Ethiopian News, Current Affairs and Opinion Forum
justo
Member
Posts: 3178
Joined: 05 May 2013, 17:54

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by justo » 22 Sep 2019, 18:45

Awash wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 18:29
You little sh!thead,
You think you're making sense. All i want to know is why you and your Agame asz didn't stay in your refugee huts but, instead, came to the land of freedom, democracy, milk & honey? You talk of Eritrean refugees as if you don't know the people, which proves you're an Agame wedi komarit like your savage tyrants. Mushmush.
ኣነ ገድድ ምሳኺ ዘኹድድ። ኣነስ ግልብጭ ተቖኒንኪ ኣንታ እዚ ጁስቶ ክንደይ ይፍተወካ ኢልኪ ትጽበዪኒ መሰለኒ እምበር ትጸርፍኒዶ ኢለ። ኺዲ በሊ ... እስኺ ቦሶሮ ኢኺ። ጸብሕኺ ኸማን ኣይጥዑምንዩ ዝኸዉን

Awash
Senior Member+
Posts: 30273
Joined: 07 Aug 2010, 00:35

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Awash » 22 Sep 2019, 19:32

justo wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 18:45
Awash wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 18:29
You little sh!thead,
You think you're making sense. All i want to know is why you and your Agame asz didn't stay in your refugee huts but, instead, came to the land of freedom, democracy, milk & honey? You talk of Eritrean refugees as if you don't know the people, which proves you're an Agame wedi komarit like your savage tyrants. Mushmush.
ኣነ ገድድ ምሳኺ ዘኹድድ። ኣነስ ግልብጭ ተቖኒንኪ ኣንታ እዚ ጁስቶ ክንደይ ይፍተወካ ኢልኪ ትጽበዪኒ መሰለኒ እምበር ትጸርፍኒዶ ኢለ። ኺዲ በሊ ... እስኺ ቦሶሮ ኢኺ። ጸብሕኺ ኸማን ኣይጥዑምንዩ ዝኸዉን
Go back to Penitentiarea with deqi komarit medhin like your fellow stooges in Norway who celebrate slavery while living in the No.1 country. :lol: :mrgreen:
The Deportables

...Among the 149 countries surveyed in the index, the lowest quality of life was found in African nations South Sudan, Central African Republic, Chad, Eritrea, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

These are the world’s top 25 countries according to the 2019 Deloitte Quality of Life Index:

1.Norway
2. Denmark
3. Switzerland...
https://news.expats.cz/weekly-czech-new ... 019-index/

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Sep 2019, 19:59

You wiggling,


That's not what you said, initially.

This are your exact words:
Even during independence your Agame tyrants wouldn't allow them to return to their homeland?
Why don't you EVER talk, about identity theft in shimbella & may ayni, btw?

Why, mr "eritrean" crockodile tears crier?



Awash wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 18:08
Zombie,
Your so-called "self-reliant" agame tyrannical regime's tactics of delaying the process of repatriation and implementatio of coinciding with a convenient war with neighbors.
Background note on Eritrean refugees in Sudan

REPORT from UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Published on 29 Jan 2002

The exodus 
UNHCR has been caring for Eritrean refugees in Sudan longer than for any other large group of exiles, with the first camp for present-day Eritreans opened by the agency in eastern Sudan in 1967.

Refugees began arriving in Sudan in the mid-1960s, after Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie annexed the territory in 1962 and people fled the first hostilities in the war of independence. The conflict and periods of drought would drive progressively larger numbers of civilians into neighboring Sudan, with the exodus marked by years when the rate of flight increased dramatically. Between 1975 and 1978 alone, for example, over 200,000 Eritreans sought safety in Sudan. In the years 1980 to 1985, during renewed struggles and crop failures, the refugee population climbed over 400,000. The number of exiles peaked in the mid-1980s at almost 500,000.

The majority of Eritreans living in Sudan has been there since well before May 1993, when Eritrea declared independence, but thousands of additional refugees crossed into the country in May and June of 2000 as additional camps were set up for those who fled fresh fighting between Eritrea and Ethiopia. Of the estimated 95,000 new arrivals, most have since repatriated either spontaneously or with UNHCR help. Over 25,000 travelled home aboard UNHCR trucks between August and November, 2000, and a further 12,000 were assisted home in 2001.

Although several hundred thousand people went back after independence, there are still an estimated 142,000 Eritreans in refugee camps in Kassala and Gedaref States in Sudan. A large number of Eritreans also live in urban areas in Sudan, chiefly in Khartoum and towns in the east such as Kassala, Gedaref and Port Sudan.

More than two-thirds of the present caseload come from the western Eritrean zone of Gash-Barka. The next largest group comes from the Anseba area, further east.

Past repatriation efforts

Following Eritrean independence, UNHCR signed bilateral agreements in 1994 with the Governments of Eritrea and Sudan, laying the groundwork for the start of voluntary refugee repatriation. Convoys began moving in November of the same year in a pilot project for 25,000 volunteers. After this initial phase, however, organized repatriation was hindered for several years by political tensions in the region, even though many Eritreans were able to return on their own.

Four years after these first organized returns, a UNHCR survey found that around 90% of the refugees remaining in the camps wanted to repatriate. The refugees' desire was confirmed by a socio-economic study in 1999.

UNHCR, Sudan, and Eritrea took the first step towards re-starting the repatriation by signing a tripartite agreement in Geneva on April 7, 2000. The accord recognized the right of individuals to go home to areas of their choice, as well as the strictly voluntary nature of the return. It also included provisions for UNHCR to monitor the returns and the reintegration process. The April agreement spelled out the need for rehabilitation of refugee-affected areas in Sudan and for assistance to returnees.

In the weeks following the signing, UNHCR staff and representatives of the two governments distributed leaflets and held public sessions in the camps to inform refugees about the start and various components of the operation. Volunteers came forward and put their names down for repatriation. However, after a week in which 9,000 Eritreans signed up to go home, UNHCR was forced to halt the process and put the operation on hold when hostilities between Eritrea and Ethiopia erupted again into full-scale conflict in May, 2000.

The current operation

Building on the agreement and plans of 2000, UNHCR and the two governments met in Khartoum in late March 2001 to again prepare for the return of the remaining Eritrean refugees. The parties reaffirmed their commitment to voluntary repatriation, estimating that at least 160,000 refugees would take this opportunity to return home. To date, more than 37,000 refugees have taken this opportunity, choosing to settle mainly in the Gash Barka Region.

Last December, UNHCR asked donors for US$ 28.1 million for repatriation, reintegration, and care and maintenance activities (the latter for Somali and Sudanese refugees) during 2002.

Information campaign - The voluntary repatriation operation began with an information campaign in the camps. Thousands of leaflets printed in Tigrinya, Arabic and English that explain how refugees will be helped to return have been distributed to refugees. The pamphlets also give Eritreans information on procedures for return and the principles agreed between UNHCR and the two governments. In addition, two dozen members of the governmental Eritrean Relief and Refugee Commission (ERREC) and officials from the embassy in Khartoum visited camps to answer refugees' questions. After signing up for return, refugees will be de-registered by UNHCR Sudan, undergo a health screening, and get a two-month ration of food from the World Food Programme. The first convoy operated on May 12, 2001. As of 26 January 2002, more than 50 convoy movements have taken place.

The move home - Convoys carrying returnees and their belongings are escorted from camps in Sudan to the UNHCR reception center in Tesseney. Medical staff accompany each group. On arrival at the reception facilities, Eritreans are again registered and provided with documentation by the government. They receive information on the danger and presence of land mines, another health check, and are provided with meals. From Tesseney, returnees either go directly home or pass through transit centers in Hagaz and Barentu before reaching their final destinations.

Returning refugees are free to choose their final destinations within Eritrea.

Aid to returnees - UNHCR provides each returning family with a shelter structure, one blanket per person, two mosquito nets per family, a kerosene stove with kerosene and water barrel, agricultural tools, kitchen sets, soap and a carry-all bag. Families also receive a cash grant of up to US $200. Returnees to urban areas may choose additional cash in place of the shelter structure and tool sets.

UNHCR and its implementing partners are in the process of providing communities with assistance to help them absorb the returning population. These projects will concentrate on health care, education, agriculture and water/sanitation facilities.

Besides the initial two-month food package issued upon arrival by WFP, returnees are also eligible for a further ten months of food assistance once inside the country. Authorities provide land for returnees to build homes on and, depending on the area, up to two hectares of land to farm.

The assistance package will give returning Eritreans a better chance at a durable and successful homecoming after their exceptionally long exile. Other agencies and bilateral organizations are being called upon to aid the returnees through longer-term development and reconstruction projects.

Reintegration Strategy - As the refugees have begun to return, efforts are underway to engage medium to longer term development actors in including returnees in their plans. A key forum for the coordination and inclusion of all actors involved in relief and development work in the Gash Barka Region in particular is the Zonal Reintegration Committee, based in Barentu, the administrative capital of Gash Barka Zone, and chaired by the Regional Governor. Attended by the regional line ministry representatives, regional authorities, UNHCR, NGOs and other actors, the Zonal Reintegration Committee approves submitted projects based on assessments by a UNHCR technical team of specialists in the various sectors. These projects range from rehabilitation and reconstruction of health posts and digging of boreholes to life-skills training projects in the schools.

