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Zmeselo
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Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Zmeselo » 16 Aug 2025, 11:51



General
Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

By: Amir Abdulkadir

https://shabait.com/2025/08/16/empowere ... s-destiny/

Aug 16, 2025



The world marked International Youth Day on 12 August, celebrating the creativity, energy, and leadership of young people everywhere. This year’s theme, calling for meaningful youth engagement in building sustainable and inclusive societies, resonated strongly in Eritrea, where youth have been putting those ideals into practice long before and after the global observance. From rural villages to bustling towns, young Eritreans are planting trees, conserving water, teaching in classrooms, and leading community projects that embody the spirit of the day.

One example came on 3 August in Tesenay sub-zone, where a seminar brought together hundreds of students in the Students’ Summer Work Program. Jointly organized by the National Union of Eritrean Youth and Students (NUEYS) and the Ministry of Education, the event was both a forum for ideas and a rallying call for action. Mr. Meles Gebrai, Head of the NUEYS branch in Tesenay, told participants that their role in national development is indispensable, urging them to take part in greening campaigns, environmental sanitation, and other community initiatives. Students pledged to approach their duties with dedication. This year, about 600 are participating in the program in Tesenay.

Similar work is underway in the Mendefera sub-zone, where students are engaged in soil and water conservation and reforestation. According to Mr. Bereket Tekleselasie, Head of the local Agriculture Office, 250,000 seedlings planted last year in seven areas are thriving. This year, 900 students – guided by teachers and agricultural experts – have planted 28,000 more and built 27 km of terraces.

Beyond their immediate contributions, these programs help instil values of civic responsibility, cooperation, and environmental stewardship in young participants. The skills and habits developed – teamwork, problem-solving, and a sense of community ownership – extend far beyond the summer months. They prepare young Eritreans to become changemakers who can tackle future challenges in agriculture, urban planning, climate resilience, and public health, ensuring that the nation’s development gains are sustained over the long term.



A national commitment to youth

International Youth Day, first proposed at the 1991 World Youth Forum in Vienna and officially proclaimed in 1999, is more than a symbolic date on the calendar. It is a reminder that young people are not passive beneficiaries of development programs, but active architects of change. This vision aligns closely with Eritrea’s approach, where youth engagement is deeply woven into national policy. The 1994 National Charter identifies human resources, especially youth, as the nation’s greatest asset, and successive policies have placed their education, health, and empowerment at the centre of development strategies.

Eritrea ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child soon after independence and later, the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child. Laws strictly prohibit child labour, trafficking, early marriage, and harmful practices such as female genital mutilation/ cutting. Programs for vulnerable children and youth – run by the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare, civil society organizations, and youth associations like NUEYS and the National Union of Eritrean Women (NUEW) – offer protection, education, and skills training.

These investments have borne fruit. Young teachers work in remote communities, raising literacy rates and building human capital. In health care, young professionals deliver essential services nationwide, improving the health and well-being of Eritrea’s citizens. Graduates contribute to research and innovation in agriculture, engineering, and infrastructure, efforts praised by the former African Development Bank President Akinwumi Adesina for advancing Eritrea’s development.

Notably, Eritrea’s young people have long played a decisive role in shaping the nation’s destiny. During the struggle for independence and the subsequent defence of sovereignty, countless young Eritreans joined the frontlines, served as medics, educators, and logisticians, and supported the liberation effort in both combat and civilian roles. Their courage, resilience, and sacrifices were central to securing freedom and preserving the country’s territorial integrity. This legacy of service and sacrifice continues to inspire today’s generation, linking the spirit of past struggles to the ongoing work of nation-building.



Agents of change and building the nation

Across the world, young people have been at the forefront of social transformation, economic innovation, and political renewal. Their energy, creativity, and willingness to challenge the status quo make them powerful catalysts for progress. In Eritrea, this same spirit is vividly evident, as youth continue to shape the nation’s trajectory through their dedication, resilience, and active participation in every sphere of society.

Eritrean youth are leading environmental stewardship efforts through reforestation, terracing, and water conservation projects that strengthen community resilience. They are challenging outdated norms on gender equality, disability, and mental health, while promoting inclusion and solidarity. In arts, music, sports, and culture, young talents are shaping Eritrea’s creative identity and gaining recognition at home and abroad. And when the nation’s sovereignty has been threatened, they have stood at the front lines with unity, determination, and courage.

The link to International Youth Day is unmistakable: the qualities celebrated globally – innovation, leadership, and service – are demonstrated daily by Eritrea’s youth. Their contributions show that sustainable national development is impossible without their vision and drive. As the world reflects on this year’s Youth Day, Eritrea stands as a vivid example of what is possible when young people are empowered.

