Eritrean Henok Mulueberhan won the Tour du Rwanda 2023

Hennok Mulueberhan who plays for the Green Project team won the eight-day Tour du Rwanda race in Rwanda.

The Eritrean won this race after wearing the Maillot Jaune on Saturday during the seventh stage of the Tour du Rwanda from Nyamata to Mount Kigali.

In the last area played in Kigali city this Sunday, Hennok was playing with three other players who were ahead of the general ranking because the second one was equal but they were separated by the fact that they have been driving in all areas according to the rules.

Henok Mulueberhan became the fourth player from Eritrea to win the Tour du Rwanda, after Daniel Tekleheimanot who won in 2010, Merhawi Kudus who won in 2019, Natnael Tesfazion who won in 2020 and 2022.

Hennok Mulueberhan in today’s area also finished in first place with a time of 2 hours, 4 minutes and 52 seconds, equaling the time of the four others who followed him.

Hennok then won the Tour du Rwanda with a total time of 28 hours, 58 minutes and one second, equaling the Italian Walter Calzoni, but Hennok brought him ahead because he performed well in all areas including the one he won.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

TOUR DU RWANDA 2023: ERITREAN MULUEBERHANE WINS 15TH EDITION AFTER SUPERB 8TH STAGE

Eritrean athlete and African cycling champion Henok Mulueberhane, who races for Green Project-Bardiani CSF-Faizanè, claimed Tour du Rwanda 2023 after winning the 8th stage, to set himself apart from the chasing pack, to triumph in Rebero.

Mulueberhane, 23, who went into the race with the yellow jersey but on the same time with duo of Lecerf William Junior, who rides for Soudal – Quick-Step Devo Team, and Calzoni Walter of Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team, sprinted to the finish line at Canal Olympia, cheered on by President Paul Kagame and other senior officials present at the finale.

The Eritrean who stayed close to the leading pack, protected by his teammates, waited for the highest climb in Rebero, before putting in a final assault to cross the line with ease, to claim what was one of the hardest tours for many riders, including legendary British cyclist, Chris Froome.

A smiling Mulueberhane received the yellow jersey from President Kagame, after which the Eritrean National Anthem was played. Eritreans living in Rwanda turned up in big numbers to cheer on their countrymate.

Calzoni finished second while Lercerf managed to finish third. Rwanda’s hopes to win Tour du Rwanda faded with Eric Muhoza, who started in 6th overall at the final stage, had a race to forget during the 75km course.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Mulueberhan wins Tour du Rwanda 2023

Henok Mulueberhane of Green Project-Bardiani made history on Sunday afternoon after claiming the final stage to Canal Olympia in Rebero to win Tour du Rwanda 2023.

The 23-year old becomes the fourth Eritrean to win Tour du Rwanda after Daniel Teklehaimanot, Natnael Tesfatsion who won it twice and Merhawi Kudus.

President Paul Kagame was in attendance at Canal Olympia, Rebero to grace the closing ceremony of the race which has been underway throughout the past eight days since February 19.

The yellow jersey for the race was not decided until Mulueberhan crossed the finish-line at Canal Olympia leading the peloton of the the of the 8th and final stage to which he finished triumphant after 75,3 kilometers in two hours four minutes and 52 seconds.

The youngster was crown champion after covering 1054,6 kilometers overall in 58 hours 28 minutes and one second to beat second-placed Walter Calzoni of Q 36.5 PRO Cycling Team to the yellow jersey by just microseconds.

Meanwhile, Bike Aid’s Eric Muhoza was not able to finish even in the top 15 on general classification despite being among the favorites to win the race prior to the final stage.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

President Kagame attends the end of Tour du Rwanda 2023

This Sunday, February 26, 2023, when the Tour du Rwanda race that had been held for eight days in Rwanda ended, President Kagame participated in the last part of the race.

It was a close race won by Eritrean Henok Mulueberhan, who also won the final section played today.

