Amnesty Report Details Accounts of Rape by Tigrayan Forces in Ethiopia’s Amhara Region

Women from an occupied town in Ethiopia’s Amhara region are accusing Tigrayan fighters of raping them at gunpoint and robbing them.

A new report by Amnesty International details the horrific attacks alleged to have taken place in Nifas Mewcha, located in northern Ethiopia’s Amhara region, in mid-August.

Through interviews with 16 women, the London-based rights group detailed a pattern of gang rape, robbery, physical and verbal assault. The report also says fighters with the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front, or the TPLF, looted and destroyed medical facilities in the town. Some of the survivors who spoke to the advocacy group recounted use of ethnic slurs and brutal attacks. In some instances, the women said they were raped in the presence of their children.

Amnesty called for TPLF commanders to investigate the charges and remove all perpetrators from the force.

“The testimonies we heard from survivors describe despicable acts by TPLF fighters that amount to war crimes, and potentially crimes against humanity,” said Agnes Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General. “They defy morality or any iota of humanity.”

TPLF leadership, however, rejected the report. Spokesperson Getachew Reda tweeted Tuesday before the release of the report saying that it was “aimed at establishing impartiality by apportioning guilt” between fighters on both sides of the conflict.

Survivors told Amnesty that the attacks began soon after the TPLF took control of the town on August 12. Local and federal officials say between 71 and 73 women were raped.

VOA Amharic Service also interviewed victims of the attacks. A mother in her 50’s who lives in Nefas Mewcha said a fighter entered her home armed and threatening violence.

“He had bombs, a knife, a Kalashnikov and he said if I moved, he would cut my legs and then he raped me,” the survivor told VOA Amharic Service. “No one came to help. There was no one coming and it was dead silence.”

A mother of three in her 30’s is another survivor who spoke to VOA Amharic Service on the condition of anonymity. She said the fighters who came to her home to attack her accused her of being married to authorities and she said she was raped while her children were watching.

“There were three or four of them. And then when they came in, one of my children started crying and he said [a fighter] said ‘I will hit you. I will kill you.’” she said. “Three to four men raped me at gunpoint,” she added, saying that the fighters hurt her 8-year-old child. Her neighbor, a mother of two children, who came in to help after hearing screams was also raped by the men, the survivor said.

Source: Voice of America

“What Eritrea looks like from a distance and the real time experience I had with the communityshow huge discrepancy” UNICEF Regional Director

UNICEF Regional Director for East and Southern Africa,Mr. Mohammed Malick Fall,conducted a three-day visit to Eritrea from 3 to 6 November. He met and had talks with high level government officials and visited basic development and social service sites in Anseba region. Following are excerpts of an interview with the director upon concluding his visit.

Welcome to Eritrea, Mr. Malick, and thank you for agreeing to have this interview.

What is the purpose of your visit?

I was due to visit Eritrea before the world got into the covid-19 crisis but was delayed because of the pandemic. The prime reason for my visit is to tour and see; to socialize and understand and to watch and learn the realities in Eritrea as an agent of UNICEF in this region. I came to see the progress achieved and problems that remain unsolved and discuss them with the government and enhance our cooperation framework.

Mr. Malick, what was your stay like?

It was a three-day mission, limited in time but very intense with a series of activities that allowed me to interact across the board. I interacted with stakeholders, members of the government, members of the UN, UN staff, and development partners. Most importantly, I interacted with the community which was eye opening on what Eritrea is today.

How do you see Eritrean progress on issues that concern UNICEF and the Government?

This trip was important because it has helped me to open my eyes on the realities and to rearrange some of the convictions that I had before coming here. We are confronted with challenges in today’s world: the climate issues, conflicts and the pandemic. It is true that we need resources but unlike what we think, it is not the only critical element that one needs for development. What I found to be more important is the determination, the commitment, the vision and the engagement of the community; people of all ages and genders working together towards a common goal. I think this trip was extremely important for me because it helped me build a new narrative around Eritrea. Unlike when looking from a distance, you see tangible progress as you get to the country.

I was struck by the level of immunization, 94% immunization of children, and increasing funds from the government for the procurement of vaccines. There are many advanced countries that have a hard time reaching that threshold. I have seen government funding match the funds from Global Partnership of Education (GPE). I have seen the determination of the people and their insights of education; girls outnumbering the boys in schools was an amazing feature. I could see the desire to learn in the eyes of the children. I have also seen barefoot doctors travelling on foot and on camels trying to ensure the well-being and vaccination of every child in hard-to-reach areas. Therefore, all those experiences have helped me to learn that to make progress in social and development sectors, it is not wealth and resources that you need but the determination and commitment of the people and government. I see this taking place in Eritrea. We need to work together to craft a new narrative of the country, which is different fromthe pre-established assessments.

