Articles
Catching the Dead
By Paulos Misgena - Jul 16, 2008   

If you are living in the Diaspora and die for any reason, you are required by GoE [Government of Eritrea] now to get a paper from a head of a church in your area for your body not only to be flown to Eritrea but also to receive proper burial and prayer services to be held for you. Otherwise, there will be no Fithat. This was announced a couple of weeks ago in no uncertain terms by the Archbishop of the Eritrean Orthodox Church in North America when he came to Seattle to maledict Priest Tekeste.

Last Updated ( Jul 17, 2008 )
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The Need For Dialogue
By Saleh Johar - Jul 15, 2008   

I have not given my consent. Wars should not be waged in my name. And I would like all Eritreans to say: Not in my name. And that, really, is how change will come. When enough Eritreans stand up and tell the Eritrean regime: not in my name.

Last Updated ( Jul 17, 2008 )
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Unbound: The Preview (To Your Review)
By SAAY - Jul 13, 2008   
The comedian Pablo Francisco has a killer bit about how Hollywood can convince us to watch anything—“the same crap you’ve seen over and over again”--as long as the salesman has a deep voice. And what happens in Hollywood never stays in Hollywood: it is copied in every wood, including Addiswood. Now an Ethiopian movie-maker is selling the same crap, with a new approach:
Last Updated ( Jul 17, 2008 )
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Just Don't Call It A War: People May Get Ideas
By Saleh AA Younis - Jun 27, 2008   

We Eritreans never have wars.  We may struggle (for 30 years), or have a crisis (Hanish Crisis!) or a conflict (Border Conflict) but never wars.  Whatever is going on with Djibouti now--confusion? fabrication?--is also not war.  Just don't call it a war: people may get ideas.  People who come out of wars, specially wars that go badly, demand accountability. 

Last Updated ( Jun 28, 2008 )
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Adapt or Perish
By Burhan Ali - Jun 23, 2008   
what Mr. Heikel predicted comes true in the manner he described, then this may be distressing and paradoxical to Eritrea, as it will find itself at the focus point of three competing nationalistic movements with universal claims: The Eritrean National Movement, The Greater Tigrai National movement, and the Beja National movement.
Last Updated ( Jun 23, 2008 )
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