The Israeli government must not withhold information from the public about the dangers faced by Eritrean asylum seekers it is planning to deport.

By Sigal Avivi

Eritrean asylum seekers protest in front of the European Union embassy in Ramat Gan, near Tel Aviv, calling for the EU to try the Eritrean leadership for crimes against humanity, on June 21, 2016. (Tomer Neuberg/Flash90)

Eritrean asylum seekers protest in front of the European Union embassy in Ramat Gan, near Tel Aviv, calling for the EU to try the Eritrean leadership for crimes against humanity, on June 21, 2016. (Tomer Neuberg/Flash90)

Emanuel, an Eritrean asylum seeker whom Israel deported to Uganda half a year ago, agreed to take the risk of being interviewed on camera for one reason: he wanted the Israeli Supreme Court justices to look into his eyes as he told them what happens to asylum seekers who succumb to Israel’s policy of pressuring them to “voluntarily” leave the country.

Emanuel’s desire to do this overcame his fears that should his filmed testimony fall into the wrong hands and he is identified, both he and his relatives in Eritrea would be in grave danger. He was aware that it was too late for his testimony to help him. However, he hoped that we would succeed in bringing his testimony before the justices, who were considering an appeal against the policy of deporting asylum seekers by force that the Israeli government is preparing to adopt.

Emanuel’s hopes have yet to be fulfilled and, to the best of our knowledge, the Supreme Court justices have no idea what is happening in Eritrea or what the implications of deporting Eritrean asylum seekers are.

Now, five justices will now decide on the fate of the Interior Ministry’s plans to force asylum seekers from Eritrea to choose one of three heinous options:imprisonment in Israelfor anunlimited time;returning to Eritrea; or leaving Israel forone of the “third countries.”

Crimes against humanity

Crimes against humanity have been perpetrated in Eritrea for decades, but until recently have attracted very little attention around the globe. This began to change over the last few years, above all with the UN’s establishment of a special committee to investigate human rights violations in Eritrea. Reportspublished by the committee, along with those from various international organizations and states, have revealed the severity of the situation.

The reports confirm widespread human rights violations in Eritrea such as murder, disappearance, torture, rape, mass and arbitrary imprisonment,forced labor, forced indefinite conscription, lawlessness, the reign of terror and the persecution of anyone who dares oppose the regime. The UN committee also formulated recommendations for states that provide asylum and suggested bringing Eritrea’s ruler, Isaias Afwerki, to trial for crimes against humanity.

Eritrean asylum seekers, wearing white masks, protest in front of Israel's Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv demanding refugee status [archive photo]. (Photo by Oren Ziv/Activestills.org)

Eritrean asylum seekers, wearing white masks, protest in front of Israel’s Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv demanding refugee status [archive photo]. (Photo by Oren Ziv/Activestills.org)

Accordingly, Eritrea is considered a dangerous state that persecutes its citizens; therefore, those who have managed to escape should not be sent back. Most countries in the world, rather than deporting them, have been granting refugee status to a large percentage of asylum seekers from Eritrea for many years.

In Israel, the situation is completely different. Israel routinely rejects Eritreans’ requests for asylum. A special tribunal in Jerusalem, which was established to address migration issues, recently ruled against this policy. The tribunal ruled that Israeli authorities must not as a matter of course reject asylum applications from Eritreans who fled their country to escape forced conscription.

We feel that this information should be at the center of discussions on deporting those who are without doubt asylum seekers. The Israeli government, however, prefers to identify them as “infiltrators” who entered the country illegally, even enacting a series of laws to prosecute them.

In an attempt to facilitate informed public discourse on the deportation policy, we filed a request for the public disclosure of Israel’s agreements with the Eritrean dictatorship regarding asylum seekers currently in Israel and their repatriation, along with expert opinions and other relevant government documents, such as those on human rights in Eritrea. The request was filed with the assistance of attorney Eitay Mack and in accordance with the freedom of information legislation.

To date, the deportation apparatus in Israel has adopted the policy of “making life miserable” for asylum seekers in the hope this will convince them to leave. As a result, the state has set up what may be one of the worst systems in the Western world for persecuting asylum seekers.

Israel is not just the only state in the world publicly declaring its intention to repatriate refugees — it has also openly repatriated many asylum seekers to Eritrea and Sudan. So far, the Israeli government has sent more people back to Eritrea — over 2,000 — than have all of the states in the Western world put together.

Asylum seekers are not only being sent back to their countries of origin. Over the past three years, Israel has also employed force and deception to deport thousands of Eritrean asylum seekers to “third countries,” knowing full well that they will have no legal status on their arrival and be will forced to leave,at great risk to their lives.

A representative of the UN special investigative committee on Eritrea, Sheila Keetharuth, has discussed this policy, warning that these “third countries” deport the asylum seekers directly back to Eritrea.

In most cases, all contact with the deportees is severed once they leave. No country in the world has real data about the fate of asylum seekers sent back to Eritrea. Our request for information contains testimony from senior U.S. officials who emphasize the lack of knowledge about the deportees’ fate, while Britain and other countries have made similar statements.

But according to the little reliable evidence that has been obtained, those who are repatriated to Eritrea are interrogated and sometimes imprisoned. Israel, which has an embassy in Eritrea, is actually one of the few sources of information. Israel has presented an expert opinion stating that the Eritreans sent back to their country will be “lined up and shot or thrown into torture chambers.” To the best of our knowledge, both of these have indeed happened to Eritreans deported from Israel.

Diplomatic ties between Israel and Eritrea

Israel is one of the few states that maintains full diplomatic relations with Eritrea, despite the weapons embargo on Eritrea. There are also reports of military ties between Israel and Eritrea, something that was known to exist in the past. It is the Israeli public’s right to know the full extent of these ties.