Cost of care and maintenance - The cost of the repatriation - and putting an end to one of Africa's longest-running refugee situations - should be compared to the expense of maintaining this large refugee population in Sudanese camps. UNHCR and WFP have had to spend many times the amount UNHCR is currently seeking for repatriation and reintegration assistance on camp-based care and maintenance programs during the last few years alone.
https://reliefweb.int/report/eritrea/ba ... gees-sudan

pastlast
Member
Posts: 2250
Joined: 19 May 2019, 18:02

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by pastlast » 22 Sep 2019, 20:09

Zmssellouts martyrd brothas last words were: " Where is my cowardly older brother he should be here with me. God damn Zmsselfish for betraying me and eritrea"
Zmeselo wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 19:59
You wiggling,


That's not what you said, initially.

This are your exact words:
Even during independence your Agame tyrants wouldn't allow them to return to their homeland?
Why don't you EVER talk, about identity theft in shimbella & may ayni, btw?

Why, mr "eritrean" crockodile tears crier?



Awash wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 18:08
Zombie,
Your so-called "self-reliant" agame tyrannical regime's tactics of delaying the process of repatriation and implementatio of coinciding with a convenient war with neighbors.
Background note on Eritrean refugees in Sudan

REPORT from UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Published on 29 Jan 2002

The exodus 
UNHCR has been caring for Eritrean refugees in Sudan longer than for any other large group of exiles, with the first camp for present-day Eritreans opened by the agency in eastern Sudan in 1967.

Refugees began arriving in Sudan in the mid-1960s, after Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie annexed the territory in 1962 and people fled the first hostilities in the war of independence. The conflict and periods of drought would drive progressively larger numbers of civilians into neighboring Sudan, with the exodus marked by years when the rate of flight increased dramatically. Between 1975 and 1978 alone, for example, over 200,000 Eritreans sought safety in Sudan. In the years 1980 to 1985, during renewed struggles and crop failures, the refugee population climbed over 400,000. The number of exiles peaked in the mid-1980s at almost 500,000.

The majority of Eritreans living in Sudan has been there since well before May 1993, when Eritrea declared independence, but thousands of additional refugees crossed into the country in May and June of 2000 as additional camps were set up for those who fled fresh fighting between Eritrea and Ethiopia. Of the estimated 95,000 new arrivals, most have since repatriated either spontaneously or with UNHCR help. Over 25,000 travelled home aboard UNHCR trucks between August and November, 2000, and a further 12,000 were assisted home in 2001.

Although several hundred thousand people went back after independence, there are still an estimated 142,000 Eritreans in refugee camps in Kassala and Gedaref States in Sudan. A large number of Eritreans also live in urban areas in Sudan, chiefly in Khartoum and towns in the east such as Kassala, Gedaref and Port Sudan.

More than two-thirds of the present caseload come from the western Eritrean zone of Gash-Barka. The next largest group comes from the Anseba area, further east.

Past repatriation efforts

Following Eritrean independence, UNHCR signed bilateral agreements in 1994 with the Governments of Eritrea and Sudan, laying the groundwork for the start of voluntary refugee repatriation. Convoys began moving in November of the same year in a pilot project for 25,000 volunteers. After this initial phase, however, organized repatriation was hindered for several years by political tensions in the region, even though many Eritreans were able to return on their own.

Four years after these first organized returns, a UNHCR survey found that around 90% of the refugees remaining in the camps wanted to repatriate. The refugees' desire was confirmed by a socio-economic study in 1999.

UNHCR, Sudan, and Eritrea took the first step towards re-starting the repatriation by signing a tripartite agreement in Geneva on April 7, 2000. The accord recognized the right of individuals to go home to areas of their choice, as well as the strictly voluntary nature of the return. It also included provisions for UNHCR to monitor the returns and the reintegration process. The April agreement spelled out the need for rehabilitation of refugee-affected areas in Sudan and for assistance to returnees.

In the weeks following the signing, UNHCR staff and representatives of the two governments distributed leaflets and held public sessions in the camps to inform refugees about the start and various components of the operation. Volunteers came forward and put their names down for repatriation. However, after a week in which 9,000 Eritreans signed up to go home, UNHCR was forced to halt the process and put the operation on hold when hostilities between Eritrea and Ethiopia erupted again into full-scale conflict in May, 2000.

The current operation

Building on the agreement and plans of 2000, UNHCR and the two governments met in Khartoum in late March 2001 to again prepare for the return of the remaining Eritrean refugees. The parties reaffirmed their commitment to voluntary repatriation, estimating that at least 160,000 refugees would take this opportunity to return home. To date, more than 37,000 refugees have taken this opportunity, choosing to settle mainly in the Gash Barka Region.

Last December, UNHCR asked donors for US$ 28.1 million for repatriation, reintegration, and care and maintenance activities (the latter for Somali and Sudanese refugees) during 2002.

Information campaign - The voluntary repatriation operation began with an information campaign in the camps. Thousands of leaflets printed in Tigrinya, Arabic and English that explain how refugees will be helped to return have been distributed to refugees. The pamphlets also give Eritreans information on procedures for return and the principles agreed between UNHCR and the two governments. In addition, two dozen members of the governmental Eritrean Relief and Refugee Commission (ERREC) and officials from the embassy in Khartoum visited camps to answer refugees' questions. After signing up for return, refugees will be de-registered by UNHCR Sudan, undergo a health screening, and get a two-month ration of food from the World Food Programme. The first convoy operated on May 12, 2001. As of 26 January 2002, more than 50 convoy movements have taken place.

The move home - Convoys carrying returnees and their belongings are escorted from camps in Sudan to the UNHCR reception center in Tesseney. Medical staff accompany each group. On arrival at the reception facilities, Eritreans are again registered and provided with documentation by the government. They receive information on the danger and presence of land mines, another health check, and are provided with meals. From Tesseney, returnees either go directly home or pass through transit centers in Hagaz and Barentu before reaching their final destinations.

Returning refugees are free to choose their final destinations within Eritrea.

Aid to returnees - UNHCR provides each returning family with a shelter structure, one blanket per person, two mosquito nets per family, a kerosene stove with kerosene and water barrel, agricultural tools, kitchen sets, soap and a carry-all bag. Families also receive a cash grant of up to US $200. Returnees to urban areas may choose additional cash in place of the shelter structure and tool sets.

UNHCR and its implementing partners are in the process of providing communities with assistance to help them absorb the returning population. These projects will concentrate on health care, education, agriculture and water/sanitation facilities.

Besides the initial two-month food package issued upon arrival by WFP, returnees are also eligible for a further ten months of food assistance once inside the country. Authorities provide land for returnees to build homes on and, depending on the area, up to two hectares of land to farm.

The assistance package will give returning Eritreans a better chance at a durable and successful homecoming after their exceptionally long exile. Other agencies and bilateral organizations are being called upon to aid the returnees through longer-term development and reconstruction projects.

Reintegration Strategy - As the refugees have begun to return, efforts are underway to engage medium to longer term development actors in including returnees in their plans. A key forum for the coordination and inclusion of all actors involved in relief and development work in the Gash Barka Region in particular is the Zonal Reintegration Committee, based in Barentu, the administrative capital of Gash Barka Zone, and chaired by the Regional Governor. Attended by the regional line ministry representatives, regional authorities, UNHCR, NGOs and other actors, the Zonal Reintegration Committee approves submitted projects based on assessments by a UNHCR technical team of specialists in the various sectors. These projects range from rehabilitation and reconstruction of health posts and digging of boreholes to life-skills training projects in the schools.

Cost of care and maintenance - The cost of the repatriation - and putting an end to one of Africa's longest-running refugee situations - should be compared to the expense of maintaining this large refugee population in Sudanese camps. UNHCR and WFP have had to spend many times the amount UNHCR is currently seeking for repatriation and reintegration assistance on camp-based care and maintenance programs during the last few years alone.
https://reliefweb.int/report/eritrea/ba ... gees-sudan

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Sep 2019, 20:15

Eat diharrhea & die, you sick agame baztard.
pastlast wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 20:09
Zmssellouts martyrd brothas last words were: " Where is my cowardly older brother he should be here with me. God damn Zmsselfish for betraying me and eritrea"
Zmeselo wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 19:59
You wiggling,


That's not what you said, initially.

This are your exact words:
Even during independence your Agame tyrants wouldn't allow them to return to their homeland?
Why don't you EVER talk, about identity theft in shimbella & may ayni, btw?

Why, mr "eritrean" crockodile tears crier?



Awash wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 18:08
Zombie,
Your so-called "self-reliant" agame tyrannical regime's tactics of delaying the process of repatriation and implementatio of coinciding with a convenient war with neighbors.
Background note on Eritrean refugees in Sudan

REPORT from UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Published on 29 Jan 2002

The exodus 
UNHCR has been caring for Eritrean refugees in Sudan longer than for any other large group of exiles, with the first camp for present-day Eritreans opened by the agency in eastern Sudan in 1967.

Refugees began arriving in Sudan in the mid-1960s, after Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie annexed the territory in 1962 and people fled the first hostilities in the war of independence. The conflict and periods of drought would drive progressively larger numbers of civilians into neighboring Sudan, with the exodus marked by years when the rate of flight increased dramatically. Between 1975 and 1978 alone, for example, over 200,000 Eritreans sought safety in Sudan. In the years 1980 to 1985, during renewed struggles and crop failures, the refugee population climbed over 400,000. The number of exiles peaked in the mid-1980s at almost 500,000.

The majority of Eritreans living in Sudan has been there since well before May 1993, when Eritrea declared independence, but thousands of additional refugees crossed into the country in May and June of 2000 as additional camps were set up for those who fled fresh fighting between Eritrea and Ethiopia. Of the estimated 95,000 new arrivals, most have since repatriated either spontaneously or with UNHCR help. Over 25,000 travelled home aboard UNHCR trucks between August and November, 2000, and a further 12,000 were assisted home in 2001.

