ መሮርን ንመሬት ዘወቅቡን ዘማዕርጉን ተፈጥሮኣዊ ኣዝርእትን ኣለዉዋ። ምስዚ ኣብ መሬት ኤርትራ ዝቕመጡ ዝተፈላለየ ሃይማኖት ዝእምነቶም፥ ዝተፈላለየ ቋንቋታት ዝዛረቡን ኣብ ዝተፈላለዩ ኣውራጃታት ዝነብሩን፥ ከምኡ እውን እንዳታት ዝሓቘፍ ብዙሕነት ዝግለጽ እንብሎ ዘለውዋ እያ። እዚ ብዙሕነት እዚ ከኣ ነቲ ፍልልያት ልክዕ ከምቲ ዕምበባ መሮር ንመሬት ዘመልክዖ ንህዝቢ ኤርትራ ዘመልክዖ እዩ። ከምኡ ስለዝኾነ ከኣ እዩ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ነዛ ክብርቲ ሃገሩ ንምግሃድ ሓቢሩን ሰሚሩን ተቓሊሱ ዝተዓወተ።

ታሪኽ ብዘይ ኣሉታን እወንታን ኣይፍጸምን እዩ። ስለዝኾነ ከኣ እቲ ታሪኽ ንኹሉ ኣሕቢሩ እዩ ዘዘንትዎ ወይ ዝስንዶ። ብዙሕ ግዜ ብዛዕባ ኣብ ሕሉፍ ምንባር ገዲፍና ኣብ ናይ መጻኢ ነቋምት ዝብል ይዝረብን ይጸሓፍን እዩ። እወ! ሕሉፍ ክቕየር ዘይከእል፡ ዘይጠፍእን ዘይሕከኽን ምዃኑ ንግንዘብ ኢና። ግን ከኣ ዋላ ጸጸኒሕና ንዛረበሉ እምበር ናትና ሽግር ኣይኮነን እንስከሞ ይኹን እንሕተተሉ ሓላፍነት እውን የለን። ስለዚ ነቲ ሕሉፍ ክንደግሞ ደኣ ኢና ዘይብልና እምበር  ክንልውጦ ኢልና ህርድግ እንተበልና ከምዘይንኽእል ርዱእ እዩ።  ግን ከኣ ብኡኡ ተዋሒጥና ክንነበር እንተዀንና ንሕና ውን ክንልወጥ ስለዘይንኽእል ኣእምሮና ከም ዝድንዝዝ ውሁብ እዩ።

እዚ ናይ ኣእምሮ ምድንዛዝ ዝስዕቦ ብልሽውና ከኣ እዩ ነቲ ንቕድሚት ኣብ ክንዲ ንስጉምን ንቀራረብን እንረሓሓቕ። ንሓቂ ክሒድና ንጭብጢ ዘይብሉ ክንኣምንን ክነእምንን እንገብሮ ጻኦሪ እዩ እቲ ቀንዲ ሽግር ዝፈጥር። እዚ ከኣ ነቲ ህልውን መጻእን ዕድላትና በቲ ንሱ ዝጠልቦን ዝገዝኦን ኩነታት ምኽታል ገዲፍና፥ ኣብ ሕሉፍ እሞ ከኣ ፍታሕ ክነምጸኣሉን ክንቅይሮን ዘይንኽእል ንምርኰስ። በቲ መጻኢ ኣብ ክንዲ ንጭነቕ በቲ ዝሓለፈ ዝፈላልየና ክነሳውርን እሞ ከኣ ንሕና ብዘይፈጸምናዮ ንሃልኽ:: እቲ ሕሉፍ ተረኽቦታት ዝተፈጸመሉ ኩነታት እንድሕሪ ተረዲእና፡ ንሱ ክንመሃረሉ እኹል መኾነ። ወገሐ ጸብሐ ኣሉታዊ ተዘክሮታት ብምድጋም ፍታሕ ናይ ህልዊ ወይ መጻኢ ክርከብ ኣይከኣልን እዩ። ብእንጻሩ ንስኻ ኣተሓሳስባኻ ክትልውጥ ስለዘይከኣልካ በቲ ዘይልወጥ ሕሉፍ ተገዚእካ ፍታሕ ክተናዲ ትህንደድ። ብሕሉፍ ምስ እንግዛእ ከኣ ኣእምሮና ሓቂ ናይ ምድላይ ወይ ይቕረ ናይ ምባል፡ ምትዕራቕን ሕድገት ምግባርን ፈጺሙ ዘይሕሰብ እዩ። ኣብ ከምዚ ኩነታት ኣእምሮና ብኽፍኣትን ምፍልላይን ይመልእ እሞ እቶም ዝተጠቕሱ ሃነጽቲ ሓሳባት ቦታ ኣይህልዎምን። በዚ ምኽንያት እቲ ኣብ ሕሉፍ ጠቢቕካ ምንባር ነቲ ህልዊ ዘቋስልን፥ ነቲ ቅኑዕ ዝምድና ክፍጠር ዝኽእል ዝጐድእን እዩ ክኸውን እምበር ትምህርቲ ኣይክውንን እዩ። ስለዚ ኩሉ ቀልብና ብዛዕባ መጻኢ ክንጭነቕን ንናይ ዝሓለፈ ስምብራት ይኹን ማህሰይትታት ንኸይድገምን ደኣ ክንጽዕር ኣሎና እምበር ህልዊ ዝፈጠሮ ጸገም ኣይኮነን። ካብ ሕሉፍ ወጺእና ንነፍስና ክንልውጥ እንተዘይክኢልና ኣብ ንሕናን ንሶምን፥ ተዋሒጥና ኣእምሮና ንምሕዳስ ኣይዳሎን፥ ንሽግራት ኣብ ምፍታሕ ኣይነድህብን ወዘተ።