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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Zmeselo » 16 Aug 2025, 11:56


ኣምባሳዶር በየነ ርእሶም ሎሚ ቀዳም 16 ነሓሰ ንኣቦና ብጹእ ወቅዱስ ኣቡነ ጳውሎስ፡ ሊቀ ጳጳስ ናይ ኤውሮጳ ናይ ምሳሕ እንግዶት ጌይሩሎም።

ኣቡነ ጳውሎስ ኣብ ናይሮቢ ንቤተ ክርስትያን ሓመረ ኖህ ኪዳነ ምሕረት፡ ቤተ ክርስትያን ንክባርኹ ከምኡውን ንምእመናንን ክበጽሑ ናብ ናይሮቢ ኬንያ ናይ ሰለስተ መዓልቲ ምብጻሕ ይገብሩ ኣለዉ።

Ambassador Beyene Resom hosted a luncheon for His Holiness Abune Paulos, Archbishop of Europe, on Saturday, August 16th 2025.

Abune Paulos is on a three-day visit to Nairobi, Kenya to bless the Hamere Noah Kidane Mihret Church and visit the faithful.





_______________





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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Zmeselo » 16 Aug 2025, 12:09

(ናቕፋ ፕረስ)
ኤርትራ፡ ኣብ ጽንኩር እዋን ንህዝብና ተቐቢላ ልክዕ ከም ዜጋ ሒዛ፡ ኣብታ ጽንክርቲ እዋን ኣብ ጎኒ ህዝቢ ሱዳን ዝኮነት ጎሮቤት ሃገር ኢያ። ኣብ ልቢ ነፍስ-ወከፍ ህዝብና ድማ፡ ልዑል ቦታ ኣለዋ።
— መራሒ ሃደንደዋ (ካርዲባይ ሕዳርብ)፡ ናዝር መሓመድ ኣሕመድ ኣልኣሚን (ትሬክ)

ህዝብን መንግስትን ኤርትራ - ከም ኣካልን መቀጸልታን እቲ ብምሉእ ዓቕሙ ኣብ ጎኒ ህዝቢ ሱዳን ዝጸንሐ፡ ንሓይልታት ሰራዊት መንግስቲ ሱዳን ዉን -እንተ'ወሓደ ኣብቲ ንኤርትራ ዝቀርብ ከባቢታት፡ ብኣየር፡ መሬትን ባሕርን ድጋፍ ከምዝገብር ኢዩ ኣነጺሩ።

ኣብ ኤርትራ ዝተዓለሙ ወተሃደር፡ ልክዕ ከም ኣብ ሩስያ ዚተዓለመ፡ ሓደ ዓይነት ወተሃደራዊ ብቕዓት ኢዩ ዘለዎም።

ያሲር ኣልዓጣ ኣብ ኤርትራ፡ ንፕረሲደንት ኤርትራ፡ ነዞም ሱዳናውያን ኣብ ኤርትራ ዚኣተዉ፡ ክበጽሖም እደሊ ኣለኹ ምስ በሎ፡ ኣብ ገዝኦምን ምስ ስድርኦምን ስለዘለዉ፡ እንታይ ከይኮኑ ተሰኪፍካ ክብል መሊሱሉ።

መጀመርያ ኩናት ምስ ተወልዐ፡ ፕረሲደንት ኢሰያስ ንዓይን ንኣርኮ ሚናዊን ኣስመራ ጸዊዑ
ሕጂ ሱዳን፡ ወትሃደር የድልያ ኣሎ፡ ኣብዚ ዶ ተምጽዎም ከሰልጥነልኩም፡ ወላስ ኣብ ወሽጢ ሱዳን ክብል ሓቲቱና።
ኣብ ኤርትራ ክስልጥኑ ተሰማሚዕና። እቶም ኣብ ኤርትራ ዚሰልጠኑ ድማ፡ ነጥበ መቀይሮ ናይቲ ኩናት ኣምጺኦም ።


SUDAN — ERITREA ✊

Eritrea has long been a stabilizing force in the Horn of Africa, though its role is often misunderstood.

When neighbors find themselves on the brink of collapse, it is Eritrea that quietly steps in offering stability and support and its support often proves «decisive» as Ethiopia’s Abiy Ahmed has experienced firsthand.

Today, Sudan is in the eye of the storm, facing a struggle for survival. And once again, Eritrea, with its limited resources but steady resolve, has stood beside a neighbor in need.

