Message from the Editor

“Our flag does not fly because the wind blows it; it flies with the last breath of all the brave martyrs who died defending it”

Eritreans in the country and around the world are still coming to terms with the shocking and extremely sad news of the passing of Alamin Mohammed Said, a veteran freedom fighter and one of the pioneers and stalwarts of Eritrea’s long liberation struggle. Alamin passed away on Sunday at the age of 74 due to a sudden illness during his brief trip to Saudi Arabia, where he was conducting public seminars with the local Eritrean community.

By any standard or objective measure, Alamin’s was truly an extraordinary life. As a young man driven and inspired by the mission to liberate his country and free his people, Alamin joined the Eritrean Liberation Front in 1966. He then went on to become one of the founders of the EPLF in 1970. For a period of 55 years, Alamin served his nation and his people with utmost dedication and stellar distinction. At the First, Second, and Third EPLF Congresses (held in January 1977, March 1987, and February 1994), Alamin was elected to high offices. Additionally, among several other leadership and service positions, he served as the Head of EPLF Foreign Relations (from 1977-1987); National Guidance (1987-1991); Information (1991-1994); and PFDJ Secretary (1994-2021).

This long track record of dedicated service and excellence is not only a powerful demonstration of his immense, diverse skills and great capabilities, but also a true reflection of how highly Alamin was respected and trusted by all those around him. He was one of Eritrea’s best sons and there are not many, anywhere, that can truly or honestly say that they played as large and pivotal role in the liberation, freedom, and development of their nation as Alamin did. It is a testament of his commitment to Eritrea that Alamin passed away essentially as he had lived: serving his people.

Undoubtedly, for Eritreans, the unfortunate passing of Alamin leaves a deep and profound heartache that does not quickly or simply heal. His loss will be truly mourned.

At the same time, however, Alamin’s life and passing provide us all with a great legacy to protect and offer us a truly remarkable example to follow. Accordingly, we can best pay our respects and honor Alamin by remaining strongly committed and dedicated, as he was to the last days of his life, to building a peaceful, prosperous, harmonious nation.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

State Department Recap: November 11-17

STATE DEPARTMENT — Here’s a look at what U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and other top diplomats have been doing this week:

Ethiopia, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal

Blinken is visiting Africa November 15-20, with stops in Kenya, Nigeria and Senegal. He met with Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta in Nairobi on Wednesday to discuss urgent regional security, with pulling Ethiopia back from the brink of civil war high on the agenda. At a news conference in Nairobi, Blinken said he and Kenyatta discussed the crisis in Ethiopia and the African effort to resolve it, led by former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo.

Blinken, in Kenya, Pushes for End to Ethiopia War

Blinken is set to start events in Nigeria on Thursday, where he is expected to discuss the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, security issues and revitalizing democracies.

Nigerian Experts Have Big Expectations Ahead of Blinken’s Visit Thursday

Blinken’s last visit will be with Senegalese President Macky Sall in Dakar “to reaffirm the close partnership between our two countries.”

Blinken’s trip to Africa comes as the U.S. aims to boost an African Union-led initiative to end the fighting between the Ethiopian government and ethnic Tigrayans.

Blinken to Visit Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal to Discuss Ethiopian Crisis

Myanmar

American journalist Danny Fenster was released Monday after being held in Myanmar for 176 days. Bill Richardson, a former U.S. representative and ambassador to the United Nations, took part in negotiations with the Myanmar junta for Fenster’s release, and he called for protection for journalists worldwide.

Journalist Held in Myanmar Back in US After Release

US, China

The United States and China will ease access restrictions on journalists from each other’s countries. The State Department said the People’s Republic of China was committed to extending visa validity for U.S. journalists to one year. In return, the U.S. committed to do the same for PRC journalists. The PRC also pledged to permit U.S. journalists already in the country to freely depart and return, which they had previously been unable to do, and the U.S. plans to do the same for Chinese journalists.

China, US Agree to Ease Restrictions on Journalists

The journalist reciprocity agreement discussed between working-level officials came before U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping held a virtual meeting Monday to ensure that the competition between the two countries “does not veer into conflict.”

US, Chinese Officials Laud Progress in Inaugural Presidential Meeting

Blinken participated in the virtual meeting, where senior officials from the U.S. and China held “an extended discussion” on Taiwan. Biden clarified U.S. interests, ensuring there were “no unilateral changes to the status quo” across the Taiwan Strait. And, according to a senior U.S. administration official, Biden was “quite direct about his concerns about some of Beijing’s behavior that he believes is at odds with” peace and stability across the Taiwan Strait.

