Russia Suspended From UN Human Rights Body

UNITED NATIONS — The U.N. General Assembly voted Thursday to suspend Russia from the body’s Human Rights Council over atrocities it has been accused of committing in Ukraine.

In a vote of 93 to 24 with 58 abstentions, the assembly suspended Russia for its “gross and systematic violations of human rights” and violations of international law committed against Ukraine.

The resolution requires a two-thirds majority to be adopted; the abstentions are not counted.

“We view voting to suspend a state’s Human Rights Council rights as a rare and extraordinary action,” Ukrainian envoy Sergiy Kyslytsya said ahead of the vote.

“However, Russia’s actions are beyond the pale — Russia is not only committing human rights violations, it is shaking the underpinnings of international peace and security.”

Forty-seven countries are on the Geneva-based Human Rights Council. They are elected in secret ballot votes by the General Assembly. Russia is currently serving a three-year term that was due to expire on December 31, 2023.

Kyslytsya noted that April 7 is when the Rwandan genocide is commemorated, and said those massacres were due in large part to a lack of international action and failure by the United Nations to respond to warnings from the ground.

“On this day of grievances and bearing its own tragedy of thousands of Ukrainians killed by the Russian invaders, Ukraine stands together with Rwanda and calls to reaffirm our pledge to never forget and to never allow the recurrence of genocide, which was a result of the international community’s indifference,” the Ukrainian envoy said.

On Tuesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy admonished the U.N. Security Council in a video address for its inaction in stopping Russia’s war against his country. He called for Moscow to face accountability for crimes it has carried out there.

The United States led the move to suspend Russia and was joined by more than 60 countries in co-sponsoring the resolution.

“The country that’s perpetrating gross and systematic violations of human rights should not sit on a body whose job it is to protect those rights,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters in Brussels. “Today, a wrong was righted.”

“Unprecedented, historic vote,” U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield told VOA after the vote. “We suspended a permanent member of the Security Council off of the U.N. Human Rights Council. We sent a strong message of support to the Ukrainians. We sent a strong message about human rights.”

She said the suspension is effective immediately.

Russian dismissals

Russia has repeatedly dismissed accusations of abuses and atrocities, saying they are either “fake news” or the Ukrainian side committed them to make them look bad.

Following the vote, Russia’s deputy U.N. ambassador, Gennady Kuzmin, said Moscow had taken its own decision to end its membership in the Human Rights Council and did not want to remain with Western states whom he accused of carrying out or abetting human rights abuses of their own.

“The sincere commitment of Russia to promoting and protecting of human rights does not make it possible for us to remain a member of an international mechanism that has become an enabler of the will of the above-mentioned group of countries,” Kuzmin said.

“You do not submit your resignation after you are fired,” Ukraine’s envoy told reporters in discussing Russia’s withdrawal.

This is only the second time the General Assembly has suspended a Human Rights Council member. It last happened in March 2011, when Libya was undergoing a brutal crackdown by then-dictator Moammar Gadhafi in a bid to suppress Arab Spring protests. He was ousted from power and later killed. Libya’s membership was restored eight months after its suspension, after a new government was installed.

Authority to investigate

The Human Rights Council has the authority to set up commissions of inquiry, fact-finding missions and investigations into rights abuses and has done so in many countries, including Syria, Myanmar and North Korea.

Last month, the council decided to establish an independent international commission of inquiry to investigate alleged violations and abuses in the context of Russia’s war against Ukraine. Three human rights experts have been appointed to collect and preserve evidence and testimony for any future legal proceedings.

Some countries that either voted against suspending Russia or abstained said they believed the move was premature and prejudges the outcomes of the commission of inquiry.

China, which had abstained in earlier assembly votes condemning Russia’s invasion and on the humanitarian consequences of the war, chose Thursday to side with Moscow and voted against the resolution.

“Such a hasty move at the General Assembly, which forces countries to choose sides, will aggravate the division among member states and intensify the contradictions between the parties concerned,” Ambassador Zhang Jun said. “It is like adding fuel to the fire, which is not conducive to the de-escalation of conflicts, and even less so to advancing the peace talks.”

Reluctance on suspension

Even some countries that have been vocal in condemning the war were not comfortable suspending Russia from the Human Rights Council, such as Mexico, which abstained.

“Yes, there is a commission of inquiry. We want to see the result of that commission of inquiry, but do we have to sit and continue to watch the carnage, watch the horror of Bucha happen over and over again, while Russia is sitting on the Human Rights Council?” Thomas-Greenfield told VOA.

Since its creation in 2006, the Human Rights Council has come in for frequent criticism because of the abhorrent rights records of some of its members. Currently, China, Eritrea, Pakistan and Venezuela are among its members.

The council has also been criticized for its focus on Israel. In 2018, the Trump administration left the body, calling it a “cesspool of political bias.” The Biden administration returned last year. Blinken said at the time that when the council works well, it shines a spotlight on countries with the worst human rights records.

Source: Voice of America

Press Statement: Eritrea’s Progress in Promoting and Protecting the Rights and Welfare of the Child Evaluated by the ACERWC

Eritrea’s Progress in Promoting and Protecting the Rights and Welfare of the Child Evaluated by the ACERWC

Eritrea’s national report on the implementation of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (ACRWC), covering the period 2014-2019, was presented to and discussed with the African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child (ACERWC), on 23rd of March 2022, at the 39th session of the Committee being held virtually.

It is to be noted that Eritrea signed and ratified the ACRWC in 2000, and in 2016 presented to the Committee its initial report on the implementation of the Charter, covering the period from 2000-2013.

The latest report was presented to the ACRWC by a high-level Eritrean delegation led by H.E. Ms. Luul Gebreab, Minister of Labour and Social Welfare, and composed of officials and experts from several Ministries including Labour and Social Welfare, Education, Foreign Affairs, Health, Justice, as well as the National Union of Eritrean Women (NUEW) and the Embassy of the State of Eritrea in Ethiopia and Permanent Mission to AU and UNECA.

The report underscored that despite the challenges the country is facing, Eritrea continues to make significant progress in all areas that pertain to the rights and welfare of the Child, and consequently fulfilling its commitments under the ACRWC and UN Convention of the Rights of the Child (CRC) and other relevant instruments.

The national report states that in the law and justice sector, the National Charter of Eritrea adopted in 1994 envisaged to ensure the rights of children and provide them with appropriate upbringing and care, that would make them active and responsible adult citizens. Eritrea’s national laws, which inter alia includes the Civil Code of Eritrea, Penal Code of Eritrea, and the Penal and Civil Procedure Codes of Eritrea as well as the Labour Proclamation No.118/2001, provide the legal basis for the protection of the rights of children.

The ‘minimum age of work’ and ‘the best interest of the child’ have been clearly stipulated as guiding principles in the Civil Code of Eritrea. In conformity with the ACRWC requirements, and other instruments to which Eritrea is a party, the principle of non-discrimination is firmly incorporated in the Eritrean legal system.

The report states that the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare in coordination with other government institutions, regional administrations, and civil society organizations developed a comprehensive national policy on children in 2016.

Moreover, the report gave an overview on Eritrea’s achievements in key social sectors. In the Education sector, the national policy promoted and upholds the right of every child to education. Free access is provided from the primary to the tertiary level. Taking into consideration the fledgling national economy this is a massive investment by the government. The number of schools in the country rose from 132 in 1991 to 1987 in 2017, of which 80% were in rural areas. The number of students more than tripled, from 200,000 to around 700,000; and at a tertiary level from 1200 to 14,000. The adult literacy rate rose from 20% to 80%.

In the health sector, the national health policy of 2020 and the national health sector strategic development plan (2017-2021), prioritize family and community health care services in all health facilities. The availability of health care facilities within a radius of 10 km increased from 46% in 1991 to 80% in 2019. As a result, maternal mortality rate dropped from 998/100,000 in 1995 to 185/100,000 in 2019; under-five child mortality dropped from 153/1000 in 1990 to 136/1000 in 1995 to 63/1000 in 2010 to 30/1000 in 2019; communicable diseases – malaria and tuberculosis are almost controlled and HIV prevalence dropped to 0.63%. Thanks to these and the progress made in other social sectors, life expectancy jumped from 48 in 1991 to 66 years (male/female) in 2018.

The report also indicates that access to adequate and safe drinking water jumped from 30% to 80% of households. Access to electricity reached 43.5%. Vegetation coverage of the landmass rose from 1% to 13%.

In its effort to ensure gender equality, the Eritrean Government developed a Five-Year Gender Action Plan which covered 2015-2019. The Action Plan aims at ensuring women’s empowerment and gender mainstreaming in all development programs.

Although the government and people of Eritrea recognize the magnitude of the progress achieved thus far, they are not relenting their efforts in further strengthening Child rights and welfare as well as achieving other development objectives. It is from this conviction that in 2019, Eritrea declared 11 strategy and policy areas to further embark on sustainable development. In a nutshell, this strategy focuses on the “maximum utilization of available resources by a rigorous review of fundamental programs that will buttress tangible economic growth through higher productivity and increased output.”

After the presentation of the report, members of the Committee raised questions and sought clarifications. The Eritrean delegation provided detailed, comprehensive, sector-by-sector responses.

The exchange was concluded on a positive note with the Committee commending the significance Eritrea accords to the rights and welfare of the child as well as its constant engagement with the ACERWC in fulfilling its reporting obligations. The Eritrean Delegation also expressed its gratitude to the Committee for constructively engaging in the consideration of the report. The Delegation reiterated Eritrea’s resolve to forge ahead in promoting and protecting the rights and welfare of the Child, despite the various challenges it is facing, including the imposition of unjust and illegal unilateral sanctions on it by the US and the EU.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

ModernDemocracy.com: Africa’s Position on Russia-Ukraine Crisis at UN: Significance and Implications

As oftentimes said, Russia and Africa have traditional and cordial relations. Both have common understanding and position on global questions at international platforms, especially at the United Nations. At the UN General Assembly in March 2022, Africans were sharply divided with their votes, since then have divergent views and worse, afraid of contradictions and confrontations posed by the Russia-Ukraine crisis and effects on future diplomatic relations.

Within the confines of international law, political independence, the national sovereignty, territorial integrity are the most important for Ukraine. The circumstances demand settling their international disputes by peaceful means in such a manner that international peace and security, and justice are not endangered has been profoundly undermined.

Since his appointment, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has repeatedly stressed in all his speeches and with almost all African delegations the traditional and friendly relationship between Russia and African countries. He adores mentioning that the time-tested relationship characterized by a high level of mutual trust and more democratic polycentric world order, and that Russia and Africa closely cooperate on significant questions at the United Nations.

Russia and Africa want all UN members to rely on the need for dialogue and respect for the right of nations to decide their destinies independently, as well as a search for reliable consensus solutions in settling conflicts and overcoming crises.

Recalling from Sochi summit, the joint political declaration concretely reflects the principles coordinated by the two sides, the most important are:

• –. respect for international law and the UN Charter,

• –. the movement towards peace and security through the creation of more equal and fair international relations

• –. and a world order based on the principles of multilateralism, respect for national sovereignty, non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries

• –. and the peaceful settlement of crises, as well as the protection of national identity and civilisational and cultural pluralism.

In a statement released (official AU statement issued February 28) by the AU Commission in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The current Chair of the African Union and President of the Republic of Senegal, Macky Sall, and the Chairperson of the African Union Commission, Moussa Faki Mahamat, noted closely seriousness of the dangerous developments in Ukraine.

