Eritrean community festival in Switzerland

Eritrean community festival in Switzerland was conducted with patriotic zeal on 23 July in Sion in the presence of regional Governors and a number of nationals.

The festival that featured various programs was officially opened by Ms. Asmeret Abraha, Governor of the Northern Red Sea Region.

The chairman of the festival coordinating committee, Mr. Berhane Teklu said that it is a big victory to observe Eritrean festivals being adopted as big national festive in various countries.

Indicating the significance of festivals in the conservation and transferring national values as well as in strengthening unity and national identity, Mr. Adm Osman, Charge d’Affairs at the Eritrean Embassy, said that the big number of participants has added color to this year’s festival.

Ms. Asmeret Abraha also gave extensive briefing on the objective situation in the homeland, future programs as well as regional developments.

The festival was highlighted by sports competitions, cultural and artistic performances and other programs.

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Experts Say Russia Turns to Sanctioned North Korea to Break Rules

WASHINGTON — Russian and North Korea, both beset by punishing economic sanctions, appear to be looking for ways to help one another while thumbing their noses at the rules-based order espoused by the wider international community, experts say.

Five months after invading Ukraine, Russia is being hit by successive rounds of sanctions by the U.S. and its partners.

The latest came Tuesday when the U.K. announced new sanctions on Russian officials. Weeks earlier, on June 28, the U.S. targeted 70 entities, many of them in Russia’s defense industry.

The European Union issued a sixth rounds of sanctions that included Russia’s central bank, top officials and oil exports, and on July 17 proposed a seventh sanctions package that will impact Russian gold and an expanded list of dual-use goods and technology.

Sanctions violations

Short of allies, Moscow has begun casting about for new economic relationships.

Russian Ambassador to North Korea Alexander Matsegora said in an interview with the Russian daily newspaper Izvestia on July 19 that Moscow could hire North Korean workers to rebuild Ukraine’s war-ruined Donbas region, now largely under Russian control. Pyongyang showed interest in importing goods manufactured in the region, according to The Moscow Times.

“It just shows the degree to which [Russian President Vladimir] Putin remains isolated. Now he’s got to turn to North Korea,” remarked John Kirby, The White House’s National Security Council coordinator for strategic communications, that same day.

VOA’s Korean Service contacted the Russian Embassy in Washington and Foreign Ministry in Moscow requesting comment on Matsegora’s remarks but did not receive a reply. The service also contacted the North Korean Mission to the U.N. requesting confirmation of Matsegora’s remarks but did not receive a reply.

The U.N. Security Council, of which Russia is a permanent member, passed a resolution in December 2017 banning member states from hiring North Korean workers in response to Pyongyang’s launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile the month before.

Eager for foreign currency, Pyongyang had long dispatched North Korean workers to Russia to make money to send home. The U.S. estimated 30,000 North Korean workers were in Russia before the U.N. issued sanctions. Many remained in Russia and worked using student or travel visas. In a report submitted to the U.N. March 2020, Russia acknowledged that 511 North Koreans remained in the country.

“Moscow has violated the North Korea sanctions ever since the moment that Russia voted for them,” said Anthony Ruggiero, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. But Matsegora’s remarks indicate an outright willingness to “blatantly advocate for such a violation,” according to Bruce Klingner, a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation.

Sergey Radchenko, a Cold War historian at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, said, “Now that Russia itself is under sanctions, it obviously has no reason to abide by any restrictions.”

Renewed cooperation

Experts see mutual benefits in the growing cooperation between Russia and North Korea, both of which are willing to break rules and flout norms established by the U.S. and like-minded countries.

Patricia Kim, a fellow focusing on East Asia at the Washington-based Brookings Institution, said, “The two states see clear parallels in their respective situations and share a common cause in opposing sanctions and the U.S.-led ‘Western order.'”

She continued, “It is quite likely we’ll see the deepening of diplomatic, economic and perhaps even military ties between North Korea and Russia in the coming months as both states face global isolation.”

Harry Kazianis, president of the Rogue States Project which bills itself as a bipartisan national security think tank, said cooperation “would not be surprising as both Moscow and Pyongyang are so isolated that they would try and work together in any way possible.”

Once friendly relations between Moscow and Pyongyang deteriorated after the collapse of the Soviet Union but the Ukraine war is bringing them together again, analysts say.

Shortly after the outbreak of war in February, North Korea defended Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. In March, along with Belarus, Eritrea, and Syria, Pyongyang voted against a U.N. resolution demanding that Russia end the invasion.

