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EXODUS OF ERITREA’S YOUTH TO CONTINUE TILL ISAYAS’ EXIT
In one of the latest jokes from Eritrea, Isayas Afeworki
goes to the immigration office in Asmara and joins a long queue to see for
himself of what was going on. He then observed the long queue melting down
in minutes. Wondering of what was happening; he stopped a limping old man
and asks him why the people who lined up on the queue since the early hours
of the day left the place upon his (Isayas’) arrival. The old man replied:
"I know you can send me to prison even at my age, but all the same I will
answer your question. The people went home because you are finally here
asking for an exit visa. We will have no more mass departure out of home
after your exit, my dear ex-hero".
The ‘dear ex-hero’ of Eritrea’s liberation struggle, now
nothing but a brutal dictator and a shadow of his past, will for sure face
his final exit out of his small dig-out. But until then, the exodus of
Eritrea’s youth and its elderly will continue unabated. Latest reports had
it that 7 young soldiers and officers, among them a woman, reached Port
Sudan from the sea in the eve of the New Year 2004. Other 50 members of the
Eritrean defense forces also reportedly crossed the border to the Sudan on
23 December 2003.
During the year just ended, Eritrea continued to suffer
of painful experiences under the callously selfish and oppressive PFDJ. The
flow of new waves of refugees out of the country, all fleeing from the
excesses of the dictatorship, was one of the indicators of how life in
Eritrea has degenerated to sub-human level.
We have never been good at counting our casualties. We
don’t actually know our total losses during the long years of the struggle,
both peaceful and armed. We don’t know how many of our compatriots perished
in the hands of Isayas Afeworki’s security apparatus or are still
languishing in the dungeons of his PFDJ regime. We have no idea whether we
lost 19,000 or 49,000 in Isayas’ latest senseless war. And indeed, we do not
know how many of our youth are perishing every year on the high seas and the
deserts while trying to escape from equally inevitable death at home under
the militarist regime of the ‘ex-hero’.
One of the ‘routes of death’ to Eritrea’s new wave of
refugees is a line unmarked on the map but all the same stretching from the
Eritrea-Sudan border and passing via Khartoum and Suq-Libya to Unwainat and
Ejabiya on the Sudan-Libya border, through the killing and always moving
sandbanks of the Sahara Desert, to Kufra, Bengazi and Tripoli in Libya and
on to the drowning waves of the Mediterranean Sea. Malta is one of the
unintended destinations.
Alongside the reported arrival in the Sudan of 57 army
‘deserters’ during the last week of year 2003, we also received the good
news about the release of about 70 compatriots from the detention barracks
of Malta. During the past 24 months, Eritreans in the Diaspora were
expressing deep concern about the plight of their compatriots who were
caught up in Malta and unfairly treated by the authorities of that island
state. Worse than that, many of them were deported to Eritrea where they
would not expect just and civilized treatment.
The Eritrean Newsletter and other organs of the
ELF-RC have been highlighting the causes and effects of the new wave of
refugees out of PFDJ’s Eritrea. The article below, presented in the form of
an interview with a survivor of the dangerous trip from Eritrea to Malta,
tells the dangers and difficulties faced by our youth today.
Many human rights activists and Eritreans among the civic
societies in Europe have extended a helping hand in raising awareness about
the plight of Eritrean asylum seekers in Malta. As told by the interviewee
below, the ELF-RC was in the forefront of raising the required awareness
among human rights organizations starting in the spring of 2002 when the
Malta crisis was in its making. Only to remind the reader, it was in the
spring and summer of 2002 that the ELF-RC urged humanitarian organizations
to intervene on the side of the Eritrean refugees stranded and unjustly
detained in military barracks in Malta. The president of Malta was
repeatedly urged by messages from the ELF-RC to reconsider the detention of
Eritrean refugees and treat them humanely. Prominent humanitarian and human
rights personalities who received messages on the subject from the ELF-RC
included the president of the European Parliament, Pat Cox, and the UNHCR
High Commissioner, Ruud Lubbers.