We were not surprised to discover, in the initial response to our request for information, that Israel and Eritrea maintain a dialogue and have signed agreements about the asylum seekers in Israel. We were informed that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs possesses documentation of these agreements, as well as expert opinions about the state of human rights in Eritrea.

The ministry, however, refused to reveal this information, claiming that doing so would damage Israel’s foreign relations. This is ridiculous in light of the revelation that these documents exist. Their concealment is a crime against both the Israeli and the Eritrean public. Furthermore, agreements with dictatorships and the violation of human rights should not be concealed with the claim that revealing the crimes would harm the criminals.

An Eritrean Asylum seeker cleans, after spending the night in Levnisky park, South Tel Aviv, on their eighth day of an on going protest, on the early hours of February 9, 2014. (photo: Oren Ziv/Activestills.org)

An Eritrean asylum seeker cleans, after spending the night in Levnisky park, south Tel Aviv, on their eighth day of an on going protest, on the early hours of February 9, 2014. (photo: Oren Ziv/Activestills.org)

It was recently revealed that the expert opinion regarding Eritrean asylum seekers was shelved because it did not serve the agenda of the current Israeli government. A report from the Population and Immigration Border Authority unit that processes asylum requests, which concluded that non-Arab asylum seekers from Darfur should be granted refugee status, was ignored in a similar manner to other recommendations presented to the officials. In other words, the Israeli government is concealing information it possesses regarding asylum seekers from the public and the courts.

The requested information regarding Eritrea and Israeli-Eritrean relations is vital to legal and public discourse regarding the fate of Eritrean asylum seekers in Israel. In its desire to deport them, the Israeli government is attempting to hide from the public and the Supreme Court the fate that awaits the asylum seekers in their own country and the “third countries” following their removal as well as Israel’s role in this process. The requested information also is vital to the international struggle against the Eritrean dictatorship and to the rights of Eritrea refugees worldwide. Last, but not least, it is vital to public discourse within Israel in order to cease our support of dark dictatorial regimes.

The truth which Emanuel wished to share with the Supreme Court concerns not only the future of his fellow asylum seekers who face deportation from Israel, but also the entire Israeli public: the five justices’ decision on deportation policy will have a decisive impact on the nature of the State of Israel.

Sigal Avivi is a human rights activist based in Tel Aviv.

Source=https://972mag.com/what-will-happen-to-eritrean-asylum-seekers-after-israel-deports-them/124475/

 

 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 18, 2017
 

Patriarch Abune AntoniosWASHINGTON, D.C. – January 20, 2017 marks the 11-year anniversary of the Eritrean government’s illegal removal of Abune Antonios as the rightful Patriarch of the Eritrean Orthodox Church, the nation’s largest religious community. The Patriarch has been detained since 2007: His “crime” was his refusal to excommunicate 3,000 parishioners who opposed the government.

“The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom(USCIRF)calls on the Eritrean government to release Abune Antonios, allow him to return to his position as Patriarch, and cease its interference in the Eritrean Orthodox Church,” said USCIRF Chair Rev. Thomas J. Reese, S.J. “The government’s persecution of Patriarch Antonios is only one example of thecountry’s grave religious freedom violations. Eritrea has been called the North Korea of Africa due to its vigorous assault on the rights of its people:  Thousands are imprisoned for their religious beliefs and their real or imagined opposition to the government.

One year after removing the Patriarch, Eritrean authorities confiscated his personal pontifical insignia. On May 27, 2007, the Eritrean government forcibly removed Patriarch Antonios from his home and placed him under house arrest at an undisclosed location. He remains detained and is denied medical care despite severe heath concerns. 

Chair Reese has taken up the case of Patriarch Antonios as part of USCIRF’s Religious Prisoners of Conscience Project.

The Eritrean government engages in systematic and egregious violations of religious freedom, including torture or other ill treatment of religious prisoners, arbitrary arrests and detentions without charges, a prolonged ban on public religious activities of unregistered religious groups, and interference in the internal affairs of registered religious groups.

President Isaias Afwerki and the Popular Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ) have ruled Eritrea with absolute authority since the country’s 1993 independence from Ethiopia. Private newspapers, political opposition parties, and independent nongovernmental organizations are not allowed in Eritrea.  The government requires all physically and mentally capable people between the ages of 18 and 70 to perform national service full-time and indefinitely.

In 2016, the United Nations Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in Eritrea concluded that Eritrean authorities had committed crimes against humanity.

Since 2004, USCIRF has recommended, and the State Department has designated, Eritrea a “country of particular concern,” or CPC, for its systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom. For more information, please see USCIRF’schapter on Eritreain the 2016 Annual Report. 

USCIRF’s Religious Prisoners of Conscience Project highlights the plight of individuals who have been imprisoned for their religious beliefs, practices or identity. To learn more about this project or to interview a Commissioner, please contact USCIRF at http://www.uscirf.gov/sites/all/modules/extlink/mailto.png) 100% 50% no-repeat;"> or 202-523-3258.

 

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AFP

180 dead in Saturday's migrant boat disaster in Med: survivors
File photo of migrants and refugees en route to Italy following a rescue operation:
11:10 CET+01:00
 
Four people died and nearly 180 are missing, presumed dead, after Saturday's migrant ship capsize in the Mediterranean, officials said on Tuesday after interviewing a handful of survivors.
 

Humanitarian workers from International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), recounted harrowing details of the latest major tragedy in waters off Libya after talking to four rescued passengers, two Eritreans and two Ethiopians, who arrived on Monday evening in the Sicilian port of Trapani.

The survivors, three men and one woman, were described as "traumatized and exhausted".

They said their two-tier, wooden boat had left Libya on Friday with more 180 people packed on board, all of them originally from East Africa.

After five hours at sea, the engine cut out and the boat started to take on water. As it slowly sank, more and more of the people on board were submerged under water.

One of the survivors described his desperate effort to find his wife, who had taken a spot in the centre of the ship.

After hours in the water, the survivors were rescued on Saturday 30 nautical miles from the Libyan coast by a French boat operating as part of the European borders agency Frontex's Operation Triton before being transferred to another Frontex ship, the Siem Pilot.

Siem Pilot, provided by the Norwegian coastguard, arrived in Trapani on Monday evening with the four survivors, four recovered corpses and 34 people rescued from another stricken migrant boat.

The latest deaths and rescues follow a record year for the number of migrants trying to reach Europe on the western Mediterranean route from north Africa to Italy.

Some 181,000 people were registered at Italian ports in 2016 while the UNHCR recorded more than 5,000 deaths and presumed deaths on all migrant routes across the Mediterranean.

Despite the mid-winter weather making crossings particularly perilous, the start of 2017 has brought no sign of departures slowing with some 2,300 migrants already registered in Italy since January 1st.

Source=http://www.thelocal.it/20170117/180-dead-in-saturdays-migrant-boat-disaster-in-med-survivors


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17 January 2017
09:01 CET+01:00

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   Italy sends in the army to assist Italians trapped by snow

Heavy snow has seen schools closed and thousands left without electricity. Photo: AFP

UPDATED: Heavy snowfall and unusually harsh weather have left hundreds of thousands of homes without electricity, schools closed, and roads unusable.

Recent days have seen up to a metre of snow in southern areas, strong winds in the north and coastal areas, and temperatures well below the average for the season in most of the country, reaching lows of below -30C in some northern mountain towns.

The wintery conditions are expected to last for at least another week, due to the arrival of a polar air mass in the country, weather experts at Meteo.it explained.
On Tuesday evening, Italy's Defence Minister Roberta Pinotti confirmed that the army had deployed soldiers to Abruzzo, which is suffering the brunt of the wintery spell with road closures, power blackouts and some smaller villages isolated.
   
View image on Twitter


Over a quarter of the local population - 300,000 people - are without electricity, according to the region's councillor for Civil Protection. A further 12,000 people in the Marche region also suffered power blackouts, while 2,000 in the towns of Chieti and Pescara had no running water.
Fire services are also assisting in the central Italian regions, rescuing trapped farm animals and helping to clear roads, as well as continuing to work on recovery in the areas hit by earthquakes last year.
   
View image on Twitter View image on Twitter View image on Twitter

Since the weekend, at least three people have been reported dead from weather-related conditions. A 67-year-old man was reported dead from hypothermia in Teramo, Abruzzo, after falling from a boat into icy water, and a 53-year-old homeless person was found dead by police due to exposure in Agrigento, Sicily. On Wednesday morning, a third victim was found dead in his car in Brindisi.

In Salerno, Campania in southern Italy, the small mountain village of Pruno had been isolated by the snow for several days without access to food or medical supplies. Soldiers and firefighters conducted relief operations on Monday, bringing medicine and food supplies for the next few days.


Photo: AFP

Heavy snowfall in the areas affected by the 2016 earthquakes has left already fragile buildings struggling under the added weight, with further damage to the towns' historic centres feared.

Residents have raised concerns for their farm animals in damaged barns and stables while temperatures remained at around 0C in most of the region on Tuesday, with both Amatrice and Arquata del Tronto at -1C.

"We're back on our knees: we have a meter of snow, isolated hamlets, no light, and the Via Salaria [the main road from Rome to the region] is blocked. We need help," said Sante Stangoni, mayor of Acquasanta Terme in the Marche region.

Over the weekend, residents of the affected areas held demonstrations over the lack of government assistance, with one protester telling The Local: "The rubble is still there; nothing has been moved, and then there's the aggravating factor of the snow and frost."

Five months after the earthquake, Italy residents say 'nothing has changed'
Photo: Mario Laporta/AFP

There has also been huge disruption to travel, with the A14 reopening at 9:30am on Wednesday morning after two days' closure due to snowfall. Other partial road closures remain in place in Sicily, Tuscany and Emilia Romagna and boat travel to some of the country's islands is severely disrupted, with Capraia, and the islands of Elba and Giglio all isolated due to agitated seas.


chool closures continue across the country, including in the mountainous parts of the Umbria and Marche regions, Prato in Tuscany, and northern Sardinia.

IN PICTURES: Italy transforms into a winter wonderland with heavy snowfall
The wintery spell is expected to continue until next Thursday at the very earliest, the weather boffins at Meteo.it predict, with continued cold weather across the country and more snow in the centre-south and extremely strong winds of over 100km/h in Trieste and Tuscany.

Wednesday will likely bring widespread cloud and rain, with snow in Emilia Romagna, Marche and northern Abruzzo at 100-300m altitudes, while elsewhere snowfall will be constrained to areas above 400m. Temperatures are expected to remain low before seeing slight increases on Thursday and Friday.
But the weekend should finally bring some moderate relief, with slight improvement in conditions expected across the country but especially in the central-south.

Source=http://www.thelocal.it/20170117/thousands-without-electricity-as-snow-and-wind-batter-italy

Tuesday, 17 January 2017 10:10

Europe’s African ‘wall’ now almost complete

Written by

frontex-migration-2016

Martin Plaut and Leonard Vincent


frontex-migration-2016
Date: 16/01/2017
Author: Martin Plaut
1 Comment
Martin Plaut and Leonard Vincent

It may not be a physical barrier comparable to Donald Trump’s wall to prevent Mexicans from reaching the USA, but it is nearly in place. Europe is close to sealing the routes refugees and migrants take across the Mediterranean. Consider the facts. These are the routes into southern Europe. (Map: Frontex Risk Analysis, Q2 2016) frontex-migration-2016


frontex-migration-2016

The graphic produced by the EU’s Frontier Agency is clear: the major route that Africans are taking is via Libya.