The difference is, that the Sudanese people and their government openly acknowledge this solidarity. Their gratitude contrasts sharply with Ethiopia’s, where appreciation faded once the crisis passed.

Sudanese generals have even pledged in recent days that, should Eritrea face its own trials from any hostile neighbor, Sudan will repay the support in kind.

This spirit of solidarity and gratitude is powerfully expressed in the words of Hadendowa Nazir Mohammed Al-Amin Tirik, the Beja tribal leader and head of the independent councils, who speaks to the strength of today’s Eritrea-Sudan political, diplomatic and people-to-people relationship.

Zmeselo
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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Zmeselo » 16 Aug 2025, 12:18

Biniam Ghirmay Designated as Goodwill Ambassador of UNDP Eritrea

By: Samuel Habtemikael @shabait

Aug 16, 2025



He came, he saw, and he conquered—both on the cycling track and in the hearts of millions. Today, his name is synonymous with sporting excellence. Biniam Ghirmay, through remarkable achievements in world-class cycling tournaments, has become a national pride and a symbol of Eritrea’s sporting spirit.

On Tuesday, 12 August 2025, Olympian cyclist Biniam Ghirmay was officially appointed Goodwill Ambassador of UNDP Eritrea. The ceremony, attended by senior government officials, UN agency representatives, and members of the Eritrean National Cycling Federation, marked a historic moment for Eritrea and the UN’s partnership in the country.

In his keynote address, Ambassador Zemede Tekle, Commissioner of Culture and Sports, highlighted the transformative role of sports in advancing sustainable development, promoting environmental protection, and amplifying Eritrea’s development philosophy at the regional and global levels. Sports, he noted, can bridge divides in wealth, culture, technology, and political will, fostering dialogue and collective solutions.

Moreover, the commissioner said that over the past 30 years, Eritrea has invested heavily in youth development through sports. Its athletes have embodied the nation’s philosophy of self-reliance and resilience, representing Eritrea with honor in regional and international arenas. He also praised Biniam’s global triumphs—particularly in the Tour de France—as exemplary of the power of sports to enhance cultural diplomacy and national pride.

Recognizing Biniam’s role in addressing the issues above and fostering engagement between Eritrean institutions and the world community, he further emphasized Biniam’s potential to advance Eritrea’s narratives on sustainable development endeavors and to share success stories internationally; while also underscoring his influence among his peers in inspiring youth involvement in environmental conservation. He also stressed Biniam’s well-deserved appointment as a Goodwill Ambassador for UNDP Eritrea as an inspiring achievement for Eritrean youth, Africans, and the global sports community.

In his closing remark, Ambassador Zemede reiterated Eritrea’s commitment to collaborate with the UN agencies in Eritrea, particularly with the UNDP, by involving athletes, and assured that the Commission of Culture and Sports will provide all necessary resources to support the partnership.

The UN resident coordinator, Ms. Nahla Valji, on her part, mentioned that the day marks a historic event both for Eritrea and its partnership with the United Nations.

Ms. Nahla Valji stated Binim’s success journey as the continuation of a legacy built by generations of Eritrean cyclists, men and women, who have carried the nation’s flag with pride. She also added the designation of Biniam Ghirmay as UNDP’s first-ever Eritrean Goodwill Ambassador, which honors not only an extraordinary athlete but also a powerful agent of change.

She also noted that cycling is more than Eritrea’s national sport and that it is a story of discipline, unity, and excellence. Eritrea has dominated the African cycling scene for decades and continues to produce world-class athletes.

More importantly, Ms. Nahla Valji stressed that the appointment of Biniam activates a platform for transformation and that it honors more than a legacy. She also asserted that his ambassadorship will honor the legacy by investing in Eritrea’s next generation of youth, promoting equal opportunities for girls and boys in sports; champion climate action, showcase Eritrea’s green initiatives from renewable energy to landscape restoration; demonstrate how sport can power sustainable development and the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG’s).

Ms. Nahla Valji acknowledged, that the appointment of Biniam Ghirmay will help advance a new narrative for Eritrea. She noted that incomplete stories often shape international perceptions. Through champions like Biniam, the UNDP aims to present a fuller picture, one that reflects Eritrea’s achievements, aspirations, and unique model of self-reliance.

In her final remarks, Ms. Valji emphasized that the ambassadorship is both a tremendous opportunity and a profound responsibility.
As Biniam wears the jersey, he carries not only the UNDP’s trust but the hopes of every young Eritrean pedaling their dreams—on the racetrack, in their communities, and in our shared race for sustainable development,
she concluded.