When the situation of the asylum seekers in Malta
worsened in September 2002, the ELF-RC Chairman sent messages to all those
concerned. The message partly read: "In this moment of outrage, [we in
the ELF-RC] once again appeal to the UNHCR, the UNHCHR, the EU, the US and
all humanitarian and human rights bodies and states to seriously turn their
attention to the lot of persecuted Eritreans now under fire in Malta".
Those efforts were partly thwarted when the Maltese
authorities on 30 September 2002 started deporting a total of 223 Eritrean
asylum seekers back to Eritrea.
The exodus of our youth out of the homeland will continue
until the removal of the regime which is the root cause of our people’s ever
widening problems. Until then, the struggle to mitigate those problems
caused by the regime will be continued alongside our relentless struggle to
bring real change and democratization in the country.
***********
A CHAT WITH A SURVIVOR OF THE SAHARA DESERT, THE HIGH SEAS
AND THE DETENTION CAMPS OF MALTA
A staff writer for The Eritrean Newsletter met on
2 January 2004 with a compatriot who spent nearly two years in one of the
Malta detention camps for asylum seekers before arriving where he is today.
He requested anonymity due to his current situation but was willing to talk
his heart about what is happening to Eritrean youth inside
home, which he described as a ‘burning hell’, and to those fleeing from home
only to plunge into another hell outside home – the likes of detention camps
in Malta. When asked if he wanted to be called by any alias of his
preference, he said: "call me a survivor of the Sahara Desert and Malta".
For the sake of brevity, this article will refer to him as ‘The Survivor’.
Like Asmarino.com’s recent interviewee who was talking
direct from Malta, The Survivor was also an agriculture graduate from the
University of Asmara where he once was a frontline campus activist within
the generation of Semere Kesete. As is the case with every member of
Eritrea’s latest category of ‘lost generation’, The Survivor had to escape
from PFDJ because of unbearable life conditions in the homeland. The long
chat with The Survivor can be summarized in the following Question and
Answer notes:
Newsletter: Why and how are young Eritreans escaping from
home?
The Survivor: To start with,
the why is very simple to answer: in my case, for example, I was running
away from insecurity, oppression and lawlessness in today’s Eritrea. The
country is not only declining but literally sinking to the bottom in all
aspects: political, social and economic. I was one of those who left Eritrea
during the second half of 2001. One of the escape routes continues to be the
Sudanese border. As was the case in the long past, it still takes pains and
risks to reach the Eritrea-Sudan border and become a refugee in hiding – in
hiding because of the existing irony: the UNHCR and the Sudan do not
recognize Eritreans fleeing from ‘their own’ regime as refugees. What people
generally do is buy internal mobility permits (menqesaqesi) from the
corrupt regime officials/officers, and until crossing the border one has to
camouflage oneself as a trader, or as a soldier going to his/her unit or
government functionary on internal travel. The mobility permit alone costs
several hundred dollars. Road guides who claim to know the ‘safe’ passages
also charge a lot of money, which sometimes is worth it because the know
some of the people planted by the GOE in the border areas to pass
intelligence to its security services. I paid a lot of money to reach the
Sudan.
Newsletter: What happened next – to
you and to others in a similar situation?