They called on the Russian Federation and any other regional or international actor to imperatively respect international law, the territorial integrity and national sovereignty of Ukraine. The statement unreservedly urged “the two parties to establish an immediate ceasefire and to open political negotiations without delay, under the auspices of the United Nations, in order to preserve the world from the consequences of planetary conflict, and in the interests of peace and stability in international relations in service of all the peoples of the world.”

The UN General Assembly overwhelmingly adopted a resolution that “demands” Russia “immediately” withdraw from Ukraine, in a powerful rebuke of Moscow’s invasion by a vast majority of the world’s nations. After more than two days of extraordinary debate, which saw the Ukrainian ambassador accuse Russia of genocide, 141 out of 193 member states voted for the non-binding resolution.

China was among the 35 countries which abstained, while just five — Eritrea, North Korea, Syria, Belarus and of course Russia — voted against it. The resolution “deplores” the invasion of Ukraine “in the strongest terms” and condemns President Vladimir Putin’s decision to put his nuclear forces on alert.

As already known, both were together part of the Soviet Union but became independent republics in 1991. Under the directorship of Russian President Vladimir Putin, and approved by the both Federation Council and the State Duma, Russian establishment made the decision to hold a “special military operation” largely aims at demilitarization and denazification of Ukraine.

Arguably, African representatives and their votes was considered very interesting. Some 17 African countries abstained from the vote at the UN General Assembly to deplore the Russian invasion of Ukraine while some other 28 countries in the continent voted in favour. Among those abstaining from vote were South Africa, Algeria, Uganda, Burundi, Senegal, South Sudan, Mali and Mozambique. Others were Sudan, Namibia, Angola, Zimbabwe, Equatorial Guinea, Central Africa Republic, Madagascar, Tanzania and Congo.

Eritrea was the only African country that voted against the resolution. Besides that however, Egypt, Tunisia, Nigeria, Kenya, Chad, Ghana, Gambia, Gabon, Rwanda, Cote d’Ivoire, Libya, Liberia, Djibouti, Mauritania, Somalia, Niger, Benin, Lesotho, Botswana, Zambia, Malawi, Mauritius, Comoros, Seychelles ,Cape Verde, Sao Tome and Principe, Sierra Leone and the Democratic Republic of Congo, among others, voted against Russia.

Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Guinea Bissau, Ethiopia, Eswatini were not in the room. Uganda said it abstained from the vote to uphold “neutrality” as the incoming chair of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM). NAM is a forum made up of 120 developing countries to assert their independence from the competing claims of the two superpowers.

A quick study vividly shows that Africa has three distinctive groups: those voted for, those voted against and those that completely abstained. South Africa’s Foreign Ministry slightly backtracked with a statement explaining their abstention, saying the UN resolution does not “create an environment conducive for diplomacy.”

“You’ll recall that South Africa abstained the last time, too, in 2014, when Russia annexed Crimea, it supports Russia as one of the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa) emerging countries group,” Aanu Adeoye, a Russia-Eurasia program fellow at the Mo Ibrahim foundation in London told Radio France International (RFI).

“If South Africa felt so strongly about the failures of the resolution as it was written, it should have voted against. And South Africa … as well as five other liberation movements in southern Africa, have historical ties with the former Soviet Union,” he tells RFI. “All six abstained in the vote.”

Writing in the Nigerian Premium Times, Lawyer Chidi Anselm Odinkalu describes the breakdown of the African vote as naturally set tongues wagging about Africa’s position in this Russia-Ukraine crisis. Governments in many of the African countries that abstained have been severely criticized by their citizens for doing so. Surprisingly, much of this criticism takes place without any clear articulation of how the conflict impacts Africa. That, surely, should be where the conversation should begin.

Addressing the Security Council on the same conflict, Kenya’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Martin Kimani, took the philosophical path in an impressive takedown of colonialism and its aftermath in Africa but failed to say much else to define an African interest in the conflict.

According to his newspaper article, Macky Sall and Moussa Faki Mahamat failed, however, to take anything further beyond their official statement that only petered out into a whimper, merely urging “all countries to respect international law and show the same empathy and support to all people fleeing war notwithstanding their racial identity.” They could not even utter a minimal offer of assistance or strong advocacy to alleviate the crime of racist exceptionalism, which has emerged as a dimension to the war specifically targeting Africans and persons of African descent.

With increasing global isolation, many African countries continue watching almost completely the military crises contradictions and confrontations between Russia and Ukraine, the multifaceted implications and global reactions. United States and Canada, the European Union bloc, Australia and New Zealand and a number of Asian countries imposed stiff sanctions. In addition, Russia’s status is being revoked in many prestigious international organizations.

Many Western companies are suspending their business operations. United States and European Union bloc are taking systematic and well-thought-out measures to destabilize the economy of Russia. On the other hand, United Russia – the largest political party in Russia, which supports President Putin’s policies – has proposed to nationalization of the enterprises of those Western companies that refused to operate in the Russian Federation.

As the situation turns scary, Russia has been adopting serious measures, trying to perform a delicate balancing act between saving its economy from collapse and achieving the chosen goal in Ukraine. Putin has also spoken with many world leaders including a few from Africa. Putin had a telephone conversation with President of the Republic of South Africa Cyril Ramaphosa at the South African side’s initiative.

The March 10 conversation coincided with the three-decade-old establishment of post-Soviet diplomatic relations.

Both presidents briefly reviewed diplomatic relations between Russia and South Africa and reaffirmed their commitment to further develop the bilateral strategic partnership, noting, in particular, their readiness to expand trade, economic and humanitarian cooperation. He also informed the South African leader about the situation regarding talks with representatives of the Ukrainian authorities. The President of South Africa supported the ongoing political and diplomatic efforts. Vladimir Putin and Cyril Ramaphosa agreed to continue their contacts.

In a similar conversation, President of the Arab Republic of Egypt Abdel Fattah el-Sisi urged for adoption of peaceful and dialogue in resolving the crisis after Putin informed him about the main aspects of the special military operation and its current consequences.

As the current Chair of the African Union and President of the Republic of Senegal, Macky Sall, and the Russian leader reaffirmed that it was important to consistently implement the agreements reached at the first Russia-Africa Summit in Sochi in 2019 and further develop diverse ties between Russia and Africa.

Earlier, the African Union called on Russia and “any other regional or international actor to imperatively respect international law, territorial integrity and national sovereignty of Ukraine” and further urged Russia and Ukraine for an immediate ceasefire and the opening of negotiations with the help of the UN. Senegal, among some African countries, which has strong relations with Western countries. It abstained in a UN General Assembly vote on Russia against Ukraine.

In a research report, Priyal Singh, Researcher and Gustavo de Carvalho, Senior Researcher at the Peace Operations and Peacebuilding, Institute of Security Studies in Pretoria, South Africa wrote recently that over the past two decades, Russia has aimed to re-establish itself as a world power. A key way to achieve this has been through its permanent membership on the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). But Russia’s posturing on several international conflicts has increasingly divided the UNSC, causing a degree of paralysis that hasn’t occurred since the Cold War.

At the same time, the researchers noted sharp division among Africans and, certain African members becoming more aligned to Russia’s positions on the council, while other are not. In order to understand these dynamics, a recent study commissioned by the South African Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA) and the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) examined voting patterns. The researchers noted that African countries on the UNSC have increasingly relied on collective positions among themselves and those aligned to the African Union (AU).

In conclusion, African policy researchers and politicians interviewed for this article called on all African leaders and governments have to demand for peaceful mechanism and resolution of the crisis within the norms of the international law, as well as emphasizing the need for their strict compliance by both Russia and Ukraine.

Further noting that Russia and Africa almost have convergence or similarity of approaches to many global and regional issues, and therefore Russia has to, at least, adopt the position to renounce the existing crisis, not necessarily by special military operation. But African leaders and governments together with the African Union have to move more decisively, step up and commit to working together in a spirit of cooperation voice for peaceful settlement to save human lives and ensure global economic stability rather than embarking on military operation.

Discussions and several interviews with most of the researchers and politicians have firm hopes that African leaders continue their contributions toward achieving and preservation of peace and security, and toward building a more just and equitable system of relations based on the principles of respect for sovereignty, territorial integrity, non-interference in internal affairs of individual countries. The African researchers and politicians finally appreciated efforts directed at building on the existing friendly relations between Russia and Africa.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Eritrean Woman’s Story is all about the love of her Country

Two days ago I was listening to a song by a famous Eritrean female singer, Abeba Haile. The song’s title is ‘eritrawit’ (the Eritrean woman) and my four-year-old daughter asked me about the meaning of the song. I just looked at her thinking about where to start and asked myself who ‘eritrawit’ is. I tried my best to make my daughter understand but I couldn’t reach an endpoint. It is really important to remember all the history that Eritrean women went through during the colonial period, the armed struggle and the 30 post-independence years.

Eritrean women stood up against colonizers, got armed and wiped out tyrants. They made a lot of sacrifices. They tolerated hunger, thirst and harsh weather, and climbed mountains wearing a pair of plastic sandals. They ensured their equality by doing their part along with their male comrades. Eritrean women gave their precious lives for their rights and liberty. They said ‘no laying down of arms’ to both the irrational gender bias in the society and to the external oppressors.

Eritrean fighters were not only warriors on battlefields but also leaders, mothers, mentors and lovers. They carried out every mission given by the EPLF with great passion and diligence. They break the burdens of Eritreans imposed by colonizers. In his book, ‘The tenacity and resilience of Eritrea,’ Tekeste Fikadu gave a broad account of the hardships Eritrean female fighters faced during the war, including challenges associated with their reproductive cycle and the very pervasive gender bias.

A friend of my mom’s, who is a veteran fighter, once told me that there were mothers who fought along with their daughters. Eritrean mothers gave both their lives and the lives of their offspring. Some mothers have four to five martyrs and some gave their only offspring because the existence of the nation takes precedence over their own lives.

Eritrean women in Diaspora did a good job in mobilizing Eritrean communities and funding the armed struggle. They gave whatever they had in their pocket, including their jewelry. Their contribution was so much that it is really difficult to imagine Eritrea’s independence without their sacrifices.

Eritrean women fighters made up 30% of the EPLF’s fighting force. This level of participation of female fighters was a stepping stone toward ensuring the transformation of the role of women to social, economic, political and cultural development of the nation. In order to build on the achievements earned during the struggle for independence, the government of Eritrea codified in the 1994 national charter the rights of women and their equal participation in nation-building.

The heroism of the freedom fighters has been passed down to the new generation, ‘warsay,’ who have made extraordinary sacrifices in the war of aggression waged by the TPLF. They have accomplished their duty in preserving Eritrea’s sovereignty. In the book ‘kaleay gedli nmklikal hager,’ the writers illustrate their bravery by saying “female fighters annihilated the invaders who came to erase the Eritrean identity and liberty. The enemy was left exposed to the bullet of ‘Eritrawit.’” They dealt with the adverse conditions of the battlefields and successfully defended the nation. They did this not for money or fame, but for the love of their nation.

The National Union of Eritrean Women (NUEW), which was born and flourished during the armed struggle, engages in empowering women to preserve their history and liberty and works for the equality of women. It also works to eradicate harmful cultural practices such as early marriage and Female Genital Mutilation and conducts campaigns all over the country to achieve its mission.

In the past twenty years many women have participated in national development programs such as the building of infrastructure, farming, industrial activities and the national service. Eritrean women all over the country are doing their part for national development. This is their promise to build their nation from the devastation of war and sanctions of the West.

The story of Eritrean women will continue as the story of love of the land. It is this history that makes me proud to be an Eritrean woman.

It is apt to close with a quotation from Dr. Tekeste’s book. He wrote: ‘’To the Eritrean female fighters for their unique history which deserves world respect in the historic war of independence; they fought heroically and with extraordinary determination, steadfastness and perseverance in the pursuit of liberty on an equal footing with their male counterparts; and to all the martyred female fighters for whom present and future generations bear the torch of integrity embodied by their lives!

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Empowering Women: Building Resilient Nation

Ensuring the economic emancipation of women is a basic human right. Women’s unwavering determination to bring about multifaceted transformation as mothers, girls and citizens has enabled them to have a say in all work areas. Eritrean women who have fought for the country’s independence and to safeguard the national sovereignty have continued to play a due role in the nation-building process. Their participation in all sectors has enabled them to become breadwinners and supportive to their society. Eritrea’s policy on women’s rights is crystal clear: women and men have equal rights as citizens of the country. Gender equality has been a focal point of all policies that have been enacted in the country.

Women’s enrollment in schools, including colleges, has been the main driving force for their participation in all development sectors. The more women go to colleges, the more their input in the socio-economic transformation that has been going on and will go on in the country.

Women in villages are being provided with the necessary support to enable them to become economically self-reliant. They are given technical assistance and input such as chickens to start small-scale farms such as poultry. In collaboration with the Ministry of Agriculture and the Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare (MLSW), the National Union of Eritrean Women (NUEW) provided over 300 beehives to women farmers. In 2020, over 200 women were given training in weaving in Anseba, Central, Southern and Gash- Barka regions. Training of trainers in designing was also organized in 2021 to build the capacity of weavers.

Around 80 artisan women who work with beads were also trained in the techniques of making beautiful ornaments while 43 female members, who fulfilled their national service duties and have been exempted, have been trained to drive for the 2nd, 3rd and 4th-grade driving licenses. All 43 are now working as drivers, 20 work for the National Aviation Authority and the rest for Harat Transportation Company.

Over 47 million Nakfa has been disbursed as part of the micro-credit scheme for women to support them engage in the fields of their interest. The training and supportive measures have transformed women’s living standards and created a viable venue in upbringing and educating their children.

In 2021, over 9000 chicken were given to around 300 women farmers in various locations. The result has been so encouraging and such an intervention will be extended to other businesses as well.

Women have been organized at a community level in all villages to reinforce their participation in development activities. Their active participation in soil and water conservation activities has been a testimony to their commitment to protect the environment. There is no activity that women do not participate in. The major activities of women in environmental protection include the construction of terraces, the restoration of check dams, the construction of micro-dams and the planting of seedlings as part of the reforestation programs that have been carried out at a national level.

Around 250 women in Qnafina, a village in the Southern region, have become beneficiaries of solar energy while the women, on their part, actively participated in the renovation of roads and planting of seedlings.

The overall participation of women and their unwavering determination to implement development projects is impressive. Ms. Senait Mehari, head of Socio-Economic Services at the NUEW, said that women in the six regions of the country have implemented 32 of the planned 33 projects. Their contribution in the national greening campaign was applauded and awarded on 15 May, the National Greening Day. “Any project set out to be implemented by women has always been successful,” Ms. Senait said.

The distribution of improved energy-saving stoves has been transforming women’s livelihood. NUEW has been motivating women to extend their influence in their communities by participating in all communal activities. The expansion of energy-saving stoves in villages has been done with the support of the MoA and the Ministry of Land, Water and Environment, and the role of the NUEW has been to facilitate and follow-up the projects.

Training was given to selected women who play a key role in promoting the stoves in their villages. They call the energy-saving stove ‘Adhanet’ (savior) for it has protected them from the hazardous effects of smoke and consumption of firewood. There have been major achievements in the distribution and promotion of energy-saving stoves at household levels in Central and Southern regions. The NUEW has been working to introduce portable Adhanet particularly in the lowlands.

The NUEW has also been actively engaged in supporting efforts that aim at women’s healthcare. The fight against malaria, Female Genital Mutilation, underage marriage and other healthcare issues have been reinforced to be able to fight against any unforeseen negative impacts that may erupt with the outbreak of COVID-19.

One in 10 women in the villages is given training in healthcare to provide basic healthcare services to mothers who have newly born children and children under five years of age. The intervention is done by three parties — NUEW, the Ministry of Health and the MLSW, who have prepared a strategic action plan and conducted studies on mother and child health.

The NUEW encourages female students to be competitive in their academic careers. It provides educational materials and make-up classes and gives awards to outstanding students to mark March 8 –International Women’s Day.

Eritrean women have been empowering themselves with the support of the NUEW and other stakeholders and playing roles in building the nation. United they overcome challenges and united they are always ready to make a difference.

This year’s International Women’s Day will be commemorated under the theme “Principled Belief for Timely Imperative.” Events associated with the commemoration of March 8 will be held in all regions of the country and involve blood donation, visiting hospitals and supporting patients, staging dramas that highlight women’s role in all socio-economic activities and women’s role in the struggle for independence, and seminars, highlights of opportunities aimed at empowering women and the wider training opportunities women will have with the opening of vocational training centers for women in all regions of the country.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Saudi court orders compensation for Eritrean passenger prevented from boarding a flight

RIYADH — A Saudi court did justice to an Eritrean resident passenger by obliging an airline to pay him SR11,000 as compensation for the damage caused to him due to the airline’s refusal to board him on a flight to Spain and then to Mexico.

The Appeals Court has upheld the verdict issued by the Jeddah Administrative Court. Walid Mahmoud, the Eritrean national, who confirmed receipt of the amount of compensation, thanked the Saudi judiciary, stating that the verdict reposed his faith in the judiciary that everyone is equal in front of the law of the land.

According to the judgment, a copy of which was obtained by Okaz/Saudi Gazette, Walid had stated in the lawsuit that his flight was scheduled to depart from Jeddah to Madrid airport and then to Cancun airport in Mexico, the final destination. But the airline prevented him from boarding the flight on the pretext that he did not have a transit visa to Spain.

There is no prerequisite of transit visa for landing in Spain, he pointed out while quoting the guidelines published in the website of the International Air Transport Association (IATA) and the website of the airline that completed the booking procedures for him.

In the lawsuit, the plaintiff also noted that he had a valid Japanese visa under which there is no need for the issuance of a transit visa, and the denial of travel incurred him financial losses.

Walid indicated that he had lodged a complaint with the Customer Protection Department, the General Authority of Civil Aviation and the air carrier and that the value of the financial losses he suffered amounted to SR11,000 in terms of airfares from Jeddah to Spain and Mexico, as well as losses caused by the cancelation of return tickets to Korea.

The representative of the airline responded to the lawsuit by pleading that the passenger did not have a valid travel visa to Spain or Mexico and thus the airlines prevented him from boarding due to violation of the conditions for travel stipulated in the air transport contract.

The representative also noted that the decision was taken after coordinating with the Federal Customs Authority, represented by the Swiss Border Guard Office in Dubai, saying that the office advised, after reviewing the passenger’s file, that he should not be allowed to board the flight on the ground of the suspicion of illegal immigration and the request for political asylum.

The plaintiff rejected these claims as baseless, saying that he is a resident with valid documents and stable employment in the Kingdom. Walid also submitted a memorandum in which he confirmed that he had a valid exit and re-entry visa issued by Saudi Passports Directorate and the approval of vacation by the employer.

The court ruled that the airline committed an error by refusing to transport the plaintiff, as he holds a valid visa from Japan that entitles him to enter Mexico via Spain without the need to issue a visa. The court considered the opinion of the Federal Customs Administration merely as an advisory.

Walid told Okaz/Saudi Gazette that the verdict showed the fairness of the Saudi judiciary, which does not differentiate between young or old or citizen or resident, and that everyone is equal before the court.

“Some close people to me mocked me when I decided to file a lawsuit, and doubted whether I could receive a favorable judgment or compensation against a large Saudi firm,” he said, while adding that the verdict proved his firm conviction that the truth would triumph and justice would be done.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

EheElephant.Info: The Sands of the Ogaden Are Blowing Across East Africa.

Even in a season of bad years, it is a particularly very bad year for the Horn of Africa. War and hunger tearing at Somalia, revolutionary hope in Ethiopia turned into existential crisis, the coming end of Kenyatta’s reign over Kenya with a Kalenjin successor and ethnic tensions in the wings, and in Uganda, the recent suspicious death of an Archbishop amidst a military regime openly massacring the country’s citizens, bring the region to the very edge of catastrophe.

As always happens for the region, it all starts with failed rains, most likely somewhere between Ethiopia and Somalia, although because the way in which it works is complex, few pause to consider that stopping hunger deaths in the Ogaden could create a more stable East Africa. But the rains have failed for more than three years now, and in time, the impact will be felt as coups and massacres as far afield as Kampala and the Congolese border.

In the meantime, as superpower rivalry swoops in, a looming election cycle is setting unease. The elections come. They are stolen. Civil war breaks out in Uganda. In Kenya, tensions between Luo, Kikuyu and Kalenjin politicians push the country to the brink of civil war; in no time, there will be an attempted coup in Nairobi.

But for the more alert readers, if the above scenario sounds more like a description of 1977, rather than of 2022, then there is a good reason for it; it is 1977. There have been many turning points in our post-independence history, but if I were pressed hard to pick the one that unites us in our common fate, I would settle for 1977.

And then, I would back up a little to 1972. For this was the year in which a general, global drought hit East Africa in a serious way. An indictment of public media discourse in the region is the degree of ignorance it engenders not just in its audience, but also in its reporters and editors, and so it was not until 2012 that, travelling to Kaabong from Kotido in Karamoja, I first heard the words “Loreng Lega”, from a pastoralist-turned farmer, Faustino Odir. He was explaining why he, a Jie man, started farming, saying that his family fled Loreng Lega in Karamoja in 1973 and lived in Masindi in Western Uganda for 36 years.

When I inquired further, I was told that Loreng Lega means Red Jewels, in Ateker. At the time, before plastic and glass spread across the pastoralists’ lands as beads, women wore loops of iron wire as neckpieces and kept them fresh with cow butter. In 1973, the cows died. There was no butter. The neckpieces turned rusty and the ever-poetic Ateker found a name for the famine. I might have left it there but there were others. I was told of Lopiar and Loreng Arup, all describing famines — Lopiar in 1980 and Loreng Arup in 1986.

The 1972 famine — also named the Dimbleby Famine by the international media after the British journalist Jonathan Dimbleby who brought it to Western attention — caused what I came to see as the most important political event in all of Eastern Africa for 50 years. Without that event, it is arguable that Eritrea may never have split from Ethiopia, Somalia might still be stable, Museveni would not be president and the Rwanda genocide of 1994 would not have happened.

The fall of Emperor Haile Selassie undid settled but fragile political ties that had kept Somalia, north-eastern Uganda, northern Kenya, parts of South Sudan and all of Ethiopia manageably stable for centuries. The immense legitimacy that comes from a political system widely seen as both righteous and lawful is not a cheap one, and with the great 19th century opening of all the world’s corners to communication and commerce, Ethiopians learnt that the feudal system they had so naturally accepted was in fact a very bad system. Attempts at reforms did not go far enough, and the fact that by 1974 Ethiopia still had actual, rather than metaphoric peasants, who gave up a part of their harvest to the landlord, meant that the country was really asking for it.

The fall of Selassie, heart-rending and ruinous as it was, was a foregone conclusion, which is not to say the successor system was deserved nor that those who carried out the coup de grace to an ossified system were angels. The tragedy of Ethiopia has always been that the rules of political dialectics that describe a move to a better system, don’t usually apply.

We have been paying the price for Selassie’s fall ever since.

With the fall of Selassie, subject ethnic groups on the empire’s periphery began to question their status — questions unthinkable whilst Menelik’s progeny sat on the throne. For a measure of how recent this is, Somali writer Nurrudin Farrah once told me that he met the Emperor as a child when he came on a tour of the territories and was picked to read a poem to him.

The loss of Ethiopia’s sacerdotal myth (aspects of it still exist in what is described as Solomonite society in origin) combined with the ascendency of the Derg to convince the empire’s provinces that the time to leave had come. The most important departure was Eritrea. But in 1977, it looked as if Somalia might be the first.

“The tragedy of Ethiopia has always been that the rules of political dialectics that describe a move to a better system, don’t usually apply.”

The Ogaden war that broke out in July 1977 was a tragic event that should have been avoided, if only for the fact that it produced none of the intended goals. When Siad Barre launched his Greater Somalia wars, the irredentist suit for the unification of ethnic Somalia, he may not have foreseen an even greater shrinkage of Somalia. But it was an explicit threat to territorial Kenya as it was to Ethiopia, both countries more important to world powers than Somalia.

That Siad Barre chose to launch a revanchist campaign in the deep winter of the Cold War only ratcheted up the stakes. It ensured that his war was very quickly hijacked to become a USSR-USA affair. It is here that one of the most cynical manoeuvres of the Cold War era took place.

Since the 1930s, Imperial Ethiopia had aligned with capitalist powers after Haile Selassie petitioned the League of Nations to stop Italian aggression against what was then better known as Abyssinia. American patronage of Ethiopia continued even after the Derg was entrenched, but the openly Marxist Mengistu Haile Mariam could no longer be accommodated. Down in Mogadishu, Siad Barre was in bed with the Soviets. The march down to the Ogaden war happened with cold abject calculations. The Soviets helped Mogadishu draw up a battle plan against Ethiopia. The popular version of the story, as told to me by the late Kenyan cameraman, Mohinder Dhillon who covered the fighting, is that at the 11th hour, the Soviets, doubtless with the battle plans in their breast pockets, switched sides and supported the Ethiopians while the Americans fled Addis Ababa to take sides with Siad Barre. Beyond all belief, the Somalis marched into battle with the same Soviet battle plan. The result was a complete rout of Somali forces, the centre of battle converging at Jijiga. But there are more subtle ways in which it happened, which is beyond the scope of this piece.

“That Siad Barre chose to launch a revanchist campaign in the deep winter of the Cold War only ratcheted up the stakes.”

The result was that Mengistu got allies he was comfortable with, and the Americans, the port of Barbera and the Eastern Africa Indian Ocean. Which was cold comfort for both the USSR and the USA; scholarly journals make the argument that, by so openly going to war against the Soviets in Africa, Jimmy Carter and his national security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski, may have precipitated the end of the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty — the detente with the Soviet Union — meaning they threw away something bigger for a regional conflict.

It was a short war, lasting from June 1977 to May 1978. But it put an end to short regional wars for it put in the hands of non-state actors the means to wage guerrilla warfare. Before that, guns and ammunition had been the preserve of state actors. Both the Americans and the Soviets decanted ship and plane loads of arms into the conflict. They inaugurated a regional small arms market that is nigh impossible to shut down. And this is where the tragedy begins.

The first groups to acquire those guns were the pastoralists that straddle the Horn. The testing ground for the destructive power of guns easy to acquire, hide and maintain were the cattle rustlings which had for centuries been little more than sporting, manhood-proving raids. Supercharged with the AK47, they became lethal.

The Turkana had hitherto ruled the pastoralist roost, acquiring their first guns from Menelik in 1911, and lording it over the Samburu, Karamojong, Didinga, Tepeth, Pokot, Toposa, and Nyangatom. Now, all these groups had guns. The region’s descent into hell had begun; these gun trails were to feed Joseph Kony’s war, and all still feed conflicts in the region.

As it was, the timing could not have been worse. The pastoralists had not fully recovered from the famine of 1972, but the famine was not a singular factor. The fate of pastoralists is one that those living in the capital cities — who are nearly all from agricultural communities — don’t fully appreciate nor care about. What had happened was that colonialism had closed up lands and created administrative units corresponding to ethnicity, in effect, inventing tribes. This did not suit nomadic pastoralism, which not only required open lands, but also did not want national borders.

“The region’s descent into hell had begun; these gun trails were to feed Joseph Kony’s war, and all still feed conflicts in the region.”

The worst affected pastoralist groups were those of south-western Uganda and Rwanda, who suddenly found themselves stateless for their forage lands were split between Uganda, Rwanda, Tanzania and Congo.

Deep into independence in 1977, pastoralists started to realise that the post-colonial state had left them out and would continue to leave them out. The race to pick up guns was a belated reaction to the knowledge that unless they fought, their way of life was doomed.

The death of animals and humans from the 1972 famine broke pastoralism. But now, unbeknownst to all, an even bigger event — Lopiar — was coming in 1980 to effectively bury it. Before that, another fateful event occurred. The fall of Idi Amin in 1979 left tens of thousands of guns floating in Uganda. Just think of what it means that, when the Ugandan army under Amin fled in 1979, all of Uganda government’s guns fell into private hands. A lot of the suddenly unemployed Ugandan soldiers found that the Ogaden war had already created a market for the guns in their hands. In Moroto, the story is still told of how people carried guns like so many bunches of firewood on their heads.

Hence, when 1980 came, pastoralists were armed to the teeth. The famine of that year is hard to outdo. It is estimated that up 21 per cent of pastoralist lives were lost in that year, first to the drought and the loss of animals, but the bulk of it to the cholera outbreak that followed. They called it Lopiar, The Sweep, in Ateker languages. (On a minor note, this was the event that gave birth to Kakuma Camp, for the relief agencies that arrived found the Turkana assembled in this high, cooler and moist valley. Henceforth, arriving refugees from Somalia, Sudan and Uganda would go there, because it was a feeding centre.)