Although several hundred thousand people went back after independence, there are still an estimated 142,000 Eritreans in refugee camps in Kassala and Gedaref States in Sudan. A large number of Eritreans also live in urban areas in Sudan, chiefly in Khartoum and towns in the east such as Kassala, Gedaref and Port Sudan.

More than two-thirds of the present caseload come from the western Eritrean zone of Gash-Barka. The next largest group comes from the Anseba area, further east.

Past repatriation efforts

Following Eritrean independence, UNHCR signed bilateral agreements in 1994 with the Governments of Eritrea and Sudan, laying the groundwork for the start of voluntary refugee repatriation. Convoys began moving in November of the same year in a pilot project for 25,000 volunteers. After this initial phase, however, organized repatriation was hindered for several years by political tensions in the region, even though many Eritreans were able to return on their own.

Four years after these first organized returns, a UNHCR survey found that around 90% of the refugees remaining in the camps wanted to repatriate. The refugees' desire was confirmed by a socio-economic study in 1999.

UNHCR, Sudan, and Eritrea took the first step towards re-starting the repatriation by signing a tripartite agreement in Geneva on April 7, 2000. The accord recognized the right of individuals to go home to areas of their choice, as well as the strictly voluntary nature of the return. It also included provisions for UNHCR to monitor the returns and the reintegration process. The April agreement spelled out the need for rehabilitation of refugee-affected areas in Sudan and for assistance to returnees.

In the weeks following the signing, UNHCR staff and representatives of the two governments distributed leaflets and held public sessions in the camps to inform refugees about the start and various components of the operation. Volunteers came forward and put their names down for repatriation. However, after a week in which 9,000 Eritreans signed up to go home, UNHCR was forced to halt the process and put the operation on hold when hostilities between Eritrea and Ethiopia erupted again into full-scale conflict in May, 2000.

The current operation

Building on the agreement and plans of 2000, UNHCR and the two governments met in Khartoum in late March 2001 to again prepare for the return of the remaining Eritrean refugees. The parties reaffirmed their commitment to voluntary repatriation, estimating that at least 160,000 refugees would take this opportunity to return home. To date, more than 37,000 refugees have taken this opportunity, choosing to settle mainly in the Gash Barka Region.

Last December, UNHCR asked donors for US$ 28.1 million for repatriation, reintegration, and care and maintenance activities (the latter for Somali and Sudanese refugees) during 2002.

Information campaign - The voluntary repatriation operation began with an information campaign in the camps. Thousands of leaflets printed in Tigrinya, Arabic and English that explain how refugees will be helped to return have been distributed to refugees. The pamphlets also give Eritreans information on procedures for return and the principles agreed between UNHCR and the two governments. In addition, two dozen members of the governmental Eritrean Relief and Refugee Commission (ERREC) and officials from the embassy in Khartoum visited camps to answer refugees' questions. After signing up for return, refugees will be de-registered by UNHCR Sudan, undergo a health screening, and get a two-month ration of food from the World Food Programme. The first convoy operated on May 12, 2001. As of 26 January 2002, more than 50 convoy movements have taken place.

The move home - Convoys carrying returnees and their belongings are escorted from camps in Sudan to the UNHCR reception center in Tesseney. Medical staff accompany each group. On arrival at the reception facilities, Eritreans are again registered and provided with documentation by the government. They receive information on the danger and presence of land mines, another health check, and are provided with meals. From Tesseney, returnees either go directly home or pass through transit centers in Hagaz and Barentu before reaching their final destinations.

Returning refugees are free to choose their final destinations within Eritrea.

Aid to returnees - UNHCR provides each returning family with a shelter structure, one blanket per person, two mosquito nets per family, a kerosene stove with kerosene and water barrel, agricultural tools, kitchen sets, soap and a carry-all bag. Families also receive a cash grant of up to US $200. Returnees to urban areas may choose additional cash in place of the shelter structure and tool sets.

UNHCR and its implementing partners are in the process of providing communities with assistance to help them absorb the returning population. These projects will concentrate on health care, education, agriculture and water/sanitation facilities.

Besides the initial two-month food package issued upon arrival by WFP, returnees are also eligible for a further ten months of food assistance once inside the country. Authorities provide land for returnees to build homes on and, depending on the area, up to two hectares of land to farm.

The assistance package will give returning Eritreans a better chance at a durable and successful homecoming after their exceptionally long exile. Other agencies and bilateral organizations are being called upon to aid the returnees through longer-term development and reconstruction projects.

Reintegration Strategy - As the refugees have begun to return, efforts are underway to engage medium to longer term development actors in including returnees in their plans. A key forum for the coordination and inclusion of all actors involved in relief and development work in the Gash Barka Region in particular is the Zonal Reintegration Committee, based in Barentu, the administrative capital of Gash Barka Zone, and chaired by the Regional Governor. Attended by the regional line ministry representatives, regional authorities, UNHCR, NGOs and other actors, the Zonal Reintegration Committee approves submitted projects based on assessments by a UNHCR technical team of specialists in the various sectors. These projects range from rehabilitation and reconstruction of health posts and digging of boreholes to life-skills training projects in the schools.

Cost of care and maintenance - The cost of the repatriation - and putting an end to one of Africa's longest-running refugee situations - should be compared to the expense of maintaining this large refugee population in Sudanese camps. UNHCR and WFP have had to spend many times the amount UNHCR is currently seeking for repatriation and reintegration assistance on camp-based care and maintenance programs during the last few years alone.
https://reliefweb.int/report/eritrea/ba ... gees-sudan

Awash
Senior Member+
Posts: 30273
Joined: 07 Aug 2010, 00:35

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Awash » 22 Sep 2019, 20:32

:lol: :lol: :mrgreen:
pastlast wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 20:09

Zmssellouts martyrd brothas last words were: " Where is my cowardly older brother he should be here with me. God damn Zmsselfish for betraying me and eritrea"
Zmeselo wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 19:59
You wiggling,


That's not what you said, initially.

This are your exact words:
Even during independence your Agame tyrants wouldn't allow them to return to their homeland?
Why don't you EVER talk, about identity theft in shimbella & may ayni, btw?

Why, mr "eritrean" crockodile tears crier?



Awash wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 18:08
Zombie,
Your so-called "self-reliant" agame tyrannical regime's tactics of delaying the process of repatriation and implementatio of coinciding with a convenient war with neighbors.
Background note on Eritrean refugees in Sudan

REPORT from UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Published on 29 Jan 2002

The exodus 
UNHCR has been caring for Eritrean refugees in Sudan longer than for any other large group of exiles, with the first camp for present-day Eritreans opened by the agency in eastern Sudan in 1967.

Refugees began arriving in Sudan in the mid-1960s, after Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie annexed the territory in 1962 and people fled the first hostilities in the war of independence. The conflict and periods of drought would drive progressively larger numbers of civilians into neighboring Sudan, with the exodus marked by years when the rate of flight increased dramatically. Between 1975 and 1978 alone, for example, over 200,000 Eritreans sought safety in Sudan. In the years 1980 to 1985, during renewed struggles and crop failures, the refugee population climbed over 400,000. The number of exiles peaked in the mid-1980s at almost 500,000.

The majority of Eritreans living in Sudan has been there since well before May 1993, when Eritrea declared independence, but thousands of additional refugees crossed into the country in May and June of 2000 as additional camps were set up for those who fled fresh fighting between Eritrea and Ethiopia. Of the estimated 95,000 new arrivals, most have since repatriated either spontaneously or with UNHCR help. Over 25,000 travelled home aboard UNHCR trucks between August and November, 2000, and a further 12,000 were assisted home in 2001.

Although several hundred thousand people went back after independence, there are still an estimated 142,000 Eritreans in refugee camps in Kassala and Gedaref States in Sudan. A large number of Eritreans also live in urban areas in Sudan, chiefly in Khartoum and towns in the east such as Kassala, Gedaref and Port Sudan.

More than two-thirds of the present caseload come from the western Eritrean zone of Gash-Barka. The next largest group comes from the Anseba area, further east.

Past repatriation efforts

Following Eritrean independence, UNHCR signed bilateral agreements in 1994 with the Governments of Eritrea and Sudan, laying the groundwork for the start of voluntary refugee repatriation. Convoys began moving in November of the same year in a pilot project for 25,000 volunteers. After this initial phase, however, organized repatriation was hindered for several years by political tensions in the region, even though many Eritreans were able to return on their own.

Four years after these first organized returns, a UNHCR survey found that around 90% of the refugees remaining in the camps wanted to repatriate. The refugees' desire was confirmed by a socio-economic study in 1999.

UNHCR, Sudan, and Eritrea took the first step towards re-starting the repatriation by signing a tripartite agreement in Geneva on April 7, 2000. The accord recognized the right of individuals to go home to areas of their choice, as well as the strictly voluntary nature of the return. It also included provisions for UNHCR to monitor the returns and the reintegration process. The April agreement spelled out the need for rehabilitation of refugee-affected areas in Sudan and for assistance to returnees.

In the weeks following the signing, UNHCR staff and representatives of the two governments distributed leaflets and held public sessions in the camps to inform refugees about the start and various components of the operation. Volunteers came forward and put their names down for repatriation. However, after a week in which 9,000 Eritreans signed up to go home, UNHCR was forced to halt the process and put the operation on hold when hostilities between Eritrea and Ethiopia erupted again into full-scale conflict in May, 2000.