The Survivor: Once in the
Sudan, you look for addresses of relatives and friends in the Diaspora and
ask for urgent financial support. Preparation for the next destination
(wherever it may be) takes a lot of time. The ‘Dem’ (el Duem) quarter of
Khartoum is the staging centre for most of Eritrea’s youth packing for
further exile. My turn to travel out of Dem fell on 1 December 2001. Each
traveler collected his/her share of food and water and reached nearby Suq-Libya,
located north of Khartoum. That same night, three small trucks, each packed
with 40 souls, drove us out of Suq-Libya towards the Libyan border. The
first day of the travel is normally considered to be safe. The difficulties
and dangers augment on the second day in the Sahara Desert. This road has
claimed many Eritrean lives. For the luckier travelers, the road usually
takes five or more days, depending on correct knowledge of direction and
sheer luck. In our case, it took 26 days to cross the Sahara Desert. At half
road, we found Eritreans and others with faulty trucks which could not
proceed. We had to accommodate 10 Eritreans in our already overloaded
trucks. Soon after, ourselves faced mechanical failures in the trucks and
waited several days until rescued trucks arrived from Libya. We were running
out of drinking water. To economise on water and to restrain us from
drinking, the truck owners put oil in the water. During the last days, we
had literally nothing to eat. We felt it was by miracle that we reached an
urban centre in Libya safely. The suffering and fear from always pending
death was enormous. No statistics are taken but many young people
disappeared in the desert. It is an ongoing tragedy.
Newsletter: How much does the transport from Khartoum to
Libya cost?
The Survivor: It was not
terribly big. We paid $250 per person, excluding cost for food and water.
There are also other costs, like bribes, when the need arises. We also had
to contribute in paying $200 per each of the three trucks for the additional
10 Eritreans we gave lift on our way to Libya. It is important to mention
here that an unknown number of those non-Eritreans we left on the road with
their damaged vehicles died because they tried to walk and then lost
direction.
Newsletter: You mean death is very common on the road?
The Survivor: Many, many
die on the road. Only friends and relatives know who died. (Zmotu, zTef’u
adi’om tuqtserom. BzuHatyom.) If the incoming trucks are apprehended by
the Libyan police, then they are returned to Eritrea forcibly. While I was
in Libya, 41 Eritreans were arrested upon arrival and then imprisoned for
six months. The Eritrean Ambassador at that time, a certain Mr. Omar,
refused to help in their release. In August 2002, the Libyan authorities
attempted to send them back to the Sudan. But fortunately for this group, a
Libyan police office agreed to receive bribes and released them on the way
to the desert.
Newsletter: How was life in Libya and where did you
proceed from there?
The Survivor: It was not easy
to stay in Libya. Some are arrested and languish in prisons before
deportation to Eritrea. In my case, my wife was selling tea in the streets,
which is common in that country, and I remained inside a rented room. Every
survivor of the desert trip soon starts the third round of preparation for
another risky journey, usually to Italy, which is a spring-board for travel
to other destinations. Again, considerable time is lost in that preparation
until the required finances are somehow obtained. A journey in smugglers’
boats going to Italy costs US$1,000 per person. It is Arab mediators who
collect that fee from each potential traveler. The middlemen promise to
arrange the right boat as soon as possible, but some of them disappear with
the money they collect from us, ‘illegal refugees’. I stayed in Libya for
seven months because a middleman disappeared with the money he collected
from me and many other Eritreans. The fishing boats engaged in smuggling
refugees have small capacity but they are always overloaded. The usual
embarkation takes places are Zwara and Zeleta. When our turn came, my wife
and I made a party of 250 ‘passengers’ that left Zeleta on 25 July 2002. The
ages of passengers ranged between 8 months and 50 years. There were 30
children in that boat which aimed to take us to Italy. It was a terrible
journey. The high seas were very violent with waves rising up to the sky and
then plunging it down a violent stream. The boat was full of water. We felt
the end was approaching very fast. No one was sure how we survived. The
Italian coast guards tried to locate and save us but failed. The Maltese
finally managed to come to our rescue and transferred us to a safe ship.
That is how we unintentionally landed in Malta.
Newsletter: You also mean that like on the Sahara Desert
many others die while trying to cross the Mediterranean Sea?
The Survivor: Oh yes, many.
Take for example the boat that capsized in June 2003 near Tunis with about
250 on board. Only 14 survived. No one knows how many Eritreans died in it
but many did die! There were other boats that faced similar fate carrying
other nationalities, among them a few Eritreans. The tragedy is taking place
all the time, but no one takes count of the loss of Eritrean lives.
Newsletter: What is the frequency of the journeys from
Libya to Italy or Malta?
