Friday, 01 December 2017 20:42

Radio Demtsi Harnnet Kassel 30.11.2017

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እዚ ውሳነ ፡ ኣብ ኣይቬሪኮስት ይካየድ ኣብ ዘሎ ጉባኤ ሕብረት ኣፍሪካን ሕብረት ኣዉሮፓን'ዩ ዕላዊ ኾይኑ።

ኣብ ከባቢ ሊቢያ ዉሱን ቑጽጽር ዘለዎ ኾይኑ፡ ብዉድብ ሕቡራት ሃገራት ዝሕገዝ ምምሕዳር ሊቢያ፡ እቲ ስምምዕነት ዝተቐበለ እንተኾን ከመይ ተግባራዊ ክኸዉን'ዩ ዝብል ግና ሕቶ ይለዓል ኣሎ።

ኣብታ ሃገር ዘለዉ ስደተኛታት፡ ናብ ዝመጽሉ ክምለሱ'ዮም።

ኣብቶም ዝሓለፉ እዋናት ኣብ ሊቢያ ዝርከቡ ስደተኛታት ሃገራት ትሕቲ ሰሃራ ኣፍሪካ ብመልክዕ ባርያ ይሽየጡ ምህላዮም ዝገልጽ ምስሊ ዕላዊ ምዃኑ ስዒቡ'ዩ ናብዚ ስጉምቲ ተበጺሑ ዘሎ።

ፕረዚደንት ፈረንሳይ፡ ኢማኑኤል ማክሮን ነቲ ተግባር "ገበን ኣንጻር ሰብኣዉነት" ክብሉ ገሊጸሞ'ዮም።

ብኣማኢት ኣሽሓት ዝቑጸሩ ስደተኛታት፡ ኣዉሮፓ ንምእታዉ ብባሕሪ ሜዲትራኒያን ኣቢሎም በረኻ ሰሃራ ኣቋሪጾም፥ ኣሽሓት ድማ፡ ሊቢያ ክኣትዉ ብዘመናዊ ንግዲ ባርያ ተሸይጦም።

ሊቢያ ኣብ መፋርቕ ወርሒ ሕዳር ማዕኸን ዜና ሲኤንኤን ዘቃልዖ ንግዲ ባርያ ስደተኛታት ስዒቡ፡ ስሩዕ ከይዲ ምጽራይ ጀሚራ'ያ።

ናይጀሪያ፡ ብፍቓዶም ናብ ሃገሮም ዝኣተዉ 240 ስደተኛታት ሓዊሱ ዜጋታታ ምቕባል ጀሚራ።

ፕረዚደንት ፈረንሳይ ማክሮን፡ እቲ ህጹጽ ትልሚ ምድሓን ስደተኛታት፡ ሃገራት ሊቢያ፣ ፈረንሳይ፣ ጀርመን፣ ቻድን ኒጀርን ሓዊሱ 9ተ ሃገራት ከምዝተሰማምዓሉ ሓቢሮም።

ምንጭታት ሕብረት ኣዉሮፓ ንኤኤፍፒ ከምዝበሉዎ፡ ኣብቲ ዝሓለፈ ዓመት፡ ኣብዛሓ ካብ ትሕቲ ሰሃራ ዝተሰደዱ ኣስታት 13 ሽሕ ስደተኛታት ናብ ሃገሮም ተመሊሶም'ዮም።

Source=https://www.bbc.com/tigrinya/news-42187265

 

During the 30-year liberation war in Eritrea, the Ethiopian occupation army had committed horrific massacres against innocent unarmed civilians all over the country. The two-day Ona and Beskdira massacre of November 30 and December 1, 1970 near Keren, held the highest record of nearly 1,000 civilians killed at one go. The second biggest massacre took place on 5 December 1988 in She'eb, also near Keren, followed by the Hirgigo massacre of 17 April, 1975 in which well over 300 lives perished. The list of massacres in Eritrea is grisly and long, but the now 26-year old 'government' in Independent Eritrea has not so far shown any interest to commemorate the still unaccounted for figures of deaths of so many Eritrean civilians killed by the enemy between 1961 and 1991. When the regime in Asmara talks about martyrs of the liberation struggle, it does not think of the civilian sacrifices.