The map below, from the same source, underlines the point.

frontex-illegal-entry

Two routes that Africans have used in the past have almost been sealed. There is next to no transit by sea from West Africa through the Canary Islands and only a limited number arriving in Spain.

The route through the Sinai and Israel has been closed.

The brutal treatment of Eritreans and Sudanese in the Sinai by mafia-style Bedouin families, who extracted ransoms with torture and rape, was certainly a deterrent. So too has been the increasing propensity of Egypt to deport Eritreans to their home country, despite the risks that they will be jailed and abused when they are returned. But this route was sealed in December 2013 when the Israeli authorities built an almost impregnable fence, blocking entry via the Sinai.

This has left Libya – and to a lesser extent Egypt – as the only viable routes for Africans to use. Both are becoming more difficult. Although the International Organisation for Migration calculates that roughly 17 men, women and children perishing every day making the crossing, or nearly one every hour, they have not been deterred.

Libya is critical to the success of the EU’s strategy, as a recent European assessment explained:  “Libya is of pivotal importance as the primary point of departure for the Central Mediterranean route.”

Libya: the final brick in the ‘wall’

The European Union has adopted new tactics to try to seal the central Mediterranean route.

The countries keenest to push this for this to take place are Germany and Italy, which took the bulk of the refugees that arrived in recent years. Germany received nearly 1.2 million asylum seekers over the past two years, while Italy received 335,000 arrivals over the course of 2015 and 2016.

Earlier this month Italy’s Interior Minister Marco Minniti was dispatched to Tripoli to broker an agreement on fighting irregular migration through the country with Fayez al-Sarraj, head of the UN-backed Government of National Accord.

Minniti and al-Sarraj  agreed to reinforce cooperation on security, the fight against terrorism and human trafficking.

“There is a new impulse here — we are moving as pioneers,” Mario Giro, Italy’s deputy foreign minister, told the Financial Times. “But there is a lot of work to do, because Libya still doesn’t yet have the capacity to manage the flows, and the country is still divided.”

The deal has, apparently, hit a snag. The Libyan government is resisting Italy’s proposals, although their detailed objections have not been revealed.
Germany’s aid threat

While Italy’s attempting to strike a deal with Libya, Germany is issuing threats.

With Chancellor Angela Merkel facing elections in 2017 and keen to show she is no longer a ‘soft touch’ for refugees, a much harder line is now being taken with anyone seeking asylum in Germany.

Germany deported 25,000 migrants in 2016 and another 55,000 were persuaded to return home voluntarily.

German Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière is pushing a plan that would make it easier to detain rejected asylum seekers considered a potential security threat, and to deport them from “repatriation centres” at airports.

Germany is underling its determination to cut numbers by threatening to end development aid to countries that refuse to take back rejected asylum seekers. “Those who do not cooperate sufficiently cannot hope to benefit from our development aid,” Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel told Der Spiegel.


Europe and Africa


The Italian proposals are very much in line with agreements the EU reached with African leaders during their summit in Malta, in late 2015.

The two sides signed a deal to halt the flight of refugees and migrants.

Europe offered training to “law enforcement and judicial authorities” in new methods of investigation and “assisting in setting up specialised anti-trafficking and smuggling police units”. The European police forces of Europol and the EU’s border force (Frontex) will assist African security police in countering the “production of forged and fraudulent documents”.

This meant co-operating with dictatorial regimes, like Sudan, which is ruled by Omar al-Bashir, who is wanted for war crimes and crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court.

But President al-Bashir is now seen as a western friend, despite his notorious record. One of President Obama’s last acts in office has been to lift sanctions against Sudan.
What is clear from the Italian and German initiatives is that Europe is determined to do all it can to reduce, and finally halt, the flow of Africans through Libya – the only viable route left for most African migrants and refugees to reach Europe.

A legal route into Europe

While the informal and illegal routes are being sealed a tiny legitimate route is being opened. The Catholic Church, working through its aid arm, Caritas and the Community of Sant Egidio, has managed to negotiate an agreement with Italy for 500 refugees from the Horn of Africa to be allowed to come to Italy.

Oliviero Fortis, Head of the Immigration Department of Caritas, said: “We must, as far as possible, promote legal and secure entry solutions. Being able to enter Italy with a visa is an operation that works perfectly. Except at the political level, and that’s the big problem! It is the Italian Church that will bear the costs, in the hope that this initiative will be a model for the acceptance of refugees that can be monitored and replicated by European institutions.”

EU and Eritrea

Eritrea – among the most brutal dictatorships in Africa – remains one of the key sources of migration and refugees. Although Eritrea has fewer citizens than most other African states more Eritreans arrived illegally in Europe in early 2016 than from any other African country.

This comes at a time of unprecedented pressure on Eritrean refugees, as they make their way through Sudan and into Libya.  The Sudanese government’s ‘Rapid Support Force’ – an autonomous special force headed by a notorious Janjaweed commander – has been used to round up refugees, to deport them back to Eritrea.

The EU is floundering around attempting to halt this exodus. Recently it offered €200 million in aid to Eritrean ‘projects’, but has few means of monitoring just how it will be spent. Eritrea is a one-party state, in which the ruling PFDJ has never held a congress.

The country is ruled by a narrow clique surrounding President Isaias Afwerki, which uses National Service conscripts on the farms and factories that they control.

While the EU has outlined a range of programmes it is willing to support, given the monopoly power exercised by the sole party and army commanders over the entire Eritrean society, it has next to no means of ensuring that the funds do not ultimately end up reinforcing this autocracy.

Conclusion

If the EU initiatives fail (and it is highly likely that they will) they will only serve to strengthen the Eritrean and Sudanese regimes. At the same time attempting to block Libya and Egypt as the only remaining means of reaching European soil is likely to force Eritrean and Sudanese citizens to take even longer and more dangerous journeys to reach safety.

The EU is working hard to strengthen its ties with Libya so that it can go into Libyan waters and destroy the boats and other infrastructure used to smuggle Africans into Europe.