It is the second time that President Kagame participated in the Tour du Rwanda, where last year he also participated in the closing day of the Tour du Rwanda 2022, he was defeated by the Eritrean Natnael Tesfazion.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

NLTimes.nl: Hundreds of Eritreans in the Netherlands victims of smuggling network

Thousands of Eritrean migrants have been mistreated in Libya by an internationally operating human smuggling network, according to Dutch Public Prosecution Service (OM). In the process, they were mistreated and imprisoned by the people smugglers and their relatives were extorted to pay ransom. Today, hundreds of the victims live in the Netherlands. 191 witnesses have testified to the Dutch prosecution about the human rights violation.

The victims want to remain anonymous out of fear of retaliation by the regime and possible negative consequences for their Eritrean relatives. “There were three large sheds on the compound, with more than 2,000 people in each shed,” one of the victims told TV program Nieuwsuur. “Some sleep at night and others during the day, because there is not enough room for everyone to sleep at the same time.”

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Human rights violations range from violence to rape. Victims reported being beaten with garden hoses and sticks, which were recorded on video. Furthermore, Eritrean women were taken from sheds by smugglers and raped, which was sometimes also filmed, according to one of the victims, NOS reported.

According to OM, the human smuggling network have earned millions of euros from the fact that they called the relatives of the Eritrean migrants in the Netherlands to pay a ransom. “We see that an exploitation system has been devised, a criminal revenue model in which people are seen as commodities,” said press officer Gerben Wilbrink of the National Public Prosecutor’s Office to NOS.

The prosecution has been aware of the human smuggling network for some time and have had them on their radar since 2018 and were able to detain two ringleaders of the network. They were charged with participation in a criminal organization, human trafficking, and aggravated assault.

One of the two ringleaders is Eritrean Tewelde G., known as Walid, and is detained in the Netherlands. The second main suspect is Eritrean Kidane Zekarias H., who has been on the Dutch wanted list since 2021 and had previously fled Ethiopia. He is still detained in Dubai. Five other people who were responsible for collecting the ransom from the victims’ relatives have also been arrested, the TV programme reported.

But the smugglers alone have not been involved in the human rights violations. According to Eritrea expert Mirjam van Reisen of Tilburg University, the Eritrean regime is also involved in the human smuggling network and extortion in the Netherlands. It is a “closed system” in which the smugglers work with middlemen in the Netherlands who are linked to the Eritrean regime.

However, the Embassy of Eritrea in The Hague denies these allegations, announcing “The Embassy of Eritrea strongly rejects the fabricated allegations against the Eritrean government by these so-called Tilburg University researchers.” The embassy also wrote that it “fully supports the legal action taken by the Dutch prosecution against human smugglers,” NOS reported.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

MiddleEastEye.net: Shadow games on the Red Sea as scramble for Sudan’s ports intensifies

Foreign operatives appear to be living on small islands in the Red Sea, patrolling the waters around them and banishing the locals.

Billion-dollar deals are being made and then unmade. The whole world is coming to African shores, with dreams of power and profit occupying their thoughts. In the shadows, away from prying eyes, a game is being played.

‘We were attacked by some foreigners while we were fishing near Agig port. They were white and I believe they were Russian’

Fishermen in Sudan’s deep south told Middle East Eye that they were attacked and expelled from their waters by armed foreigners off an island close to Agig port, south of Port Sudan near the border with Eritrea.

Eyewitnesses in these southern areas of Sudan’s Red Sea coastline said they were sure there was a foreign military presence on islands inside Sudanese territorial waters.

One of the Sudanese fishermen, who asked not to be named for security reasons, told MEE that he believed the armed attackers were Russians, adding that he saw them taking samples from the land.

“We were attacked by some foreigners while we were fishing near Agig port. They were white and I believe they were Russian because I saw Russians in other parts of the region and they looked very similar,” the fisherman said, adding that they could have come from another western nation.

No-one seems to be quite sure who these people are and what they are doing in Sudan. Officials from the Tokar locality – the nearest town – did not respond to questions from MEE.