The Survivor: As I know, there
were major sea trips every month with up to 250 persons. But there also are
smaller boats trying to cross the sea all the time, some making it
successfully others not. For example, a young Eritrean known as "Teklit" and
his 9 friends bought a small motor-boat at US $10,000 and crossed the sea to
Italy after facing real death under stormy sea waves. We knew about them
because they somehow survived. Debesai of "Glas" and his friends were
traveling with Arab youth in June 2002 but all perished etc.
Newsletter: How would you summarize
your experience in Malta?
The Survivor: It was very bad
experience to a large number of us. It was in March 2002 that the first
group of 150 Eritreans landed in Malta unintentionally. Those of us who
arrived there in late July 2002 were the largest group (250 persons). Other
smaller groups of Eritreans and other nationalities also joined us in
Maltese detention camps during 2002 and 2003. To be very brief: staying in
the military barracks of Malta for over a year without getting the very
basic human needs for livelihood was extremely depressing and damaging to
the human person, both physically and mentally. We expected decent treatment
as asylum seekers but were treated as sub-humans and as criminals. We felt
our human worth was taken from us. And it is no exaggeration to say that
every one of us who was detained at those barracks known as Al Safi, Halfar,
TaKandjia and the Floriana police station still shudders at the very mention
of the name Malta and its military barracks.
Newsletter: What was your worst day in Malta?
The Survivor: The day the
Maltese authorities started deporting some of us back home. I was one of
those listed to return on 30 September 2002. My case was reconsidered and my
deportation to Eritrea postponed because my wife gave birth in Malta only a
few weeks earlier. Otherwise, I would have been sent as the 224th
deportee that week. I was among the government critics in the University and
outside it, and my forced return to Eritrea would have been very risky. We
pleaded that they be deported not directly to Eritrea but at least to the
Sudan or Ethiopia, but the Maltese authorities were not interested in the
lives of those Eritreans. I know many compatriots deported to Eritrea had
very serious cases. I don’t think some of them are still alive, especially
among former members of the Defense Forces. I later on learned that about 10
of the deportees from Malta, including Major Fitsum Haile, were taken away
from the Asmara airport to unknown prison and no one knew their whereabouts.
The rest were detained at Adi Abeito and later taken to detention centers in
the dry Dahlak islands.
Newsletter: What contacts did you have with Eritreans
outside Malta, for example, and how did you leave those camps?
The Survivor: The first
contact we had starting in the spring of 2002 was the ELF-RC. We talked to
their Khartoum and Frankfurt offices from the detention barracks. We always
talked with Drar Mentai of ELF-RC in Khartoum and Dr. Yussuf Berhanu and
Negusse Tsegai in Frankfurt. They were very helpful and we in Malta heard
with satisfaction about the messages their organization was sending to the
President of Malta, to Amnesty International and other humanitarian
organizations. This campaign made many Eritreans aware of our plight. We
also recall of what Arta’a of the same organization has done in Kassala a
year ago in convincing the Sudanese authorities to stop deporting to Eritrea
of about 60 Eritrean youth who were returned from Libya. Former detainees in
Malta will also always remember the indomitable Father Mintoff and his Peace
Lab, and Aba Marino of Milano who was among the first to reach us. I am also
thankful to others who gave support to the cause of the asylum seekers in
Malta during 2003, among them Elsa Chyrum, and in doing so drew
international attention to the suffering of Eritrans in Malta and,
hopefully, in other places.
Newsletter: You still feel you would say much more on the
subject of your experience in the past two years?
The Survivor: I did not even say a small fraction of
what I saw, what I heard and what I experienced
on those high risk trips from Eritrea to the Sudan, then
life in the Sudan, the life-or-death journey on the Sahara Desert, life in
hiding inside Libya, the risky boat journey across the Mediterranean, and
then landing in the Maltese barracks as a detainee without a known crime and
the fear of deportation back to Eritrea. I hope to say more about these
experiences when I find time to say them freely and fully.
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