 

As usual, the Ona-Beskdira Massacre will never get a mention in the Eritrean regime's radio and press these days. But thanks to the social media, they are hot topics of discussion and solemn commemoration these days. Veteran liberation fighters and civilians who eye-witnessed the killings and the burial of so many lives on Monday, November 30, Tuesday, December 1, 1970 have been sharing their sad experiences over the events that befell those two villages a week after the ambush and  assassination by the ELF of General Teshome Ergetu, top commander of Ethiopia's occupation army in Eritrea.

The rich information and eye-witness experiences about the Ona-Beskdira killings  and are being aired over the weekly Blin-language radios: the three-year old Radio Blina and the newly started Radio Jahray. The broadcasts are receiving wide circulation via YouTube recordings. Other social media outlets taking part in the discussions about Ona-Beskdira in particular, and about other general mass killings in the 1970s in that region, are two paltalk rooms called Werena and Gherbesha, also in Blin language. The language and culture website Daberi.org also carried big coverage of the massacres in Tigrigna language, with details recorded by missionaries who were in that region during the early 1970s.Ona Massacre 2

Picture shows the mosque in Beskdira in which the Ethiopians massacred 118 men, women and children after the villagers refused to be separated as Muslims and Christians. The next day, 1 December, was the turn for Ona residents. Ona was a concentration camp for people who were forced to settle in it after their villages were burnt down by the army. Eye-witnesses say well over 700 bodies were buried in mass graves the next day. Some corpses outside the village were left to the hyenas because people were ordered to leave the area soon. After 47 years, no one  knows the exact figure of victims and their names. And no effort is made by independent Eritrea's "government". 

Veteran ELF fighters who participated in the discussions revealed that the liberation organization was very well informed from inside the Ethiopian government itself about the trip to Keren of General Teshome Ergetu who was then killed in an ELF ambush at HabromGaqa near Elebered. ELF forces and fedaeen assigned in the operation to ambush the Ethiopian army were commanded by JimiE Abulkher, with Ghebrehiwet Himbirti as his deputy.

The mass media discussants in the above mentioned radios and paltalk-rooms claimed that General Teshome Ergetu was reportedly swearing to "put an end to the Eritrean rebellion" in one go. It was claimed that only very few survived of the Ethiopian soldiers in General Teshome Ergetu's convoy consisting of 15 large military personnel trucks.

It was as a revenge to the death of the Ethiopian top army general that so many civilians were killed in 1970 at Ona, Beskdira and many other places in the region that year.

Participants in the social media chats on the Ona-Beskdira Massacre regretted that nothing has been done so far by Independent Eritrea - at least in honouring the victims. It is to be recalled also that Ethiopia was not asked even nominal compensations for the massacres it committed against innocent civilians in Eritrea. Others worried about the families and relatives that lost their children who were adopted by foreigners after the Ona-Beskdira killings. Some newly born children were found alive in the ruins of burnt down Ona.

It is to be recalled that, starting in 1986, the ELF-RC commemorated 1 December as its Martyrs' Day. This commemoration continued till December 2009.

During the 30-year liberation war in Eritrea, the Ethiopian occupation army had committed horrific massacres against innocent unarmed civilians all over the country. The two-day Ona and Beskdira massacre of November 30 and December 1, 1970 near Keren, held the highest record of nearly 1,000 civilians killed at one go. The second biggest massacre took place on 5 December 1988 in She'eb, also near Keren, followed by the Hirgigo massacre of 17 April, 1975 in  which well over 300 lives perished. The list of massacres in Eritrea is grisly and long, but the now 26-year old 'government' in Independent Eritrea has not so far shown any interest to commemorate the still unaccounted for figures of deaths of so many Eritrean civilians killed by the enemy between 1961 and 1991. When the regime in Asmara talks about martyrs of the liberation struggle, it does not think of the civilian sacrifices.

As usual, the Ona-Beskdira Massacre will never get a mention in the Eritrean regime's radio and press these days. But thanks to the social media, they are hot topics of discussion and solemn commemoration these days. Veteran liberation fighters and civilians who eye-witnessed the killings and the burial of so many lives on Monday, November 30, Tuesday, December 1, 1970 have been sharing their sad experiences over the events that befell those two villages a week after the ambush and  assassination by the ELF of General Teshome Ergetu, top commander of Ethiopia's occupation army in Eritrea.