What further measures do you suggest should be taken to achieve the goals (SDGs) important to Eritrea in line with its national priorities?

There are a lot of initiatives for which we need to scale up our efforts now. I visited a water distribution center for villages that had difficulty accessing clean water; now they have solar- powered pumps. I have seen the Government helping to build schools to meet the increasing demand of education. I have also seen a health system where children are referred to for treatment, prevention of malnutrition and vaccination with utmost devotion of health workers. I have seen pregnant women coming for antenatal care. Now, while I saw all that, all I could think was how we can intensify the development to keep pace with the needs of the people in all sectors. I think that is the direction we need to march on. In Eritrea, all the ingredients and the ground we need to get it right as in the rate of vaccination are met. What we need to increase is the effort to have the quality, speed and scale of service provided. If those elements are pulled together, I think Eritrea is going to be in the development landscape in an area which will surprise a lot of people. What Eritrea looks like from a distance and the real time experience I had with the community show a huge discrepancy. We should close the gaps by telling the real stories.

Give us an overview of your visit of Anseba Region.

First of all, the commitment and determination are outstanding. I have seen workers that did not have a lot of means but the determination of continuing to deliver the services that people needed. There are teachers who barely had what they needed to teach properly but they are there doing it with grace and hard work. I could say a lot about the sectors in which I saw service being delivered to the people by the people assisted by the government. That is why I say this is a development driven by the community.

I am an African; from West Africa which has the same challenges. That is why when I gave the speech I spoke as the son of this continent not simply as the Regional Director of UNICEF. I have learned that sometimes all the services can be in place but if the community does not demand it, it may not be utilized. Here [in Eritrea], I could see it was otherwise. All the services are fully utilized because there is full demand and thirst for access to the services. All the villages in the sub-zone that I visited have declared Open Defecation Free (ODF) because they demanded it and adopted it, which is another big milestone. You cannot have health if you do not have sanitation or nutrition. We need to integrate the package and that integration was evident in the places I have visited. That impact is priceless and to have that impact you would need the government, UNICEF, and other partners. But most of all, you would need the community to come towards the services and demand them.

In how many places in Africa can one find females outnumbering males in primary school? Females tend to be fewer in schools because of the responsibilities they have in their homes at an early age. But here, even in conditions that are not ideal, the ratio of females was more than or equal to males. Their desire for education can be easily seen on their faces.

Is there anything special in the new UN cooperation framework?

The new cooperation framework is just a stage in a journey that started a long time ago. It is part of a long succession of plans that has been developed in this country. We need to build on the important accomplishments that I have mentioned in all sectors. We shouldn’t turn our backs to the success we have accomplished but should learn a lesson. For instance, UNICEF has been here since the early 90s and some challenges persist. We might need to reflect and be critical if there is anything we can do differently to avoid repeating the same solutions that are not taking us anywhere toward ending our problems. This is why the notion of speed and scale are necessary. Another important factor that I have seen and that we need to encourage is innovation. I saw some young people showing me a mobile app that they used to spread news and Covid 19 guidelines to the people. This speeds up the behavioral change in adopting certain things and accelerates the solution delivery.

Though Africa accounts for a very minor percent of carbon emission we need to look at the challenges we are facing. How would you address climate change if you do not have tools and interventions such as a solar power system to generate power for services and daily lives? The idea of barefoot doctors in itself is something that all African countries should adopt. It not only ensures service delivery but it is affordable, effective and community-oriented.

The education system and training of young people is basic and directly related to the development needs of their country. There is also a new area of social protection that we need to explore. If we have a scheme that transfers resources, we can also expand and accelerate the constraints children face to access these services. I have been discussing with the team that we need to figure out why our pace of development is slow and work on it in our new country program. The biggest challenge is how to accelerate the achievement that we have already scored in partnership with the government. What we are facing is a challenge that every development actor is facing. I think those are the paradigms that we need to integrate.

What was your meeting with Eritrean officials like?

It was extremely good and cordial. For someone who has arrived for the first time, I had a warm welcome and great hospitality. I met with Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of Finance, Minister of Health, Governor of Anseba region, Minister of Education and many other officials. The meetings were extremely candid across the board; very open discussion where I could hear and learn what the Government’s main concern really are. That was the reason of my stay here; an eye opening experience because it was open and frank discussion. There were no bureaucratic complications in the meetings that I had. I was struck by the openness and positively impressed by the determination, vision, self-reliance, commitment and the people-centered approach of the officials I met.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

21-year-old World Cycling Centre struck by driver in Eritrea

21-year-old World Cycling Centre struck by driver in Eritrea

African cycling and the sport in general is mourning the tragic loss of the young rider Desiet Kidane. Details are still emerging but initial reports state that she was killed after being struck by a driver while training in Asmara in Eritrea on Monday.

The 21-year-old Eritrean rider was part of the UCI’s World Cycling Centre programme and both the governing body and the WCC paid tribute to her on Tuesday morning.

“With her constant smile, kindness, respect and deep passion for cycling, Desiet Kidane Tekeste was a rising young talent who will be greatly missed. Our thoughts are with her family, friends and teammates and coaches during this tragic time,” the UCI said via its social media channels.

Kidane showed her talent in 2018 with a number of strong results as a junior rider. She won both the road race and time trial at the African Continental Championship in Kigali in Rwanda, and then later that year placed 22nd in the road race and 28th in the time trial at the world championships in Innsbruck, Austria. She went on to ride the Youth Olympic Games in Argentina and finished 11th.

Those results helped strengthen links with the UCI’s World Cycling Centre team and she competed with the set-up in 2019, with the programme helping her gain important experience in her first year as a senior rider.

She was 11th in the youth classification at the Festival Elsy Jacobs stage race and 19th on a stage of the Vuelta a Burgos Feminas, as well as clocking up victory in the Eritrean national time trial championships and silver medals in the road race.

The COVID-19 pandemic interrupted her 2020 season but Kidane was back with the World Cycling Centre this year, riding a number of events in Belgium and France. These included placings of 18th in the La Périgord Ladies and La Choralis Fourmies Féminine in France, as well as participation in the world championships road race.

In a 2018 interview with the Eritrean media outlet Tesfa News, Kidane enthused about the chance to ride with the UCI World Cycling Centre team.

“After my competitions in Rwanda [at the African Continental Championships – ed.], I was fortunate to be selected to get the UCI training to become a professional athlete. It is a wonderful opportunity. We are trained and get to participate at numerous games and tours in Europe every week. The training is tough and you get to race against hundreds of contestants, which have both upgraded my skills as a contestant.

“We have many young Eritrean cyclists who are skilled enough to make it to the professional level. I wish they would get the UCI opportunities like I did, it would help boost their talents.

“I have always had the dream to be a professional cyclist next to Mossana Debesai, and want the number of Eritrean female professional cyclists to rise. We have the skills and passion. Most of all, we are competitive. I don’t think there is anything that can stop us from reaching that goal.”

Like those in Eritrea who knew Kidane, the UCI is also reeling with the news. A spokesperson said on Tuesday that “this is an absolute tragedy and here we are absolutely shocked.”

UCI president David Lappartient and the governing body’s director general both expressed their own feelings on Twitter.

Cyclingnews expresses its condolences to Kidane’s family, friends and teammates at this sad time.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Urban Hinterlands in Antiquity: Reflections from Matara and Keskese

The archaeological site of Matara is located about 1km south of Senafe in the southern region of Eritrea. The archaeological site has for long been recognized by surrounding communities as Belew-Kelew. Matara´s visibility in various documents started to feature during the 19th century when various Europeans visited the site and documented their observations. Different aspects of the site, including fragments of ancient inscriptions, architectural remains and pottery fragments were recorded during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Matara´s prominence, however, came in the 1960s and 1970s when Anfray conducted multiple seasons of field surveys and excavations. The excavations involved a sustained archaeological research at Matara, though destructive, as the excavations did not allow proper conservation in the aftermath.

Matara is most closely associated with the 1st millennium A.D. (100-900 A.D.) cultural period as much of the focus of research in the area has been on the architectural features pertaining to the period. Yet, 1st millennium B.C. (900-100 B.C.) deposits were documented by Anfray´s excavations. Excavated levels at Matara have shown two phases of occupation dating to the 1st millennium B.C. (900-100 B.C.), represented by architectural features and pottery that belongs to the period. Researchers interested in the archaeology of the Horn believe that the pottery uncovered from the 1st millennium B.C. levels at Matara are comparable to those documented on the Asmara Plateau at the ancient site of Ona Hashel. The strong resemblance with the Greater Asmara site dates form 800-400 B.C. is an indication of the ceramic tradition that flourished in the region by the 1st millennium B.C. Moreover, inscriptions that belong to the 1st millennium B.C. recovered from Matara include reference to the goddess Dât- Ba´dan, who, as in South Arabia, may have been associated with the solar cult. Two other inscriptions from Matara refer to the star deity Athtar and moon god, Almaqah, both commonly represented as important deities in the southern Red Sea world of the 1st millennium B.C.

Excavations at Matara also involved approximately one-half of the visible 1st millennium A.D. buildings, producing much valuable information on architecture and material culture of the period as well as on coins and imported objects that provided relative dating. Amphorae of likely Mediterranean origin, ceramics with painted or stamped Christian crosses, blue-glazed pottery from the wider Indian Ocean World and a bronze lamp of Hellenistic style were also useful for relative dating at Matara.

The 1st millennium A.D. settlement occupation at Matara has been divided into elite residences, churches and commoner as well as intermediate level domestic buildings. The early phase of the 1st millennium A.D. at Matara corresponds to the erection of the famous stelae. Originally located at the base of the Gual Saim hill, the stelae includes an engraved disc and crescent symbol often associated with the moon god Almaqah and a four line inscription in an early Ge´ez or proto-Ge´ez script that reads as´´ this is the stelae which Agaz has erected for his ancestors for their defeat of the forces of Aw´a and Tsebelen.

Rectangular shaped church or church –like structures were also revealed through the excavations at Matara, perhaps dating to the 5th to the 7th centuries A.D. Moreover, stone tomb features are found in several locations of the Matara archaeological site. The elite residential structures at Matara follow the conventional 1st millennium A.D. architectural design. Two residential quarters of densely packed neighboring stone and mud mortar dwellings interpreted as commoner residences were also excavated at Matara. Evidence of social hierarchy has been suggested from differences seen in architectural designs. A plethora of rock-cut tombs and special use areas such as workshops, stables, etc are spread over parts of the archaeological site of Matara. The research at Matara has been provided important insights into an ancient complex settlement. Linking the archaeological site of Matara to its more rural hinterland will help better understand the archaeological site, and the conservation of exposed architectural features at Matara should be the focus of future archaeological works.

While Matara represents a 1st millennium B.C. -1st millennium A.D. urban settlement in the central highlands, the archaeological site of Keskese represents a ritual site that belongs to the period. Keskese is located north of Matara on a highland valley near the edge of the eastern escarpment at an average elevation of 2000 meters above sea level and about two kilometers north of the Amba Tarika. The Keskese area is located near the starting point of the Komaile Valley that descends from the central highlands to the Gulf of Zula on the Red Sea Coast. The site has been described as a 1st millennium B.C. ritual center due to at least six documented, partially buried, monolithic pillars or obelisks visible on the site surface. The pillars are between seven and nine meters in length and are generally similar in form to those documented elsewhere in the northern Horn. An inscription engraved in a granite block found at Keskese includes the Epigraphic South Arabian name believed to represent a king of the 1st millennium B.C.

Systematic survey conducted in the area in 2001 resulted in the documentation of ten archaeological sites including two site areas with six obelisks and sites with extensive architectural wall and terrace features as well as substantial architectural rubbles. Stone artifact tools similar in form to the assemblage documented in the Greater Asmara sites were also documented in as much as ceramics resembling the ceramic tradition established for the Greater Asmara region were recovered.

Keskese´s position between the important urban centers of Mata¬ra and Qohaito and at the end of the Komaile valley directly link¬ing the highlands with Adulis on the Red Sea littoral must have played a great role in the site´s development during the 1st mil¬lennium B.C. (900-100 B.C.). – 1st millennium A.D. (100-900 A.D.) of the northern Horn. The remnants of substantial monu-mental architecture, multiple mounds, inscriptions and abun¬dant 1st millennium B.C. pot¬tery and stone tools indicate that settlement and religious activi¬ties took place over many years. Features such as the evidence of past agricultural terraces, walls and pathways across the site sug¬gest complex patterns that future research will reveal in depth. Keskese undoubtedly provides an important area to test hypoth¬eses concerning interactions in the northern Horn, including the much debated ideas about South Arabian influences in the devel¬opment of 1st millennium B.C. cultures and the subsequent roles and functions of ritual activities by the 1st millennium A.D. in the region.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea