30 ዓለም-ለኸ ተሓለቅቲ ሰብኣዊ መሰላት፣ ብዛዕባ ኣብ ኤርትራ ዘሎ ኩነታት ሰብኣዊ መሰላት ብዝምልከት ናብ ናይ ሕቡራት ሃገራት ቤት ምኽሪ ሰብኣዊ መሰላት ደብዳቤ ጽሒፎም።

እቶም ዓለም-ለኻውያንን ኤርትራዊያንን ጉጅለታት ሰብኣዊ መሰላት ኣብቲ ትማሊ 11 ሰነ ዝጸሓፈዎ ደብዳቤ፣ ቤት ምኽሪ ሰብኣዊ መሰላት ሕ/ሃ ኣብ ዘካይዶ ስሩዕ ኣኼብኡ፣ ብዛዕባ ኩነታት ሰብኣዊ መሰላት ኤርትራ ምቁጽጻርን መጽናዕትን ክካየድን ጸብጻባት ብስሩዕ ክቐርብን ክቕጽሎ ሓቲቶም’ለዉ።

ድሕሪ’ቲ ምስ ኢትዮጵያ ዝተጀመረ ርክብ፣ ይኹን ኣብ መንጎ ኤርትራ፣ ኢትዮጵያን ሶማልን ዝተኻየደ ስሉሳዊ ስምምዕ፣ ኩነታት ሰብኣዊ መሰላት ኤርትራ ገና ኣብ ሕማቕ ኩነታት ኣሎ ኢሎም።

ብኻልእ ወገን ልዕሊ 100 ህቡባትን ፀለውትን ዝኾኑ ኣፍሪቃውያን ፀሓፍቲ ደረስትን ጋዜጠኛታትን ኣብ ኤርትራ ዘሎ ኩነታት ከመሓይሹ ዝፅውዕ ቅሉዕ ደብዳበ ናብ ፕረዚደንት ኢሰያስ አፈወርቂ ፅሒፎም።

ናብ ኤርትራ ብምኻድ ምስ ፕረዚደንት ኢሰያስ ተራ ዜጋታት ኤርትራ እሱራት ጋዜጠኛታትን ካልኦትን ክዘራረቡ ከምዝደልዩ ብምግላፅ መልሲ ፕረዚደንት ኢሰያስ ይፅበዩ ከም ዘለዉ’ቶም ተሰማዕነት ዘለዎም ኣፍሪቃውያን ኣብቲ ደብዳበኦም ገሊፆም’ለው።

Source=https://tigrigna.voanews.com/a/ዓለም-ለኸ-ተሓለቅቲ-ኣብ-ኤርትራ-ዘሎ-ኩነታት-ሰብኣዊ-መሰላት-ብዝምልከት-ናብ-ሕ-ሃ-ደብዳቤ-ጽሒፎም/4956635.html

Reliable sources from inside Eritrea reported that in the morning hours of 12 June 2019, Eritrean regime officials ordered Catholic Church representatives in Keren to hand-over as of 13 June all the health centers and clinics they own and administer in the region of  Keren.

The said the seizure of Church properties will affect all the remaining eight health facilities that were not affected by a similar government action a couple of years ago.

The sources feared that a similar order of seizure may soon follow to affect health facilities of the church in and around Asmara, Segheneiti and Barentu. It is to be recalled that the Archbishop of Asmara and the Bishops of Segheneiti, Keren and Barentu a few weeks ago issued yet another message calling on the Eritrean regime and the people to avert the existential threat hanging over all Eritreans and their country.

According to the Eritrean Catholic Church website, the eight health facilities treat up to 40,000 patients per year.

Clinics 1FFFFFFFFFFFFFFF

The affected health centers are located at the villages of  Ashera; Boggu; Feledarb; Glass; Halibmentel; Halhal; Waliku/suburb of Keren city,  and  the clinic at Hamelmalo. Most of them existed since 1981.

Chairman of the Eritrean People’s Democratic Party (EPDP), Mr. Menghesteab Asmerom, today addressed an urgent memorandum to the African Union Commission and African heads of state and government trying to draw their kind attention to an open letter sent to the Eritrean dictator by prominent African authors, journalists, human rights and pro-democracy activists.

The EPDP leadership with rank and file is engaged today, 12 June 2019, at distributing the message to all African embassies in every country asking them to share it with their foreign ministries and heads of state and government.

Below is the full EPDP memorandum to which is annexed the letter of pan-Africanist message.

Good reading.

======

Dear AU Commission Chairman, Mr Moussa Faki Mahamat,

Dear African Heads of State and Government

We in the EPDP, one of the Eritrean non-state pro-democracy actors in exile, are pleased to once again take the liberty of addressing to you this message hoping to draw your kind attention to what has been going on in Eritrea for the past 28 years. Strange at it may sound, our message today is simply a copy of an open letter to the Eritrean head of state  by 102 prominent citizens of our Africa,  including the Nigerian Nobel Laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka.     

Written in the spirit of Pan-African solidarity, the letter deeply regrets the fact that Eritrea remains for a long time as “the most closed society in our continent.” 

The distinguished signatories of the letter do not only remind Eritrea’s Isaias Afeworki of the tragic consequences of denying one’s people all basic rights, including a total denial of freedom of expression and the press, the rule of law, an independent judiciary and political pluralism, but they also offer to send a delegation to Eritrea to help. This is something that the AU and its member states were expected to do for a long time. We still expect Africa to act.

For the kind attention of Your Excellencies, copied below is the full text of the African Message.

 Respectfully  yours,

 Menghesteab Asmerom, Chairman, the Eritrean People's Democratic Party (EPDP) in exile.

======

Your Excellency, President Isaias Aferwerki:

We write to convey our most sincere congratulations upon your country’s normalization of diplomatic relations with Ethiopia. This is a development much appreciated by all Africans of goodwill.

We write to you in our capacity as citizens of Africa to pledge our unequivocal solidarity with all the people of Eritrea. This includes the many Eritreans we see enduring all manner of risk and suffering in search of a better life outside their homeland. We acknowledge that we too hail from nations with varying governance and developmental challenges.  We write to you, in the spirit of Pan-African solidarity, to seek common solutions to our shared problems.

Africa’s many disparate nation states have undergone significant and diverse changes over the course of the last two decades.   [Today, many more Africans live in freedom than under repression].  Importantly, those African countries that have made the most progress – including attracting investment and tourism – over the last 25 years have been those whose citizens enjoy greater freedom of expression, press and movement, the rule of law, an independent judiciary, and political pluralism. 

Sadly, in these critical areas, Eritrea has not kept pace with the changes seen elsewhere.  Over the past two decades Eritrea has been described as the most closed society on our continent, an unfortunate situation for a country with such rich human capital and potential, with so much to offer not only Africa but also the world.

We trust that by opening this channel of communication with Your Excellency, we may be afforded the opportunity to work with you to restore your country and the great people of Eritrea to their rightful place in the family of African nations.

Of particular concern to us is the fate of several journalists and activists who have been imprisoned for prolonged periods of time in Eritrea, many of whom have reportedly been denied regular visits from their families and loved ones.

Equally, we are disheartened by the plight of the many thousands of Africans, including some Eritreans, who feel compelled to flee their home countries in search of a better life for themselves and their families, risking life and limb and enduring inhumane deprivations and indignities across deserts and oceans.

Too many of these fellow Africans have found themselves in the rapacious hands of modern day slave traders and people traffickers even causing some to end up in slave markets in places such as Libya. Too many of these migrants and refugees have perished at sea in their quest for a better life. 

We Africans are blessed with too much in our home countries to have our citizens suffer and be devalued this way.  This gloomy picture needs to change, and it is in this spirit that we address this message of solidarity to you, Your Excellency.

We respectfully call upon Your Excellency to allow a delegation of the signatories hereunder to visit Eritrea, and to afford us the opportunity to meet with you and your government as well as with ordinary citizens, including journalists, writers, and other persons currently in prison.

As with the bold step you have taken to normalize relations with Ethiopia, we believe a gesture of this kind would go a long way towards ending Eritrea’s isolation from the larger African family and could help usher in a new era of prosperity and freedom for your people.

It would be an honour to furnish you with any additional information you might require of us and we eagerly await your response.

The Signatories,

  1. Prof. Wole Soyinka, Nigeria, Nobel Laureate
  2. Rafael Marques de Morais, Angola, leading anti-corruption campaigner and award winning investigative journalist
  3. John Githongo, Kenya, publisher, leading anti-corruption campaigner and award winning anti-corruption activist
  4. Kwasi H. Prempeh, Ghana, Executive Director of Center for Democratic Development
  5. Farida Nabourema, Togo, Executive Director of Togolese Civil League
  6. Leyla Hussein, Somalia, Women’s Rights & Health Campaigner, psychotherapist, writer and founder of the Dahlia Project
  7. Maina Kiai, Kenya, founder of the Kenya Human Rights Commission (KHRC) and former UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Association
  8. Maaza Mengiste, Ethiopia, award-winning writer of Beneath the Lion’s Gaze
  9. Iva Cabral, Cape Verde, Chancellor of Lusófona [Lusophone] University and  daughter of Amílcar Cabral
  10. Belabbès Benkredda, Algeria, CEO and Founder of the Munathara Initiative, the Arab world’s largest online and television debate forum highlighting voices of youth, women and marginalized communities.
  11. Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesera, Uganda, a leading LGBT rights activist, founder and executive director of the LGBT rights organization Freedom & Roam Uganda, 2011 recipient of the Martin Ennals Award for Human Rights Defenders
  12. Hon. Robert Kyagulanyi aka Bobi Wine, Uganda, musician, member of parliament and youth leader recognized throughout East Africa
  13. Tundu Lissu, Tanzania, lawyer, CHADEMA politician, member of parliament and former president of the Tanganyika Law Society
  14. Amr Waked, Egypt, award winning actor, best known for his role in Syriana
  15. José Eduardo Agualusa, Angola, award winning writer, finalist in the 2016 Man Booker International Prize for his seminal work A General Theory of Oblivion
  16.  Nasser Weddady, Mauritania, leading civil rights activist, consultant and co-editor of Arab Spring Dreams.
  17. Chiké Frankie Edozien, Nigeria, writer and professor of journalism at New York University
  18. Emmanuel Iduma, Nigeria, author
  19. Mona Eltahawy, Egypt, author and journalist
  20. Mireille Tushiminina, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gender & Equality advocate
  21. Felix Agbor Nkhongo, Cameroon, Director of the Centre for Human Rights and Democracy in Africa (CHRDA) and leading human rights defender
  22. Boniface Mwangi, Kenya, democracy activist, Ukweli political party founder, photographer and artist
  23. Adeyanju Deji, Nigeria, leading democracy activist and human rights defender
  24. Alieu Bah, The Gambia, leading democracy activist and human rights defender
  25. Tutu Alicante, Equatorial Guinea, leading democracy activist and Executive Director of Equatorial Guinea Justice (EG Justice)
  26. Andrea Ngombet Malewa, Congo Republic, Global Coordinator of the Sassoufit Collective 
  27. Roukaya Kasenally, Mauritius, CEO of African Media Initiative
  28. Abdelrahman Mansour, Egypt, Executive Director of Open Transformation Lab, leading human rights defender and journalist
  29. Reem Abbas, Sudan, journalist and leading human rights defender
  30. Moussa Kondo, Mali, journalist, CEO and founder of the weekly L’Express de Bamako, anti-corruption crusader, Country Director of Accountability Lab Mali, 2015 Mandela Washington Fellow, 2018 Obama Foundation Fellow.
  31. Ericino de Salema, Mozambique, Director of the Electoral Institute for Sustainable Democracy in Africa (EISA), academic, lawyer and journalist
  32. Jestina Mukoko, Zimbabwe, leading human rights activist and Director of the Zimbabwe Peace Initiative
  33. William Amanzuru, Uganda, environmental rights defender, founder of Friends of Zoka, winner of the EU Human Rights Defenders’ Award 2019
  34. Miguel de Barros, Guinea-Bissau, sociologist and Executive Director of the environmental NGO Tiniguena
  35. Bheki Makhubu, e-Swatini (formerly Swaziland), Editor of the Nation Magazine and leading democracy defender
  36. Edson da Luz aka Azagaia, Mozambique, rapper and leading activist
  37. Charles Onyango-Obbo, Uganda, leading publisher and columnist
  38. Rodney Sieh, Liberia, leading newspaper editor of FrontPage Africa and democracy activist
  39. Oludotun Babayemi, Nigeria, democracy activist and monitoring and evaluation expert,
  40. Akin Olaniyan, Nigeria
  41. Chanda Chisala, Zambia, founder and president of Zambia Online
  42. Dany Ayida, Togo, Resident, Country Director, National Democratic Institute (DRC)
  43. George Sarpong, Ghana
  44. Rosemary Mwakitwange, Tanzania, Chief of Party, Freedom House
  45. James Smart, Kenya, leading journalist and news anchor
  46. Abdulrazaq Alkali, Nigeria, Executive Director Organisation for Community Civic Engagement (OCCEN) Nigeria 
  47. Mathatha Tsedu, South Africa, Adjunct professor of journalism, Wits University and Acting Executive Director of the National Editors Forum (SANEF)
  48. Brenda Zulu, Zambia, journalist and ICT specialist
  49. Emanuel Saffa Abdulai, Sierra Leone, Executive Director of Society for Democracy Initiatives
  50. Zecharias Berhe, Ethiopia, Senior Fellow, African Good Governance Network
  51. Sylvia Amiani, Kenya, counseling and psychosocial practitioner focused on refugees in Germany
  52. Lamii Kpargoi, Liberia, journalist, democracy activist and lawyer
  53. Dr. George Ayittey, Ghana, economist, author and president of the Free Africa Foundation, Washington DC
  54. Evan Mawarire, Zimbabwe, pastor and democracy activist, founder of #ThisFlag movement
  55. Zineb El Rhazoui, Morocco, journalist and human rights advocate
  56. Marc Ona Essangui, Gabon, environmentalist, Executive Secretary of Brainforest
  57. Fred Bauma, Democratic Republic of Congo, democracy and youth activist, leader of the Lucha Social Movement
  58. Dr. Justin Pearce, South Africa, Department of Politics and International Studies, Cambridge University
  59. Asma Khalifa, Libya, activist, cofounder of Tamazight Women Movement
  60. Violet Gonda, Zimbabwe, journalist and President of the International Association of Women in Radio and Television (IAWRT)
  61. Fatoumata Camara, The Gambia, journalist, CEO/Founder  of the Fatu Network
  62. Jelili Atiku, Nigeria, human rights artist
  63. Fred Muvunyi, Rwanda, editor at Deutsche Welle, Op-Ed contributor for Washington Post and a consultant for Freedom House
  64. Aimable Manikrakiza, Burundi, CEO of the Centre for Development and Enterprises Great Lakes
  65. Houssem Aoudi, Tunisia, CEO/Founder of Wasabi and Cogite – co-working Space, entrepeneur and activist
  66. Chouchou Namegabe, Democratic Republic of Congo, journalist and human rights activist, CEO & Founder Anzafrika
  67. Thulani Maseko, e-Swatini (formerly Swaziland), leading human rights lawyer
  68. Samba Dialimpa Badji, Senegal, journalist
  69. Mariama Camara, Guinea, fashion designer and humanitarian, Founder/President of Mariama Fashion Production and the There is No Limit Foundation
  70. Olívio Diogo, São Tomé, sociologist and media commentator, coordinator of the Civil Society Network
  71. Adeola Fayehun, Nigeria, journalist/producer, Keeping it Real with Adeola
  72. Mohamed Soltan, Egypt, Executive Director, the Freedom Initiative
  73. Memory Banda, Malawi, children’s rights activist
  74. Ali Amar, Morocco, veteran journalist, co-founder and director of online news outlet Le Desk
  75. Mohamed Keita, Mali,  Pan African rights advocate
  76. Norman Tjombe, Namibia, human rights lawyer and activist
  77. Uyapo Ndadi, Botswana, human rights lawyer, activist, and founder of the Ndadi Law Firm
  78. Phil ya Nangoloh, Namibia, human rights activist, monitor and Executive Director of NamRights Inc
  79. Jacqueline Moudeina, Chad, prominent award-winning lawyer and human rights activist
  80. Rosmon Zokoue, Central African Republic, journalist, blogger and activist
  81. Ahmed Gatnash, Libya, co-founder & VP of Operations, Kawaakibi Foundation
  82. Anas Aremeyaw Anas, Ghana, Africa’s leading investigative journalist and private investigator
  83. Boubacar Diallo, Niger, Editor, Liberation newspaper
  84. Abdourahman Waberi, Djibouti, acclaimed novelist, essayist, academic and short story writer, human rights activist, professor of literature at George Washington University
  85. Doudou Dia, Senegal, Executive Director, Goree Institute, Center for Democracy, Development and Culture in Africa
  86. Alain Mabanckou, Congo, novelist, journalist, poet and academic
  87. Francis Kpatindé, Benin, journalist, former editor-in-chief of the newsweekly Jeune Afrique and former spokesman for the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR)
  88. Mustafa Haji Abdinur, Somalia, award-winning journalist
  89. Thembo Kash, Democratic Republic of Congo, award-winning cartoonist
  90. Damien Glez, Burkina Faso, award-winning editorial cartoonist
  91. Ahmed Abdallah, Comoros, journalist
  92. Anton Harber, South Africa, former journalist with the Rand Daily Mail until its closure by the apartheid government, co-founder and editor of the Weekly Mail (now The Mail & Guardian) and Professor of Journalism at the University of the Witwatersrand
  93. John-Allan Namu, Kenya, award-winning investigative journalist, co-founder of Africa Uncensored, 2017 Desmond Tutu Fellow
  94. Alice Nkom, Cameroon, leading human rights lawyer, defender of rights of the LGBT community
  95. Mouctar Bah, Guinea, veteran journalist
  96.  Andrew Feinstein, South Africa, former ANC MP, Executive Director of Corruption Watch UK, author of The Shadow World: Inside the Global Arms Trade
  97. William Rasoanaivo, Madagascar, award-winning political cartoonist
  98. Claudia Gastrow, South Africa, anthropologist, Univeristy of Johannesburg
  99.  Motlatsi Thabane, Lesotho, professor of History, University of e-Swatini
  100. Cyriac Gbogou, Ivory Coast, blogger, co-founder of O’Village and key actor in the new technology sector in the country
  101. Canon Clement Hilary Janda, South Sudan, Pan African Ecumenist
  102. Ola Diab, Sudan, journalist and activist

ርእሰ-ዓንቀጽ ሰዲህኤ

ህግዲፍ ንኹሉ ሓቅታት ናይ ሓሶት ድራማታት ብምህንዳስ እናሸፈነ ዝነብር ሃዳሚ ጉጅለ እዩ። ህድማኡ ዝግለጸሉ ሜላታት ብዙሕ ኮይኑ፡ መሰረታዊ ትሕዝቶኡ ነቲ ኣብ ኤርትራ ዘሎ ሓቢእካዮ ዘይሕባእ ባዕሉ ዝዛረብ ክትኣምኖ ዘጸግም ዘስካክሕ ኩነታት ክትደፍን ምፍታን እዩ። ኣብ ኤርትራ “ሕገመንግስቲ የለን፡ ምርጫ ተኻይዱ ኣይፈልጥን፡ ኢሳይያስን ጉጅለኡን ህዝቢ ጠሊሞም ኣብ ስልጣን ዝተኾየጡ ባዕላውያን እዮም፡ መሰረታዊ ሰብኣዊ መሰላት ኣይክበርን እዩ……ወዝተ” ዝብሉን ዝኣመሰሉን  ሓረጋት ህግዲፍ ከም ቁርን ኣሳሓይታን ዝፈርሖም ሓቅታት እዮም። ጠንቂ ፍርሑ ድማ ኣብ ናይ ፊትንፊት ግጥም ሓቅን ሓሶትን ንሱ ከም ዝርታዕ ስለ ዝፈልጥ እዩ።

እቲ ካልእ ንመህደሚ ዝጥቀመሉ መደናገሪ ጉልባብ፡ ናይ ገዛእ ርእሱ ዕዮ-ገዛ ዝዓመሉ ዓቕምን ባህርን ዘየብሉን ምስ ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ዘይተዓርቀን ክነሱ፡ ኣብ ጉዳይ ሰላምን ምትሕብባር ዞባናን ከባቢ ቀይሕ ባሕርን ክዋሳእ ዝገብሮ ውጥም ቅልቅል እዩ። ኢሳያስ ዞባዊ ዛዕባታት ዘልዕል ዞባዊ ዓቕምን ተሰማዕነትን ሃልይዎ ዘይኮነ፡ ካብቲ ኣብ ኤርትራ ዘሎ ዘየደቅሶ ሓቂ ከም መህደሚ ክጥቀመሉ ስለ ዝደሊጥራይ እዩ። እቲ ዘሕዝን ከኣ እቲ ዘራጊ ባህሪኡ ምስኡ ስለ ዝገይሽ ኣብ ዞባዊ መድረኽ እውን ከምቲ ኣብ ኤርትራ ዝለመዶ ዝዘርግ እምበር ዘዕሪ ውጽኢት የብሉን። ናብዚ ዝወድቕ ከኣ ኩሉ ሕልምታቱ ንጉዳያት ናብቲ ንሱ ኣብ ኤርትራ ፈጢርዎ ዘሎ ዘርጊ ክስሕቦ ስለ ዝፍትን እዩ። ነዚ ኣብ ግምት ኣእትዩ እዩ ከኣ ኣቶ ብርሃነ ኣብረሀ ኣብ መጽሓፉ “ዘራጊቶ” ዝብል ናቱ ዝሃቦ።

ብዛዕባ ዞባዊ ምትሕብባርን ምሕዝነትን ክንዛረብ እንከለና፡ ኣብ ሃገሩ ዘየድመዐ ከም ኢሳይያስ ዝኣመሰል ኣካል፡ ኣብ ዞባዊ መድረኽ ከድምዕ ማለት ዘበት እዩ። ምናልባት ኣደናጊሩ ድዩ፡ ሓላዪ መሲሉ ኣብቲ ምትሕብባር እንተ ኣተወ’ውን ናይቶም ሓቒ መሲልዎም ድዩ፡ ወይ ተገሪሆም ዘዋስእዎ ወገናት ሰከም  ካብ ምዃን ሓሊፉ ካልእ ዕድል የብሉን። ሰከም ምዃን ጥራይ ዘይኮነ ከም ጉጅለ ህግዲፍ ዝኣመሰለ ኣብ ሸፈጥን ጭውያን ዝነብር፡ ዝሕግገሉ፡ ዝፍጽመሉ ኮነ ዝፈርደሉ ትካል ዘየብሉ፡ ምስኡ ዝግበር ምሕዝነት ድዩ ምትሕግጋዝ ናይ ምቕጻል ዕድሉ ኣዝዩ ጸቢብ ምናልባት እውን ዘይከኣል እዩ። ቀንዲ ከምኡ ዝኾነሉ ምኽንያት ከኣ እቲ ዝግበር ስምምዕ ድዩ ምሕዝነት ውልቃዊ እምበር ትካላዊ ስለ ዘይኮነ እዩ።

ንሕና ኤርትራ፡  ልኡላውነታን ክብራን ኣብ ዝተሓለወሉ፡ ትካላዊ ውሕስነት ኣብ ዝተረጋገጸሉ፡ ኣብ ናይ ሓባር ረብሓ ዘትከለ፡ ኢድ ኣእታውነት ዘየፈቅድ፡ ረብሓ ህዝቢ ዝሕመረቱ ዝምዳና ኣይኮነንዶ ምስ ጐረባብታ፡ ምስ ዝኾነት ሃገር ክህልዋ ብዘይውልውል እንድግፎ ጥራይ ዘይኮነ እንቃለሰሉ’ውን እዩ። ምኽንያቱ ከምዚ ዓይነት ኣብ ድልዱል ባይታ ዝተሰረተ ዝምድናን ውዑልን እዩ፡ ምስ ዝሓልፍ ስርዓት ኣብ ክንዲ ዝሓልፍ፡ ናይቲ ነባሪ ህዝቢ ዓንዲ ሕቖ ኮይኑ ክነብር ዝኽእል። ብኣንጻሩ ምስ ጉጅለ ኢሳይያስ እሞ ከኣ ካብ ህዝቢ ተሓቢካ ዝግበር ዘይትካላዊ ውዑላትን ስምምዓትን እቲ ጉጅለ ክሓልፍ እንከሎ፡ ብህዝቢ ተወሪሱ ክቕጽል ውሑስ ዕድል የብሉን። ኢሳይያስ ክዛመድ እንከሎ ዝመርጾ ኣገባብ ኣርሒቑ ዝጠመተ፡ መሰረታዊ ረብሓ ህዝቢ ኣብ ግምት ዘእተወ ዘይኮነ፡ ንዕድመ ስልጣኑ ጥራይ ዝተዓቀነ ኣብ “ካብ ኢድ ናብ ኣፍ” ዘኹድድ እዩ። ክሳብ ክንድዚ  ኣርሒቑ ስለ ዘይርኢ እዮም ከኣ ብዙሓት ተዓዘብቲ ንተግባራት ህግዲፍ “ኣነ እንተመይተላ ዳንዴር ኣይትብቆላ” ብዝብል ዘየናሕሲ ኣበሃህላ ዝነቕፍዎ።

ንጀኦግራፍያዊ ኣቀማምጣ ኤርትራን ህርኩት ህዝባን ብሂጎም፡ ምስ ዲክታተር ኢሳይያስ ስምምዓት ክገብሩ ዝደልዩ ወገናት፡ ኢሳይያስ ሓጋጊ፡ ፈጻምን ፈራድን ኣካላት መንግስቲ ከም ዘየብሉ  ክርድኡ ይግበኦም። ካብዚ ዝዓቢ ከኣ ሕገመንግስታዊ ልጓም ኣብ ዘየብሉ ፊን ከም ዝበሎ ዝጋልብ፡ ዝነቕለሉን ዝዓርፈሉን ዘይፍለጥ ፍኑው ምዃኑ ከስተብህሉ ይግበኦም። እዚ ክግደስሉ ዝግደድሉ ምኽንያት ነቲ ባዕሉ ክገብሮ ዝግበኦ መሰል ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ንምሕላው ዘይኮነ፡ ኣብ ሰንፈላል ዝነብር ጉጅለ፡ ምናልባት ኣብ ውሱን ጉዳያት ንውሱን ሸቶ ይለኣኾም ይኸውን እምበር፡ ውሑስ ቀጻልነት ከረጋግጸሎም ስለ ዘይክእል እዩ።

ምስ ኢሳይያስ ናይ ሕጽኖት ግዜኡ ኣብ ምውዳእ ዝበጽሐ ዝመስል ዘሎ መንግስቲ ኢትዮጵያ ነዚ ከቕልበሉ ይግበኦ። ካለኦት ንህግዲፍ ኣሚኖም ክዛመድዎ ዝሓስቡ’ውን ከምኡ። ጉጅለ ኢሳይያስ ንህዝቢ ኤርትራ’ኳ ዘይኮኖ ንዓኣቶም ከሕንድየሎም ክሓስቡ ኣይግበኦም። እዚ ማለት ምስ ኤርትራ ዝምድና ኣይገበር ማለት ዘይኮነ፡ ተዛመድቱ ቅድሚ ዝምድና ጉጅለ ህግዲፍ ናብ ንቡር ክመጽእ ከገድድዎ ይግበኦም ንምባል’ዩ። ከምኡ እንተዘይገይሮም ግና እቲ ውጽኢት ቀለሙ ከይነቐጸ፡ ዘጣዕሶም ከም ዝኸውን ፍሉጥ እዩ።

ከምቲ “ንሰፍላላስ ይፈጥረላ” ዝበሃል፡ ወያ ምስ ዶ/ር ኣብይ ኣሕመድ ዝጸንሐት ወዛሕዛሕን ምልፍላፍን፡ ኣብ ዝቐምሰለትሉ፡ ኣብ ሱዳን ከኣ ኢሳይያስ ዝስዕሰዓሉ ጓይላ ተተኺሉ’ሎ። ኣብ ሱዳን ዝእጐድ ሓዊ ንፕረዚደንት ዑመር ኣልበሺር ከንድዶ እንከሎ፡ ንዲክታቶር ኢሳይያስ ከም ዝሽልብቦ፡ ኢሳይያስ ከኣ እቲ ሸልባቢ ሃፈጽታ ናብ ዝህምኾ ሃልሃልታ ከይበጽሕ ናይ ነፍሰ-ምክልኻል ጸፋዕፋዕ ከርኢ ባህርያዊ ነይሩ። ከምኡ ስለ ዝኾነ ከኣ ሱዳን ሰላምን ሲቪላዊ ምምሕዳርን ምእንቲ ከይትረክብ፡ ሰብ ሰፊሕ ከባብያዊ ረብሓ ጸሚዶም ክሓርስዎ ወጢኖም ቅርቡነቱ የርኢ ኣሎ። ምስ ግብጺ፡ ሳዑድ ዓረብን ኢምሬትን ኢድን ጓንትን ኮይኑ፡ ናይቲ ኣለሳሊሱ ስልጣን ክብሕት ትንዕምንዕ ዝብል ዘሎ ወተሃደራዊ ጉጅለ ሱዳን ደጋፊ ኮይኑ ኣሎ። ኢትዮጵያ ነቲ ብሕብረት ኣፍሪቃ ተወሲዱ ዘሎ ኣብ ሱዳን ሲቪላዊ መንግስቲ ክሳብ ዝትከል ኣባልነታ ምድስካሉ ክትድግፎ እንከላ፡ ኢሳይያስ ግና ይቃወሞ ኣሎ። ቀንዲ ምኽንያቱ ከኣ ሎሚ ህዝቢ ሱዳን ብቓልሱ ሲቪላዊ ስርዓት እንተተኺሉ ጽባሕ ኣብ ኤርትራ ናይ ምድጋሙ ዕድል ልዑል ምዃኑ ስለ ዝርዳእ እዩ። በዚ ሒዝዎ ዘሎ ኣገባብ ፕረሲደንቲ ዑመር ኣልበሽር ክወርድ እንከሎ ኢሳይያስ ዘይሕጉስ ጥራይ ዘይኮነ ሰንቢዱ ከም ዝነበረ ዘረድእ እዩ። ስለዚ ኢና ከኣ ጉጅለ ኢሳይያስ ክሳብ ዘይተወገደ  መህደሚ ምኽንያታት ካብ ምምሃዝ ዓዲ ኣይክውዕልን እዩ እንብል።

              "ንቕሎ ኣዴታት ንምድሓን ህዝብን ሃገርን" ዕላምኡ መተካእታ ይኣክል'ዩ፡

         ኣብዚ ዓመት'ዚ ዝተራእየ ኣበዓዕላ መበል 28 ጽምብል በዓል ነጻነት ብዓቐኑን ዓይነቱን ፍሉይ ምንባሩ ኩሉ ኤርትራዊ ዜጋ፣ደጋፊ ይኩን ተቓዋሚ ዝተገንዘቦ ተርእዮ ምኳኑ ዘይከሓድ ሓቂ ኢዩ። ገለ ክሕጎሰሉን ክዓግበሉን ከሎ ገለ ድማ ክስንብደሉን ክሰግኣሉን ከምዝተራእየ እዉን ባህርያውን ርዱእን ሓቂ ምኳኑ ሓተታ ዘድልዮ ኣይኮነን።

         እዚ ዕለትዚ ኣዝዩ ድሙቕ ኮይኑ ክበዓል ዘክኣሎ ምክንያት ናይቲ ዕለት ብልጭታ ዘይኮነስ ፣ ቅድሚኡ ካብ ሓይሎ እዋን ኣትሒዙ ብዝተፈላልየ ወገናት ደለይቲ ፍትሒ ክውሰድ ዝጸንሐ ተበግሶታት ውህሉል ውጽኢት ምኳኑ ብሩህ ኢዩ።

        ካብ መፈለምታ 2019 ጀሚሩ "ይኣክል" ዝብል ጭርሖ ብዝተወደበን ሰንሰላታዊን መልክዑ ካብ ዝጅምር ኣትሒዙ፣ብውልቅን ብሓባርን ዝተመሓላለፈ መልእክቲ፣ ነቲ ዝጸንሐ ናይ ቃልሲ መስርሕ ናብ ህዝባዊ ምልዕዓል መድርኽ ኣሳጊርዎ እንተተባህለ ካብ ሓቂ ዝረሓቐ ኣይኮነን። እቲ ብውልቅን ብሓባርን (ብጉጅለን) ዝፍኖ ዝነበረ ድምጺ ናይ "ይኣክል" ናይ ብዙሕን እኩብን ህዝቢ ድምጺ ኮይኑ ክቃላሕ ጀሚሩ፣ ይቅጽል'ውን ኣሎ።ኣብ ዝተፈላለየ ከተማታትን ሃገራትን ዝተካየደ ናይ "ይኣክል" ኣኬባታት ዘርዚርካ ዝውዳእ ኣይኮነን። እዚ ኣኬባታት'ዚ   "ይኣክል" ዝብል ድምጺ ኣብ ምቅላሕ ጥራይ ከይተወሰነ፣ዝተፈላለዩ ኣገደስቲን እዋናውን ጭርሖታት ኣልዒሉ ከብቅዕ እቲ ቃልሲ ናብ ዝለዓለ ካልእ መድርኽ ንምስግጋርን ቀጻልነቱ ንምርግጋጽን  ዘመሓድሩ ሰባት መሪጹ ዝወጽአ ኣኬባታት ብምንባሩ ፍሉይ ተራ ተጻዊቱ ኢዩ ክበሃል ይከኣል። ብሓፈሽኡ ኣብዚ ኣኬባታት'ዚ ዝተመርጹ ኣካላት ኣብ ምውዳብ መዓልቲ ነጻነት ተዋፊሮም ዕውት ጽምብል ነጻነት ከምዝሓለፈ ክግምገም ይከኣል።

        እዚ ዝተራእየ ለውጢ ብዝተፈላለያ ናይ ሬድዮን ተለቪጅን ማዕከናት ዝዝርጋሕ  ብምንባሩ ኣብ ደገን ኣብ ውሽጥን ዝርከብ ህዝብና ዝነበሮ ናይ ቦታ ርሕቀትን ናይ ሓበሬታ ብኩራትን ብምምላእ ክቀራረብን ተረድኦኡ ከመሳስልን ከስፍሕን ሓጊዙ ጥራይ ዘይኮነ ናይ ቃልሲ መንፈሱ ከበራትዕ'ውን ተራእዩ ኢዩ።

       እዚ ቅድመ መዓልቲ ነጻነት ዝነበረ መድርኽ፣ በዚ ኣብ ላዕሊ ዝተጠቕሰ ኣብ ብዙሕ ከተማታትን ሃገራትን ዝተካየደ ህዝባዊ ውዳቤታት ጥራይ ኣይተሓጽረን። ሓደ ካብቲ ፍሉይ ተበግሶ ክበሃል ዝከኣል ብኣጋጣሚ ኣህጉራዊ መዓልቲ ደቂኣንስትዮ ካብ ዕለት 8 ክሳብ ዕለት 10 ኣብ ፍራንክፈርት ዝተካየደ ብዙሓት ፖለቲካዊ ውድባት ዝተሳተፍዎን ዝደገፍዎን ሰሚናር  ኢዩ። እዚ ሰሚናር'ዚ ድሕሪ ሰፊሕ ምይይጥ ካብ 3ክሳብ 6 ወርሒ ኣብ ዘሎ ግዜ  ንኩሉ ደላይ ፍትሒ (ፖለቲካዊ ውድባት፣ሲቪክ ማሕበራትን ህዝባዊ ውዳቤታትን ምሁራትን) ዝሓቁፍ መኣዲ (ዋዕላ) እተዳሉ ካብ  ኩሉ ሃገራት ኤውሮጳ ዝተዋጽአት ብደቂ ኣንስትዮን ደቂተባዕትዮን ዝቕመት ኮሚተ መሪጹ  ወጺኡ። እዛ ኣካል'ዚኣ ብ"ኮሚተ ንቕሎ ኣዲታት ንምድሓን ህዝብን ሃገርን" ዝብል መጸዋዕታ ትፍለጥ ኮይና ነቲ ዝተዋህባ መደብ ስራሕ ኣብቲ ዝተመደበላ ጊዜ(ኣብ ወርሒ ነሓሰ 2019)   ኣብ ግብሪ ንምትርጓም ኣበርትዓ ትንቀሳቐስ ኣላ።

         እቲ ካሊእ ኣገዳሲ ኣብዚ መድርኽዚ ዝተራእየ ተበግሶ እቲ ካብ 16 ክሳብ 20 ማዝያ ኣብ ስቶኮልም ዝተካየደ 2ይ ጉባኤ "ኤርትራዊ ሃገራዊ ባይቶ ንደሞክራስያዊ ለውጢ" ክጥቀስ ይከኣል። እዚ 18 ዝኣክሉ ፖለቲካዊ ውድባትን ሲቪክ ማሕበራትን ዝሓቁፍ፣ ኣብ 2011 ኣብ ሃዋሳ ዝተመስረተ ጽላል'ዚ፣ድሕሪ ናይ ብዙሕ ዓመታት ደውታን ውሽጣዊ ቁርቁስን፣ ርእሱ ክኢሉ 2ይ ጉባኤኡ ምክያዱ ጥራይ ዘይኮነ፣ሕሉፍ ተሞክርኡ ብነቀፌታዊ ዓይኒ ገምጊሙ ኣገደስቲ ውሳኔታት ኣሕሊፉ ምውጽኡ ንኣባላቱ ኮነ ንኤርትራዊ ደምበ  ደላይ ፍትሒ ተስፋ ዘመንጨወ ተበግሶ ምንባሩ ክስትውዓል ዝግባኦ ኢዩ። ብተወሳኺ ኣብዚ ጉባኤ'ዚ ዝተከፋሉ መሓዙት ውዱባት ክልተ ክፋላት ሰ.ደ.ህ.ኤ ሓድነት ኤርትራውያን ንፍትሕን ኣባላት መድርክን ካልኦትን ዘመሓላለፍዎ መልእክቲ ቅሩብነት ንሓባራዊ ተግባር ነቲ ዝጸንሐ ዝምድናታት ዘቀራርብን ዘመሓይሽን ኮይኑ ክንበብ ዝክእል ኢዩ።

            ናይ "ይኣክል" ማዕበል ንኩሉ ክፋላት ሕብረተሰብ  ኤርትራ ዝሓቖፈ ፍሉይ ተርእዮ ምንባሩ ዝሕብር  ብዙሕ ምልክታት ኣሎ። ኣብ ስቕታ ዝጸንሓን ደገፍቲ ዝነበራን ኣዴታት ኣብ ቅሉዕ ባይታ ወጺአን "ይኣክል" ኢለን ክምድራ ምስማዕ ሓዱሽ ተርእዮ ኢዩ። ብዙሓት ካህናት ናይ ዝተፈላለየ ማሕበራት ክርስትናን ኣመንቲ ምስልምናን ኣብ ቅሉዕ ባይቶ ወጺኦም ዘምሓላለፍዎ መንፈሳዊን ፖለቲካዊን መልእክትታት ብስለት ዝመልኦ ምንባሩ ጥራይ ዘይኮነ ምልክት ናይ ኣብ ህዝብና ማዕቢሉ ዘሎ ዓሚቕ ናይ ኣተሓሳስባ ለውጢ  ምኳኑ ተገንዚብና ክንሰርሓሉ ይግባእ። እዚ ተበግሶታት'ዚ  ኣብ ውሽጢ ኤርትራ'ውን ምቅልሑ እቲ ሚዛን ቃልሲ ክሳብ ክንደይ ሰፊሑን ዓሚቑን ከምዘሎ ንጹር መርኣያ ኢዩ።ካብዚ ዘይፍለ ካልእ ተርእዮ እቲ ብኤርትራውያን ምሁራትን ምኩራትን ክካየድ ዝጸንሐ፣ ኣብ ሓጺር ግዜ ዝጀመረ ናይ ሓባር መኣዲ ዘተን፣ንህልውን መጻእን ኩነታት ኤርትራ ኣመልኪቶም ዘመንጭውዎ ዘለዉ ጽሑፋትን ሓሳባትን ኢዩ። ኣብ ገለ ሕቶታት ፍልልይ ዝርአ'ኳ እንተመሰለ ብልዙብን ክፉትን መንፈስ ተታሒዙ ኣብ   ባይታ ክወሃሃድ ዘጸግም ኣይመስልን።ብዓቢ ውሕልነትን ሓላፍነትን ክተሓዝ ናይ ግድን ይከውን።        

           እዚ ውህሉል ድምር ተበግሶታት'ዚ፣ መበል 28 መዓልቲ ነጻነት ብሰፊሕን ድሙቕን ኣገባብ ክብዕል ዘክኣለ

ንጥፈታት ምንባሩ ምግንዛቡ ኣገዳሲ ኢዩ። ከምቲ ጽንብል በዓል ነጻነት ብድምቀትን ስፍሓትን ዘሕለፍናዮ መጠን ድማ ጽምብል በዓል ሓርነት ከነኽብር ትምኒትናን ተስፋናን ከነንምብረሉ ይግባእ ። ይከኣል ከምዝኮነ ኣሚና ቃልስና ከነበርትዕን ድሕሪ "ይኣክል" ክስዕብ ዝግባእ ናይ ቃልሲ ኣንፈት ክንቅይስን የድልየና ኣሎ።

        ካብዚ ንንየው'ከ ናበይ? እቲ ሰፊሕ ናይ ህዝቢ ማዕበል ዘንቀለን  ዘተሓቛቖፈን  "ይኣክል" ዝብል መራሒ ሓሳብ ክቕጽል ይክእል'ዶ ወይስ ሰሓብነቱ ኣብቂዑ ኢዩ? ኣብቂዑ እንተኮይኑ'ከ መተካእትኡ እንታይ ኢዩ? ዝብሉ ሕቶታት ምምላስ የድልየና ኣሎ።

             ብዙሓት ተዓዘብቲ ዝሕብርዎ ናይ "ይኣክል"መድርኽ ከምዘብቅዐ ኢዩ። "ይኣክል"ን እቲ ምስኡ ክቃላሕ  ዝጸንሐ ጠለባትን፣ እቲ ኣረመኔ ስርዓት ክትርጉመልና ንሓቶ  ዘሎና ዘስምዕ ትርጉም'ውን ይወሃቦ ኢዩ። ኮይኑ ግን እዚ መራሒ ጭርሖ'ዚ  ዘፍረዮ ፍርያትን ዘውረሶ ጸጋታትን ዓወትን ኣነኣኢስካ ዝርአ ስለዘይኮነ ባኺኑ ከይተርፍ  መተካእታ ክርከበሉ ናይ ግድን ኢዩ።

           ብዝተፈላለዩ ናይ ምሁራት መጽናዕቲ ጉጅለታትን ሓይሊ ዕማማትን ዝተፈላለዩ ሰነዳት ይዝርግሑ ኣሎዉ። መድርኽ "ይኣክል" ሰጊርና ናብ መድርኽ "ሓዞ ሓዞ" ክንእቱ ኣለና ዝብል መተካእታ'ውን ይስማዕ ኢዩ፡፡ "ሓዞ ሓዞ" ህድማ ናይቲ ኣረሜናዊ ስርዓት ዝእምት ጭርሖ ኮይኑ፣ቃልስና ነዚ ውልቀመላኺ ስርዓት ካብ ስልጣን ንምእላዪ ዘተኮረን፣ቅዋምና ባዕልና ክንትርጉም፣ዶብና ንሕና ክንሕጽጾ፣እሱራትና ባዕልና ክንፈትሕን ገደብ ኣልቦ  "ሃገራዊ ኣገልግሎት" መንእሰያትና ባዕልና ክንስርዞን ከምዝኮና ኣሚንና ክንብገስ ኣለና ዝብል ኢዩ። ናይ "ይኣክል" ምልዕዓል ዝፈጠሮ ባይታ ዝይዳ ክድልድልን ቀጻልነቱ ከረጋግጽን ናብ ሓደ ናይ ዘተ መኣዲ ክንመጽእን፣ከስረሓና ዝክእል ሰነዳት ብምድላው ብዝተሓተ ኩሉና ንሰማማዓሉ መደብ ስራሕ ኣጽዲቕና ኣብ ሓባራዊ ተግባር ክንከይድ የድልየና ኣሎ። ኣብዚ ሜዳ'ዚ ምሁራት ዜጋታትን ፣ምኩራት ፖለቲከኛታትን ግብኦም ከበርክቱ ዓቢ ሃገርዊን ህጹጽን ሓላፍነት ይጽበዮም ከምዘሎ  ክፈልጡ ይግበኦም። ኩሉ ደላዪ ፍትሒ ዝኮነ ዜጋ፣ኣብዚ እዋን'ዚ ቀዳምነት ክወሃቦም ዝግብኦም ኣገደስቲ ሕቶታት ኣለልዩ ናብ ሓባራዊ ተግባር ዝመርሕ መገዲ ክጥምት ግቡኡን መሰሉን ምኳኑ ክግንዘብ የድሊ ኣሎ።

ምስዚ ኣብ ላዕሊ ዝተዘርዘረ ኩነታት ብምትእስሳር ኣብዚ እዋን'ዚ "ንቕሎ  ኣዴታት ንምድሓን ህዝብን ሃገርን" እንታይ ከበርክት ይክእል? ብከመይከ? ዝብል ሕቶ ክበርህ ዘለዎ ኮይኑ ይርአ።

ከምቲ ኣብ ላዕሊ ዝተገልጸ፣እዚ ተበግሶ'ዚ በተን ከም ኣደ፣ሓብቲ፣በዓልቲ ሓዳርን ጓልን ኮይነን ኣብ ሕብረተሰብና ዘይተኣደነ ተራ ዝጻወታን፣ ኣብ ጊዜ ቃንዛን ስቓይን ብቐዳምነትን ብዝያዳን ዝሳቐያ ክፋል ሕብረተስብና ዝኮና ደቂኣንስትዮ ዝነቐለ ምኳኑ ፍሉይ ኣቃልቦ ክወሃቦ ዝግባእ ኢዩ። "ንርስቲ ይወጋኣላ ኣንስቲ" ክበሃል ከሎ ብመሬተንን  ብሂወት ስድራቤተንን ንዝመጸን ዘይዕጸፋን፣ክበጽሖኦ ዝደልያ ሽቶ ከይወቕዓ ጠጠው ዘይብላ ቆራጻት ምኳነን ዘመልክት ምሳሌ ኢዩ፡ ስለዚ ነዚ ተበግሶ'ዚውን  ሽቶኡ ከይወቕዐ ጠጠው ከምዘይብላ ምሉእ እምነት ኣሎ።

           እዚ ንቕሎ'ዚ እቲ ንነዊሕ ጊዜ ዝተጻዕረሉን ብዝተፈላለየ ምክንያታት ሽቶኡ ክወቅዕ ዘይከኣለን ናይ "ሓድነት" ወይ ድማ ብናይ ሓባር መደብ ህዝብኻ ኣዕሲልካ ጸላኢኻ ከተዳኽመሉን ክትስዕረሉን ትክእል ባይታ ምጥጣሕ ዝዓለመ ኢዩ። ካብዚ ዕላማ'ዚ ብምብጋስ ንኩሉ ደላይ ፍትሒ ኤርትራዊ ዜጋ (ፖለቲካዊ ውድባት፣ሲቪካዊ ምንቅስቓሳት፣ህዝባዊ ምጥርናፋት መሁራትን ምኩራትን ዜጋታትን መራሕቲ ሃይማኖታትን ) ዝሓቁፍ ሓደ ባይታ ንምድላው ተዓጢቐን ተሲአን ኣለዋ። እዚ ተበግሶ'ዚ ካብ ምረትን ጭንቀትን ተበጊሰን ክጅምርኦ ከለዋ ናተን ዕማም ጥራይ ከምዘይኮነን፣ ንበይነን ከካይደኦ ዘለወን መደብ ጌረን ኣይቆጸርኦን። ካብ መጀመርታ ኣትሒዘን ኩሎም እዞም ኣብ ላዕሊ ተዘርዚሮም ዘለዉ ክፍልታት ደለይቲ ፍትሒ ሕብረተሰብና አእጃሞም ከብርክቱን ኣድማዒ ተራ ክጻወቱን ጻዊዒተን ቀጻሊ ኮይኑ ጸኒሑን ኣሎን።

          እቲ ክውቃዕ ዝድለ ሽቶ ኣብ  ኩሉ ደላይ ፍትሒ ዝቅበሎ ዝተሓተ እዋናዊን ኣገደስቲን ሕቶታት ብምርድዳእ (ናይ ኣረኣእያ ሓድነት ብምፍጣር)  መደብ ስራሕ ተሓንጺጹ፣ ብኤውሮጳ ደርጃ ንኩሉ ደላይ ፍትሒ እትሓቁፍን እትውክልን ናይ ሓባር መሪሕነት መሪጽካ ምንቅስቓስ ኢዩ። ኣቃሊልካ ዝረአ ዕማም ከምዘይኮነ ኩሉ ዝግንዘቦ ሓቂ ኢዩ። ቅድሚኡ ክዳሎ ዘለዎ ንዝተፈላለየ ሕቶታት ዝምልከት ሰነዳት ክቕረብ  ናይ ግድን ኢዩ። ቅጥዒ ኣወካክላ ተሳተፍቲ ከመይ ይኸውን?  ኣቋውማን  ዕማማትን እታ እትምረጽ ኣካል ከመይን እንታይን  ክኸውን ከምዘለዎ  ክንደፍን ብግሉጽ ክዝተየሉን ክውሰንን ከድሊ ኢዩ። ካሊእ ኣገዳሲ ዝበሃል ፖለቲካዊን ተክኒካዊን ጉዳያት ክህሉ ከምዝኽእል'ውን ዝከሓድ ኣይኮነን። እዚ ዕማማት'ዚ ምስ ዝተፈላለዩ ሰብ ብርኪ ብዝግበር ርክብ ከመሓደር ኣብ ትጽቢት ኣሎ።

ናይ ውሽጥን ናይ ደገን ህዝብና ጊዜ ዘይህብ ምልክታት ይልእክ ከምዘሎ ኩልና ንዕዘቦ ዘለና ኢዩ። እዚ ምልክታትዚ ኣቃሊልና ክንርእዮ ዘለና ኣይኮነን። ስለዚ እዚ ቅዱስ ዕላማ'ዚ ንምዕዋት ኩሉ ደላዪ ፍትሒ ኣበርክቶኡ ክልግስ ሃገራዊ ጻውዒት ይቀርበሉ ኣሎ።

            ዓወትና ብሓባራዊ ቃልስና፡

             ህዝቢ ኤርትራ ክዕወት ኢዩ፡

           ስውኣትና ንዘለኣለም ይዘከሩን ይከበሩን።

       

              ደስበለ መሓሪ፣

             

           

      

Tuesday, 11 June 2019 12:56

Open Letter to the Eritrean Head of State

Written by

10 de June de 2019  

Your Excellency, President Isaias Aferwerki:

We write to convey our most sincere congratulations upon your country’s normalization of diplomatic relations with Ethiopia. This is a development much appreciated by all Africans of goodwill.

We write to you in our capacity as citizens of Africa to pledge our unequivocal solidarity with all the people of Eritrea. This includes the many Eritreans we see enduring all manner of risk and suffering in search of a better life outside their homeland. We acknowledge that we too hail from nations with varying governance and developmental challenges.  We write to you, in the spirit of Pan-African solidarity, to seek common solutions to our shared problems.

Africa’s many disparate nation states have undergone significant and diverse changes over the course of the last two decades.   [Today, many more Africans live in freedom than under repression].  Importantly, those African countries that have made the most progress – including attracting investment and tourism – over the last 25 years have been those whose citizens enjoy greater freedom of expression, press and movement, the rule of law, an independent judiciary, and political pluralism. 

Sadly, in these critical areas, Eritrea has not kept pace with the changes seen elsewhere.  Over the past two decades Eritrea has been described as the most closed society on our continent, an unfortunate situation for a country with such rich human capital and potential, with so much to offer not only Africa but also the world.

We trust that by opening this channel of communication with Your Excellency, we may be afforded the opportunity to work with you to restore your country and the great people of Eritrea to their rightful place in the family of African nations.

Of particular concern to us is the fate of several journalists and activists who have been imprisoned for prolonged periods of time in Eritrea, many of whom have reportedly been denied regular visits from their families and loved ones.

Equally, we are disheartened by the plight of the many thousands of Africans, including some Eritreans, who feel compelled to flee their home countries in search of a better life for themselves and their families, risking life and limb and enduring inhumane deprivations and indignities across deserts and oceans.

Too many of these fellow Africans have found themselves in the rapacious hands of modern day slave traders and people traffickers even causing some to end up in slave markets in places such as Libya. Too many of these migrants and refugees have perished at sea in their quest for a better life. 

We Africans are blessed with too much in our home countries to have our citizens suffer and be devalued this way.  This gloomy picture needs to change, and it is in this spirit that we address this message of solidarity to you, Your Excellency.

We respectfully call upon Your Excellency to allow a delegation of the signatories hereunder to visit Eritrea, and to afford us the opportunity to meet with you and your government as well as with ordinary citizens, including journalists, writers, and other persons currently in prison.

As with the bold step you have taken to normalize relations with Ethiopia, we believe a gesture of this kind would go a long way towards ending Eritrea’s isolation from the larger African family and could help usher in a new era of prosperity and freedom for your people.

It would be an honour to furnish you with any additional information you might require of us and we eagerly await your response.

The Signatories,

  1. Prof. Wole Soyinka, Nigeria, Nobel Laureate
  2. Rafael Marques de Morais, Angola, leading anti-corruption campaigner and award winning investigative journalist
  3. John Githongo, Kenya, publisher, leading anti-corruption campaigner and award winning anti-corruption activist
  4. Kwasi H. Prempeh, Ghana, Executive Director of Center for Democratic Development
  5. Farida Nabourema, Togo, Executive Director of Togolese Civil League
  6. Leyla Hussein, Somalia, Women’s Rights & Health Campaigner, psychotherapist, writer and founder of the Dahlia Project
  7. Maina Kiai, Kenya, founder of the Kenya Human Rights Commission (KHRC) and former UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Association
  8. Maaza Mengiste, Ethiopia, award-winning writer of Beneath the Lion’s Gaze
  9. Iva Cabral, Cape Verde, Chancellor of Lusófona [Lusophone] University and  daughter of Amílcar Cabral
  10. Belabbès Benkredda, Algeria, CEO and Founder of the Munathara Initiative, the Arab world’s largest online and television debate forum highlighting voices of youth, women and marginalized communities.
  11. Kasha Jacqueline Nabagesera, Uganda, a leading LGBT rights activist, founder and executive director of the LGBT rights organization Freedom & Roam Uganda, 2011 recipient of the Martin Ennals Award for Human Rights Defenders
  12. Hon. Robert Kyagulanyi aka Bobi Wine, Uganda, musician, member of parliament and youth leader recognized throughout East Africa
  13. Tundu Lissu, Tanzania, lawyer, CHADEMA politician, member of parliament and former president of the Tanganyika Law Society
  14. Amr Waked, Egypt, award winning actor, best known for his role in Syriana
  15. José Eduardo Agualusa, Angola, award winning writer, finalist in the 2016 Man Booker International Prize for his seminal work A General Theory of Oblivion
  16. Nasser Weddady, Mauritania, leading civil rights activist, consultant and co-editor of Arab Spring Dreams.
  17. Chiké Frankie Edozien, Nigeria, writer and professor of journalism at New York University
  18. Emmanuel Iduma, Nigeria, author
  19. Mona Eltahawy, Egypt, author and journalist
  20. Mireille Tushiminina, Democratic Republic of Congo, Gender & Equality advocate
  21. Felix Agbor Nkhongo, Cameroon, Director of the Centre for Human Rights and Democracy in Africa (CHRDA) and leading human rights defender
  22. Boniface Mwangi, Kenya, democracy activist, Ukweli political party founder, photographer and artist
  23. Adeyanju Deji, Nigeria, leading democracy activist and human rights defender
  24. Alieu Bah, The Gambia, leading democracy activist and human rights defender
  25. Tutu Alicante, Equatorial Guinea, leading democracy activist and Executive Director of Equatorial Guinea Justice (EG Justice)
  26. Andrea Ngombet Malewa, Congo Republic, Global Coordinator of the Sassoufit Collective 
  27. Roukaya Kasenally, Mauritius, CEO of African Media Initiative
  28. Abdelrahman Mansour, Egypt, Executive Director of Open Transformation Lab, leading human rights defender and journalist
  29. Reem Abbas, Sudan, journalist and leading human rights defender
  30. Moussa Kondo, Mali, journalist, CEO and founder of the weekly L’Express de Bamako, anti-corruption crusader, Country Director of Accountability Lab Mali, 2015 Mandela Washington Fellow, 2018 Obama Foundation Fellow.
  31. Ericino de Salema, Mozambique, Director of the Electoral Institute for Sustainable Democracy in Africa (EISA), academic, lawyer and journalist
  32. Jestina Mukoko, Zimbabwe, leading human rights activist and Director of the Zimbabwe Peace Initiative
  33. William Amanzuru, Uganda, environmental rights defender, founder of Friends of Zoka, winner of the EU Human Rights Defenders’ Award 2019
  34. Miguel de Barros, Guinea-Bissau, sociologist and Executive Director of the environmental NGO Tiniguena
  35. Bheki Makhubu, e-Swatini (formerly Swaziland), Editor of the Nation Magazine and leading democracy defender
  36. Edson da Luz aka Azagaia, Mozambique, rapper and leading activist
  37. Charles Onyango-Obbo, Uganda, leading publisher and columnist
  38. Rodney Sieh, Liberia, leading newspaper editor of FrontPage Africa and democracy activist
  39. Oludotun Babayemi, Nigeria, democracy activist and monitoring and evaluation expert,
  40. Akin Olaniyan, Nigeria
  41. Chanda Chisala, Zambia, founder and president of Zambia Online
  42. Dany Ayida, Togo, Resident, Country Director, National Democratic Institute (DRC)
  43. George Sarpong, Ghana
  44. Rosemary Mwakitwange, Tanzania, Chief of Party, Freedom House
  45. James Smart, Kenya, leading journalist and news anchor
  46. Abdulrazaq Alkali, Nigeria, Executive Director Organisation for Community Civic Engagement (OCCEN) Nigeria 
  47. Mathatha Tsedu, South Africa, Adjunct professor of journalism, Wits University and Acting Executive Director of the National Editors Forum (SANEF)
  48. Brenda Zulu, Zambia, journalist and ICT specialist
  49. Emanuel Saffa Abdulai, Sierra Leone, Executive Director of Society for Democracy Initiatives
  50. Zecharias Berhe, Ethiopia, Senior Fellow, African Good Governance Network
  51. Sylvia Amiani, Kenya, counseling and psychosocial practitioner focused on refugees in Germany
  52. Lamii Kpargoi, Liberia, journalist, democracy activist and lawyer
  53. Dr. George Ayittey, Ghana, economist, author and president of the Free Africa Foundation, Washington DC
  54. Evan Mawarire, Zimbabwe, pastor and democracy activist, founder of #ThisFlag movement
  55. Zineb El Rhazoui, Morocco, journalist and human rights advocate
  56. Marc Ona Essangui, Gabon, environmentalist, Executive Secretary of Brainforest
  57. Fred Bauma, Democratic Republic of Congo, democracy and youth activist, leader of the Lucha Social Movement
  58. Dr. Justin Pearce, South Africa, Department of Politics and International Studies, Cambridge University
  59. Asma Khalifa, Libya, activist, cofounder of Tamazight Women Movement
  60. Violet Gonda, Zimbabwe, journalist and President of the International Association of Women in Radio and Television (IAWRT)
  61. Fatoumata Camara, The Gambia, journalist, CEO/Founder  of the Fatu Network
  62. Jelili Atiku, Nigeria, human rights artist
  63. Fred Muvunyi, Rwanda, editor at Deutsche Welle, Op-Ed contributor for Washington Post and a consultant for Freedom House
  64. Aimable Manikrakiza, Burundi, CEO of the Centre for Development and Enterprises Great Lakes
  65. Houssem Aoudi, Tunisia, CEO/Founder of Wasabi and Cogite – co-working Space, entrepeneur and activist
  66. Chouchou Namegabe, Democratic Republic of Congo, journalist and human rights activist, CEO & Founder Anzafrika
  67. Thulani Maseko, e-Swatini (formerly Swaziland), leading human rights lawyer
  68. Samba Dialimpa Badji, Senegal, journalist
  69. Mariama Camara, Guinea, fashion designer and humanitarian, Founder/President of Mariama Fashion Production and the There is No Limit Foundation
  70. Olívio Diogo, São Tomé, sociologist and media commentator, coordinator of the Civil Society Network
  71. Adeola Fayehun, Nigeria, journalist/producer, Keeping it Real with Adeola
  72. Mohamed Soltan, Egypt, Executive Director, the Freedom Initiative
  73. Memory Banda, Malawi, children’s rights activist
  74. Ali Amar, Morocco, veteran journalist, co-founder and director of online news outlet Le Desk
  75. Mohamed Keita, Mali,  Pan African rights advocate
  76. Norman Tjombe, Namibia, human rights lawyer and activist
  77. Uyapo Ndadi, Botswana, human rights lawyer, activist, and founder of the Ndadi Law Firm
  78. Phil ya Nangoloh, Namibia, human rights activist, monitor and Executive Director of NamRights Inc
  79. Jacqueline Moudeina, Chad, prominent award-winning lawyer and human rights activist
  80. Rosmon Zokoue, Central African Republic, journalist, blogger and activist
  81. Ahmed Gatnash, Libya, co-founder & VP of Operations, Kawaakibi Foundation
  82. Anas Aremeyaw Anas, Ghana, Africa’s leading investigative journalist and private investigator
  83. Boubacar Diallo, Niger, Editor, Liberation newspaper
  84. Abdourahman Waberi, Djibouti, acclaimed novelist, essayist, academic and short story writer, human rights activist, professor of literature at George Washington University
  85. Doudou Dia, Senegal, Executive Director, Goree Institute, Center for Democracy, Development and Culture in Africa
  86. Alain Mabanckou, Congo, novelist, journalist, poet and academic
  87. Francis Kpatindé, Benin, journalist, former editor-in-chief of the newsweekly Jeune Afrique and former spokesman for the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR)
  88. Mustafa Haji Abdinur, Somalia, award-winning journalist
  89. Thembo Kash, Democratic Republic of Congo, award-winning cartoonist
  90. Damien Glez, Burkina Faso, award-winning editorial cartoonist
  91. Ahmed Abdallah, Comoros, journalist
  92. Anton Harber, South Africa, former journalist with the Rand Daily Mail until its closure by the apartheid government, co-founder and editor of the Weekly Mail (now The Mail & Guardian) and Professor of Journalism at the University of the Witwatersrand
  93. John-Allan Namu, Kenya, award-winning investigative journalist, co-founder of Africa Uncensored, 2017 Desmond Tutu Fellow
  94. Alice Nkom, Cameroon, leading human rights lawyer, defender of rights of the LGBT community
  95. Mouctar Bah, Guinea, veteran journalist
  96.  Andrew Feinstein, South Africa, former ANC MP, Executive Director of Corruption Watch UK, author of The Shadow World: Inside the Global Arms Trade
  97. William Rasoanaivo, Madagascar, award-winning political cartoonist
  98. Claudia Gastrow, South Africa, anthropologist, Univeristy of Johannesburg
  99.  Motlatsi Thabane, Lesotho, professor of History, University of e-Swatini
  100. Cyriac Gbogou, Ivory Coast, blogger, co-founder of O’Village and key actor in the new technology sector in the country
  101. Canon Clement Hilary Janda, South Sudan, Pan African Ecumenist
  102. Ola Diab, Sudan, journalist and activist

* This article has been updated 10 June 2019, 10.27 p.m.

Source=https://www.makaangola.org/2019/06/open-letter-to-the-eritrean-head-of-state/

June 11, 2019 (KHARTOUM) - Former U.S. Special Envoy for Sudan and South Sudan Donald Booth will be appointed as Special Adviser on Sudan to Tibor Nagy the Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, reported The Foreign Policy Magazine on Monday evening.

PNG - 190.8 kb
U.S. Special Envoy Donald Booth, speaks at the U.S. House Subcommittee on Africa, on April 28, 2016 (ST Photo)

The move comes as over 70 U.S. lawmakers last May urged the State Department to put pressure on the military council to ensure rapid power transfer to a civilian-led government in Sudan.

Also, the US House of Representatives is set to endorse a resolution on Sudan urging “the United States Government to continue efforts to convene and work with the international community in support of a civilian-led government in Sudan”

However, US officials admitted that the lack of a clear policy towards the Sudanese crisis can explain the absence of strong action to bring the Sudanese junta to hand over power to the peaceful protesters in Sudan.

“There’s no leadership on this issue in State (Department) or the White House,” said a U.S. official involved in deliberations, who spoke on condition of anonymity to Foreign Policy.

Recently, U.S. President Donald Trump’s National Security Adviser John Bolton had to tweet twice on Sudan to express his support for the power transfer to civilians.

Also, Nagy kept posting several tweets related to the situation in Sudan to show that the State Department has been following with concern the dramatic developments in the east African nation.

Further, Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs, David Hale had to speak with Saudi and Emirati officials to encourage them to put pressure on the military junta which has been suddenly under international focus after the bloody raid on the main protest site killing over hundred people.

U.S. top diplomat for Africa will visit Sudan in the coming days as part of a tour in the African continent from 12 to 23 June. He is expected to meet the military council and the opposition Forces for Freedom and Change (FFC).

The ruling junta, according to opposition sources, has finally admitted giving the chairmanship of the Sovereign Council and the majority of the 15-member presidential body to the opposition.

If implemented, this means that Booth will be tasked with the follow-up of the implementation of democratic reforms and the peace process which should take place during the transitional period.

(ST)

Source=http://www.sudantribune.com/spip.php?article67633

Tuesday, 11 June 2019 09:08

ምስጋና

Written by

ዝኸበርክንን ዝኸበርኩምን፡ እነፍቕራን እንፈትዋን  ጓልና ነፍሰ-ይምሃር ፈለግ ኣንገሶም ኣብ ዕሸል ዕድሚኣ ብድንገት ብምዕራፋ፡ ንምጽንናዕና ኣብ መሕዘኒ ቦታ ዝተመላለስኩም፡ ካብ ርሑቕን ካብ ቀረባን ኣብ ስነ-ስርዓት ቀብሪ ዝተረኸብኩም፡ ብጸሎትን ብዜማን ዘሰነኹማ ቤተ ክህነትን፡ ብቴለፎን/ብስልኪ፡ ኮታስ ብኹሉ ዓይነት መራኸቢታት ዘጸናናዕኩምናን ናይ ሓዘን ተኻፋልነትኩም ዝገለጽኩምን ኣሓትን ኣሕዋትን፡ መዛኑኣን መማህርታን ፈለጥታን፡ ብልቢ እንዳኣመስገና፡ ክብረት ይሃበልና ሕሰም ኣይትርከቡ።

ንነፍሰ-ይምሄር ፈለግ ጓልና ድማ መንግስተ ሰማያት የዋርሳ እንዳበልና፡ ካብ ሎሚ ንዳሓር ሓዘና ከምዝዓጸና ብኣኽብሮት ነፍልጥ።

Feleg A

ኣኽበርትኹም፡

ወ/ሮ ወይኒ መምህር ሰመረ

ኣቶ  ኣንገሶም ገብረመስቀል

ምስ መላእ ስድራ ቤት

ዝኸበርኩምን ዝኸበርክንን ኣሕዋትን ኣሓትን ግዱሳት ኤርትራውያን

 ብምቕዳም ናይ ክብሪ ሰላምታና ነቕርብ። ኣስዒብና ከምቲ ወርትግ እነዳልዎ ድራር ነቶም ምእንቲ ሃገርምን ህዝቦምን ልዕሊ 40 ዓመታት ኣብ ጸሓይን ደሮናን ኣብ ሃገር ሱዳን ምስ ኩሉ መውጋእቲ ስቓይን ተወሳኺ ጸቕጢ ደምን ሽኰርን ካልእ ሕማማትን ወዘተ----ተሳቒዮም ዝነብሩ ዘለዉ ጀጋኑ ውጉኣት ሓርነት ኤርትራውያን ኣሕዋትናን፣ ብጾትናን ሓደ ምሸት ድራር ክንዝክሮም ናይ ኩላትና ኤርትራውያን ሓላፍነትን፣ ሓልዮትን ምዃኑ ንዓኻ፣ ንዓኺ ዝስወር ኣይኰነን፣ እሞ ኣብዚ ንዕለት 22-06-2019 ኣብ SAALBAU Gallus ካብ ሰዓት 16.00 ክሳዕ ሰዓት 23.00 ድሕሪ ቀትሪ ዘሎ ሰዓታት ብጉዳዮምን፤ ብጠቕላላ ማሕበራዊ ጉዳያትናን፤ ብወግዒን ብዋዛ ምስ ቁምነገርን፤ ዕላልናን ገርና ከነማሲ ብኽብሪ ንዕድመኩም።

ግዱሳት ደቂ ኣንስትዮን ኤርትራውያንን ፍራንክፈርትን ከባቢኡን ኣባላት ማሕበር ኣካለ ጽጉማን ኤርትራን

 ሓበሬታ ቦታ፣  ካብ Hauptbahnhof ብ Straßenbahn 11 Richtung Höchst, 21 Richtung Nied und S14 ደይብኩም ኣብ Gallus ወሪድኩም ንየማን ጸግዒ ጸግዒ ቀዳመይቲ ኣንጐሎ ንየማን ትኽ ኢልኩም ትኸዱ ኣብ መወዳእታ ንጸጋም ስግር ዘሎ SAALBAU Frankenallee 111 60326 Frankfurt a.Main ትረኽብዎ።

ምናልባት ኣብዚ ናይ ድራር ምሸት ብስራሕ ክትካፈሉ ዘይከኣልኩም በዚ ሕሳብ ባንክ ወፈያኹም ክትሰዱ ትኽእሉ።

 Bankverbindung: Postbank

Eritreischer Verein 2010 für Menschen mit Behinderung

 IBAN: DE 96500100600790750601