The current operation

Building on the agreement and plans of 2000, UNHCR and the two governments met in Khartoum in late March 2001 to again prepare for the return of the remaining Eritrean refugees. The parties reaffirmed their commitment to voluntary repatriation, estimating that at least 160,000 refugees would take this opportunity to return home. To date, more than 37,000 refugees have taken this opportunity, choosing to settle mainly in the Gash Barka Region.

Last December, UNHCR asked donors for US$ 28.1 million for repatriation, reintegration, and care and maintenance activities (the latter for Somali and Sudanese refugees) during 2002.

Information campaign - The voluntary repatriation operation began with an information campaign in the camps. Thousands of leaflets printed in Tigrinya, Arabic and English that explain how refugees will be helped to return have been distributed to refugees. The pamphlets also give Eritreans information on procedures for return and the principles agreed between UNHCR and the two governments. In addition, two dozen members of the governmental Eritrean Relief and Refugee Commission (ERREC) and officials from the embassy in Khartoum visited camps to answer refugees' questions. After signing up for return, refugees will be de-registered by UNHCR Sudan, undergo a health screening, and get a two-month ration of food from the World Food Programme. The first convoy operated on May 12, 2001. As of 26 January 2002, more than 50 convoy movements have taken place.

The move home - Convoys carrying returnees and their belongings are escorted from camps in Sudan to the UNHCR reception center in Tesseney. Medical staff accompany each group. On arrival at the reception facilities, Eritreans are again registered and provided with documentation by the government. They receive information on the danger and presence of land mines, another health check, and are provided with meals. From Tesseney, returnees either go directly home or pass through transit centers in Hagaz and Barentu before reaching their final destinations.

Returning refugees are free to choose their final destinations within Eritrea.

Aid to returnees - UNHCR provides each returning family with a shelter structure, one blanket per person, two mosquito nets per family, a kerosene stove with kerosene and water barrel, agricultural tools, kitchen sets, soap and a carry-all bag. Families also receive a cash grant of up to US $200. Returnees to urban areas may choose additional cash in place of the shelter structure and tool sets.

UNHCR and its implementing partners are in the process of providing communities with assistance to help them absorb the returning population. These projects will concentrate on health care, education, agriculture and water/sanitation facilities.

Besides the initial two-month food package issued upon arrival by WFP, returnees are also eligible for a further ten months of food assistance once inside the country. Authorities provide land for returnees to build homes on and, depending on the area, up to two hectares of land to farm.

The assistance package will give returning Eritreans a better chance at a durable and successful homecoming after their exceptionally long exile. Other agencies and bilateral organizations are being called upon to aid the returnees through longer-term development and reconstruction projects.

Reintegration Strategy - As the refugees have begun to return, efforts are underway to engage medium to longer term development actors in including returnees in their plans. A key forum for the coordination and inclusion of all actors involved in relief and development work in the Gash Barka Region in particular is the Zonal Reintegration Committee, based in Barentu, the administrative capital of Gash Barka Zone, and chaired by the Regional Governor. Attended by the regional line ministry representatives, regional authorities, UNHCR, NGOs and other actors, the Zonal Reintegration Committee approves submitted projects based on assessments by a UNHCR technical team of specialists in the various sectors. These projects range from rehabilitation and reconstruction of health posts and digging of boreholes to life-skills training projects in the schools.

Cost of care and maintenance - The cost of the repatriation - and putting an end to one of Africa's longest-running refugee situations - should be compared to the expense of maintaining this large refugee population in Sudanese camps. UNHCR and WFP have had to spend many times the amount UNHCR is currently seeking for repatriation and reintegration assistance on camp-based care and maintenance programs during the last few years alone.
https://reliefweb.int/report/eritrea/ba ... gees-sudan

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Sep 2019, 20:38

Asswash the coon & pastlsst the pervert:


Awash wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 20:32
:lol: :lol: :mrgreen:
pastlast wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 20:09

Zmssellouts martyrd brothas last words were: " Where is my cowardly older brother he should be here with me. God damn Zmsselfish for betraying me and eritrea"
Zmeselo wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 19:59
You wiggling,


That's not what you said, initially.

This are your exact words:
Even during independence your Agame tyrants wouldn't allow them to return to their homeland?
Why don't you EVER talk, about identity theft in shimbella & may ayni, btw?

Why, mr "eritrean" crockodile tears crier?



Awash wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 18:08
Zombie,
Your so-called "self-reliant" agame tyrannical regime's tactics of delaying the process of repatriation and implementatio of coinciding with a convenient war with neighbors.
Background note on Eritrean refugees in Sudan

REPORT from UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Published on 29 Jan 2002

The exodus 
UNHCR has been caring for Eritrean refugees in Sudan longer than for any other large group of exiles, with the first camp for present-day Eritreans opened by the agency in eastern Sudan in 1967.

Refugees began arriving in Sudan in the mid-1960s, after Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie annexed the territory in 1962 and people fled the first hostilities in the war of independence. The conflict and periods of drought would drive progressively larger numbers of civilians into neighboring Sudan, with the exodus marked by years when the rate of flight increased dramatically. Between 1975 and 1978 alone, for example, over 200,000 Eritreans sought safety in Sudan. In the years 1980 to 1985, during renewed struggles and crop failures, the refugee population climbed over 400,000. The number of exiles peaked in the mid-1980s at almost 500,000.

The majority of Eritreans living in Sudan has been there since well before May 1993, when Eritrea declared independence, but thousands of additional refugees crossed into the country in May and June of 2000 as additional camps were set up for those who fled fresh fighting between Eritrea and Ethiopia. Of the estimated 95,000 new arrivals, most have since repatriated either spontaneously or with UNHCR help. Over 25,000 travelled home aboard UNHCR trucks between August and November, 2000, and a further 12,000 were assisted home in 2001.

Although several hundred thousand people went back after independence, there are still an estimated 142,000 Eritreans in refugee camps in Kassala and Gedaref States in Sudan. A large number of Eritreans also live in urban areas in Sudan, chiefly in Khartoum and towns in the east such as Kassala, Gedaref and Port Sudan.

More than two-thirds of the present caseload come from the western Eritrean zone of Gash-Barka. The next largest group comes from the Anseba area, further east.

Past repatriation efforts

Following Eritrean independence, UNHCR signed bilateral agreements in 1994 with the Governments of Eritrea and Sudan, laying the groundwork for the start of voluntary refugee repatriation. Convoys began moving in November of the same year in a pilot project for 25,000 volunteers. After this initial phase, however, organized repatriation was hindered for several years by political tensions in the region, even though many Eritreans were able to return on their own.

Four years after these first organized returns, a UNHCR survey found that around 90% of the refugees remaining in the camps wanted to repatriate. The refugees' desire was confirmed by a socio-economic study in 1999.

UNHCR, Sudan, and Eritrea took the first step towards re-starting the repatriation by signing a tripartite agreement in Geneva on April 7, 2000. The accord recognized the right of individuals to go home to areas of their choice, as well as the strictly voluntary nature of the return. It also included provisions for UNHCR to monitor the returns and the reintegration process. The April agreement spelled out the need for rehabilitation of refugee-affected areas in Sudan and for assistance to returnees.

In the weeks following the signing, UNHCR staff and representatives of the two governments distributed leaflets and held public sessions in the camps to inform refugees about the start and various components of the operation. Volunteers came forward and put their names down for repatriation. However, after a week in which 9,000 Eritreans signed up to go home, UNHCR was forced to halt the process and put the operation on hold when hostilities between Eritrea and Ethiopia erupted again into full-scale conflict in May, 2000.

The current operation

Building on the agreement and plans of 2000, UNHCR and the two governments met in Khartoum in late March 2001 to again prepare for the return of the remaining Eritrean refugees. The parties reaffirmed their commitment to voluntary repatriation, estimating that at least 160,000 refugees would take this opportunity to return home. To date, more than 37,000 refugees have taken this opportunity, choosing to settle mainly in the Gash Barka Region.

Last December, UNHCR asked donors for US$ 28.1 million for repatriation, reintegration, and care and maintenance activities (the latter for Somali and Sudanese refugees) during 2002.

Information campaign - The voluntary repatriation operation began with an information campaign in the camps. Thousands of leaflets printed in Tigrinya, Arabic and English that explain how refugees will be helped to return have been distributed to refugees. The pamphlets also give Eritreans information on procedures for return and the principles agreed between UNHCR and the two governments. In addition, two dozen members of the governmental Eritrean Relief and Refugee Commission (ERREC) and officials from the embassy in Khartoum visited camps to answer refugees' questions. After signing up for return, refugees will be de-registered by UNHCR Sudan, undergo a health screening, and get a two-month ration of food from the World Food Programme. The first convoy operated on May 12, 2001. As of 26 January 2002, more than 50 convoy movements have taken place.

The move home - Convoys carrying returnees and their belongings are escorted from camps in Sudan to the UNHCR reception center in Tesseney. Medical staff accompany each group. On arrival at the reception facilities, Eritreans are again registered and provided with documentation by the government. They receive information on the danger and presence of land mines, another health check, and are provided with meals. From Tesseney, returnees either go directly home or pass through transit centers in Hagaz and Barentu before reaching their final destinations.

Returning refugees are free to choose their final destinations within Eritrea.

Aid to returnees - UNHCR provides each returning family with a shelter structure, one blanket per person, two mosquito nets per family, a kerosene stove with kerosene and water barrel, agricultural tools, kitchen sets, soap and a carry-all bag. Families also receive a cash grant of up to US $200. Returnees to urban areas may choose additional cash in place of the shelter structure and tool sets.