But the presence of armed foreign fighters comes as the scramble for the Red Sea coastline intensifies, with a series of international players intent on establishing a foothold in the region.

Scramble for the Red Sea

Sudan’s 750-km long Red Sea coastline is attracting widespread foreign interest, with the ambitions of a number of international players dovetailing with the country’s febrile domestic situation.

The US, Russia, UAE, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, China, Turkey and others are all vying to control Sudan’s ports, a situation that is beset with conflicts of interest at a time of great political, economic and military insecurity.

This competition has exacerbated the conflict in Sudan between civilians and the army, with the internationally brokered framework deal signed in December – which looks to set Sudan on a two-year path to elections – meeting fierce resistance on the streets.

The battle for the Red Sea is also part of an ongoing game of thrones between Sudan’s two most powerful men, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, aka Hemeti.

Burhan, the country’s de facto leader, is head of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), while Hemeti, his deputy, is leader of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) militia.

Military presence

The local and international competition along Sudan’s coastline is now a military one as well as an economic one.

The US and Russia are openly competing with one another, and are putting pressure on different parts of Sudanese society as part of that rivalry.

In a recent visit to Khartoum, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the previous agreement between Sudan and Russia to establish a Russian naval base on the Red Sea was going forward, explaining that it was waiting for ratification from the Sudanese legislative assembly.

“You know this agreement has been signed earlier between the two countries and is only waiting to be legalised,” Lavrov said.

A former senior military intelligence officer, speaking on condition of anonymity, said they believed the Sudanese army and RSF were standing with Russia and China, but that they were facing pressure from international players headed by the US.

“Bashir gave the Russians permission to build a military base in the Red Sea region in 2018 after his historic visit to Moscow,” the source said, referring to Omar al-Bashir, who ruled Sudan from 1989 to 2019, when he was ousted in a democratic uprising.

“US Africa Command put pressure on the army and the Sudanese transitional government, so they froze the agreement in 2021. But let me tell you: the Sudanese military mentality in choosing its allies has not changed from Bashir’s time.”

Hemeti’s sea base

There is also competition within the military, as Hemeti’s RSF looks to establish a strong foothold in the region.

Satellite photography seen by MEE and published here shows that the RSF has tried to build its own military base in Dungunab and Auteri, two small ports over 150km north of Port Sudan. The plans failed because of local resistance.

A document obtained by MEE through some local leaders showed that tribal conflict erupted after the land in the two areas was given to the RSF for a military base.

According to the document, the commissioner of the Gabait locality, where the two sites are located, ordered a halt on the allocation of a piece of land in the area for the RSF.

A local leader from the Bishari tribe said that the RSF has been providing a lot of financial and developmental support to the people of the area. They added that the militia succeeded in pushing local leaders to accept an RSF base in the area.

“The RSF has not just made a lot of services in order to put the locals on their side, but even provided a lot to the leaders themselves, which partly pushed them into accepting the establishment of the base,” the Bishari leader said.

“However, the commissioner has intervened and stopped it. It is also traditionally prohibited for someone from outside the region to take over public land owned by a specific tribe unless that tribe gives them permission,” they added.

Deals with other places

In December, Sudan and the UAE struck a $6bn preliminary agreement to develop and operate Abu Amama port on the Red Sea. The deal includes the construction of an airport, a big agricultural scheme, and dozens of railways and roads to link the Nile to the Red Sea.

The deal, signed by the Sudanese government and an Emirati consortium including the Abu Dhabi Ports Group and Invictus Investment Company PLC, which is owned by the Sudanese tycoon Osama Daoud Abdellatif, has been questioned by the local community and employees of the Sudan Sea Ports Corporation, a state body.

A leading member of the Bishari tribe, the traditional owners of the area around Abu Amama area, said it wasn’t clear what the deal would bring to the local community other than simply a loss of land.

“We have no problem with the development of our area to improve the life of the people and modernise the region, but we want guarantees and transparency, which is not present in this deal as it was signed without our consultation,” the source said.

Mohammed Ahmed Alawad, deputy chairman of the Sea Ports Corporation, told MEE that the deal was still in its initial stages and that it would be reviewed by the corporation’s technical teams.

“The technical teams of shipping, finance, legal affairs and others have to review the agreement once we receive it from the government,” he said.

China is also involved in the great game of the Red Sea. Haidob port, 80 km south of Port Sudan, was built by China Harbour Engineering Company and is part of China’s 21st-century maritime Silk Road.

The port, which cost $141m and was opened in 2020, is allocated for exporting livestock – including camels – to China and the Gulf, according to its manager, Mohammed Alhassan.

Haidob is expected to be the “biggest port that will export camels from Africa to China”, Alhassan told MEE.

China also has two ports in Bushair, which are around 30km from Port Sudan. They are intended for the export of oil from Sudan and the landlocked South Sudan.

Sudan is now also trying to resolve complications relating to deals signed during the Bashir era. One involves the suspension of a deal with a Philippines company. Another involves a $4bn deal signed with Qatar in 2018 to improve Suakin port in northeastern Sudan.

However, a source at the sea port said the agreement seemed to have been frozen after the ousting of Bashir in April 2019.

“The agreement was preliminary and it seems that it hasn’t been developed after the revolution, as politicians in both Doha and Khartoum seem to have no interest in it after the political shift in Sudan,” the source said.

A December 2017 deal between Sudan and Turkey for the reconstruction and restoration of the historic Suakin island on the Red Sea coast also alarmed Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

Reports said that the Ottoman-era port of Suakin had been leased to Turkey for 99 years, seeing the island revived as a tourism hub for Hajj-bound pilgrims.

In the wake of the Sudanese revolution, the agreement was reportedly ended by Sudan’s new government, but Turkey denied this.

Middle East Eye visited the island and saw that construction by the Turkish Development Agency was still ongoing.

As well as being the gateway to Sudan and the wider region – 90 percent of Sudan’s trade passes through Port Sudan – Red Sea state is also the richest gold-mining region of Sudan, with Russian, Turkish, Egyptian and other mining companies operating alongside Sudan’s Ariab Mining Company.

Just another of Sudan’s glittering prizes the world’s powers are fighting over.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

“Cutting Trees is Like Amputating Part of My Body”

The title of the article comes from what an exemplary farmer, Mr. Michael Andemariam Hadera, said. In an article by Amare Weldeab that was published in the February 19, 2023 issue of Haddas Ertra, the Tigrigna daily national newspaper, I read about the activities and future plans of this exemplary farmer, who lives in Arberebu’e, on the Asmara-Massawa road. Here, I will provide the key points from the extensive interview to introduce the actions taken by and the intention of Mr. Michael Andemariam and share my general observation of the reforestation and afforestation programs in Eritrea.

Eleven kilometers on the Asmara-Massawa road, you encounter an eye-catching scene on the steep slope to the right of the road. The cliff is terraced, the gorge blocked, the ponds filled and the barren land cultivated. The land has been transformed into such an attractive scenery by the diligence and creativity of Mr. Michael, the exemplary farmer. Mr. Michael has a diploma in agriculture and had worked at the Ministry of Agriculture’s branch in Anseba region for six years until he went to Sawa in 2008 for his national service.

Arberebu’e, Mr. Michael’s home village, is mountainous and not suitable for farming. However, he took an initiative in 2003 to level the land and plant trees. Since then he, along with his family, has invested a lot to change the nature of the area. He has undertaken various initiatives to enhance soil fertility and water infiltration in the mountainous landscape.

Mr. Michael said that upon his return from Sawa, in collaboration with his two brothers, he constructed three bridges as well as ponds that cost half a million Nakfa. Initially he planted 200 orange seedlings that he brought from Hamelmalo Agricultural College, but they didn’t grow due to shortage of water and associated problems. Having learned from the experience, he decided not only to grow fruits but also to raise animals. Mr. Michael now grows fruits such as guava, apple and orange and raises animals, including goats, sheep, cows and camels. He has also levelled 3550 meter square of land to grow animal feed.