On July 14, ahead of Matsegora’s remarks, Pyongyang recognized the independence of two Russian-backed breakaway regions – the self-styled Donetsk and Luhansk People’s Republics in Ukraine’s Donbas region.

Five days later, North Korea’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying its relations with Moscow “are reaching a new strategic height.”

‘Weakening the liberal democratic order’

Ken Gause, director of the Adversary Analytics Program at the nonprofit research and analysis organization CNA, said Matsegora’s remarks show “the Russians are focused on weakening the liberal democratic order, the way the international community is structured to support U.S. national interest, from the Russian point of view.”

He added that Russia and China “are going to carve off pieces of the international community” such as North Korea “that really don’t want to have to deal with the U.S. and all of its rules and regulations” and bring them under its shadow.

Russia has also turned to Iran for weapons to use in the Ukraine war, said White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan on July 12.

Patrick Cronin, the Asia-Pacific security chair at the California-based Hudson Institute, said, “Russia is keen to show that it retains the initiative in its war with Ukraine, and to do that it needs any willing partner to resist being shunned by the international community.”

He continued, “Pariah state helping another pariah state sums up the transactional relationship.”

Going forward, Cronin said, Pyongyang could provide “cheap labor” while Moscow supplies energy and food. He added, “There is potential for a stronger military technology partnership that can help North Korea with its growing nuclear weapons arsenal.”

North Korea is suspected of having completed the preparations for its seventh nuclear weapons test.

Samuel Wells, Cold War fellow at the Wilson Center, said, “The expression of this interest in economic cooperation may be a trial balloon,” but it “certainly points to a limitation to [the use of] sanctions for policy.”

 

Source: Voice of America

Seminar to nationals in Austria

Members of the Eritrean Embassy in Germany conducted a seminar on 23 July for nationals residing in Vienna, Austria.

At the seminar, the organizers of the seminar gave extensive briefings on the objective situation in the homeland as well as regional developments and called on the nationals to strengthen organizational capacity and unity, and participation in national affairs.

The organizers also gave a briefing on the responsibility of nationals and the Embassy in the efficient and timely provision of consular services.

The seminar also conducted an extensive discussion on the progress of the activities of the Eritrean community in Austria as well as on future programs

 

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Activity assessment meeting of NUEYS

The National Union of Eritrean Youth and Students conducted activity assessment meeting of the first half of 2022 as well as on the implementation of programs for the coming six months.

At the meeting, the national union reported that in the second half of 2022 the union will provide priority for strengthening awareness and organization of students in secondary schools.

According to report presented at the meeting, training program on administration and leadership has been organized for youth and youth workers in various parts of the country, strong effort has been exerted to strengthen the organization and contribution of youth clubs, ‘Buya’ general knowledge competition has been organized in all regions of the country aimed at developing the knowledge and awareness of the youth on the history of their country.

Regarding future plan of action, the report cited that effort will be exerted to develop affection of education and reading of the youth, strengthen the organizational capacity of youth workers, reinforce awareness raising activities in schools and colleges, coordinate concerned Government and PFDJ institutions on issues of the youth as well as develop the relationship with Diaspora youth organizations as well as design projects to develop creativity and innovation of the youth among others.

Commending the contribution of members and stakeholders in raising the political awareness and capacity development of the youth in the past six months, Mr. Saleh Ahmedin, Chairman of the National Union of Eritrean Youth and Students, called on partners for reinforced participation in the implementation of the program for the coming six months.

 

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Eritrea’s Participation at the High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (Part II)

Note: This is the second article in a multi-part series reviewing Eritrea’s participation at the 2022 High-Level Political Forum and the country’s presentation of its Voluntary National Review report. Part II offers background about the development of Eritrea’s inaugural report and an overview of its main elements. Subsequently, the country’s policy enabling environment and several guiding principles are discussed.

The core of the Voluntary National Review (VNR) process involves countries assessing and presenting their progress, achievements, and challenges in implementing the 2030 Agenda and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). VNRs provide an important snapshot of where countries stand in the implementation of the SDGs, with a view to help accelerate progress through experience sharing, peer-learning, identifying gaps and good practices, and mobilizing partnerships.

To a large degree, the structure and elements of Eritrea’s inaugural VNR report are consistent with those proposed under the United Nations Secretary-General’s Guidelines. The report comprises a total of 64 pages, separated into several sections: an introductory section; a discussion of the methodology and preparation process; a section outlining Eritrea’s policy and enabling environment vis-à-vis SDG implementation; a detailed review of progress made in achieving the SDGs; and a concluding section, which closes the report, discusses several challenges, and points the way forward. (Following the concluding section, there is also a detailed statistical annex with coverage development indicators.)

During the process of preparing the VNR, the multi-institutional National SDGs Taskforce (NST) and thematic working groups closely adhered to the guidelines outlined in the “Handbook for the Preparation of Voluntary National Reviews”, developed by the Division for Sustainable Development of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs. In addition, members of the NST and thematic working groups participated in several formal preparatory activities, including a series of multi-day regional and global workshops.

Prior to data gathering and analysis, preliminary assessments were conducted during multi-stakeholder consultations convened by the NST and the thematic working groups. These sessions addressed the availability and quality of data, as well as identified possible sources and mechanisms for collection or estimation. Furthermore, detailed collection and reporting instruments and procedures were developed, in order to ensure consistency across the working teams and maintain a high degree of quality and rigor.

Data were collected from local (ministries and offices) and international (UNICEF, the WHO, UN-IGME, UNESCO) sources. Consistent with the guidelines detailed in the VNR preparatory handbook, Eritrea’s report touches upon the status of implementation of most SDGS, but with special emphasis on SDGs 3 and 13.

Embodying the key principles of the 2030 Agenda, while also remaining uniform with the rest of the national VNR process, the development of the report was locally-owned, inclusive, highly collaborative, and transparent. Preliminary drafts were developed by the thematic working groups, overseen by the NST. The draft development process was guided by the common framework detailed in the preparatory handbook. As the substantive body of the report was progressively developed and steadily updated, working drafts were continuously shared with a diverse set of stakeholders. This provided a vital opportunity for ongoing review and enrichment through critical feedback and the incorporation of diverse perspectives, as well as helped to maintain a high degree of accuracy, refinement, and common understanding. A final working draft was disseminated during a validation workshop, where it was endorsed by various stakeholders following thorough review and open consultation.

Policy and Enabling Environment

Following the introduction and methodology sections, the report discusses Eritrea’s policy and enabling environment vis-à-vis SDG implementation.

Sustainable development, in all of its forms, elements, and principles, remains an integral part of Eritrea’s long-term vision and policy architecture. In fact, even prior to the international community’s collective formulation and adoption of the SDGs (or preceding Millennium Development Goals) the country had fully embraced and was wholly committed to very many of the same development priorities and objectives.

Eritrea emerged out of a long, bitter struggle, not only for national independence and emancipation, but to bring about social justice, gender equality, shared prosperity and poverty elimination, and human rights. Various documents, statements, and declarations, crafted both before and after Eritrea’s independence, have articulated its bold vision to become a prosperous, developed nation where the full potential of its entire people, including women, children, and the historically marginalized, underrepresented, and vulnerable, is realized in a healthy, clean, and safe environment with peace, strong national unity and cohesion, sustained economic growth, and social justice.

At present, the vast majority of Eritrea’s national policies, action plans, and cross-cutting priorities, which are collectively based upon and informed by the country’s prevailing socio-political, historical, cultural, and ecological realities, are closely aligned with the SDGs and have been identified as being highly supportive of the country’s development objectives. Perhaps the most pertinent is the National Charter, adopted in February 1994 in the historic city of Nakfa. The National Charter, which provides the guiding vision for the country, outlines a number of objectives and aspirations, the vast majority of which closely align and run parallel to many of the SDGs.

Significantly, Eritrea has also signed onto an array of important regional and global agreements, conventions, protocols, and frameworks that help to advance its development objectives and reinforce implementation of the 2030 Agenda. Additionally, it has undertaken tangible steps to foster a conducive environment for sustainable development that promotes inclusive, whole-of-society approaches, leverages the country’s rich diversity and wealth of local, indigenous knowledge systems, and catalyzes collective actions and contributions from all regions, communities, and groups.

As a fundamental pillar of its development agenda, Eritrea has established cooperative framework and close partnerships with a range of international organizations and specialized agencies. Many of these relationships are robust and longstanding, dating back to the earliest years of the country’s independence. Meaningful engagement and cooperation have been built upon a platform of common principles, transparency, and trust, with concerted efforts being based on complementarity and guided by locally-defined development priorities and needs.

In addition to its cooperation with various organizations and agencies of the United Nations system, Eritrea has maintained steady relations with other partners. It shares robust ties with many bilateral partners, is a member of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa, and works with different international organizations in the North-South and South-South framework.

Notably, Eritrea’s large diaspora also plays a positive role in assisting development processes. As well as making substantial financial and in-kind contributions to a range of initiatives and projects, the diaspora promotes trade and investment opportunities, is active in business creation and entrepreneurship, provides diverse volunteer support, and assists in the transfer of knowledge and skills.

Guiding Principles

Eritrea’s development and nation-building processes are firmly grounded on a number of principles, including social justice and self-reliance.

Regarding social justice and leaving no one behind, the country places unwavering emphasis on ensuring that all, regardless of any distinction, can freely and fully participate in, contribute to, and benefit from the achievement of development. Eritrea’s laws, regulations, and policies, which are underpinned by strong and longstanding socio-cultural values, establish a platform for inclusive development, while guaranteeing and promoting an array of basic and fundamental rights. Discrimination, exclusion, restriction, or preference based on the grounds of disability, ethnicity, color, religion, socioeconomic status, language, opinion, gender, or other similar distinctions is strongly prohibited and punishable by national law.

Since independence, the country has crafted a spectrum of policies and adopted various legal instruments to help address the specific needs of and catalyze progress for vulnerable groups (e.g., the poor, women, children, persons with disabilities, nomadic populations, and those residing in hard-to-reach areas). These interventions play a critical role in cultivating peace and unity within Eritrea’s multiethnic, multicultural society, aim to mitigate disparities and create a level playing field on which all Eritreans have an opportunity to excel, and seek to ensure that every individual is empowered and able to enjoy the fruits of development.

Eritrea’s development approach is also guided by self-reliance. Perhaps somewhat unique or less common, this approach is often maligned and misjudged, with the country frequently (and incorrectly) being labeled as “isolationist”. In its interactions with other governments, international development organizations, global financial institutions, and other potential donors, the Eritrean government has historically insisted on establishing genuine partnerships and cooperation, while retaining firm control of its development agenda and local implementation. As well, foreign aid is turned down when it does not fit the country’s needs or its capacity to use effectively. Thus, Eritrea does not reject external support – it actively welcomes it, but only when it fills a locally-identified gap and complements the country’s own internal efforts. In fact, the Eritrean government has encouraged assistance that addresses specific needs which cannot be met internally, which is designed to minimize continued external support, and which complements and strengthens, instead of replacing, Eritrea’s own institutional capacity to implement projects.

Rather than isolationism, this approach is rooted in a desire to avoid crippling dependence, ensure local agency, and foster a strong, clear sense of responsibility for and genuine ownership of the country’s future among all citizens.

 

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea

Tour de Wallonie: Arnaud De Lie ahead of Biniam Girmay and Axel Laurance on the 3rd stage

It was the young Arnaud De Lie (Lotto Soudal), 20, who won the 3rd stage of the Tour de Wallonie in Rochefort. At the end of the 194.3 kilometer, on a false flat finish, he sprinted ahead, and a good length, Biniam Girmay (Intermarché Wanty Gobert), 22 years old and Axel Laurance (B&B Hotels / KTM), 21 years old. A podium made up of young runners! 

In the last kilometers, the Frenchman Kevin   Vauquelin (Arkea Samsic), who started alone 5 kilometers from the finish, resisted the return of the sprinters until the last kilometer. 

The young Belgian pocketed his 7th victory of the season, for his first year with the pros. A victory celebrated by imitating the horns of the bull, the “Bull” nickname of the Belgian phenomenon. 

 

Source: Dehai Eritrea Online

Eritrean community festival in UK

Nineteenth annual festival of the Eritrean community in the UK was enthusiastically conducted on 23 and 24 July in London under the theme “Independent Choice-Backbone of Our Pride”.

The festival in which a number of nationals from all cities in the UK took part was officially opened by Mr. Habteab Tesfatsion, Governor of the Southern Region.

Commending all that contributed to organizing the event, Mr. Estifanos Habtemariam, Eritrean Ambassador to the UK and Ireland, said that this year’s festival is unique for it is being conducted after two years of absence due to COVID-19 pandemic.

Ambassador Estifanos also said that the festival will have a significant contribution in strengthening the attachment of nationals with their homeland and in transferring the noble societal values to the young generation.

Mr. Habteab also conducted a seminar for participants of the festival focusing on the national development programs and role of nationals inside the country and abroad, the progress of the friendship and cooperation between countries in the Horn of Africa, and the role of Eritrea, Eritrea’s relation with neighboring countries and beyond, the contribution of public diplomacy in this new era as well as developments and trends in the region.

Mr. Tewolde Yohannes, head of Public and Community Affairs at the Eritrean Embassy, also gave a briefing on “Role of Eritrean Community in the Success of National Affairs”.

The festival was highlighted by cultural and artistic performances by various cultural groups.

 

Source: Ministry of Information Eritrea