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Zmeselo
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From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 19 Nov 2019, 13:18



ARCHITECTURE

From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Gillian Darley

https://www.apollo-magazine.com/eritrea ... hitecture/

19 NOVEMBER 2019


The Fiat Tagliero service station in Asmara, designed by Giuseppe Pettazzi and completed in 1938. Photo: © Edward Denison, 2013

In 2017 Asmara, the capital of Eritrea, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site, a move that can be seen as the beginning of more hopeful times for the country. The following year Eritrea and Ethiopia, its much larger neighbour (from whom it had gained independence in 1993) signed a declaration ending a state of war that had existed since 1998; this was followed in the autumn by the opening of the mutual border and the lifting of UN sanctions against Eritrea.

The remarkable architectural heritage that earned Asmara this listing was largely the product of Italian imperialism. Until 1897, Asmara was a village; its fortunes were transformed when the Italian colonists decided to move their administrative capital inland from the Red Sea port of Massawa. At more than 2,300 metres above sea level, Asmara was a far cooler and healthier spot for European functionaries to develop as their centre. Colonial architects produced an extraordinary, eclectic range of Italianate architecture, inspired by home but incorporating local materials such as a red-black or grey-black stone that, painted in white, gives a rough-hewn and cheerful finish to many of these early buildings. Brick was reserved for the most important and official buildings. The earliest church was in a Lombard style and the ambitious cathedral complex which replaced it in 1923 followed suit. Brick villas and offices for the water company took the Tuscan medieval for inspiration, with suitably Romanesque detailing. The Asmara Theatre (later a cinema), was designed in around 1919 by the engineer Odoardo Cavagnari, the leading planner of the new capital. Looking to the Florentine Renaissance, the building has a portico recalling the Ospedale degli Innocenti, which is approached by a pair of sweeping stairs leading up from the street through a terraced garden.

When younger architects began to aggrandise Asmara in the name of Mussolini from the late 1920s onwards, they were urged to change direction and look purposefully forward. The earlier buildings, loaded with decoration and a host of historical references, were followed by another generation of structures designed in a modernist idiom. Hotels, offices, villas and apartments were designed for the climate, with balconies and courtyards constructed of heavy concrete with arbitrary ornament and a wash of render. These are tough buildings, simply detailed and well-made, the earliest of which was the Casa del Fascio – now the Ministry of Education.

The extraordinary [deleted] of the central area of the town has been left largely undisturbed by the usual pressures of commercialisation, intrusive tourism and the rest; the dire legacy of Italian segregationist town planning also remains, spilling across the surrounding hillsides. No new construction has been allowed in the key historic district since 2001. The World Bank underwrote an important programme, the Cultural Assets Rehabilitation Programme (CARP), which ran from then until 2007; in those years, a wide programme of repair and upgrading of key buildings took place, as well as the intensive research that eventually led to UNESCO recognition. Twelve years later, both those who take direct responsibility for the old town’s buildings and those who offer help from the sidelines – notably Edward Denison who, with his wife Guang Yu Ren, worked on the archives for the submission to UNESCO and co-wrote a book on Asmara – hope for new political will and funding.


The Cinema Impero, Asmara, designed in 1937 by Mario Messina. Photo: the author

Meanwhile, some building types are still used for their original purposes. The Cinema Impero, designed in 1937 by Mario Messina, was originally intended to seat 1,800. It is still immense even in a more modest incarnation, and fills to capacity for streamed sporting events (football and cycling in particular). The cafes and bars, deco or modernist, are also little changed. Factories, on the other hand, have found new uses after the Italian automobile industry moved on, leaving a remarkable built legacy that ranges from the little Agip petrol station of 1937 (now owned by Shell), and the most famous modernist building in Eritrea, the Fiat Tagliero service station, designed by Giuseppe Pettazzi and completed in 1938.

These buildings may be tough, but many need care and maintenance. Pettazzi’s service station, which was renovated under the CARP programme, is again a sorry sight, isolated by a roundabout, disused and fading among weeds and broken paving. Conservation plans have been drawn up but there is no indication of when work might begin.

Asmara is not the only city that stands to benefit from the normalisation of relations with Ethiopia. The opening of the border suggested that Eritrea might provide the landlocked country with access to the coast; and a new focus fell upon the port of Massawa. In the early 20th century the Italians had connected it to Asmara by a railway line that offered a spectacular 12-hour journey. That line is now unused, except by a few steam-train enthusiasts, and the only direct link between the two towns is a three-hour mountain drive.