Sustainable agriculture and agroforestry play a key role in combating environmental crisis and food shortage by increasing crop yields, diversifying food and income sources, and improving the ecosystem. Mr. Michael intends to build agroforestry by growing high valued trees and shrubs alongside livestock production. To sustainably manage the land used for crop cultivation, it is important to adequately address the increasing concern of enhancing the conservation of biodiversity on lands surrounding the farm.

Mr. Michael is operating in a mountainous area. The steeper slopes on the farmland add to the cost of maintaining the farms, and there are high production and reproductive costs. Notwithstanding its cost, mountain farming has contributed a lot to sustainable development. Mr. Michael has diversified his agriculture by integrating tree planting and animal husbandry in the harsh and difficult environment.

A century ago, 30% of the total land area of Eritrea was covered with abundant and diverse flora. However, mismanagement of land during the century of colonization, the thirty year of war of liberation and recurrent droughts reduced areas covered by vegetation to merely 1 % in 1997. Mr. Michael is carrying out intensive afforestation activities. Tree planting has been his top priority in mountain farming. Since 2007 he has planted 13,735 seedlings — 6185 eucalyptus, 7500 sisal and 50 black pepper. The trees have a lot of potential to rebuild the resilience of the farming system through the conservation of biological diversity and the provision of essential ecosystem.

In Eritrea, reforestation is becoming a popular strategy to protect the country’s remaining forests and to restore degraded lands. The government has taken several steps to encourage the people to plant trees in areas where they live. The summer campaign, a national program commonly known as kremtawi maetot, is one of the significant initiatives of the government that started in 1994 to encourage secondary school students to play their role in restoring the environment by planting trees and performing other environment friendly activities. Reforestation serves many purposes. It improves the quality of air, enhances soil and water conservation and provides an important habitat for animals. When forests are destroyed, wild animals lose their habitats and move away. As part of the efforts for the restoration and conservation of the natural environment, the Forestry and Wildlife Conservation and Development Proclamation was issued in 2006.

Mr. Michael, who is very much aware of the importance of trees, said, “Trees are beneficial for you, your country and the world. The life of all living things depends on trees.” He has taken a quarter of a million Nakfa in loan to cultivate the area while he continues to give his national service. He waters the plants by fetching water using jerricans loaded on camels. In the future he plans to introduce an irrigation that can work in a mountainous landscape.

Besides the topographical challenge, Mr. Michael has to protect his plants from being eaten by animals. He has planted 7500 sisals on the margins which are serving as fence. Speaking about the usefulness of sisals, Mr. Michael said, “They have many benefits. They prevent soil erosion, their rods are used for construction and as fire wood, their flowers attract bees, and their ever green looks make for a good scenery.” The sisals are also preventing people from cutting trees. Commenting on the people acting irresponsibly, Mr. Michael said, “I see a person who cuts trees as amputating part of my body. Any person who cuts trees without the knowledge of the concerned body is destroying the life of all creatures.” He called for a revision of the methods of patrolling and the rules and regulations to protect trees.

Mr. Michael’s project is a family farm project. As such he is not motivated exclusively by profit. This is particularly important in mountainous areas, where the time and other resources required for their maintenance are generally high. Family farms are largely operated with low external inputs. In addition to his personal vision and ambition Mr. Michael always has a family on his side. He said, “My wife, my three sons, who are now mobilized for the defense of the country, and those who are at home motivate me to work.” According to FAO’s working definition, family farming is a means of organizing diversified agricultural practices that is managed and operated by a family and is predominantly reliant on family labor, including both women’s and men’s. In Eritrea, family farming is one of the most predominant form of agriculture.

Farmer-led initiatives in restoring the environment and practicing diversified agriculture are important. In expressing his plans for the future, Mr. Michael said, “Nothing comes before a country. When my sons return from their duty of national defense, I plan to further develop and expand afforestation and bee keeping and to plant 2000 seedlings per year.”

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea