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sesame
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by sesame » 22 Jul 2019, 17:27

SAWA is what killed the dream of Abay Tigray. It is what Agamest hate most. So Agmash enjoy this classic song


Awash
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Awash » 22 Jul 2019, 18:09

Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

AI Staff on 22 July 2019 in News Analysis 

A few days ago the regime in Asmara reported that the 25th Anniversary of National Service Program will be celebrated during the first week of August all over Eritrea. 

The story that appeared on Eritrea Profile, the government's paper published in English, reads as follows:

"The Silver Jubilee of the beginning of Eritrea’s National Service Program will be celebrated in Sawa from 1-4 August, under the theme “Sawa: The perfect choice for sustainability!”, the Commander of the Sawa Center of Education and Military training, Col. Ezra Woldegebriel, stated."

The first thing one feels after reading such a story is an adverse reaction of sorts.  ‘There must be an editorial mistake here’ one ponders … ‘perhaps it is a simple slip of the tongue’ one concludes.  Is the ENS “the perfect choice for sustainability?” How?

How can the regime ‘celebrate’ the number one national affliction that has turned the country up-side-down?

On 20 Jul, another story appeared on Shabait.com, PFDJ’s website, under the title of “Seminars on progress of national service program.”  The seminar, which was held in Barentu, discussed the history of the program, national service in the new era, and a plan to organize more seminars in the 16 sub-zones of the Gash Barka. 

Unfortunately, open-ended ENS is here to stay!

What is Eritrean National Service?

According to the National Service Proclamation of 1995 ENS’ aims are:

• To establish a strong defence force.

• To preserve and entrust future generations with the valour.

• To create a new generation characterised by love of work, discipline and a willingness to participate and serve in the reconstruction of the nation.

• To develop the economy.

• To foster national unity.

In actual fact, since the introduction of the program the defence forces have been weakened, the economy has been worsening, the country is divided into PFDJ (government party) and non-PFDJ groups, and the youngsters (ENS ‘graduates’) continue to flee.  The country has been beset by desertion woes since the ENS program started. 

Once again, the initial plan was to pass the values of the ‘Yikealo’ resolve (‘mighty freedom fighters’) to ‘Warsai’ (the inheritors). It was then believed ENS would nurture the work ethic of the previous generation of fighters and produce competent and patriotic youngsters.  They were, in common parlance, expected to become exceedingly acquiescent to the demands of the regime.  In other words, the aim was to trap the youngsters in an open-ended servitude that would sap them of their resolve. 

Therefore, ENS cannot be the “the perfect choice for sustainability”; on the contrary, ENS threw a spanner in the works!  It soon dawned on all that the government simply wanted the cheapest possible labour, foot soldiers, and domestics … all done at the expense of the recruits’ future.

It is to be remembered that members of the ENS ended up being herded into joining the army during the 1998-2000 border war where more than 19,000 recruits perished in the conflict. It was a pointless war that changed the future of the young recruits and the country.

Dr Gaim’s recent book, “The Eritrean National Service: Servitude for ‘the Common Good' and Youth Exodus” answers the following interconnected questions:

What is the impact of the Eritrean National Service (ENS) on the country’s economy?  What is the impact on the recruits in this open-ended program?  Why are the recruits fleeing the country in large numbers?  Why has the government failed to introduce a timely intervention to this profuse seepage?  Why are ENS members taking such a huge risk in this non-stop mass migration?  How and why the majority of the conscripts are herded to join the Eritrean Defence Forces (EDF)?  

Dr. Gaim Kibreab's pioneering work on Eritrean National Service (ENS) is both a detailed contemporary and a historically informed analysis of the institution that has had a major impact on the country’s economic, social, military and political life. In the current environment migration poses serious challenges to Eritrea’s identity and sovereignty.  

The account covers a period from the Liberation Struggle to today.  The author writes in a clear and accessible manner that makes the book a significant contribution to our understanding of the relations between the conscripts, the state and the unsteady development in Eritrea.

The publisher excellently encapsulated the story of recruits by stating that it ‘lies at the core of the post-independence state, not only supplying its military, but affecting every aspect of the country's economy, its social services, its public sector and its politics’.