US, Chinese Leaders Share Differing Interpretations on Taiwan

Religious freedom

Blinken designated China, Russia and eight other countries as violators of religious freedom. In a statement Wednesday, he said that the 10 countries “engaged in or tolerated systematic, ongoing, egregious violations of religious freedom.” Other countries on this year’s list are Myanmar, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Eritrea, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Pakistan. Nigeria, which was removed from the list this year, will host Blinken’s visit this week.

US Designates China, Russia, 8 Others as Violators of Religious Freedom

Cambodia

The U.S. announced sanctions against two high-level Cambodian military officials last week, setting off a storm of invective from Phnom Penh and ratcheting up tensions related to Chinese development around the strategically located Ream Naval Base. In statements about the decision, the U.S. specifically cited corruption related to the naval base, which has become a geopolitical flashpoint between the superpowers as the U.S. worries it may become a Chinese military outpost in the Gulf of Thailand.

Phnom Penh Rebuffs US Sanctions of Cambodian Military Leaders

U.S., Qatar

Qatar will represent American interests in Afghanistan beginning December 31, Blinken announced last Friday during the U.S.-Qatar strategic dialogue. The U.S. Embassy in Kabul closed after last summer’s withdrawal of U.S. and allied troops from Afghanistan, ending the country’s 20-year war and leaving it under Taliban control.

Qatar to Represent US Interests in Afghanistan

Source: Voice of America

Funeral service of Mr. Alamin Mohammed Seid

The funeral service of Mr. Alamin Mohammed Seid, Secretary of the People’s Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ) was conducted today, 17 November at Asmara Martyrs Cemetery in the presence of President Isaias Afwerki, senior Government and PFDJ officials, Army Commanders as well as religious leaders, family members, and others within the confines of COVID-19 guidelines. President Isaias Afwerki, Mr. Yemane Gebreab, Head of Political Affairs of the PFDJ, Gen. Flipos Woldeyohannes, Chief of Staff of the Eritrean Armed Forces, and the late veteran fighter’s daughter Amira Alamin laid a wreath at the cemetery.

A veteran fighter, Alamin Mohammed-Seid, joined the ELF at a young age in 1966 and was one of the founders of the EPLF in 1970. And for the subsequent 55 long years, Mr. Alamin served his nation and people with stellar dedication and distinction. He was elected to high offices in the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd EPLF Congresses.

Among other leadership positions, Mr. Alamin was Head of EPLF Foreign Relations (1977-87); National Guidance (1987-91); Information (1991-94), and PFDJ Secretary (1994-2021). Fluent in many languages, Mr. Alamin was renowned for his exceptional personal warmth and kindness.

The Secretary of PFDJ, Mr. Alamin Mohammed-Seid, Veteran freedom fighter and one of the pioneers and stalwarts of Eritrea’s liberation struggle, passed away at the age of 74 due to sudden illness during his brief sojourn for public seminars in Saudi Arabia.

Mr. Alamin Mohammed Seid is survived by his wife and four children.

Expressing deep sorrow of the passing away of a veteran fighter, Mr. Alamin Mohammed Seid, the Government of Eritrea and the People’s Front for Democracy and Justice express condolences to the Eritrean people, families, and friends.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Kenyan Experts To Receive Training On Invasive Mealy-Bug Pest

Kenya will be among nine countries whose diagnostic experts will be trained to detect a new invasive mealy-bug pest that has arrived in the Eastern Africa sub region, called the Mango Mealy- bug.

Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service (KEPHIS) in collaboration with the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the Natural History Museum, London, UK and the Centre of Phytosanitary Excellence (COPE) are this week training 18 diagnostic experts from the nine countries that comprise the FAO Eastern Africa sub-region.

The Purpose of the training that will see Kenya, Burundi, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Rwanda, Somalia, South Sudan and Uganda experts trained to build diagnostic capacity will see early detection and early identification of the pest, thus give the countries an advantage to launch early action and thereby mitigate the damaging effects of the pest.

According to FAO, boosting early warning, early detection and early response capacities in the Eastern Africa sub-region, is key to ensuring that we safeguard food security, reduce poverty, build resilience, enhance economic opportunities and build a better life for all.

KEPHIS Managing Director, Prof Theophilus Mutui, in a joint statement with FAO said that they will train personnel from the Ministries of Agriculture from each of the nine countries.

“The experts are tasked to learn the methods for field detection, sample collection, sample preparation, slide preparation and diagnosis of specimens of a range of mealy-bug species that are common to Eastern Africa,” he said.

The knowledge gained at the training, he added, will aid in boosting the early detection and response capacities of the countries as the Mango Mealy-bug spreads throughout Eastern Africa.

Mutui explained that Mealy bugs are common on food crops, fruits, ornamentals and forest trees and are easily spread through international trade in plant materials.

“The damage they cause can be devastating, leading to crop loss, restricted market access and increased cost of production. These pests can be easily overlooked due to their small size, cryptic habits and because they do not resemble most other insects,” he noted.