Mr. Pa Lamin, the UNDP Representative in Eritrea, expressed his privilege in announcing Biniam Ghirmay’s appointment. He described it as a new chapter in UNDP Eritrea’s mission to advance sustainable development.

Lamin highlighted that Biniam’s extraordinary achievements in cycling have not only made history but have also demonstrated the power of resilience, discipline, and ambition. These values, he noted, are in perfect alignment with the UNDP’s efforts to support the government in its development strides.

Mr. Pa Lamin then pointed out that Biniam is expected to leverage his influence to advocate three critical pillars for Eritrea that incorporate, climate action – supporting Eritrea’s environmental initiatives and amplifying campaigns for a greener future; youth empowerment – inspiring young Eritreans to become drivers of sustainable progress; sports for the SDGs – showcase how sports can unite communities and accelerate national development.

He then expressed his confidence that Biniam’s voice will amplify UNDP’s message on Eritrea’s achievements on climate, youth, and sport for the SDGs in Africa and beyond, and wished Biniam all the best in his ambassadorship.

Olympian cyclist Biniam Ghirmay on his part, stated that he is honored to be appointed as a Goodwill Ambassador for the UNDP country office in Eritrea and recognized the profound sense of responsibility that the ambassadorship carries.

Biniam also commented, that the designation represents a collective vision for Eritrea. He then affirmed that he will be committed to championing three key themes that are vital to our future; climate action, youth empowerment, and the role of sports in achieving sustainable development.

He finally underlined, that he will use his influence for greater good, advocating for climate action and supporting Eritrea’s sustainable development in the African continent and beyond.

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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Digital Weyane » 16 Aug 2025, 12:32

እምበር ተጋዳላይ Deqi Arawit ዊል ሜክ ኢትይጵያ ግሬት ኤጌይን!

Zmeselo
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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Zmeselo » 16 Aug 2025, 14:34

Digital Weyane wrote:
16 Aug 2025, 12:32
እምበር ተጋዳላይ Deqi Arawit ዊል ሜክ ኢትይጵያ ግሬት ኤጌይን!



Eritrean Cycling Trio to Compete in Hamburg Cyclassics

Three of Eritrea's top professional cyclists, Biniam Girmay, Natnael Tesfatsion, and Henok Mulubrhan, are set to compete in the prestigious BEMER Classic in Hamburg this Sunday, August 17.

The 200km race offers a significant prize of €28,000 for the winner.

This one-day event is expected to be highly competitive.

Last year, Biniam Girmay secured a commendable third-place finish, earning a bronze medal. The race was won by Olav Kooij, with Jonathan Milan taking second place. 👇

With the confirmation of two more elite Eritrean riders from their respective clubs, the competition is anticipated to be even more fierce this year.
A total prize fund of €100,000 is available for the top 20 finishers.

Cycling enthusiasts in Hamburg are encouraged to come out and support the Eritrean riders, in what promises to be a challenging and important race.







_____________




Last edited by Zmeselo on 17 Aug 2025, 06:56, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 16 Aug 2025, 17:13

Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny



The so called youth who are presumably leading the country are 80 years old and the su™™cker is promoting about the youth and future....What we have is a bleak future where the country will be destroyed NOT by external forces but by its own weight.......Donkoro low IQ

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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 16 Aug 2025, 17:17

The sodomite dictator cant even maintain the statue quo of Eritrea industrial base which was kept and preserved by Mengestu.......Low IQ, Tell us the companies which were operational during the derg and compare them with what you have in the sodomite lead Eritrea.....Idiot low IQ





Please wait, video is loading...

The empowerment of Youth under the sodomite useless and visionless dictator.......I have been in Kampala Uganda and Jubba South Sudan, there is no such empowerment of youth in these countries and here are the low IQ mini skunis telling us that Eritrea is moving to the highest gear for development......

I


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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 16 Aug 2025, 17:24

Mini skunis.......Unless you are opportunistic cu™ts who enjoy the suffering of Eritrea and Eritreans, Either you should keep silent and be like the rest of silent majority of Eritreans who cant stand the sodomite dictator but if you insist to propagate and promote the sadistic nature of the sodomite dictator......You need to raise questions which were raised by wedi sewra.....IQ matters.

Mini skunis, Do you see youth and bright from the statement of the sodomite dictator.........The 80 years old sodomite dictator might try to look like youth by mimicking an expired prostitute who still think she got it by making excessive make up and cosmetic surgery but it doesn't make him youth.


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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 16 Aug 2025, 17:30

Mini skunis.......an individual who suffers from severe autism or a person with down syndrome is smarter than Wedi Medhin Berad skunis because these qentir are still convinced that Eritreans are a Bunch of herds with no brain of their own and who are ready to digest every crap of the dictator........Here is the script of the sodomite dictator and his followers........Basically, Eritreans are destined to count the number of Ethiopian rulers instead of counting how many factories our country is establishing or the number of PHD students.


How many Game over.........The dumb arses cu£@nts are really something.



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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Abere » 16 Aug 2025, 17:34

ወይ አያምር ወይ አፍር ማለት ዘኢይመስሎ ነው። ቢለጥፍ ዱቄት; ቢለጥፍ ዱቄት - ችግር ወጥሮ ይዟል፡ ግን አገር የሆኑ አገሮች ሲሉ ታይቶ ተሰምቷል። Simply you are got at sing-a-poor. No body believes your sh!t post - even the nearly 1 million poor people of Eritrea living in Addis Ababa proves you are a topnotch liar. Eritrea is not a country :mrgreen:

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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Abere » 16 Aug 2025, 17:43

Abere wrote:
16 Aug 2025, 17:34
ወይ አያምር ወይ አፍር ማለት ዘኢይመስሎ ነው። ቢለጥፍ ዱቄት; ቢለጥፍ ዱቄት - ችግር ወጥሮ ይዟል፡ ግን አገር የሆኑ አገሮች ሲሉ ታይቶ ተሰምቷል። Simply, you got to sing-a-poor. :mrgreen: No body believes your sh!t post - even the nearly 1 million poor people of Eritrea living in Addis Ababa proves you are a topnotch liar. Eritrea is not a country :mrgreen:

Zmeselo
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Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Zmeselo » 16 Aug 2025, 17:54



Ethiopia’s central government under Abiy Ahmed, is unraveling. Field Marshal Berhanu Jula has openly conceded, that even a change of regime would not stabilize the country—an implicit admission that state collapse is imminent. To divert attention from mounting crises, Abiy is picking territorial fights with Somalia, ratcheting up war talk against Eritrea, and dragging Ethiopia into a Cold War–style standoff with Egypt.

At the same time, the situation on the ground is dire:

Amhara communities are still being targeted with drone strikes and mass arrests unchecked.

Oromia is engulfed in conflict, as OLA‑Shene exploits the federal government’s weakness.

The economy is spiraling, with runaway inflation and looming debt defaults.

Meanwhile, Fano resistance forces are gaining momentum and scoring significant victories. Ethiopian troops are being killed or surrendering in growing numbers, while Fano captures more weapons from federal forces—rapidly shifting the balance of power. This dynamic helps explain the recent admissions by Abiy and Berhanu Jula. Their statements are not just warnings—they’re tacit acknowledgments that they can no longer control Ethiopia. Regime collapse appears imminent, and attention is now being directed toward what follows.

Yet, U.S. policy has remained vague. Washington voices concern but imposes no real consequences for war crimes, applies no leverage to force inclusive dialogue, and has no plan if militias or a coup overrun Addis Ababa. Senator Marco Rubio has criticized Abiy’s authoritarian tilt, but will the United States:

• Suspend security assistance, until atrocities cease?
• Support U.N. investigations into crimes in Amhara and Tigray?
• Prepare sanctions for officials obstructing negotiations?




Ethiopia's fragility demands urgent action. While Sudan's collapse serves as a warning, Ethiopia's potential disintegration would have far greater regional consequences. Current diplomatic approaches appear insufficient to halt this trajectory.

A critical factor being overlooked, is Eritrea's unique position to influence stability in Ethiopia. No sustainable solution can emerge, without acknowledging Asmara's role and interests in the region. A more inclusive regional strategy that engages all key stakeholders - including Eritrea - offers the best path forward.

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 36821
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Empowered for the Future: Eritrea’s youth Shaping the Nation’s Destiny

Post by Zmeselo » 17 Aug 2025, 03:24

Subhuman-liar!

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Deqi-Arawit wrote:
16 Aug 2025, 17:17
The sodomite dictator cant even maintain the statue quo of Eritrea industrial base which was kept and preserved by Mengestu.......Low IQ, Tell us the companies which were operational during the derg and compare them with what you have in the sodomite lead Eritrea.....Idiot low IQ





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The empowerment of Youth under the sodomite useless and visionless dictator.......I have been in Kampala Uganda and Jubba South Sudan, there is no such empowerment of youth in these countries and here are the low IQ mini skunis telling us that Eritrea is moving to the highest gear for development......

I


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