Over half the workforce are forcibly enrolled into it by the government, driving the country's youth to escape national service by seeking employment and asylum elsewhere. Yet how did the ENS, which began during the 1961-91 liberation struggle as part of the idea of the "common good" - in which individual interests were sacrificed in pursuit of the grand scheme of independence and the country's development - degenerate into forced labour and a modern form of slavery? And why, when Eritrea no longer faces existential threat, does the government continue to demand such service from its citizens?

Without doubt, according to the account, the net effect of the current status of Eritrea’s national service has been detrimental to the recruits, their families and villages and ultimately to the country. The extraordinary outflow of refugees is a tragedy; it continues to impose implications on every aspect of life in the country. 

Given the length and nature of the national service, patriotism and a sense of duty are no longer the factors maintaining it. It is only the regime’s sheer coercive force that is driving it. And that is what will be celebrated in two weeks’ time!
http://asmarino.com/news-analysis/5174- ... tLWSUca7Lg

Degnet
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Degnet » 22 Jul 2019, 18:13

Awash wrote:
22 Jul 2019, 18:09
Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

AI Staff on 22 July 2019 in News Analysis 

A few days ago the regime in Asmara reported that the 25th Anniversary of National Service Program will be celebrated during the first week of August all over Eritrea. 

The story that appeared on Eritrea Profile, the government's paper published in English, reads as follows:

"The Silver Jubilee of the beginning of Eritrea’s National Service Program will be celebrated in Sawa from 1-4 August, under the theme “Sawa: The perfect choice for sustainability!”, the Commander of the Sawa Center of Education and Military training, Col. Ezra Woldegebriel, stated."

The first thing one feels after reading such a story is an adverse reaction of sorts.  ‘There must be an editorial mistake here’ one ponders … ‘perhaps it is a simple slip of the tongue’ one concludes.  Is the ENS “the perfect choice for sustainability?” How?

How can the regime ‘celebrate’ the number one national affliction that has turned the country up-side-down?

On 20 Jul, another story appeared on Shabait.com, PFDJ’s website, under the title of “Seminars on progress of national service program.”  The seminar, which was held in Barentu, discussed the history of the program, national service in the new era, and a plan to organize more seminars in the 16 sub-zones of the Gash Barka. 

Unfortunately, open-ended ENS is here to stay!

What is Eritrean National Service?

According to the National Service Proclamation of 1995 ENS’ aims are:

• To establish a strong defence force.

• To preserve and entrust future generations with the valour.

• To create a new generation characterised by love of work, discipline and a willingness to participate and serve in the reconstruction of the nation.

• To develop the economy.

• To foster national unity.

In actual fact, since the introduction of the program the defence forces have been weakened, the economy has been worsening, the country is divided into PFDJ (government party) and non-PFDJ groups, and the youngsters (ENS ‘graduates’) continue to flee.  The country has been beset by desertion woes since the ENS program started. 

Once again, the initial plan was to pass the values of the ‘Yikealo’ resolve (‘mighty freedom fighters’) to ‘Warsai’ (the inheritors). It was then believed ENS would nurture the work ethic of the previous generation of fighters and produce competent and patriotic youngsters.  They were, in common parlance, expected to become exceedingly acquiescent to the demands of the regime.  In other words, the aim was to trap the youngsters in an open-ended servitude that would sap them of their resolve. 

Therefore, ENS cannot be the “the perfect choice for sustainability”; on the contrary, ENS threw a spanner in the works!  It soon dawned on all that the government simply wanted the cheapest possible labour, foot soldiers, and domestics … all done at the expense of the recruits’ future.

It is to be remembered that members of the ENS ended up being herded into joining the army during the 1998-2000 border war where more than 19,000 recruits perished in the conflict. It was a pointless war that changed the future of the young recruits and the country.

Dr Gaim’s recent book, “The Eritrean National Service: Servitude for ‘the Common Good' and Youth Exodus” answers the following interconnected questions:

What is the impact of the Eritrean National Service (ENS) on the country’s economy?  What is the impact on the recruits in this open-ended program?  Why are the recruits fleeing the country in large numbers?  Why has the government failed to introduce a timely intervention to this profuse seepage?  Why are ENS members taking such a huge risk in this non-stop mass migration?  How and why the majority of the conscripts are herded to join the Eritrean Defence Forces (EDF)?  

