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Zmeselo
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Notes from Eritrea, Part II

Post by Zmeselo » 11 May 2022, 07:10



Notes from Eritrea, Part II

Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor

https://blackagendareport.com/notes-eri ... 0ACutQNkNE

11 May 2022


Dr. Samson Abay Asmerom, pediatrician, and Dr. Eden Tareke, medical research scientist and professor, at the Mendefera Referral Hospital in Eritrea’s Southern Region. Health care is free in Eritrea.

Contributing Editor Ann Garrison contines her reporting from the Horn of Africa. (Part I, if you missed it: https://blackagendareport.com/notes-eritrea )

Upon arriving in Eritrea, I tuned out all the Eritrea haters screaming that it doesn't practice multi-party political democracy. This very limited form of democracy hasn’t saved the West from oligarchy, mass homelessness, mass incarceration, or perpetual war and aggression against peoples of the Global South, including Eritreans, so it’s obviously not the pinnacle of global civilization. If Eritreans or other peoples of the world choose multi-party democracy, fine, but the US/NATO shouldn't be trying to ram it down their throats with sanctions or using it as an excuse to bomb them into submission.

I came to learn about what the Eritrean government is doing to: 1) uplift its population—70% or more of whom are subsistence farmers, 2) maintain its fierce independence from the dominant world powers, and 3) achieve its goal of national self-reliance.

I have in no way disguised that I’ve been here as a guest of the Eritrean government, and I would not have come as such if I did not already have a good opinion of its achievements and aspirations. I recommend “Eritrean Journey, Photos and Texts by Robert Papsteinhttps://robertpapstein.com/?page_id=364 to anyone reading this.

Eritrea rewrites the African mining script

Most African resource extraction leases are robbery, with a cut for the kleptocrats who sign them. It’s not uncommon for a mining company to promise an African nation as little as 5%, then lie about how much ore, oil, or gas they’re actually extracting or find some other way not to leave even 5%. The impoverished people of Chad, for example, have gotten all but nothing for the oil moving through Exxon-Mobil’s Chad- Cameroon Pipeline, and their people have received no training or technology that might enable them to build a domestic oil industry.

For decades the Congolese people have been robbed of the immense mineral resources smuggled out of their Eastern provinces by the US-backed armies and militias of Rwanda and Uganda, and this plunder is now being institutionalized with the collaboration of Congolese President Félix Tshisikedi, Rwandan President Paul Kagame, and Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni—all infamous kleptocrats.

I know these stories are more than familiar to most Black Agenda Report readers, so instead of citing more, I’ll move on to what Eritrea is doing to start rewriting the script. I had several long conversations about this with Economic Affairs Officer Hagos Ghebrehiwet https://prabook.com/web/hagos.ghebrehiwet/880848, Minister of Information Yemene Meskel https://twitter.com/hawelti, and Milena Bereket https://twitter.com/0to1infinity, the government consultant who helped me schedule meetings and plan trips to see what most interested me in Eritrea. Milena worked on the Social and Environmental Impact Assessment for the Bisha Mining Project, which is now producing gold, silver, copper, and zinc.

They told me that all the mining resources in the country belong to the people and that the government is responsible to develop them, on behalf of the people. I later confirmed these principles in the 2006 Eritrean National Mining Corporation Establishment Proclamation https://www.resourcedata.org/dataset/rg ... ef16d1dbc8 published in the Gazette of Eritrean Laws.

Do I believe that this is real, not a cover for the usual kleptocracy? I have no reason to believe, that I was talking to kleptocrats or anyone covering for them. These are people who dress modestly, drive modest—even beat-up—cars and work in modest offices. I didn’t see any trappings of lavish lifestyles and in fact, didn’t see any evidence of gross wealth and income inequality in Asmara, the capital, where I spent my time when I was not in the countryside. The Minister of Information tells me that Eritrea’s Gini index of income inequality is 8%—extremely low. I can’t confirm this because the World Bank https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SI ... cations=ER reports that there’s no data available for Eritrea’s Gini, but what I saw in the streets and the countryside suggests that he’s correct.