The rich information and eye-witness experiences about the Ona-Beskdira killings  and are being aired over the weekly Blin-language radios: the three-year old Radio Blina and the newly started Radio Jahray. The broadcasts are receiving wide circulation via YouTube recordings. Other social media outlets taking part in the discussions about Ona-Beskdira in particular, and about other general mass killings in the 1970s in that region, are two paltalk rooms called Werena and Gherbesha, also in Blin language. The  language and culture website Daberi.org also carried big coverage of the massacres in Tigrigna language, with details recorded by missionaries who were in that region during the early 1970s.

Ona Massacre Discussed in Social Media 2

Picture shows the mosque in Beskdira in which theEthiopians massacred 118 men, women and children after the villagers refused to be separated as Muslims and Christians. The next day, 1 December, was the turn for Ona residents. Ona was a concentration camp for people who were forced to settle in it after their villagesd were burnt down by the army. Eye-witnesses say well over 700 bodies were buried in mass graves the next day. Some corpses outside the village were left to the hyenas because people were ordered to leave the area soon. After 47 years, no one  knows the exact figure of victims and their names. And no effort is made by independent Eritrea's "government".

 

Veteran ELF fighters who participated in the discussions revealed that the liberation organization was very well informed from inside the Ethiopian government itself about the trip to Keren of General Teshome Ergetu who was then killed in an ELF ambush at HabromGaqa near Elebered. ELF fforces and fedaeen assigned in the operation to ambush the Ethiopian army were commanded by JimiE Abulkher, with Ghebrehiwet Himbirti as his deputy.

The mass media discussants in the above mentioned radios and paltalk-rooms claimed that General Teshome Ergetu was reportedly swearing to "put an end the Eritrean rebellion" in one go. It was claimed that only very few survived of the Ethiopian soldiers in General Teshome Ergetu's convoy consisting of 15 large military personnel trucks.

It was as a revenge to the death of the Ethiopian top army general that so many civilians were killed in 1970 at Ona, Beskdira and many other places in the region that year.

Participants in the social media chats on the Ona-Beskdira Massacre regretted that  nothing has been done so far by Independent Eritrea -  at least in honouring the victims. It is to be recalled also that Ethiopia was not asked even nominal compensations for the massacres it committed against innocent civilians in Eritrea. Others worried about the families and relatives that lost their children who were  adopted by foreigners after the Ona-Beskdira killings. Some newly born children were found alive in the ruins of burnt down Ona.

It is to be recalled that, starting in 1986, the ELF-RC commemorated 1 December as its Martyrs' Day. This commemoration continued till December 2009.

By Abraham T. Zere

 
 
Are Eritrea's young people saying enough is enough? Credit: David Stanley.

Are Eritrea’s young people saying enough is enough? Credit: David Stanley.

On the 31 October, Eritrea experienced a rare protest as hundreds of people took the streets in opposition against the nationalisation of an Islamic school. Government forces reacted in characteristically brutal fashion and dispersed protesters with gun-shots in the capital Asmara.

A protest in the hugely repressive state of Eritrea is remarkable in of itself. But last month’s demonstration was additionally notable for the make-up of its participants. Many of those who took to the streets were secondary school students. An article on the Ministry of Information’s portal dismissively referred to the protestors as “a group of teenagers”.

For over 16 years, there has been virtually no space to challenge the government of Eritrea. There is no independent press or right to free association and movement. Internet penetration is almost non-existent. And extreme militarisation and surveillance pervade society. All the government’s former critics have all been imprisoned, disappeared or have fled.

However, that does not mean there is no opposition to the regime in the country. They may be disconnected from one another and uncoordinated, but 31 October was not the first time “a group of teenagers” has expressed its frustrations and openly defied the all-powerful Eritrean government.

The plight of Eritrea’s youth is well-documented. Facing indefinite military conscription and a lack of jobs, the youth are fleeing the country in droves only to be stranded in the neighbouring countries or faced with the risky journey across to Mediterranean. Even the sons and daughters of the ruling elite try to escape the country, including the youngest son of President Isaias Afwerki. They would prefer to cut ties with their parents and risk living as destitute refugees than remain in Eritrea.

Of course, not everyone leaves. Some stay happily. But for the many disillusioned young people who remain in the country, there is the feeling of a deepening divide between their generation and the governing system. Recently, this has manifested in a number of under-reported clashes between protesting youth and the government.

The regime attempts to suppress such incidences, which is made easier by its restrictions on international media. This means that these events largely remain confined to those directly affected, but they could have a much broader significance.

[Dear Europe, if you really must re-engage with Eritrea, here’s how you should do it]

[The questions no one is asking about Eritrea]

Fighting back

Despite continued repression and an education system set up to produce obedient citizens, Eritrea’s youth currently seems to be the only group ready to openly confront the regime. Young people in national service have reportedly booed officials coming to conduct seminars and killed commanders’ goats in protest.

The class of 2013 was reportedly particularly insubordinate. According to students and an internal report that was leaked, many of that year’s intake was punished for their defiance by being told they would be recalled to the military training centre Sawa after their exams. They were told to prepare for a long walk. That night, however, hundreds of students fled. Soldiers were deployed to lock down the camp.

Those who remained – more than 12,000 – were rounded up and forced to travel on foot for over 21 days. The report says two students drowned crossing a river, while another two died from snake bites. On arriving at their destination, the group was put in open prison camps without proper shelter. 34 more died, while there were 17 unwanted pregnancies.

This year, there was news of similar collective resistance. In July, 6,000 students were reportedly deployed to Adi-Halo where President Afwerki is attempting to establish a college of agriculture and machinery. However, there was allegedly no proper lodging to accommodate the students, many of whom were assigned there involuntarily.

They believed they were brought there to work on Afwerki’s projects in the area. In protest, they started leaving rocks on the road the president takes to his office in Adi-Halo and demanded he address their concerns.

When the military intervened, the unarmed students openly challenged the guards. In October, tensions escalated and protesters began throwing stones at them. The Eritrean opposition radio Medrek reports that the military responded by forcibly moving the students to Naro in the far north for military training.

Eritrea’s youth standing up

These isolated but notable incidents suggest that the protest in Asmara last month was unique, but not unprecedented. In that demonstration, hundreds took to the streets of the capital in defiance of the regime’s repressive rule and in anger at its decision to wield greater control over the education system. Once again, many of them were students.

These acts of insubordination suggest that many young people are now saying enough is enough. There does not seem to be coordination around a collective movement. But in the face of clear threats and repression by the regime, and in the absence of an organised opposition, groups of youth may be beginning to take matters into their own hands. Knowing no-one will instigate change for them, frustrated young people may be feeling a greater sense of ownership over their own affairs and future.

If they do continue to mobilise, they may nevertheless find support amongst their as yet quieter compatriots. In Asmara, police sent to disperse the protest reportedly told demonstrators that they share their grievances and refused to fire on them.

That is reportedly how the protesters managed to get so close to the Office of the President. It was there, however, that Special Forces fired on them in a show of violence that leaves those who would question the regime in no uncertain terms about what they ultimately are up against.

SWource=http://africanarguments.org/2017/11/29/eritrea-youth-are-taking-matters-into-their-own-hands/

ኣቦ-መንበር ሰልፊ ዲሞክራሲ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ኣቶ መንግስተኣብ ኣስመሮም፡ እቲ ኣብ ኣቡጃ ኣይቨሪኮስት ዝካየድ ዘሎ 5ይ ርክብ ሕብረት ኣፍሪቃን ኤውራጳዊ ሕብረትን ንጉዳይ እቲ ብብዝሒ ዝመዛበል ዘሎ ኤርትራዊ መንእሰይ ከም ሓደ ቀዳምነት  ዝወሃቦም ጸገም ኣፍሪቃ፡ብመንጽር ውሳነን ለበዋን መሰል ሰብኣዊ መሰል ሕቡራት ሃገራት ንክምልከቶ መጸዋዕታ ኣቕሪቡ። እቲ ንክልተ መዓልታት ዝጸንሕ ብ29 ሕዳር 2017 ዝተኸፍተ ርክብ “ንቐጻሊ መጻኢ ኣብ ጉዳይ መንእሰያት ምስራሕ” ኣብ ትሕቲ ዝብል ጭረሖ እዩ ዝካየድ።

ኣቦ-መንበር ሰዲህኤ፡ ኣብቲ ናብ ኣቦ-መንበር ኮሚሽን ሕብረት ኣፍሪቃ ኣቶ ሙሳ ፋኪ ማሃማትን ወ/ሮ ፈደሪካ ሞገሪኒ ላዕለወይቲ ወካሊትን ሓላፊት ወጻኢ ጉዳያትን ጸጥታዊ ፖሊስን ሕብረት ኤውሮጳ ዝተላእከን ቅዳሑ ናብ ዝተፈላለዩ ሓለፍቲ ሕብረት ኣፍሪቃን ኤውሮጳዊ ሕብረትን ብ28 ሕዳር 2017 ዝተዘርግሐ መልእኽቱ፡ ንጭረሖ ናይቲ ርክብ ደገፉ ገሊጹ።  ምስዚ ኣተሓሒዙ እቲ ርክብ ምስዚ ጭረሖኡ ኣተሓሒዙ ነቲ ኣብ ሊቢያ ዝረአ ዘሎ ናይ መንእሰያት ናይ ባርነት ዕዳጋ፡ ኣብ እስራኤል ዘሎ ናይ መዳጐኒ ሰባት፡ ኣብ ኣፍሪቃን ደቡብ ኤውሮጳን ዝረአ ዘሎ ኩነታትን ኣብ ግምት ኣእትዩ ክመዝኖ ተስፋኡ ገሊጹ።  ምስዚ ኣተሓሒዙ ኣደዳ እዚ ጸገማት ይኾኑ ካብ ዘለዉ መንእሰያት መብዛሕትኦም ካብ ኤርትራ ዝወጹ ምዃኖም’ውን ኣይሓበአን። እዚ ኩነታት ኣብ መጻኢ ኣህጉር ኣፍሪቃ ናብ ሕማቕ ዘምርሓ ምዃኑ እውን ጠቒሱ።

ካብዚ ሓሊፉ እቲ መልእኽቲ ንዘይሕጋውን ጨቋንን መንግስቲ ኤርትራ ኣብዚ እዋንዚ  ብኣፍሪቃን ኤውሮጳን ዝግበረሉ ዘሎ ሓገዝን ኣፍልጦን ዘይምጥኖ ምዃኑ ጠቒሱ። እዚ መልእኽቲ ሰዲህኤ ብተወሳኺ፡ ነቶም ኣብ ኤርትራ ሰብኣዊ መሰላት ዝግህሱ ዘለዉ ተሓተቲ ምግባሮም ኣድላይ ምዃኑ ጠቒሱ፡ እዚ ድማ ነቲ ኣብ 2016ን 2017ን ብባይቶ ሰብኣዊ መሰል ውድብ ሕቡራት ሃገራት ዝቐረበ ሓሳብ ብህጹጽ ኣብ ግብሪ ንምውዓል  ተጽዕኖ ብምሕያል ዝግለጽ ክኸውን ከም ዝግበኦ ኣመልኪቱ።

እቲ “ኤርትራን ካለኦት ሃገራት ኣፍሪቃን ኣብ ቐጻሊ ዕቤት መንእሰያት ምስራሕ” ኣብ ዝብል ጭረሖ ክሰማምዑ እንከለዉ፡ ኣብዚ እቶም ከልምዑ ዝግበኦም መንእሰያት ቅድም ቀዳድም ኣብ ሃገሮም ረጊኦም ክነብሩ ክኽእሉ ይግበኦም። ቀንዲ ሕመረት መልእኽቲ ሰልፊ ዲሞክራሲ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ድማ እዚ እዩ።

እዚ ንክልተ መዓልታት 29-30 ሕዳር 2017 ዝካየድ ርክብ፡ መጻኢ ዝምድና ሕብረት ኣፍሪቃን ኤውሮጳዊ ሕብረትን፡ ኣብቲ ካብ ህዝቢ ኣፍሪቃ 60% ዝኾነ ትሕቲ 25 ዓመት ዝዕድመኡ መንእሰይ ምውፋርን ዝብሉ ዛዕባታት፡ ቆላሕታ ምሃብ ክኸውን እዩ። ኣብ ርእሲ እዚ ዝዝረበሎም ዛዕባታት፡ ሰላምን ጸጥታን፡ ወፍርን ንግድን፡ ምፍጣር ናይ ስራሕ ዕድል፡ ምምዕባል ክእለትን ፍትሓዊ ምምሕዳርን፡ ምኽባር ሰብኣዊ መሰልን ዘጠቓልሉ ክኾኑ እዮም። 

 

In Libya, dozens of migrants sleep alongside one another in a cramped cell in Tripoli's Tariq al-Sikka detention facility. Photo: UNHCR/Iason Foounten

 
 

28 November 2017 – The United Nations is stepping up its work to stop the grave abuses perpetrated against refugees and migrants along the Central Mediterranean routes, including alleged slave trade in Libya, two UN agency chiefs told the Security Council Tuesday.