Dr. Gaim Kibreab's pioneering work on Eritrean National Service (ENS) is both a detailed contemporary and a historically informed analysis of the institution that has had a major impact on the country’s economic, social, military and political life. In the current environment migration poses serious challenges to Eritrea’s identity and sovereignty.  

The account covers a period from the Liberation Struggle to today.  The author writes in a clear and accessible manner that makes the book a significant contribution to our understanding of the relations between the conscripts, the state and the unsteady development in Eritrea.

The publisher excellently encapsulated the story of recruits by stating that it ‘lies at the core of the post-independence state, not only supplying its military, but affecting every aspect of the country's economy, its social services, its public sector and its politics’.

Over half the workforce are forcibly enrolled into it by the government, driving the country's youth to escape national service by seeking employment and asylum elsewhere. Yet how did the ENS, which began during the 1961-91 liberation struggle as part of the idea of the "common good" - in which individual interests were sacrificed in pursuit of the grand scheme of independence and the country's development - degenerate into forced labour and a modern form of slavery? And why, when Eritrea no longer faces existential threat, does the government continue to demand such service from its citizens?

Without doubt, according to the account, the net effect of the current status of Eritrea’s national service has been detrimental to the recruits, their families and villages and ultimately to the country. The extraordinary outflow of refugees is a tragedy; it continues to impose implications on every aspect of life in the country. 

Given the length and nature of the national service, patriotism and a sense of duty are no longer the factors maintaining it. It is only the regime’s sheer coercive force that is driving it. And that is what will be celebrated in two weeks’ time!
http://asmarino.com/news-analysis/5174- ... tLWSUca7Lg
How can you try to reason with such people,Awash,they are intellectually poor.Shefta equa tarikn kebrin alewo.

Zmeselo
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Jul 2019, 18:27


Zmeselo
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Jul 2019, 18:29

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Zmeselo
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Jul 2019, 18:32

ክልተ ወለዶ ኣብ ሓደ ማሕላ!




Awash
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Joined: 07 Aug 2010, 00:35

Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Awash » 23 Jul 2019, 08:47

Eritrea: The Indefinite National Service Defining the Fate of Adolescents

July 23, 20198:58 am

Paris – The Etritrean-Ethiopian War, one of the most brutal wars in Africa, took place between both countries from May 1998 to June 2000, however peace was finally agreed in 2018, twenty years after the conflict began.

Since Eritrea’s independence from Ethiopia in 1993, Eritrea became a militarized authoritarian state with only one political party, The People’s Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ), which is led by President Isaias Afwerki. Democracy is far from accurate as the country has not held a national election since 1993 and President Isaias and the PFDJ have been in power since the country’s independence. With national elections being postponed indefinitely, opposition groups are unable to participate or join government. Freedom of expression or any private discussion is entirely forbidden and any form of dissent is likely to result in arrest or arbitrary detention, leaving Eritreans no choice but to pledge their allegiance to the PFDJ. With Eritrean society being dominated entirely by the military since May 2002, Eritrean citizens are required to participate in the endless national service which requires all men and women aged 18 to 55 to join the national service for an unspecified amount of time. Offering two programmes, the civil service and the military service, anyone who enters the programmes are forbidden to leave until they turn 55, making Eritrea one of the most punitive countries in Africa justly earning its unofficial title of Africa’s North Korea...
https://www.afrancophone.org/reports/er ... Ab5vSLE_aY

Awash
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Awash » 23 Jul 2019, 09:28

I asked young Eritreans why they risk migration. This is what they told me

July 22, 2019 10.31am EDT Milena Belloni, University of Trento

Isaias was 16 when he escaped from Sa’wa, the military training camp for final-year high school students in Eritrea. His parents came to know of his whereabouts only a few weeks after. From Sudan he tried to cross the Sinai to reach Israel. But he was kidnapped by bandits. His family paid a high ransom to save him...
https://theconversation.com/i-asked-you ... MfsIqRuutI

Tog Wajale
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Tog Wajale » 23 Jul 2019, 10:10


Tog Wajale
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Tog Wajale » 23 Jul 2019, 10:12


Awash
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Awash » 23 Jul 2019, 16:42


Awash
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Awash » 24 Jul 2019, 00:02

Watch "Wedi Tikabo new song from Sawa ERI-Youth Festival 2012" on YouTube

Awash
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Re: Eritrea: Twenty Five Years of Servitude

Post by Awash » 24 Jul 2019, 01:02


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