The nation shrugged at recent U.S. sanctions imposing foreign asset freezes on military and government officials because, they said, they didn’t have any.

Mining contracts

The mining contracts that my hosts tell me Eritrea demands, are more just than any I’ve heard of in Africa. The mining company gets a 60% share, while the government gets a 40% share and then collects a 34% capital gains tax. In the potash mine now in development, the government’s share is 50%. Given that Eritrea sits within the mineral-rich Arabian-Nubian Shield,
these contracts have the potential to raise great amounts of money that can then be ploughed into the country’s development goals, including health, education, infrastructure and food security. Health care and education are already free and grains are the only agricultural commodity that the country imports.

Revenue from just mining contracts, could no doubt build many more of the dams and ponds that are part of the Ministry of Agriculture’s national irrigation plan. The Ministry’s motto is:
not one drop of rain should fail to irrigate, and not one drop should erode the soil.
Mining revenue could also provide many of the Minimum Integrated Household Agricultural Packages that the government is trying to provide to small farm households to help them sustain themselves and produce enough surplus to feed four other families: 1 in-calf dairy heifer or 6 milking sheep or goats, 25 backyard chickens, 2 bee hives, 5 kilograms of vegetable, forage, and cereal seeds, and 20 tree seedlings. Total cost per package: $4000/USD.

I was able to confirm the 60/40% split at the Bisha gold/silver/copper/zinc mine in a January 2012 article in the journal Mining Technology https://www.mining-technology.com/proje ... a-project/.

However, U.S. resistance to the implementation of the Bisha mining project was not recounted there. My hosts explained that when Nevsun Resources—the Canadian firm that developed and, for some time, operated the Bisha Mining Project—sought financing from a German bank, the U.S. intervened diplomatically to discourage it, and then a Chinese firm stepped in to provide financing instead. Ultimately, Zijin Mining Group Co. Ltd, a Chinese-based multinational traded on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, bought the majority of Nevsun Resources.

COVID-19 stopped, thus far, without mass vaccination

The Minister of Information, who also sits on the national COVID task force, told me that they are not ideologically opposed to mass vaccination, but they've seen no need to institute it so long as their preventive measures—including testing at air borders, quarantine at porous land borders, social distancing, and closure of public facilities for the first six months of the pandemic—continue to be extraordinarily successful. These measures have kept infections to 9,734 cases and deaths to 103, in a population of 3.6 million. That's 28 deaths per million population, compared to, e.g., 3,062 per million in the U.S.

Much of the reason for this success is no doubt that Eritrea's population is somewhere between 70 and 80% rural and there aren't large numbers of people traveling in and out of the country.

Despite its low COVID infection and death rate, the country has been excoriated for not instituting mass COVID vaccination—despite the fact that they've used vaccination, especially childhood vaccination, to achieve extraordinary success in stopping communicable diseases. They were the first African nation to achieve the UN’s Millenium Development Goals, regarding health.

Eritrea does not practice the death penalty

Unlike the US, which loves to hate on Eritrea and claims vast moral superiority, Eritrea does not practice the death penalty. According to the World Coalition Against the Death Penalty https://worldcoalition.org/pays/eritrea/, the last known state execution there was in 1989. In October 2016, it voted in support of the most recent UN General Assembly resolution on a death penalty moratorium.

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Ann Garrison is a Black Agenda Report Contributing Editor based in the San Francisco Bay Area. In 2014, she received the Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza Democracy and Peace Prize http://www.rifdp-iwndp.org/letter-from- ... pol-i-mas/ for her reporting on conflict in the African Great Lakes region. She can be reached at [email protected].



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Zmeselo
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Re: Notes from Eritrea, Part II

Post by Zmeselo » 11 May 2022, 07:34























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ሃገራዊት ጋንታ ቼስ ኤርትራ ኣብ ዞባዊ ውድድር ቼስ ኣተባባዒ ውጽኢት ብምምዝጋብ ናብ ሃገራ ተመሊሳ። ራብዓይ ደረጃ ሒዛ ውድድር ዝዛዘመት ጓል 14 ዓመት ኤልሻሎም ኢሳያስ ናእዳ ረኺባ። እንቛዕ ሓጎሰኪ!
Ghideon Musa: @GhideonMusa

Zmeselo
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Re: Notes from Eritrea, Part II

Post by Zmeselo » 11 May 2022, 11:13


































59 67 ▲8 KUDUS Merhawi EF Education-EasyPost 15:13

Merhawi is now 59th in the GC. Advanced 8 places, today.