But the biggest impact was still in the future. In Uganda, 1980 is thought of narrowly as the year that Museveni launched a bush war in response to a lost election. What is rarely thought of is that Museveni, himself a pastoralist, was merely doing what pastoralists all over The Horn of Africa were doing. He was playing the part of kraal boss, and like all kraal bosses, he was leading a group of young pastoralists to fight to keep their way of life viable, for it falls upon young men in pastoralist societies to go out and fight for animals when the herd is either dead or rustled. This time, they were going to rustle the entire Uganda.

Museveni not only led Ugandan pastoralists to battle, but combined those with pastoralist refugees from Rwanda as well. The mass of guns floating all over the region found eager takers.

Overall, the decision could not have been worse. The gun turned against pastoralists, and for the next two decades, hundreds of thousands would perish in ensuing conflicts. The shadow of the Rwanda genocide of 1994 obscures the fact that the 1990s was the worst decade for pastoralism. The drawing up of colonial borders had kettled in nomadic lifestyles. The attack on Rwanda in 1990 by Paul Kagame and the late Fred Rwigyema was not too different from the Somali attack on Ethiopia in 1977; the aim was the same, to pry loose the 1884 Berlin conference borders and let the herds roam free. It was not too different from the armed gunfights by the Turkana, Pokot, and Karamojong against the Kenyan and Ugandan armies. The Toposa of Southern Sudan were caught in a much more complex battle, for they were caught between the Khartoum forces and the SPLA, who both supplied them with guns, and although they were better off with the SPLA, whom they chose in the end, they were still part of the “Karamoja” cluster, their fate still impacted by the fall of Emperor Haile Selassie.

“The shadow of the Rwanda genocide of 1994 obscures the fact that the 1990s was the worst decade for pastoralism.”

Grimly, the killings in Rwanda in 1994 were not too distant in form from the gun deaths that happened with such casual repetitiveness between Ugandan, Kenyan, Ethiopian and Sudanese pastoralists at the same time that they were rarely reported. But hundreds of thousands perished in the decades between 1977 and 2006.

The one pastoralist struggle that made good was the ascension of Museveni to power. He has said it many times — and makes propaganda use of herding his animals for the cameras — but what perhaps explains the seeming paradox of his reformist rhetoric which clashes with his dictatorial practice, is that he was driven to pick the liberation lingua of his time to gain support beyond his clannist instinct, whilst fighting for something closer to his heart. If Museveni does not seem that presidential, it is because his psychological make-up is that of a kraal leader. You have to meet many of them throughout the pastoralist lands in the north to meet his kind: tyrannical, brash, hard-driving, imperative, brooking no argument, but above all uber-clannist. The massive land grabs in the latter days of his presidency have a central pattern — to benefit pastoralists as unreported conflicts in many, many parts Uganda between farmers and pastoralists protected by the army attest. The colonial and postcolonial abuse of pastoralists made its mark. They are called “backward”, which is derogatory, considering that pastoralists today remain the true custodians of African cultures abandoned by agricultural communities, and that many in agricultural communities are only a generation removed from pastoralism. But conflict is conflict, and Museveni used to state that he would not leave power while his people remained backward. He has since turned every government institution into an ethnically monolithic stronghold.

“If Museveni does not seem that presidential, it is because his psychological make-up is that of a kraal leader.”

The biggest coming conflict of Museveni’s life, and one which will survive him for the coming decades, will be a rebalancing of the power stakes between pastoralists and agrarians, for in the long term, agriculture always wins, even if by absorbing pastoralists. This means that this coming conflict will once more pit Museveni’s pastoralists against the agricultural communities of southern and south-western Uganda. The break with Buganda and Busoga, hitherto Museveni’s biggest supporters, is only the opening salvo of this coming conflict. Bobi Wine may be the spearhead of this struggle, but it will outlive him and reshape Uganda for generations to come.

It is Museveni’s terrible, bad luck that Cold War II is returning when his government has lost all legitimacy, meaning that in the event of another armed rebellion, he will no longer be the good guy. He lost that tag forever when he ordered his goons to shoot to death dozens on 18 November 2020. Even worse, he is now the de facto Haile Selassie of Eastern Africa, meddling in Congo, Rwanda, Sudan, Kenya and Somalia. By positioning his son to succeed him, and now openly saying that Ugandan public offices will be ring-fenced to those with money (effectively his bush war pastoralist compadres), he is creating a feudal monarchy out of Uganda, like Ethiopia in reverse. He is making Selassie’s mistakes. But he is also giving a bad name to pastoralists who are otherwise noble people.

That is because, as in 1977, the factors to turn conflicting interests into ruinous warfare are in place, almost comically so in how much the players of 1977 are back in place. In Kenya, another Kenyatta is about to exit office. His vice president happens to be a Kalenjin. In the wings, vying for succession, is another Odinga. You cannot make this stuff up. But unlike 1977, and unlike Moi, Ruto is Museveni’s protégé. The ethnic configurations of Kenya are such that should Ruto become president, he will find himself forced to govern like Moi, albeit a Moi who can count on another Idi Amin in Uganda as his ally. This will mean that the coming political instability in Uganda will also become political instability in Kenya. Ruto is opening the gates for Uganda’s political incompetence to be imported into Kenya. We just hope that among his intimate exchanges with Museveni, military rule in Kenya did not crop up.

Like in 1977, Ethiopia is at war. It might be a matter of time before dreams of Greater Somalia are revived, as Mogadishu once more watches Addis Ababa’s discomfiture. Somalia’s options are not that many. After all, the state disintegrated after Siad Barre was beaten on the plains of the Ogaden. It is a matter of time before someone in Mogadishu sees a foreign military adventure as a way to unite the country’s clans. Should this happen, the Ogaden could well be the playing field. But this will not be too much news to Kenya whose biggest threats have so far come from Somalis.

Almost beyond belief, Russia, in the place of the Soviet Union, could very well join China and the USA in messing up the politics of the region, which mess is already in high gear. In 2022, there could well be more AK47s poured in, but there might be other weapons as well.

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online