In a report to EU’s 28 member states, Rear Admiral Enrico Credendino, who heads the European Union Naval Force Mediterranean (EU NAVFOR MED) explained that it is vital that

European navies operated inside Libyan territorial waters to halt trafficking. But this cannot happen at present. “It is clear that the legal and political pre-conditions have not been met,” said Admiral Credendino, indicating that greater cooperation with the Libyan authorities was needed.

The tiny legal route offered by Italy is unlikely to meet the needs of Africans desperate to seek refuge in Europe. Instead, the increasing restrictions are likely to lead to increased deaths and despair as destitute African youths take ever-more risky routes out of Africa – and further destabilisation of an already fragile part of the world.

This is the likely outcome of Europe’s African ‘wall’.

It will neither end the flow of refugees fleeing suffocating repression, nor will it seal the borders of Europe. Thousands of people fleeing for their lives will be forced away from Europe (and away from European public opinion). Instead it will place the burden of this crisis on brutal and often racist regimes along the fugitives’ routes.

And all this for what?


Refusing to accommodate, for a reasonable period of time, a few thousand young women and men who are only too eager to learn, live and contribute to European societies, until eventually circumstances change and they can return home with gratitude towards their European hosts.


It’s not only a shame; it is a political mistake of historic proportions.

Source=https://martinplaut.wordpress.com/2017/01/16/europes-african-wall-now-almost-complete/

Two routes that Africans have used in the past have almost been sealed. There is next to no transit by sea from West Africa through the anary Islands and only a limited number arriving in Spain.

The route through the Sinai a

nd Israel has been closed.

The brutal treatment of Eritreans and Sudanese in the Sinai by mafia-style Bedouin families, who extracted ransoms with torture and rape, was certainly a deterrent. So too has been the increasing propensity of Egypt to deport Eritreans to their home country, despite the risks that they will be jailed and abused when they are returned. But this route was sealed in December 2013 when the Israeli authorities built an almostimpregnable fence, blocking entry via the Sinai.

This has left Libya – and to a lesser extent Egypt – as the only viable routes for Africans to use. Both are becoming more difficult. Although the International Organisation for Migrationcalculatesthat roughly 17 men, women and children perishing every day making the crossing, or nearly one every hour, they have not been deterred.

Libya is critical to the success of the EU’s strategy, as a recent European assessmentexplained:  “Libya is of pivotal importance as the primary point of departure for the Central Mediterranean route.”

Libya: the final brick in the ‘wall’

The European Union has adopted new tactics to try to seal the central Mediterranean route.

The countries keenest to push this for this to take place are Germany and Italy, which took the bulk of the refugees that arrived in recent years. Germanyreceivednearly 1.2 million asylum seekers over the past two years, while Italy received 335,000 arrivals over the course of 2015 and 2016.

Earlier this month Italy’s Interior Minister Marco Minniti was dispatched to Tripoli to broker an agreement on fighting irregular migration through the country with Fayez al-Sarraj, head of the UN-backed Government of National Accord.

Minniti and al-Sarraj agreed to reinforcecooperation on security, the fight against terrorism and human trafficking.

“There is a new impulse here — we are moving as pioneers,” Mario Giro, Italy’s deputy foreign minister, told theFinancial Times. “But there is a lot of work to do, because Libya still doesn’t yet have the capacity to manage the flows, and the country is still divided.”

The deal has, apparently, hit a snag. The Libyan governmentis resistingItaly’s proposals, although their detailed objections have not been revealed.

Germany’s aid threat

While Italy’s attempting to strike a deal with Libya, Germany is issuing threats.

With Chancellor Angela Merkel facing elections in 2017 and keen to show she is no longer a ‘soft touch’ for refugees, a much harder line is now being taken with anyone seeking asylum in Germany.

Germanydeported25,000 migrants in 2016 and another 55,000 were persuaded to return home voluntarily.

German Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière is pushing a plan that would make it easier to detain rejected asylum seekers considered a potential security threat, and to deport them from “repatriation centres” at airports.

Germany isunderlingits determination to cut numbers by threatening to end development aid to countries that refuse to take back rejected asylum seekers. “Those who do not cooperate sufficiently cannot hope to benefit from our development aid,” Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel toldDer Spiegel.

Europe and Africa

The Italian proposals are very much in line with agreements the EU reached with African leaders duringtheir summitin Malta, in late 2015.

The two sides signed a deal to halt the flight of refugees and migrants.

Europe offered training to “law enforcement and judicial authorities” in new methods of investigation and “assisting in setting up specialised anti-trafficking and smuggling police units”. The European police forces of Europol and the EU’s border force (Frontex) will assist African security police in countering the “production of forged and fraudulent documents”.

This meant co-operating with dictatorial regimes, like Sudan, which is ruled by Omar al-Bashir, who iswantedfor war crimes and crimes against humanity by the International Criminal Court.

But President al-Bashir is now seen as a western friend, despite his notorious record. One of President Obama’s last acts in office has been tolift sanctionsagainst Sudan.

What is clear from the Italian and German initiatives is that Europe is determined to do all it can to reduce, and finally halt, the flow of Africans through Libya – the only viable route left for most African migrants and refugees to reach Europe.

A legal route into Europe

While the informal and illegal routes are being sealed a tiny legitimate route is being opened. The Catholic Church, working through its aid arm, Caritas and theCommunity of Sant Egidio, hasmanaged to negotiatean agreement with Italy for 500 refugees from the Horn of Africa to be allowed to come to Italy.

Oliviero Fortis, Head of the Immigration Department of Caritas, said: “We must, as far as possible, promote legal and secure entry solutions. Being able to enter Italy with a visa is an operation that works perfectly. Except at the political level, and that’s the big problem! It is the Italian Church that will bear the costs, in the hope that this initiative will be a model for the acceptance of refugees that can be monitored and replicated by European institutions.”

EU and Eritrea

Eritrea – among the most brutal dictatorships in Africa – remains one of the key sources of migration and refugees. Although Eritrea hasfewer citizensthan most other African states more Eritreans arrived illegally in Europe in early 2016 than from any other African country.

This comes at a time of unprecedented pressure on Eritrean refugees, as they make their way through Sudan and into Libya.  The Sudanese government’s ‘Rapid Support Force’ – an autonomous special force headed by a notorious Janjaweed commander – has been used to round up refugees, to deport them back to Eritrea.

The EU is floundering around attempting to halt this exodus. Recently it offered€200 million in aid to Eritrean ‘projects’, but has few means of monitoring just how it will be spent. Eritrea is a one-party state, in which the ruling PFDJ has never held a congress.

The country is ruled by a narrow clique surrounding President Isaias Afwerki, which uses National Service conscripts on the farms and factories that they control.

While the EU has outlined arange of programmesit is willing to support, given the monopoly power exercised by the sole party and army commanders over the entire Eritrean society, it has next to no means of ensuring that the funds do not ultimately end up reinforcing this autocracy.

Conclusion

If the EU initiatives fail (and it is highly likely that they will) they will only serve to strengthen the Eritrean and Sudanese regimes. At the same time attempting to block Libya and Egypt as the only remaining means of reaching European soil is likely to force Eritrean and Sudanese citizens to take even longer and more dangerous journeys to reach safety.

The EU is working hard to strengthen its ties with Libya so that it can go into Libyan waters and destroy the boats and other infrastructure used to smuggle Africans into Europe.

In a report to EU’s 28 member states, Rear Admiral Enrico Credendino, who heads the European Union Naval Force Mediterranean (EU NAVFOR MED)explainedthat it is vital that European navies operated inside Libyan territorial waters to halt trafficking. But this cannot happen at present. “It is clear that the legal and political pre-conditions have not been met,” said Admiral Credendino, indicating that greater cooperation with the Libyan authorities was needed.

The tiny legal route offered by Italy is unlikely to meet the needs of Africans desperate to seek refuge in Europe. Instead, the increasing restrictions are likely to lead to increased deaths and despair as destitute African youths take ever-more risky routes out of Africa – and further destabilisation of an already fragile part of the world.

This is the likely outcome of Europe’s African ‘wall’.

It will neither end the flow of refugees fleeing suffocating repression, nor will it seal the borders of Europe. Thousands of people fleeing for their lives will be forced away from Europe (and away from European public opinion). Instead it will place the burden of this crisis on brutal and often racist regimes along the fugitives’ routes.

And all this for what?

Refusing to accommodate, for a reasonable period of time, a few thousand young women and men who are only too eager to learn, live and contribute to European societies, until eventually circumstances change and they can return home with gratitude towards their European hosts.

It’s not only a shame; it is a political mistake of historic proportions.

 

እነሆ ሎሚውን ልክዕ ከምቶም ቀዳሞት ዝሓለፉ ብጸቱ ፡ ካብ ንእስነቱ ጀሚሩ ኣብ መሪር ተጋድሎ ዝዓበየ ፡ ክሳብ ዕለተ ዕረፍቱ ንተጋድሎ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ቀዳማይ ቦታ ሰሪዑ ፡ ናይ ቃልሲ ዕጣቑ ከየውረደ ዝጸንሐ ልዑልን ጽኑዕን ተቃላሳይ ዶክተር ሃብተ ተስፋማርያም ወዲ ጎሞራ ኣቦ መንበር ሃገራዊ ድሕነት ፡ ብሕማም ምኽንያት ብሞት ክፍለየና ከሎ ዝተሰማዓና ስንባደን ሓዘን ደረት የብሉን ። መስዋእቱ ንተጸባያይ ፍትሒ ንዝኾነ ውጹዕ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ዘይተጸበዮ ዓቢ ክሳራ እዩ ።

ስዉእ ተጋዳላይ ዶክተር ሃብተ ተስፋማርያም ወዲ ጎሞራ ዋላውን ካባና ካብዛ ዓለም እዚኣ እንተተፈለየ ፡ በቲ ኣብ ሃገራዊ ሓርነታዊ ተጋድሎ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ዘበርከቶ ምእንቲ መሰልን ፍትሕን ራህዋን ንምርግጋጽ ዘሕለፎ መሪርን ነዊሕን ናይ ቃልሲ መዋእል ብኹሎም ወሎዶታት እናተዘከረ ክነብር እዩ ።

ነታ ኣንጊሁ ሰናይ ዝሓለመላ ሃገሩ ንኽቃለሰላ ኢሉ ዝወጸ ፡ ተመሊሱ ከይረኣያ ፡ ብደገ ደጊኡ ክስዋእ ከሎ ንበዓልቲ ቤቱን ንደቁን ንመላእ ዓጽመ ስጋኡን ንተቃለስቲ ብጾቱን ዝወረደ ከቢድ ሓዘን ንሕና ኣባላት ኤርትራዊ ደሞክራሲያዊ ማሕበር ኣብ ጀርመን ብምሉእ ሕልና ተኻፈልቱ ምዃና ድሕሪ ምግላጽና፤ ንመዋቲ መንግስተ ሰማይ የዋርሶን ። ካብ በዓልቲ ቤቱን ደቁን ጀሚርና ክሳብ ንኹሉ ኣብዚ ሓዘን እዚ ተጸሚዱ ንዘሎ ቤተሰቡን ፈተውቱን ናይ ቃልሲ ብጾቱን፡ እቲ ኩሉ ዝካኣሎ ጌታ ሰማይን ምድርን ዝፈጠረ ጽንዓት ይሃብኩም ጠሊ ምስ ፍቕርን ስኒትን የውርደልኩም ንብል ።