The MD confirmed that management of mealy bugs is difficult as they develop resistance to conventional control products saying that in recent years, they have become major pests, with new introductions of invasive species like papaya mealy-bug, cotton mealy-bug and now the mango mealy-bug, which has been reported in Rwanda.

The pest was first detected in 2019 in Rwanda and according to FAO, the pest has since spread to Uganda and Burundi and as parts of its efforts, FAO has engaged partners on identification of mealy-bugs and their parasitoids (natural enemies) through funding an emergency response project for the three countries; Burundi, Rwanda and Uganda to combat the impact of the mango mealy-bug.

In Kenya, as well as in other countries of the sub-region, FAO warns that it is important that the Ministries of Agriculture remain vigilant and conduct surveys of urban and rural areas to detect as early as possible the presence of the Mango Mealy-bug.

The general population, they say in the statement, should be made aware to be on the lookout for the new pest as in almost all cases, mango mealybug appears in urban settings suggesting the link to humans as an effective factor in spreading the pests from one location to another.

“The general population is therefore encouraged to observe plants in their domiciles or farms and report promptly any suspicion of Mango Mealy bug infestation that they may suspect. It is only with specialized diagnostic confirmation that the presence of the Mango Mealy bug can be made and thereby, the relevant action to control its spread can be taken,” FAO says.

According to FAO, it is not a matter of “IF” mango mealy bug will arrive in Kenya and other Eastern Africa countries but a matter of “WHEN”.

Mutui said Kenya through KEPHIS is committed to collaboration that contributes to the reduction of plant health risks; helps minimize trade costs by making trade in plants, plant products and regulated articles more transparent and efficient; allowing goods to move more smoothly between markets.

“It is my appeal to the other National Plant Protection Organizations in the region that we shall collaborate and partner in the management of invasive mealy bugs. We recognize the limitations of available resources and structures that have led to challenges in the management of invasive species most of which require countrywide and regional management,” he said.

Mutui however noted that this can only be overcome through coordinated and comprehensive collaboration, partnerships and sharing of information that will facilitate preventing the introduction, spread and establishment mealy bug pests.

According to experts, the introduction of the Mango Mealy bug poses a new challenge to agriculture, particularly since the only effective means of control is to use biological control, that is, the introduction of an organism that feeds on the mealy bugs.

Since mealy -bugs cover their bodies and eggs with a waxy material, conventional control using water-soluble pesticides is ineffective and the rapid development of the colonies also leads to rapid buildup of resistance to pesticides.

FAO is taking action by raising awareness of the threat of the mango mealy bug across Eastern Africa, training relevant staff of the Eastern Africa sub-region to identify mealy bug species in their territories and specifically the Mango Mealy bug and also boosting capacity for early detection in agricultural and urban areas.

FAO will further be facilitating the importation and release of the effective biological agents following a strict adherence for scientific review of the safety of introduction of new organisms into the territories of the affected countries and ensure that the sub-region has the capacity to mass rear the parasitoids for easy access and rapid response.

Meanwhile, papaya maybug is currently also spreading across Eastern Africa and hampering papaya production efforts and with the rapid development of the colonies also leading to rapid buildup of resistance to pesticides, it’s advisable that everyone is aware that the use of pesticides is not recommended.

Sustainable management of these pests is through natural control agents which also leads to compliance to food safety standards in the local and international markets and thus increased market access.

Kenya has approved the importation of the Acerophagus papayae parasitoid from Ghana for the classical release for the management of the papaya mealy bug and recognizes that this is a potentially more sustainable and environmentally a friendly solution to management of this pest.

According to KEPHIS, Mealy bug thrive in dry conditions, prefers feeding on Mango but can also attack a wide variety of plants including bananas. They attack the roots of certain species of plants, leaves of plants as well as fruits but can extend to branches, limbs and trunks of trees particularly when infestation levels are high and the most efficient mechanism for spread of mealy bugs is human activity.

Gardeners tending plants in urban areas will spread them by contamination of their equipment; farmers through constant contact with their plants and the movement of planting material; nurseries through the distribution of infested live plants and the general movement of people in urban and rural areas who inadvertently brush against an infested plant, picking up the crawlers and transporting them to new areas.

Mutui explained that Mealy bug, tend to produce lots of eggs during their lifetime of about three months. The babies (crawlers) are highly mobile and they tend to fall off the infested plants and hitch rides on anything they may fall on then moving to new locations therefore increasing spread of the pest.

He adds that due to the size of the mealy bugs, about 1 millimetre in length, they tend to not get noticed until they form large colonies (in the millions).

Mango production in the sub-region is an important economic activity. In the eighties and nineties, Mango mealy bug arrived in Africa and caused significant losses of up to 80 percent losses which were reported throughout Central and Western Africa.

Source: Kenya News Agency