UNHCR and its implementing partners are in the process of providing communities with assistance to help them absorb the returning population. These projects will concentrate on health care, education, agriculture and water/sanitation facilities.

Besides the initial two-month food package issued upon arrival by WFP, returnees are also eligible for a further ten months of food assistance once inside the country. Authorities provide land for returnees to build homes on and, depending on the area, up to two hectares of land to farm.

The assistance package will give returning Eritreans a better chance at a durable and successful homecoming after their exceptionally long exile. Other agencies and bilateral organizations are being called upon to aid the returnees through longer-term development and reconstruction projects.

Reintegration Strategy - As the refugees have begun to return, efforts are underway to engage medium to longer term development actors in including returnees in their plans. A key forum for the coordination and inclusion of all actors involved in relief and development work in the Gash Barka Region in particular is the Zonal Reintegration Committee, based in Barentu, the administrative capital of Gash Barka Zone, and chaired by the Regional Governor. Attended by the regional line ministry representatives, regional authorities, UNHCR, NGOs and other actors, the Zonal Reintegration Committee approves submitted projects based on assessments by a UNHCR technical team of specialists in the various sectors. These projects range from rehabilitation and reconstruction of health posts and digging of boreholes to life-skills training projects in the schools.

Cost of care and maintenance - The cost of the repatriation - and putting an end to one of Africa's longest-running refugee situations - should be compared to the expense of maintaining this large refugee population in Sudanese camps. UNHCR and WFP have had to spend many times the amount UNHCR is currently seeking for repatriation and reintegration assistance on camp-based care and maintenance programs during the last few years alone.
https://reliefweb.int/report/eritrea/ba ... gees-sudan

pastlast
Member
Posts: 2250
Joined: 19 May 2019, 18:02

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by pastlast » 22 Sep 2019, 20:54

Zmsselfish ranaway in1994 from Eritrea leaving his younger brotha to be conscripted and get killed in Badme war. Zmsselfish is the family cowardly sheep.

He calls strangers here brothers but complète ly betrayed his younger brotha

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Sep 2019, 20:56

Let's go back, to memory lane: :lol:


pastlast wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 20:54
Zmsselfish ranaway in1994 from Eritrea leaving his younger brotha to be conscripted and get killed in Badme war. Zmsselfish is the family cowardly sheep.

pastlast
Member
Posts: 2250
Joined: 19 May 2019, 18:02

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by pastlast » 22 Sep 2019, 20:59

1994 the YEAR ZMSSELFISH BETRAYED HIS YOUNGER BROTHA AND ERITREA BY RUNNING AWAY TO GO LIVE IN A FREE DEMOCRATIC WEST. WHERE ZMSSELFISH ENJOYED LOTS OF FOOD FUN AND FREEDOM HIS SHORT LIVED YOUNGER BROTHA DIDNT EVEN HAVE.
Zmeselo wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 20:56
Let's go back, to memory lane: :lol:


pastlast wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 20:54
Zmsselfish ranaway in1994 from Eritrea leaving his younger brotha to be conscripted and get killed in Badme war. Zmsselfish is the family cowardly sheep.

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Sep 2019, 20:59

Go save your brother, instead of talking about mine:


Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Sep 2019, 21:04

Your ዓባቕ momma, doesn't even have clean drinking water in 2019: :lol:


Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Sep 2019, 21:07

What dirty people!

What gag reflex!


pastlast
Member
Posts: 2250
Joined: 19 May 2019, 18:02

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by pastlast » 22 Sep 2019, 21:08

Zmsselfish. PIA uses your martyrd brothas skull as spit bowl for chewing tobacco for his Arab guests

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Sep 2019, 21:15

Look at your people:




Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 33606
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 22 Sep 2019, 21:21








Meleket
Member
Posts: 3057
Joined: 16 Feb 2018, 05:08

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Meleket » 23 Sep 2019, 05:19

Meleket wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 03:55
ሓወይ justo እቱይ ዝበልካዮ ጽቡቕ ቢልኻ ኣሎኻ። ንነፍስና ምስ ካልኦት እናነጻጸርና ካብ መኣል ኩስቶ ንሓይሽ ኢና ምባል’ኳ ንኣና ብዙሕ ኣይኽጠቕመናን ኢዩ። እቱይ ዝጠቕመና ንጌጋታትና እናኣረምና ምኻድ ኢዩ። ንኣብነት ሕጋዊ ንብረት ካቶሊካዊት ቤተክርስትያን (ክሊኒካት ሆስፒታላት ቤት ትምህርትታት) ኪሕገር ወይ ኪምንዛዕ እሞ ድማ ምስቶም መራሕቲ ካቶሊካዊት ቤተክርስትያን ከይተላዘብኻ ሕጋዊ ንብረት ቤተክርስትያን ብኃይሊ ብዘይ ልዝብ ምውሳድን ምህጋርን ምምንዛዕን ዓቢ ጌጋ ስለዝዀነ ኪእረም ኣይግብኦን’ዶ፧ ምስ ዜጋታትካ እሞ ድማ ምስ መራሕቲ ቤተክርስትያን ንምልዛብ ዜሰክፍ ስለምንታይ ኢዩ፧ ኣማኢት ዓመታት ዘቝጸረ ቤት ምህሮ ምዕጻዉከ ምስ ምንታይ ይቝጸር፧ ልዝብ ምስ መራሕቲ እምነት እናጎዳነብኻ ካብ ካልኦት ንሓይሽ ምባል ንነብስና ምጥባር እምበር ብዙሕ ትርጉም ዚወሃቦ ኣይዀነን። ኣመጽቲ ባዕዳዉያን ደርጊ ከምኡዉን ወያነ ከምኡ እንደኣሎም ጌርም! ደርጊ ክንደይ ንብረት ገዳማትን ቤት ትምህርትታት ብኃይሊ ብዘይ ልዝብ ሃጊሩን ወሲዱን ወያነ ድማ ከምኡ ንብረት ኣሽሓት ኤርትራዉያን ብኃይሊ ብዘይ ልዝብ ሃጊሩን ወሪሱን። እዙይ ሓሶት ዲዩ፧ ነዙይ ኣሉ ዚብል ኅልና ኣሎኒ ዚብል ሰብ ኣሎ ዲዩ፧


“ሓቂ፡ ሓሞት ኢያ መራር ንዘይፈልጣ!” ዲዮም ዝበሉ ገዲም ድምጻዊ ኣቶ ኣተወብርሃን ሰጊድ!
justo wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 05:36

ሓዉና መለኸት ዝበልካዮ ሓቂዩ። ካብ ካልኦት ይሓይሽ ምባል ፋይዳ የብሉን። አቲ ዝበለጸ ጉድለትካ ምእራም እዩ ዝሓሸ። ግን ካብ ካልኦት ትሓምቕ ኢሎም ምስ ኣጽመሙኻ ትብሎ ነገር እዩ አምበር ስቕ ኢልካ ካብ መሬት ተላዒልካ ትብሎ ኣዮኮነን። እንታይ እሞ ክንገብር ካብ ኩሉ ትሓምቁ እንዳበሉ ብኮምዚ ዓይነት ፕሮፕርጋንዳ እንዶ ኣጽሚሞና። ዕረፍቲ ዘይብሉ ፕሮፓጋንዳ ነዛ ምስኪን ሃገር።
ኣገናዕ ሓውና justo ኤርትራዊ ጭዉነት ማለት ነቱይ ርኡይ ጌጋታት ንምኽዋል ምፍታን ዛይዀነስ እንታይ ደኣ ምእማን፣ ምእንቲ እቱይ ብፍላጥ ይኹን ብዘይፍላጥ እንገብሮ ጌጋ ንምእራም ድልዊ ምዃን፡ እዙይ ድማ እቱይ ፍቱንን እንኾን መገዲ ዓወት ምዃኑ ምእማን ምኳኑ ከምዘይሰሓትካዮ ካብ ጽሑፍኻ ተረዲኤ።

ንሓደ ቆማትን ከም ጽሕዲ መተተን ወይ ከም ጽሕዲ ቢዘን ወይ ከም ጽሕዲ ምራራ ነዊሕን ምልኹዕን ንቅዱስ ሚካኤል ዚመስልን ሰብ፣ ሓደ ጸላኢኡ ብጸለመን ብቕንዒን ብጠቐነን ብሓሶትን ተመሪሑ ኩስቶ ክፉእን ሓጺርን ድንኺን ዶጭዷጭን ኢዩ እናበለ ከቋናጽብ እንተፈተነ፡ ቢሉን ግዒሩን ጥራሕ ኢዩ ዚተርፍ እምበር ነቱይ ሰብ ብግብሪ ከሕጽሮን ከክፍኦን ኣይከኣሎን ኢዩ።

ብናይ ሓሶት ፕሮፓጋንዳ ወይ ድማ ተጋሩ ከምዝብልዎ ብ“ነፍሒን ጨደደደደደደደደደደደደደደደድን” ሃገር ክትዓኑ ኣይትኽእልን ኢያ ክትሕነጽዉን ከምኡ። ናይ ፖለቲካ ኮነ ናይ ሃይማኖት መራሕታን ዜጋታታን ቅኑዕ ናይ ልዝብን ምትእርራምን መንፈስ እንተጥርዮም ግና ሃገር እናሓደረት ከምትብልጽግ ከምትትርንዕ ንዜጋታታዉን ተበሃጊትን ዜጋታታዉን ናብኣ እምበር ናብ ግዳም ዘይሳግሙ ብሃገሮም ሕቡናትን ብህይወቶምዉን ፍሱሓት ከምዝዀኑ ኣየጠራጥርን። ብሕድሕድ ልዝብ እትኣምን፣ ንኃይሊን ሥነ መጎት ጎነጽን እትፍንፍን፣ ንመራሕቲ ቤት እምነታት እተኽብር፣ ንምዕዶ ዓበይቲ ጽን እትብል፣ ብቕዋም እትመሃደር ሃገር እነሓደረት ዝያዳ ከምተጉላዕልዕን ዜጋታታዉን ንልዕልና ሕጊ ዘኽብሩ ከምዝኾኑ ጥርጥር የልቦን።

መጻኢት ኤርትራና ድማ ሕላዌኣን ብልጽግንኣን ዘይምነዩ ኣካላት እንተክኢሎም ኪድምስስዋ፡ ኣይዀነን ድማ ኪሕንኩልዋ ከይደቀሱ ከምዝሓድሩ ዜጋታት ኤርትራ ኣዳዕዲዕና ንፈልጦ ኢና። ነዙይ ርኹስ ዕላምኦም ከምዘበርዓናዮ ብቀጻሊዉን ከይተበገሰ ከምነምኽኖ ንፈልጥን ንኣምንን ኢና። ክንድ ዝዀነዉን ብቀጻሊ ሓቂ ሒዝና ክንምክቶም ኢና ንምክቶም’ዉን ኣሎና። እዙይ እናተገብረ ክነሱ ሕጋዊ ንብረት ቤት እምነትና ቤተክርስትያንና ብዘይልዝብ ምስ መራሕቲ ኣቦታትና እሞ ድማ ብኃይሊን ብጎነጽን ኪምንዛዕ ክንርኢ ከሎና፤ ገለ’ዶ ምኽብባርናን ስኒትናን ሕድሕድ ልዝብናን ዛይደሊ ንነፍሱዉን ልዝብ ዚፍንፍን ባእታ ኣብ ውሽጥና ዀይኑ፡ ኮነ ቢሉ ነገራት ዚጠናንግ ኣሎ ዀይኑ ኢዩ ዛየብል ኣይኰነን።

ተስፋ ንገብር መንግስትና ከምቶም ምስ መራሕቲ ጎረባብቲ ሃገራት ዚላዘቦ ከምኡ ድማ ብቅኑዕ መንፈስ ምርድዳእ ምስ መራሕቲ እምነት ሃገርና ልዝብ ኪገብር። ንኣብነት መዋዕል ዘቑጸረ ሕጋዊ ንብረታ ብደርጊ ዝተመዝዐት ሕጂውን ኣብ ግዜ ናጽነት ብኃይሊ ትምንዛዕ ዘላ ካቶሊካዊት ቤተክርስትያን ኤርትራ፡ ጥርዓና ከተቅርብን ሕጋዊ ንብረታ ኪምለሰላን ክትጠልብ፣ ነዙይ ንምግባርዉን ልዝብ ኣብ ዙርያ ጠረጴዛ ኪካየድ ካብ ምጽዋዕ ቦኺራ ከምዘይትፈልጥ መእመናናን ኩሉ ሰብ ጽቡቕ ድላይን ዚፈልጦ ሓቂ ኢዩ። መንግስትና ብጭዉነት እወንታዊ ምላሽ ኪህብ ከምዝግብኦ ድማ ኩሉ ደላይ ልዝብን ጽቡቕን ዝምነዮ ኢዩ።
ምጭውቲ ኤርትራና ትማል፡ ሎሚ ኮነ ጽባሕ ሃገረ እምነት፣ ሃገረ ጽንዓት፣ ሃገረ ተወፋይነት፣ ሃገረ ፈተውቲ ሓቂ፥ ሃገረ ሰማእታትን ኢያ። ዜጋታታ ሳላ ብእምነት ዝተመልመሉን ጽኑዕ እምነት ኣብ ልቦም ዚወነኑን ሓቂ ዝዓተሩን ድማ ኢዮም፣ ንኩሉ ናይ ሓሶት ፕሮፓጋንዳ ጥራሕ ዛይኰንስ ንኩሎ በብዓይነቱ ናይ ውሽጥን ናይ ግዳምን ተጻብኦ ዝመከቱን ዝምክቱ ዛለዉ። ሓቂ ዝሓዘ ይውዓል ይሕደር ወትሩ ዕዉት ኢዩ።

ኣማን ብኣማን ኤርትራ ዕድለኛ ሃገር እያ፣ እቱይ ምንታይ እንተተባህለ፡ኤርትራ ንዘለዓለም ሃገረ እምነት፣ ሃገረ ሓቂ፣ ሃገረ ሰማእታት ስለዝዀነት!

kerenite
Member
Posts: 4480
Joined: 16 Nov 2013, 13:15

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by kerenite » 23 Sep 2019, 13:13

Meleket wrote:
23 Sep 2019, 05:19
Meleket wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 03:55
ሓወይ justo እቱይ ዝበልካዮ ጽቡቕ ቢልኻ ኣሎኻ። ንነፍስና ምስ ካልኦት እናነጻጸርና ካብ መኣል ኩስቶ ንሓይሽ ኢና ምባል’ኳ ንኣና ብዙሕ ኣይኽጠቕመናን ኢዩ። እቱይ ዝጠቕመና ንጌጋታትና እናኣረምና ምኻድ ኢዩ። ንኣብነት ሕጋዊ ንብረት ካቶሊካዊት ቤተክርስትያን (ክሊኒካት ሆስፒታላት ቤት ትምህርትታት) ኪሕገር ወይ ኪምንዛዕ እሞ ድማ ምስቶም መራሕቲ ካቶሊካዊት ቤተክርስትያን ከይተላዘብኻ ሕጋዊ ንብረት ቤተክርስትያን ብኃይሊ ብዘይ ልዝብ ምውሳድን ምህጋርን ምምንዛዕን ዓቢ ጌጋ ስለዝዀነ ኪእረም ኣይግብኦን’ዶ፧ ምስ ዜጋታትካ እሞ ድማ ምስ መራሕቲ ቤተክርስትያን ንምልዛብ ዜሰክፍ ስለምንታይ ኢዩ፧ ኣማኢት ዓመታት ዘቝጸረ ቤት ምህሮ ምዕጻዉከ ምስ ምንታይ ይቝጸር፧ ልዝብ ምስ መራሕቲ እምነት እናጎዳነብኻ ካብ ካልኦት ንሓይሽ ምባል ንነብስና ምጥባር እምበር ብዙሕ ትርጉም ዚወሃቦ ኣይዀነን። ኣመጽቲ ባዕዳዉያን ደርጊ ከምኡዉን ወያነ ከምኡ እንደኣሎም ጌርም! ደርጊ ክንደይ ንብረት ገዳማትን ቤት ትምህርትታት ብኃይሊ ብዘይ ልዝብ ሃጊሩን ወሲዱን ወያነ ድማ ከምኡ ንብረት ኣሽሓት ኤርትራዉያን ብኃይሊ ብዘይ ልዝብ ሃጊሩን ወሪሱን። እዙይ ሓሶት ዲዩ፧ ነዙይ ኣሉ ዚብል ኅልና ኣሎኒ ዚብል ሰብ ኣሎ ዲዩ፧


“ሓቂ፡ ሓሞት ኢያ መራር ንዘይፈልጣ!” ዲዮም ዝበሉ ገዲም ድምጻዊ ኣቶ ኣተወብርሃን ሰጊድ!
justo wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 05:36

ሓዉና መለኸት ዝበልካዮ ሓቂዩ። ካብ ካልኦት ይሓይሽ ምባል ፋይዳ የብሉን። አቲ ዝበለጸ ጉድለትካ ምእራም እዩ ዝሓሸ። ግን ካብ ካልኦት ትሓምቕ ኢሎም ምስ ኣጽመሙኻ ትብሎ ነገር እዩ አምበር ስቕ ኢልካ ካብ መሬት ተላዒልካ ትብሎ ኣዮኮነን። እንታይ እሞ ክንገብር ካብ ኩሉ ትሓምቁ እንዳበሉ ብኮምዚ ዓይነት ፕሮፕርጋንዳ እንዶ ኣጽሚሞና። ዕረፍቲ ዘይብሉ ፕሮፓጋንዳ ነዛ ምስኪን ሃገር።
ኣገናዕ ሓውና justo ኤርትራዊ ጭዉነት ማለት ነቱይ ርኡይ ጌጋታት ንምኽዋል ምፍታን ዛይዀነስ እንታይ ደኣ ምእማን፣ ምእንቲ እቱይ ብፍላጥ ይኹን ብዘይፍላጥ እንገብሮ ጌጋ ንምእራም ድልዊ ምዃን፡ እዙይ ድማ እቱይ ፍቱንን እንኾን መገዲ ዓወት ምዃኑ ምእማን ምኳኑ ከምዘይሰሓትካዮ ካብ ጽሑፍኻ ተረዲኤ።

ንሓደ ቆማትን ከም ጽሕዲ መተተን ወይ ከም ጽሕዲ ቢዘን ወይ ከም ጽሕዲ ምራራ ነዊሕን ምልኹዕን ንቅዱስ ሚካኤል ዚመስልን ሰብ፣ ሓደ ጸላኢኡ ብጸለመን ብቕንዒን ብጠቐነን ብሓሶትን ተመሪሑ ኩስቶ ክፉእን ሓጺርን ድንኺን ዶጭዷጭን ኢዩ እናበለ ከቋናጽብ እንተፈተነ፡ ቢሉን ግዒሩን ጥራሕ ኢዩ ዚተርፍ እምበር ነቱይ ሰብ ብግብሪ ከሕጽሮን ከክፍኦን ኣይከኣሎን ኢዩ።

ብናይ ሓሶት ፕሮፓጋንዳ ወይ ድማ ተጋሩ ከምዝብልዎ ብ“ነፍሒን ጨደደደደደደደደደደደደደደደድን” ሃገር ክትዓኑ ኣይትኽእልን ኢያ ክትሕነጽዉን ከምኡ። ናይ ፖለቲካ ኮነ ናይ ሃይማኖት መራሕታን ዜጋታታን ቅኑዕ ናይ ልዝብን ምትእርራምን መንፈስ እንተጥርዮም ግና ሃገር እናሓደረት ከምትብልጽግ ከምትትርንዕ ንዜጋታታዉን ተበሃጊትን ዜጋታታዉን ናብኣ እምበር ናብ ግዳም ዘይሳግሙ ብሃገሮም ሕቡናትን ብህይወቶምዉን ፍሱሓት ከምዝዀኑ ኣየጠራጥርን። ብሕድሕድ ልዝብ እትኣምን፣ ንኃይሊን ሥነ መጎት ጎነጽን እትፍንፍን፣ ንመራሕቲ ቤት እምነታት እተኽብር፣ ንምዕዶ ዓበይቲ ጽን እትብል፣ ብቕዋም እትመሃደር ሃገር እነሓደረት ዝያዳ ከምተጉላዕልዕን ዜጋታታዉን ንልዕልና ሕጊ ዘኽብሩ ከምዝኾኑ ጥርጥር የልቦን።

መጻኢት ኤርትራና ድማ ሕላዌኣን ብልጽግንኣን ዘይምነዩ ኣካላት እንተክኢሎም ኪድምስስዋ፡ ኣይዀነን ድማ ኪሕንኩልዋ ከይደቀሱ ከምዝሓድሩ ዜጋታት ኤርትራ ኣዳዕዲዕና ንፈልጦ ኢና። ነዙይ ርኹስ ዕላምኦም ከምዘበርዓናዮ ብቀጻሊዉን ከይተበገሰ ከምነምኽኖ ንፈልጥን ንኣምንን ኢና። ክንድ ዝዀነዉን ብቀጻሊ ሓቂ ሒዝና ክንምክቶም ኢና ንምክቶም’ዉን ኣሎና። እዙይ እናተገብረ ክነሱ ሕጋዊ ንብረት ቤት እምነትና ቤተክርስትያንና ብዘይልዝብ ምስ መራሕቲ ኣቦታትና እሞ ድማ ብኃይሊን ብጎነጽን ኪምንዛዕ ክንርኢ ከሎና፤ ገለ’ዶ ምኽብባርናን ስኒትናን ሕድሕድ ልዝብናን ዛይደሊ ንነፍሱዉን ልዝብ ዚፍንፍን ባእታ ኣብ ውሽጥና ዀይኑ፡ ኮነ ቢሉ ነገራት ዚጠናንግ ኣሎ ዀይኑ ኢዩ ዛየብል ኣይኰነን።

ተስፋ ንገብር መንግስትና ከምቶም ምስ መራሕቲ ጎረባብቲ ሃገራት ዚላዘቦ ከምኡ ድማ ብቅኑዕ መንፈስ ምርድዳእ ምስ መራሕቲ እምነት ሃገርና ልዝብ ኪገብር። ንኣብነት መዋዕል ዘቑጸረ ሕጋዊ ንብረታ ብደርጊ ዝተመዝዐት ሕጂውን ኣብ ግዜ ናጽነት ብኃይሊ ትምንዛዕ ዘላ ካቶሊካዊት ቤተክርስትያን ኤርትራ፡ ጥርዓና ከተቅርብን ሕጋዊ ንብረታ ኪምለሰላን ክትጠልብ፣ ነዙይ ንምግባርዉን ልዝብ ኣብ ዙርያ ጠረጴዛ ኪካየድ ካብ ምጽዋዕ ቦኺራ ከምዘይትፈልጥ መእመናናን ኩሉ ሰብ ጽቡቕ ድላይን ዚፈልጦ ሓቂ ኢዩ። መንግስትና ብጭዉነት እወንታዊ ምላሽ ኪህብ ከምዝግብኦ ድማ ኩሉ ደላይ ልዝብን ጽቡቕን ዝምነዮ ኢዩ።
ምጭውቲ ኤርትራና ትማል፡ ሎሚ ኮነ ጽባሕ ሃገረ እምነት፣ ሃገረ ጽንዓት፣ ሃገረ ተወፋይነት፣ ሃገረ ፈተውቲ ሓቂ፥ ሃገረ ሰማእታትን ኢያ። ዜጋታታ ሳላ ብእምነት ዝተመልመሉን ጽኑዕ እምነት ኣብ ልቦም ዚወነኑን ሓቂ ዝዓተሩን ድማ ኢዮም፣ ንኩሉ ናይ ሓሶት ፕሮፓጋንዳ ጥራሕ ዛይኰንስ ንኩሎ በብዓይነቱ ናይ ውሽጥን ናይ ግዳምን ተጻብኦ ዝመከቱን ዝምክቱ ዛለዉ። ሓቂ ዝሓዘ ይውዓል ይሕደር ወትሩ ዕዉት ኢዩ።

ኣማን ብኣማን ኤርትራ ዕድለኛ ሃገር እያ፣ እቱይ ምንታይ እንተተባህለ፡ኤርትራ ንዘለዓለም ሃገረ እምነት፣ ሃገረ ሓቂ፣ ሃገረ ሰማእታት ስለዝዀነት!
Ato meleket greetings,

You are a good person but you are on the wrong forum.

You remind me of my first postings when I became an active participant in 2013. Yours truly was always initiating his posts with the term GREETINGS and ending it up with the term CHEERS. That was then.

Hey! I was a sort of uncle ghandi type but ain't the case any more.

From my long experience here, one has to either be a sheep or a wolf. I used to approach myself here as a sheep as the indian ghandi type then but unfortunately I was always confronted by wolves.

In conclusion, the long you stay here, you will end up as pastor degnet who ain't a bad person but forced to act un-christian sometimes.

kerenite
Member
Posts: 4480
Joined: 16 Nov 2013, 13:15

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by kerenite » 23 Sep 2019, 13:13

Meleket wrote:
23 Sep 2019, 05:19
Meleket wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 03:55
ሓወይ justo እቱይ ዝበልካዮ ጽቡቕ ቢልኻ ኣሎኻ። ንነፍስና ምስ ካልኦት እናነጻጸርና ካብ መኣል ኩስቶ ንሓይሽ ኢና ምባል’ኳ ንኣና ብዙሕ ኣይኽጠቕመናን ኢዩ። እቱይ ዝጠቕመና ንጌጋታትና እናኣረምና ምኻድ ኢዩ። ንኣብነት ሕጋዊ ንብረት ካቶሊካዊት ቤተክርስትያን (ክሊኒካት ሆስፒታላት ቤት ትምህርትታት) ኪሕገር ወይ ኪምንዛዕ እሞ ድማ ምስቶም መራሕቲ ካቶሊካዊት ቤተክርስትያን ከይተላዘብኻ ሕጋዊ ንብረት ቤተክርስትያን ብኃይሊ ብዘይ ልዝብ ምውሳድን ምህጋርን ምምንዛዕን ዓቢ ጌጋ ስለዝዀነ ኪእረም ኣይግብኦን’ዶ፧ ምስ ዜጋታትካ እሞ ድማ ምስ መራሕቲ ቤተክርስትያን ንምልዛብ ዜሰክፍ ስለምንታይ ኢዩ፧ ኣማኢት ዓመታት ዘቝጸረ ቤት ምህሮ ምዕጻዉከ ምስ ምንታይ ይቝጸር፧ ልዝብ ምስ መራሕቲ እምነት እናጎዳነብኻ ካብ ካልኦት ንሓይሽ ምባል ንነብስና ምጥባር እምበር ብዙሕ ትርጉም ዚወሃቦ ኣይዀነን። ኣመጽቲ ባዕዳዉያን ደርጊ ከምኡዉን ወያነ ከምኡ እንደኣሎም ጌርም! ደርጊ ክንደይ ንብረት ገዳማትን ቤት ትምህርትታት ብኃይሊ ብዘይ ልዝብ ሃጊሩን ወሲዱን ወያነ ድማ ከምኡ ንብረት ኣሽሓት ኤርትራዉያን ብኃይሊ ብዘይ ልዝብ ሃጊሩን ወሪሱን። እዙይ ሓሶት ዲዩ፧ ነዙይ ኣሉ ዚብል ኅልና ኣሎኒ ዚብል ሰብ ኣሎ ዲዩ፧


“ሓቂ፡ ሓሞት ኢያ መራር ንዘይፈልጣ!” ዲዮም ዝበሉ ገዲም ድምጻዊ ኣቶ ኣተወብርሃን ሰጊድ!
justo wrote:
22 Sep 2019, 05:36

