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Higher Education in Eritrea
Simon Bisrat (May
2005)
This article is not
intended to prescribe a solution for all the ailments the education
system is suffering; but to shade light on one of the core problems the
country is facing and entice scholars and experts in this field for
further in-depth and professional discussion.
Eritrea has only one
higher institution. This very lone institution is under the process of
disintegration, as a result of the government’s deliberate actions. I am
surprised to see only few and sporadic articles dedicated to this
dwindling institution despite the enormous challenge and difficulty it
is facing today. I am equally surprised by the muted response of most of
the respected Eritrean scholars in the diaspora to this deliberate
action of the government and its dire consequences.
The University of
Asmara (UoA) is facing its greatest challenges since its inception some
50 years ago. Even during the most difficult and trying times of the
late 80’s, the UoA did not stop enrolling students. But now under the
very hands of a government which is believed to care, it stopped
enrolling freshmen students for the last two successive academic
calendars and there is no any hope it will enroll during the upcoming
academic calendar of 2005/2006. It is literally slowly phasing out. No
one knows the fate of the University after the current year III and year
IV students graduated. In 2004, the government suddenly cancelled the
graduation ceremony and ordered all the would-be graduates to go to Sawa
few days before the intended day of commencement. The government’s
deliberate action to phase out the institution did not stop there; it is
tirelessly working to open other higher institutions to replace it. Each
ministry is ordered by the President to open its own College regardless
of the existence of the program with in the UoA. A good testimony of
this is the opening of the School of Medicine with in the auspices of
the Ministry of Health, instead of upgrading or strengthening the
College of Health in the UoA. Recently, I read news clip at the Ministry
of Information website reporting that a new College of Agriculture which
will offer five different programs is being built in the Gash Barka
region and the President recently visited the area and gave directives
to expedite the process while UoA has similar programs running.
In 2004, the
government suddenly ordered all high school graduates to go to Sawa for
additional one school year after hastily opened a ‘High School’ without
giving any plausible explanation. This decision overwhelmed the general
public. Few months later, the government again hastily opened a
‘College’ at Mai Nefhi with out any prior preparation. The programs at
the new ‘College’ were exact replica to what UoA is currently offering
with others to have no direct relevance to the needs of the country at
this point in time. Then, all the students from Sawa including some
members of the national service were directed to attend the new
‘College’ regardless of the results achieved in their High School
Leaving Certificate Examination denying the bright students the
opportunity to join the established programs with in the UoA.
Ironically, the Minister of Education, Mr. Osman Saleh, publicly
confirmed his government’s policy not to fail any students defying the
conventional wisdom of learning; thereby, confirming the sole intention
of the opening of the ‘College’ which is to appease few thousands of
members of the national service which otherwise were supposed to be
demobilized. The greatest irony is that in this whole process the UoA is
just kept in the dark. This put the University administration in a
defensive position; and later led to the resignation of its President
who was a staunch supporter of the government and faithful cadre for
decades.
In 1991, the
government introduced new education policy by radically changing the
existing curricula. No one questioned the appropriateness of that policy
as the general public was pre-occupied with greater euphoria caused due
to the victory achieved in liberating the country. Thirteen years later,
after a generation of students passed through the supposedly ‘improved’
curricula, it was declared a failure by the President himself and the
Ministry was ordered to introduce another one. Again without the
requisite consultation and in-depth review the Ministry again hastily
drafted a new one. No one knows how long the current curricula will
last.
The hostility and
contempt of the academia started when the government suddenly dismissed
40+ Professors from the UoA in 1993 by the time the thriving University
desperately needs them. In 2001, it incarcerated 2000 UoA students that
led to the death of two students in the detention camp. The government
did not take responsibility to the death of the two students to date.
How can a government that tried to preach to others about the principles
of ‘self-reliance’ treats its own citizens that are the brightest and
the educated in such a manner? How can a government which states time
and again that Eritrea’s only resource is its people condemn, ostracize,
and disenfranchise the young and the educated under the hands of tugs of
government officials who are either have no any formal education or lack
the necessary professional training. How can a government which brags
for having a sound education policy deny the salary of teachers across
the country under the guise of national service for almost five years?
Education is a
cornerstone of a modern society. Then, why is all this mockery to the
education system, in the first place? No sane individual can get a
plausible explanation to the action of this government. Are there any
other governments in this world who are hostile to education to a level
to the government of PFDJ? Not to my knowledge. The government’s
contempt to education emanates to the very foundation of the government.
History tells us that the EPLF, which is the precursor to the ruling
party, was formed out of those who lack formal education with a wider
base with people in the rural part of Eritrea. The elites either shunned
it away from the very beginning of its inception or gunned down by the
‘halewa sewra’ who attempted to join it during the course of the
struggle. How can you expect a sound education policy and respect for
professionals and scholars from people who have a long-standing history
of working against these segments of the society? It was for this very
reason that one of the reform-minded veteran fighter, Petros Solomon,
made the wake up call in public in June 2001 to the obsolete and
outdated ruling party to participate the young and the educated if it
needs to survive in 21st century. His call for ‘new
generation of leaders’ resonated throughout the academia and the younger
generation. Such reform-minded and inclusive personality with in PFDJ is
not welcome and his fate became incarceration.
No words could be
sufficient to explain the brunt of war that is being waged against the
educated in Eritrea. It is the hope of this writer that this article
will meet its intended objectives of inviting more professional
discourse on this very issue which received little attention to date.
Hope the anticipated scholarly review and analysis of the problem will
lead to the recommendation on how to fix the problem in post-PFDJ
government.
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