Zmeselo
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Re: Notes from Eritrea, Part II

Post by Zmeselo » 11 May 2022, 11:57



Giro d’Italia 2022 Stage 5 Race Recap Analysis: Biniam Girmay BOXED AGAIN And ALMOST CRASHED

Quinten Lafort

https://thecyclingdane.podbean.com/e/gi ... t-crashed/

May 11, 2022

Stage 5 produced a tense battle between the sprinter's teams and Caleb Ewan and Mark Cavendish were dropped on the climb and FDJ did there best to put Arnaud Demare in a perfect scenario and the french star delivered.


Masterpiece: Biniam Girmay escapes crash in full mass sprint

Unlike Mathieu van der Poel, Biniam Girmay did claim the victory in the bunch sprint of the fifth Giro stage towards Messina. The winner of Gent-Wevelgem seemed to start his sprint, until Phil Bauhaus handed out a quack. Girmay had to move heaven and earth to stay straight and crossed the finish line in fifth.

The 22-year-old Eritrean seemed to be on his way to fight for victory, until he was hit by Phil Bauhaus. Girmay flirted with the crash, but miraculously stayed upright.

Despite the near fall, the winner of Gent Wevelgem finished in fifth place. A missed opportunity for Girmay, who in the points classification over Mathieu van der Poel, but has to tolerate Arnaud Démare. A sprint train from Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert could have helped Girmay to victory today. Would Hilaire Van der Schueren like to reach for a sprint train in function of his gold nugget.




It's this German guy (Phil Bauhaus- Team Bahrain), that continuously blocked him. 😡😡😡























Highlights:


Last edited by Zmeselo on 11 May 2022, 15:38, edited 6 times in total.

Zmeselo
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Re: Notes from Eritrea, Part II

Post by Zmeselo » 11 May 2022, 12:26



Be on Guard against Greed!

By: Natnael Yebio W.

https://shabait.com/2022/05/11/be-on-gu ... t-greed-2/

ARTS & SPORTS

May 11, 2022



When Europeans flocked to the New Continent following its discovery in 1492, the idea was to get as much gold and silver as possible from the land they mistook for India or the China of Marco Polo.

Their kings wanted to stock their coffers with gold for an everlasting war and glory, the Church to make up for the money it had failed to obtain through the sale of indulgences to ‘lost’ souls, and the elderly, perhaps, to fill their teeth with gold so that they could die with a golden smile on their faces.

The natives of the New Continent were taken aback, rather shocked, by the total greed of the new arrivals whom they thought were gods who came to fulfill ancient traditional prophecies. For them, it was quite strange that ‘aliens from outer space', probably from distant but very many civilized galaxies, could be so much preoccupied with gold and silver as to forgo the honor associated with royalty. The Olympian gods, who in former times lusted after women and gold, would have shown better manners.

These visitors, who came from across the ocean, did not ask the usual question supposed to be asked by green men, namely: ‘take me to your leader’, but preferred the more down-to-earth and rewarding one:
take me to the goldmine on time!
In line with this, it can be said that the first question ever addressed (probably in Castilian) to the Red Indians after the motley crew from Pinta, Nina and Santa Maria had rowed ashore and met the natives, who sported gold amulets and gold ritual masks, was: WHERE DID YOU GET THE GOLD?!

Thus, it can be said that the first large-scale hold-up in history took place in South America, before it could move to the streets of Chicago and New York. Your gold or your life! The threat was so unfair, that at the end of the day, the natives lost both gold and life. Al Capone, looks juster and kinder by comparison.

Suppose the new continent did not contain any gold or silver at the time, would the colonizers have continued to flow there just the same? One may ask. By all means! Greed has never listened to reason. There is a proverb in our country which goes somewhat like this: when they told the poor hyena that there was a faraway city made of meat and bones somewhere beyond the hills (a sort of meaty Shangri-La), he rushed out without asking to know of its exact position. It is, however, a tribute to the loftiness of the human spirit in the face of greed that Columbus had, at least, the sense to be appraised of ‘El Dorado’s exact position before he set sail westward. Go west young sailor till something stops you, like for example, a mountain of gold!

This was of course repeated in Africa, Asia and many other places the colonizers set foot on. The caravels used by these people might as well have flown the Jolly Roger (skull and crossbones) as they sailed the high seas with a Señor de las Quintas, a Marquis de la Grange, a Sir William Scot and a Van der Valt on board. It would have been more proper had these gentlemen changed their names to Señor de las Greedas or Sir William McGreedy, Van der Greed instead; appellations consonant with their trade and befitting their manners.

Of course, all of these plunderers had priests and pastors accompanying them. While the natives were busy being saved in some remote churches in the jungle, the colonists stole and looted as they listed; for they all came with their own versions of Christian values elevating greed to the state of virtue. They ‘saved’ souls as a spiritual investment for a happy life in the hereafter, and saved money to enjoy life to the fullest in this uncertain world.

Those who, amongst them, got away with their ships laden with more gold and silver than would have been tolerated by the dictates of the greed of the times, had to be hunted down and their vessels scuttled and their gold coffers robbed clean. In the game called hide-and-greed played in the open seas, rich bankers and investors watched with drooling mouths, as sea powers such as England and France slugged it out in various spots of the world for power and riches. These events were replayed in recent times in Iran, Iraq, Venezuela, Libya and now Syria. It is like: the same film company that brought you The Sea-Hawks starring England and France.

At this juncture, someone might interrupt and say that one cannot after all separate colonization from greed, for the principal motive behind the former is to take the land of others with total impunity, exploit the inhabitants and take away their riches without shame. No one ever went, one would add, to colonize other lands with glad tidings of salvation or emancipation or with the motive of preaching liberty, equality and fraternity.

Well, the problem was not so much with colonization as with the immense scale with which it was carried out, assisted by the accelerating socio-economic momentum that led to capitalism in all its ugly forms.

I don’t mean, that greed was invented by Europeans. God forbid! Why should it be, when sin (of which greed is only a component) had already infected mankind during creation? All men are created equal, with equal count of greed genes in their blood. But, just as a virus had to wait for centuries hidden in some corner of our frail body for an opportune time to strike with a devastating impact, in the same manner had the all-encompassing greed, latent in man, to wait for the invention of the gunpowder and fast moving sailing ships equipped with compasses to take the lead in the affairs of men.

The frightening thing about greed and all its attendant sub-vices, was that it could easily lend itself to institutionalization. Hence, big overseas companies, factories using child labor, commerce and loan banks thriving on slave trade, insecure insurance companies, bloodsucking lawyers, usurers of all types, spawned, and committed unspeakable crimes in the name of progress. The IMF and the World Bank followed, to complete the misery.

Almost a millennium and a half after the Sermon on the Mount had been preached, greed was elevated to the rank of a guiding principle; a loadstar to those in search of riches at all cost.

Can you imagine of anything as evil as greed, made to work as a driving force and as a primary impulse for the fast socio-economic and technological growth of our planet? And yet, that was what happened during the centuries that followed the age of discovery and conquest. Never in the history of mankind has greed been venerated and trusted so much, as to be made to march with lies and cheatings massed behind its back and wars and strife guarding its flanks. Millions of Africans had to be moved to the Americas, to help the Whites make fast money! And as one American son-of-a-gun has put it aptly, the fastest way to make money is to steal it!

Now with all the rich people getting richer and the poor getting poorer, things were getting dangerous. Adam Smith, wanting to accommodate greed by all means, advocated for capitalism. Marx, in his anti-greed campaign, wanted to reverse (or maybe to correct) the course of history by preaching communism. Georges Sorel, desiring to nationalize and sanctify greed stood for fascism. Mikhail Bakunin, from Russia, fearful of the motives of governments in all their forms, stood for their total abolition by preaching anarchism.