ሓዉና መለኸት ዝበልካዮ ሓቂዩ። ካብ ካልኦት ይሓይሽ ምባል ፋይዳ የብሉን። አቲ ዝበለጸ ጉድለትካ ምእራም እዩ ዝሓሸ። ግን ካብ ካልኦት ትሓምቕ ኢሎም ምስ ኣጽመሙኻ ትብሎ ነገር እዩ አምበር ስቕ ኢልካ ካብ መሬት ተላዒልካ ትብሎ ኣዮኮነን። እንታይ እሞ ክንገብር ካብ ኩሉ ትሓምቁ እንዳበሉ ብኮምዚ ዓይነት ፕሮፕርጋንዳ እንዶ ኣጽሚሞና። ዕረፍቲ ዘይብሉ ፕሮፓጋንዳ ነዛ ምስኪን ሃገር።
ኣገናዕ ሓውና justo ኤርትራዊ ጭዉነት ማለት ነቱይ ርኡይ ጌጋታት ንምኽዋል ምፍታን ዛይዀነስ እንታይ ደኣ ምእማን፣ ምእንቲ እቱይ ብፍላጥ ይኹን ብዘይፍላጥ እንገብሮ ጌጋ ንምእራም ድልዊ ምዃን፡ እዙይ ድማ እቱይ ፍቱንን እንኾን መገዲ ዓወት ምዃኑ ምእማን ምኳኑ ከምዘይሰሓትካዮ ካብ ጽሑፍኻ ተረዲኤ።

ንሓደ ቆማትን ከም ጽሕዲ መተተን ወይ ከም ጽሕዲ ቢዘን ወይ ከም ጽሕዲ ምራራ ነዊሕን ምልኹዕን ንቅዱስ ሚካኤል ዚመስልን ሰብ፣ ሓደ ጸላኢኡ ብጸለመን ብቕንዒን ብጠቐነን ብሓሶትን ተመሪሑ ኩስቶ ክፉእን ሓጺርን ድንኺን ዶጭዷጭን ኢዩ እናበለ ከቋናጽብ እንተፈተነ፡ ቢሉን ግዒሩን ጥራሕ ኢዩ ዚተርፍ እምበር ነቱይ ሰብ ብግብሪ ከሕጽሮን ከክፍኦን ኣይከኣሎን ኢዩ።

ብናይ ሓሶት ፕሮፓጋንዳ ወይ ድማ ተጋሩ ከምዝብልዎ ብ“ነፍሒን ጨደደደደደደደደደደደደደደደድን” ሃገር ክትዓኑ ኣይትኽእልን ኢያ ክትሕነጽዉን ከምኡ። ናይ ፖለቲካ ኮነ ናይ ሃይማኖት መራሕታን ዜጋታታን ቅኑዕ ናይ ልዝብን ምትእርራምን መንፈስ እንተጥርዮም ግና ሃገር እናሓደረት ከምትብልጽግ ከምትትርንዕ ንዜጋታታዉን ተበሃጊትን ዜጋታታዉን ናብኣ እምበር ናብ ግዳም ዘይሳግሙ ብሃገሮም ሕቡናትን ብህይወቶምዉን ፍሱሓት ከምዝዀኑ ኣየጠራጥርን። ብሕድሕድ ልዝብ እትኣምን፣ ንኃይሊን ሥነ መጎት ጎነጽን እትፍንፍን፣ ንመራሕቲ ቤት እምነታት እተኽብር፣ ንምዕዶ ዓበይቲ ጽን እትብል፣ ብቕዋም እትመሃደር ሃገር እነሓደረት ዝያዳ ከምተጉላዕልዕን ዜጋታታዉን ንልዕልና ሕጊ ዘኽብሩ ከምዝኾኑ ጥርጥር የልቦን።

መጻኢት ኤርትራና ድማ ሕላዌኣን ብልጽግንኣን ዘይምነዩ ኣካላት እንተክኢሎም ኪድምስስዋ፡ ኣይዀነን ድማ ኪሕንኩልዋ ከይደቀሱ ከምዝሓድሩ ዜጋታት ኤርትራ ኣዳዕዲዕና ንፈልጦ ኢና። ነዙይ ርኹስ ዕላምኦም ከምዘበርዓናዮ ብቀጻሊዉን ከይተበገሰ ከምነምኽኖ ንፈልጥን ንኣምንን ኢና። ክንድ ዝዀነዉን ብቀጻሊ ሓቂ ሒዝና ክንምክቶም ኢና ንምክቶም’ዉን ኣሎና። እዙይ እናተገብረ ክነሱ ሕጋዊ ንብረት ቤት እምነትና ቤተክርስትያንና ብዘይልዝብ ምስ መራሕቲ ኣቦታትና እሞ ድማ ብኃይሊን ብጎነጽን ኪምንዛዕ ክንርኢ ከሎና፤ ገለ’ዶ ምኽብባርናን ስኒትናን ሕድሕድ ልዝብናን ዛይደሊ ንነፍሱዉን ልዝብ ዚፍንፍን ባእታ ኣብ ውሽጥና ዀይኑ፡ ኮነ ቢሉ ነገራት ዚጠናንግ ኣሎ ዀይኑ ኢዩ ዛየብል ኣይኰነን።

ተስፋ ንገብር መንግስትና ከምቶም ምስ መራሕቲ ጎረባብቲ ሃገራት ዚላዘቦ ከምኡ ድማ ብቅኑዕ መንፈስ ምርድዳእ ምስ መራሕቲ እምነት ሃገርና ልዝብ ኪገብር። ንኣብነት መዋዕል ዘቑጸረ ሕጋዊ ንብረታ ብደርጊ ዝተመዝዐት ሕጂውን ኣብ ግዜ ናጽነት ብኃይሊ ትምንዛዕ ዘላ ካቶሊካዊት ቤተክርስትያን ኤርትራ፡ ጥርዓና ከተቅርብን ሕጋዊ ንብረታ ኪምለሰላን ክትጠልብ፣ ነዙይ ንምግባርዉን ልዝብ ኣብ ዙርያ ጠረጴዛ ኪካየድ ካብ ምጽዋዕ ቦኺራ ከምዘይትፈልጥ መእመናናን ኩሉ ሰብ ጽቡቕ ድላይን ዚፈልጦ ሓቂ ኢዩ። መንግስትና ብጭዉነት እወንታዊ ምላሽ ኪህብ ከምዝግብኦ ድማ ኩሉ ደላይ ልዝብን ጽቡቕን ዝምነዮ ኢዩ።
ምጭውቲ ኤርትራና ትማል፡ ሎሚ ኮነ ጽባሕ ሃገረ እምነት፣ ሃገረ ጽንዓት፣ ሃገረ ተወፋይነት፣ ሃገረ ፈተውቲ ሓቂ፥ ሃገረ ሰማእታትን ኢያ። ዜጋታታ ሳላ ብእምነት ዝተመልመሉን ጽኑዕ እምነት ኣብ ልቦም ዚወነኑን ሓቂ ዝዓተሩን ድማ ኢዮም፣ ንኩሉ ናይ ሓሶት ፕሮፓጋንዳ ጥራሕ ዛይኰንስ ንኩሎ በብዓይነቱ ናይ ውሽጥን ናይ ግዳምን ተጻብኦ ዝመከቱን ዝምክቱ ዛለዉ። ሓቂ ዝሓዘ ይውዓል ይሕደር ወትሩ ዕዉት ኢዩ።

ኣማን ብኣማን ኤርትራ ዕድለኛ ሃገር እያ፣ እቱይ ምንታይ እንተተባህለ፡ኤርትራ ንዘለዓለም ሃገረ እምነት፣ ሃገረ ሓቂ፣ ሃገረ ሰማእታት ስለዝዀነት!
Ato meleket greetings,

You are a good person but you are on the wrong forum.

You remind me of my first postings when I became an active participant in 2013. Yours truly was always initiating his posts with the term GREETINGS and ending it up with the term CHEERS. That was then.

Hey! I was a sort of uncle ghandi type but ain't the case any more.

From my long experience here, one has to either be a sheep or a wolf. I used to approach myself here as a sheep as the indian ghandi type then but unfortunately I was always confronted by wolves.

Just for a laugh, have you ever heard in your life somedy bragging that he ate for lunch konjo ye wolf tibs or key tokla wet etc..? Of course not.

In conclusion, the long you stay here (BTW you are are a well read person), but unfortunately, you will be disappointed and end up as pastor degnet who ain't a bad person but forced to act un-christian or a christian jihadist sometimes.

Meleket
Member
Posts: 3057
Joined: 16 Feb 2018, 05:08

Re: Lucky Eritrea

Post by Meleket » 24 Sep 2019, 03:09

ክቡር ሓዉና ኣቶ kerenite ከም መጠን ገዲም ሓዉ፡ ስለቲ ካብቱይ ሃብታም ተመኹሮኩም ንዝተዓዘብኹሞ ኣብዙይ ዛሎ ብድሆታት ዘካፈልኩምና ኣዚና ነመስግነኩም ኣሎና። ሓቂ ብምግላጽ፡ ከከም ኣድላይነቱ ካብቱይ ሃብታም ተሞክሮኩምን ልቦናኹምን በብእዋኑ ንኩላትና ከተካፍሉና ንትስፎ። ሽሕ እኳ “ዱባና ቅል አበቃቀሉ ለየቅል” እንተኰነ፡ ኣነን ኩስቶን ከምዙይ ዀይንና ኢና እሞ ንስኩም ድማ ከምዡይ ከይትዀኑ ቢልኩም ንዝመዓድኩምና’ዉን ኣብ ግምት ከነእትዎ ኢና።

ምኽሪን ምዕዶን ካብ ለባማት እንደኣሉ ዚርኸብ! ምዕዶኹም ብኽፉት ልቢ ተቐቢልናዮ ኣሎና! ነመስግነኹም ድማ!

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