ተስፋማርያም ክብራኣብ

ኣቦ መንበር ኤደማ ጀርመን

ብሉይ ብሓዲሽ፥ ክትካእ ኣድማሳዊ  ሕጊ እዩ። ከመይሲ እቲ ሓዲሽ ዝነበረ እናኣረገ ክኸይድ እንከሎ፡ ንኣኡ ዝትክእ ከኣ ጎኑጎኑ ክፍጠር ናይ ግድን ስለዝኾነ። እዚ ማለት እቲ ካብ ሓዲሽ እናበለየ ናብ ብሉይ ገጹ ክጎዓዝ እንከሎ እቲ ብድሕሪኡ ንምሕዳስ ዝመጽእ ሓሳባት ከኣ እቲ ሓዲሽ ሓሳብ  ነቲ ብሉይ ይትክኦ ማለት እዩ። እዚ ነቲ ገዲምን ሓድሽን ወለዶ እውን ዝትንክፎ እዩ። እቲ ምስ ሓዲሽ ኣተሓሳስባ ዝመጽእ ወለዶ ካብቲ ብሉይ ንኽሙከር ወይ ትምህርቲ ክቐስም ብቕዓትን ድሌትን ወኒኑ ሓዲሽ ነገር ክምህዝ ይኽእል።

ኤርትራ ሃገርና ኣብ ቅድምን ደሓርን መግዛእታዊ ዝነበረ ምትእስሳር በቲ እዋን እቲ ዝነበረ ናይ ባህልን ልምድን ሓቢርካ ምንባርን ክፈላለ ናይ ግድን እዩ። ስለዚ ኣብቲ ግዜ ባዕዳዊ መግዛእቲ ዝነበረ ባህሊ ኣዝዩ ክድልድልን ሃገራውነት ንከይፈሓቚን ዝሓልን ዝከላኸልን እዩ ነይሩ። እዚ ኣብ ግዜ ባዕዳዊ መግዛእቲ ዝነበረ ባህሊ ካብቲ ድሕሪ መግዛእቲ ዘሎ መድረኽ ምስቲ እቲ ባዕዳዊ መግዛእቲ ከተኣታትዎ ዝሓስብ ዝነበረ ባህሊ ኣዝዩ ይልዕል ምንባሩ ዝከሓድ ኣይኮነን። ምኽንያቱ እቲ ዕላማ ሃገራውነት ምስቲ ዝተኣሳስሮ ባህልን ልምድን እናተኸባበረ ኣብ ውሽጡ ንፋስ ከየእቱ ብጥንቃቐ ይሕዞ ስለዝነበረ እዩ።

ሎሚ ድሕሪ ባዕዳዊ መግዛእቲ  ብመግዛእቲ ደቂ ሃገር ምስ ተተከአ ግና እቲ ዝነበረ ባህሊ ሃሲሱ ሕድሓዳዊ ምክብባር ጠፊኡ ብውሑዱ እቲ ቀዳሞት ወለድና ኣብ ሓደ ባይቶ ኮፍ ኢሎም ብምድምማጽ ሽግራት ዝፈትሕሉ ዝነበሩ ጥበብ ኩሉ ጠፊኡ። ንዓበይቲ ምዝንጣልን፥ ንምእንቲ ሃገር ዝተወፈዩን በጃ ዝሓለፉን ምስትንዓቕን፥ ኮታ ንታሪኽ ዝሓለፉን ዝሓለፋን ብምንሻውን ዝተጸምደ ሓዲሽ ወለዶ ነቲ ነባር ክትክእ ይኽእልዶ? ዘጠራጥር እዩ። ሕሉፍ ዘይብሉ ህልዊ ከኣ ኣይክህልዎን እዩ። ህልዊ ዘይብሉ ከኣ መጻኢኡ ጽልግልግ ዝበለን ፍንጡሕን እዩ ክኸውን። ብዘይካዚ  በቲ ሕሉፍ ኣሉታዊ ተረኽቦ ብምቚዛም ነቲ ህልዊ ልክዕ ከም ባርዕ ስለ ዘንድዶ እቲ መጻኢ ካብ ሕሉፍ  ዝረኽቦ ውጽኢት፡ ወይ እውን ዝምኰረሉ ስለዘይብሉ መሰረት ዘይብሉ ሰነድ እዩ ክውንን።

በቲ ኣብ ግዜ ባዕዳዊ መግዛእቲ ዝነበረ ቃልሲ በቶም ቀዳሞት ወለዶ ዝተጀመረ ኮይኑ፡ ኣብ ማሕበራዊ፡ ፖለቲካውን ቁጠባውን ኣተሓሳስባ ካብቲ ናይ ሽዑ ናይ ገበተ ባህሊ ብቐሊሉ ናጻ ክኸውን ከምዘይክእል ርዱእ እዩ። ይኹን እምበር እቲ ናይ ቅድም ወለዶ በቲ ናቱ ሃገራዊ ንቕሓትን ዝተኣሳስሮ ዝነበረ ሃገራዊ ባህልን መንነትን ነቲ ዝነበረ ባዕዳዊ መግዛእቲ ብሓዲሽ ኣተሓሳስባ ተኪእዎ እዩ። እዚ እቲ ኣድማሳዊ ሕጊ ኮይኑ እቲ ባዕዳዊ ኣተሓሳስባ ከም ብሉይ ክኸውን ናይ ግድን እዩ። እዚ ምትካእ እዚ ንፍቶ ንጽላእ ገዲም ወይ ብሉይ ኣተሓሳስባ ባዕዳዊ መግዛእቲ ኣልጊሱ፥ ብሃገራዊ ኣተሓሳስባ ከምዝተተከአ ሓደን ክልተን ዝበሃሎ ኣይኮነን። ብርግጽ እታ ሃገር ካብ ባዕዳዊ መግዛእቲ ናጻ ኮይና ኢያ። ይኹን እምበር እቲ ሓዲሽ ሃገራዊ ኣተሓሳስባ ከይተበገሰ ከሎ ኣሰር እቲ ዝጸንሐ ኣረጊት ወይ ብሉይ ኣተሓሳስባ ክወጽእ ስለዘይከኣለ ከኣ ነቲ ሃገራዊ ዘተኣሳስሮ ዝነበረ ባህልን ልምድን መንነትን ብፈላሊኻ ግዛእ ዝብል ስለ ዝበታተኾ እነሆ ቅጥዒ ብዝሰኣነን ስነምግባር ብዝጎደሎን ተተኪኡ።

እዚ ፈላሊኻ ግዛእ ዝብል ኣተሓሳስባ ነቲ ውጽኢት ብረታዊ ቃልሲ ክኸውን ዝነበሮ ኣሳታፊ፡ ማዕርነታውን፡ ሓባራዊ ሃገራዊ መንነትን ኣህሲስዎ። በዚ መሰረት እቲ ጥሙር ሃገራዊ ኣተሓሳስባ ነቲ ተሓቛቚፉ ክጎዓዝ ጸንሐ ሕብረተሰብ ኤርትራ ኣብ እንዳዳታት፥ ሃይማኖታትን፥ ቀቢላታትን ከፋፊሉ ጥራሕ እዩ መሰል ዝሕሎ ዝብል ኣጉል ፍልስፍና ክስዕርር ክኢሉ። በዚ መሰረት እቲ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ዝነበሮ ተጻዋርነት፥ ምትሕቑቛፍን፥ ስኒትን ኩሉ በብኣውራጃኡን ሃይማኖቱን ተኸባቢሩ ዝነብረላ ዝነበረት ሃገር በዚ እንተቐጺሉ ኣብ ቅልውላው ክትኣቱ ምዃና ርዱእ እዩ።

ሎሚ እቲ ኣብ ግዜ ብረታዊ ቃልሲ ዝነበረ ወለዶ ብደረጃ ገዲም ዝቑጸር ዘሎ፡ ምስቲ ሓዲሽ ወለዶ ኮይኑ እዩ እቲ መድረኽ ናይ ምቅብባልን ተመኩሮ ምውርራስን ባህሊ ክፈጥሮ ዝኽእል እምበር፡ በበይንኻ ኰንካ ዝመጽእ ናይ ምስግጋር ለውጢ ካብ ብሉይ ኣተሓሳስባ ናጻ ከውጸኣና ኣይክእልን። ውጽኢቱ ኣሉታኡ’ውን ከቢድን እዩ ዝኸውን። ምኽንያቱ እቲ ሓድሽ ወለዶ ካብ ስነፍልጠት ወጻኢ ብዝኾነ ስምዒት ነቲ ዝነበረ ባህልን ሃገራዊ ምትእስሳርን ብምብታኽ ክትክእ እንተ ኮይኑ ካብቲ ናይ ዝሓለፈ ብሉይ ኣተሓሳስባ ኣይክመሃርን እዩ። እቲ ኣብ መንጎ ብሄራዊ፡ ሃይማኖታውን ዕልማናውን ዘሎ ፍልልይ መሰረቱ ፖለቲካዊ ምዃኑ ተገንዚብካ ኮፍ ኢልካ ብሓባር ናይ ምዝታይ፡ ምርድዳእን ናይ እንካን ሃባን ባህልን ምስ እነጥሪ እዩ እቲ ብሉይ ብሓዲሽ ክንትክእ በቒዕናዮ ከበሃል ዝክኣል።

ስለዚ ነቲ ዝሓለፈ መጉዳእትን ብሉይ ኣተሓሳስባን ዘስዓቦ ቃንዛን ስቅያትን ናይ ሓደ ውሱን ሕብረተሰብ፥ ወይ ናይ ሓደ ውልቀሰብ ዘይኮነስ ናይ መላእ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ቃንዛን መጉዳእትን ምዃኑ ተገንዚብና ክንቅበሎ ዘኽእለና ሓዲሽ ባህሊ ምፍጣር ከድልየና እዩ። እዚ ሓዲሽ ባህሊ እዚ ግና ካብ ፖለቲካዊ ስነፍልጠት ዝነቐለን እቲ ናይ ብሕቲ ንብሕቲ  እቲ ናይ ሃገር ከኣ ናይ ኩሉ ዝኾነሉ ባይታ ክንምድምድ ከሎና እዩ እቲ ገዲም ብሓዲሽ ተተኪኡ ኢልና ንተኣማመነሉ ውጽኢት ንረኽበሉ።

ድራር መንታይ

Disaster comes day after more than 550 migrants rescued between Libya and Italy

Saturday 14 January 2017

med-rescue-4.jpg The disaster came a day after two migrants were found crushed to death in a dinghy AP

More than 100 refugees have drowned after a boat sank in rough conditions in the Mediterranean Sea as the crisis shows no sign of slowing.

The Italian Navy was searching for survivors from the vessel, which was believed to be carrying up to 110 people.

Only four survivors were pulled from the water, with at least eight bodies found so far.

​Flavio Di Giacomo, from the International Organisation for Migration, told The Independent around 106 people were thought to have died and described the conditions at sea as "extremely bad".

The boat went down in waters between Libya and Italy, which has become the deadliest sea crossing in the world since the start of the refugee crisis.

It claimed the vast majority of more than 5,000 lives lost in treacherous boat journeys to Europe in 2016, the deadliest year on record, with people drowning or being crushed or suffocated in overcrowded smugglers' boats.

Saturday's disaster was the worst single incident so far this year, which has already seen at least 122 deaths at sea.

Source=http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/refugee-crisis-migrants-asylum-seekers-mediterranean-sea-disaster-boat-sinking-100-rescue-latest-a7527596.html

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