And prior to these gentlemen, we had Hobbes, Rousseau, Montesquieu, and Locke, who presented themselves as physicians and tried to find the proper balm, if not medicine, to cure the rising social and political ills of the time.

When all failed to effect a sure remedy to the current disease, it was assumed that liberal democracy could do the trick, not because it could cure the disease (far from it) once and for all, but it could at least gradually accustom the world to the disease itself. Most of the physicians who diagnosed the disease were either reluctant or simply hesitant to take the necessary but painful steps for a lasting remedy, which was nothing else but the application of the principle of human rights, equality, justice and tolerance.

Alas, as foolish mistakes and sometimes hasty decisions based on quick fixes created disasters in the four corners of the world, their consequences have been presented to us as breaking news to keep us worrying, as editorials to be analyzed by eager but insincere politicians, as research works to be commented by academicians, and as hot issues to be fought by rival parties. And as man-made disasters multiplied, Tarzan-oriented NGOs moved into action whose cure was, more often than not, more painful than the disease itself; including innumerable do-gooder organizations who went around dressing up wounds that could never heal.

As incapable physicians continued to provide remedy at every turn of the long march towards doom, the real but painful cure has been made to wait, and means are devised with which to placate and appease the people in the most subtle and clever way.

As I have said above, unscrupulous profit-at-any-cost mentality found its winged horse as a vector in the invention of fast moving sailing boats, gunpowder (at the time used for entertainment by the lighthearted Chinese) and the compass which helped greed and callousness to spread their tentacles far and wide.

Alas, with the invention of the airplane, the telephone, the radio, the TV and the internet and the e-mail etc. and with the subsequent shrinking of the world into a small village, greed is just lurking across the fence. Paupers of the world unite, for the boogeyman is peeping through your windows to eat you alive one day!

Zmeselo
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Re: Notes from Eritrea, Part II

Post by Zmeselo » 11 May 2022, 13:28

Fake News vs. the truth:








Zmeselo
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Re: Notes from Eritrea, Part II

Post by Zmeselo » 11 May 2022, 15:48




ኣብ ናይ ሎሚ ውድድር 5ይ ጂሮ ዲታልያ ኣብ ካታንያ ዝርከቡ ኤርትራውያን ባንዴራ ኤርትራ ኣብ ጎደናታት ብምብልባልን ብእልልታን ጣቂዕት ንኤርትራውያን ተቐዳደምቲ ኣተባቢዖሞም። Via @mediacomeritrea


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For those, proficient in French: 👇




Sur le Giro, la dolce vita de Biniam Girmay, nouvelle star du cyclisme africain
https://www.leparisien.fr/sports/cyclis ... 1481423553






Tour d'Italie - Biniam Girmay : «J'ai heurté deux fois les barrières...»
https://www.cyclismactu.net/news-tour-d ... yclismactu

quindibu
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Re: Notes from Eritrea, Part II

Post by quindibu » 11 May 2022, 15:56

Zmeselo wrote:
11 May 2022, 13:28
Fake News vs. the Truth...


Manufacturing 'reality' is the specialty of the western PR machine....and they're quite adept at it. The best illustration of this is the late Rumsefeld's, US secretary of state, straight-faced 'interpretation' of the total breakdown of law and order in Iraq following US invasion. He simply described it as 'an instance of untidy freedom.' (Whatever that means)
And of course, the copycat and the midget leader of the 'monkeys-see-monkeys-do' Adwan bunch once said the sugar scarcity in Ethiopia was caused by 'thanks to TPLF, the farmers have begun consuming sugar, instead of salt, in their coffee'.......

Zmeselo
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Re: Notes from Eritrea, Part II

Post by Zmeselo » 11 May 2022, 19:10













ሃገራዊት ጋንታ ጁንየር (ትሕቲ 18 ዓመት) ኣትሌታት ኤርትራ ኣብቲ ካብ 14 ግንቦት 2022 ኣብ ዳር-ኤ-ሳላም ዝጅምር ውድድር ምብራቕ ኣፍሪቃ ንምስታፍ ሎሚ ናብ ታንዛንያ ገይሻ።




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