ንሕሉፍ ክንዝርዝርን ክንዛረበሉን ተመሊስና ከኣ ክነስተንትነሉ እንከሎና ኣብ ጉዕዞና ዓጋቲ ተራ እዩ ክህልዎ። ልክዕ እዩ ንሕሉፍ ክነጽንዖን ክንርድኦን እንከሎና ኣብ ሎሚ ኮይና “ንሕና መን ኢና?” ንኽንምልስን ናበይ ገጽና ኢናኸ እንምርሽን ንምርዳእ ይሕግዘና እዩ። ካብኡ ሓሊፉ ነቲ ኣሉታዊ ሸነኹ ሒዝና ወገሐ ጸብሐ ክንዛረበሉ ንግላዊ ስምዒትን መንፈስ ምፍልላይን ዘራጉድ ጥሩምባ ምንፋሕ እዩ። እቲ ሕሉፍ ክንመሃረሉ ዝግባኣና እኮ ንሓቀኛ ጉዳያት ተረዲእና ነቲ ህልዊ ዝምድናን ምትእስሳርን ደቂ ሰባት ምእንቲ ከየበላሹ እዩ። ምኽንያቱ ነቲ ኣብ ሕሉፍ ዝተፈጸመ ጉዳያት እንታይ ክንረብሓሉ ኢና ዝብል ቅድመ ኩነታዊ ምርምር ዘድልዮ እዩ። እቲ ቀንዲ ተበግሶና ንሕሉፍ ክነጽንዕ ዝድርኽ ሓቂ ንምድላይን እእምሮና ከኣ ንኽፍኣትን ተንኮልን ቦታ ንኸይህቦም ንምጥንቃቕ እዩ።

ካብኡ ሓሊፉ ሕሉፍ ተመኩሮ ብጠቓምን ጐዳእን ፍጻመታት ዝግለጽ ታሪኽ እዩ። እቲ ቀንዲ ዕላማ ንሕሉፍ ናይ ምብርባር ከኣ ሕማቕ ንምውጻእ ዘይኮነስ ነቲ ቅኑዕ መጻኢ ንምስሳን እዩ። እቲ እወንታን ጠቓምን ተግባራት እንታይ ነይሩ ኢና ቅድም ክንፈልጥ’ዩ ዝግበኣና። ምኽንያቱ ንህቢ እኮ እናነኸሰካ ኢኻ ነቲ ጥዑም ዝኾነ መዓር ትብርብር እምበር እቲ እትንከሶ ኣይኮነን ዘገድሰካ። ንህቢ ክትብርብር እንከሎኻ ንኸይትንከስ እንታይ ብልሓታት ትጥቀም ክትመሃርን ክትጥንቀቕን ይግባእ። ልክዕ እዚ ነቲ ኣሉታን እወንታ ዝተፈጸመ ታሪኽ ከኣ ክንፍትሾን ክንመራመረሉን ከሎና እቲ እወንታ ብዘይኣሉታ ክነብር ከምዘይከኣል ንርዳእ።

ነቲ ሕሉፍ ትምህርቲ ንቐስመሉ እሞ ንብድሕሪ ሕጂ ከመይ ምስ እንገብር እዩ እወንታዊ ዝኾነ ሓሳባትን ተግባራትን ክንሰንቕ ዝብል ጉዳይ ብተገዳስነት ክተሓዝ ዝግበኦ እዩ። እንተዘይኮይኑ ነቲ ኣሉታ ጥራሕ ወሲድና  ኣብ ናይ ሕነ-ምፍዳይ ክንጥቀመሉ እንተኾይና መደባትና ንበዓል ክፉእ ፍርዱ ኣብ እንህበሉ ደረጃ ኢና ሸታሕታሕ ክንብል። ስለዚ እቲ ሎሚ ክንገብሮ ዝግበኣና፡ ነቲ ሕሉፍ ዝፍውስ ጥራይ ዘይኮነ ናብ ናይ ጽባሕ ጽቡቕ ዘማዕደወ ኣሳታፍን ሓቛፍን ግብራዊ ስጉምቲ ዝመርሓና ክኸውን ይግባእ።

June 27, 2017

Rights and Accountability in Development (RAID) is delighted to announce the appointment

of Anneke Van Woudenberg as its new executive director, and said it plans to expand its work.

Anneke Van Woudenberg, Director RAID

 

Date: 27/06/2017Author: Martin Plaut

By RAID

June 27, 2017

Rights and Accountability in Development (RAID) is delighted to announce the appointment of Anneke Van Woudenberg as its new executive director, and said it plans to expand its work.

Patricia Feeney, RAID’s outgoing director, is retiring after 18 years during which she earned RAID the reputation as a small and highly effective organization spearheading efforts in the field of business and human rights. She will be replaced by Van Woudenberg, who was previously deputy Africa director at Human Rights Watch.“

Anneke has 20 years of experience on the frontlines of human rights in Africa and I’m thrilled to be handing over to her,” said Feeney. “She is just the person to lead RAID as it takes on corporations that believe they can tread on the rights of people in Africa without consequence.”

Feeney’s work will be celebrated at an event at Matrix Chambers on 28 June.

Van Woudenberg’s work at Human Rights Watch included in-depth fact-finding and reporting on human rights violations across sub-Saharan Africa, especially in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), a major focus of RAID’s existing portfolio. She has briefed the UN Security Council, the US Congress and the British and European parliaments, and is a frequent commentator in the international press on human rights and justice issues. Prior to joining Human Rights Watch, Van Woudenberg was the country director for Oxfam in the DRC.

“Anneke brings the perfect experience, skills, and passion to build on Patricia’s remarkable legacy,” said Dr. Bronwen Manby, chair of RAID’s board. “Her work in Congo has shamed governments, changed international policy, and led to international trials against notorious warlords. We need the same tenacity to bring greater accountability for corporate complicity in human rights violations across the continent.”

Since it was founded in 1998, RAID has led the way in the use of detailed research to achieve justice for victims of corporate human rights abuse and environmental damage. RAID’s pioneering cases cover the DRC, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Tanzania, amongst others, and range from legal actions against mining companies complicit in war crimes to pressing stock markets to more effectively regulate companies involved in corruption and rights abuses.

In 2008, RAID’s meticulous case work led to the first ever determination that a British company had breached the human rights provisions of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, paving the way for other such cases. The precedent set helped lead to the adoption of explicit business and human rights standards by the United Nations in 2011.

“I have long admired RAID’s powerful combination of in-depth research with seeking justice for the victims, no matter how long it takes and how impossible the struggle appears,” Anneke said.  “It’s a great honour to lead this small organization and to take RAID into its next chapter.”

Biography:

Born in the Netherlands and raised in Canada, Anneke graduated from the London School of Economics with a Masters in International Relations in 1992. She went on to work in the parliamentary office of the former British Prime Minister, Sir Edward Heath before entering the corporate world with Andersen Consulting and NatWest Bank, working in London, Moscow, New York and Johannesburg. Her work in the private sector was followed by work with Marie Stopes in Malawi on reproductive health, Oxfam as Country Director in the Democratic Republic of Congo and with Human Rights Watch from 2002 to 2016. Anneke is also finishing a book on her personal journey seeking justice for mass atrocities in Congo.

 

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