The meeting was held at UN Headquarters in New York in response to growing international concerns about risks facing migrants and refugees, which were illustrated by recent news reports and videos showing African migrants in Libya allegedly being sold as slaves.

“This is an enormous human tragedy and we can stop it,” said William Lacy Swing, Director General of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), via video link from Geneva, underscoring the need to break the smugglers’ business model.

In such efforts, IOM has helped 13,000 people get out of detention centres in Libya and 8,000 in Niger, he said, noting that there are about 15,000 still in such facilities.

IOM is working with partners, including the Government of Libya, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the African Union, the European Union, and countries of origin, to forge an agreement to implement a programme to empty those detention centres, Mr. Swing said.

Also briefing was the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi, who told the Council: “The grave abuses perpetrated against migrants and refugees along the Central Mediterranean routes can no longer be ignored.”

“Compelled to flee, but without legal pathways to safety, refugees are exposed to appalling harm, together with migrants, including torture, rape, sexual exploitation, slavery and other forms of forced labour,” Mr. Grandi said, also via video link from Geneva, adding that these abuses proliferate where governance is weak and transnational criminal networks take root.

“This requires a comprehensive approach encompassing countries of origin, transit, and destination,” he stressed, highlighting the need to strengthen refugee protection and offer solutions along the routes.

UNHCR is stepping up its work – but faces “dramatic” funding gaps, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, he added.

UNHCR is helping the authorities address the needs of displaced Libyans and others affected by conflict. Reception and protection mechanisms are being incrementally strengthened. Plans for a transit centre in Tripoli are progressing positively.

“Too often, measures pursued in relation to the Mediterranean routes have centred on how to control, deter and exclude. This can have a dehumanizing effect – and more importantly, alone, it does not help refugees and migrants avoid exploitative, deeply harmful situations,” Mr. Grandi said, calling for a comprehensive set of political, security, humanitarian, human rights and development investments.

“Your attention is welcome, because your leadership is critical to ensuring that this happens,” he told the Council members.

Source=http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=58176#.Wh_ETrpFzIW


News Tracker: past stories on this issue

UN chief 'horrified' at buying and selling of African migrants in Libya

In an urgent message addressed to the 5th Summit of the African and European Unions in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, EPDP Chairman Menghesteab Asmerom asked AU-EU delegation in the Summit to consider the plight of huge numbers of displaced Eritrean youth as a priority problem in Africa and address it properly based on UN Human Rights Commission decisions and recommendations. The two-day AU-EU Summit opening in Abidjan today, 29 November, is convening under the theme of "Investing in the Youth for Sustainable Future".

 

Addressed to African Union Commission Chairman, Mr. Mousa Faki Mahamat, and to Ms. Federica Mogherini, EU High Representative and head for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, with copies to several heads of AU-EU delegations, the EPDP message of 28 November hailed the choice of the theme for the summit. It hoped that the that the summit will measure up to that noble aim by tackling the challenges facing African youth in extremely dire situations like the human slave-trading 'markets' of Libya, the Holot concentration camp of Israel and similar refugee conditions in Africa and southern Europe. Likewise, the message did not fail to stress the fact that the majority of those youth in these unbearable situations come from small Eritrea which leads the entire continent in everything bad.

 

The message highlighted the abuses of the illegitimate and repressive regime in Eritrea and reminded African and European delegations that the ruling clique in Asmara " does not deserve the acceptance and appeasement it is starting to enjoy nowadays from the EU and other quarters".

 

The EPDP message also stressed the importance of bringing to accountability the perpetrators of crimes against humanity in Eritrea and that effective pressure on the Asmara regime will include helping in the "most immediate implementation of the recommendations of the UN Human Rights Council adopted in 2016 and 2017."

 

"Eritreans and the rest of Africans would agree that investing in the youth for sustainable future is a great theme, but in order to give some meaning to the theme, those youth must first be helped to remain at home", the EPDP message added. 

 

The two-day AU-EU Summit meeting for 29-30 November is expected to discuss the future of EU-African relations, focusing on investing in youth who constitute 60% of the African population under the age of 25. Other issues to be discussed will include peace and security, investment and trade, job creation, skills development and of course  governance (including democracy, human rights, migration and mobility).

Wednesday, 29 November 2017 05:52

Harnet Tigrinia Magazine Issue 58

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Wednesday, 29 November 2017 05:44

Harnet Tigrinia Magazine Issue 58

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