The Governor’s Palace in Massawa – built in 1872, later used by Haile Selassi as his winter residence, and badly damaged in 1990 during the Ethiopian bombardment of Eritrea. Photo: Andrew McConnell/Alamy Stock Photo

Massawa has long been moribund as a port, but its old town is a place of seductive, if dormant, beauty. The town’s radial street plan was ingeniously calibrated to take maximum advantage of any available breeze, with the narrow street blocks angled towards the open sea while also catching whatever shade might be found. Largely built from coral, on an island of which the town stands – the dominant vernacular architecture is a blend of the influences of past colonisers – the Ottomans, who ruled for 300 years, and the Egyptians, who were in charge from 1865 until the Italians arrived. Then and now the two towns are economically, religiously and physically very distant from one another. When the traveller James Bruce visited Massawa in 1769 he noted that although the governor was a Turkish appointment, all customs duties received were divided with the negus (monarch) of Abyssinia (as Ethiopia was known until the Second World War) in return for his protection.

Massawa lies in a tectonically active region. The most dramatic earthquake was in 1921, which prompted the Italian administration to propose total reconstruction. Fortunately, the wise counsel of local people prevailed, and both the plan and historic construction methods were retained in repair and reconstruction. Traditionally, the coral limestone blocks are sandwiched by timber, which is relatively shock-proof. But timber is now in very short supply in Eritrea, and recently concrete has replaced it, making the buildings more vulnerable. The old town may lack UNESCO recognition, but it is a candidate for serious and urgent attention.

Zmeselo
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Posts: 36067
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Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 19 Nov 2019, 13:28



PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS

https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/parliament ... o/45374154

Zurich public prosecutor opens investigation into possible racism behind campaign video

NOV 17, 2019


The Swiss People's Party lost several seats in the House of Representatives last election but still remains the largest party. (© Keystone / Ennio Leanza)

(Software translation from French)

An election campaign video pulled by YouTube for violating its hate speech policy has become the subject of an investigation by the Zurich public prosecutor’s office.

According to the German-language newspaper NZZ am Sonntag, the Zurich public prosecutor’s office initiated a criminal investigation last Monday into unknown persons suspected of violating the laws on racial discrimination.

The SVP posted it on various social media platforms on October 3, 2019. YouTube blocked the video on October 9, two weeks before the parliamentary elections. Switzerland’s largest political party defended the video, with the head of the Zurich SVP chapter arguing that it was not racist but rather part of an “information campaign”.

It contained many headlines, one was:
This is how the Eritrean asylum chaos destroys our security.
And another:
Eritreans are not threatened with life and limb. They are not real refugees.
The Eritrean media service in Switzerland opened a criminal complaint against the SVP for the video in the middle of October.

Refugees from Eritrea have represented the largest foreign community seeking asylum in the alpine country in recent years. However, since 2017, Switzerland has steadily tightened its admission criteria for Eritrean asylum seekers.

In January 2017, the federal administrative court ruled that Switzerland will no longer recognise Eritreans as refugees solely on the grounds of having fled their country illegally. Later that year, the same court ruled that deserters were not at risk of inhumane treatment and that the same applies to those who have already lived abroad for several years.

The SVP has a history of using provocative messages and analogies to rally support during elections. In the most recent parliamentary elections, the party drew criticism for featuring an apple being eaten by worms adorning the colours of the European Union and of the other main political parties.



In 2004, the party’s campaign poster of three white sheep booting a black sheep out of the country drew fire and was denounced by the Swiss president at the time as racist.

Zmeselo
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Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 19 Nov 2019, 13:39


Partial view - city of Keren: Eritrea
(Ghideon Musa: @GhideonMusa)



Asmara's architectural marvel - the flying building - is glowing blue this evening.
(Milena Bereket: @tekerebanelim)


Majestic Mountains of Senafe: Eritrea


D'rfo - Asmara Massawa Rd.

Zmeselo
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Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 19 Nov 2019, 13:47

The Red Sea:
For Ethiopian brothers & sisters to come & visit but for the agame to cry blood!









Dahlak





Bara'sole coast

Zmeselo
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Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 19 Nov 2019, 13:50




ብኣጋጣሚ 40 ዓመት ምምስራት ሃማደኤ: ደቂ ኣንስቲዮ ንኡስ ዞባ መንደፈራ ወፈራዊ ዓጺድ ንስድራ ስውኣት ኣካይደን፡፡
ጽምብላትና ብስራሕ ነሰንዮም! (Credit: Girmai Gebru)

Zmeselo
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Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 19 Nov 2019, 13:52

ተኸሲቱ ዘሎ ባና ትስፉውን ብሩህን መጻኢ፡ በቲ ሒዝዎ ዘሎ ኣንፈት ዝያዳ ገስጊሱ፡ ራእይን ድልየትን ህዝብታት ዞባና ክሰምር፡ ተፈጢሩ ዘሎ ሰላማዊ ዝምድና ክሕይልን ክድልድልን፡ ንመንግስታት ዞባና ሓያል ሓድሕዳዊ ምትእምማንን ውፉይ ስራሕን ይሓቶም

Info. Minister Yemane Gebremeskel





After five days of surgery in Asmara- Eritrea- we performed 1,333 surgeries! The outreach brought together ophthalmic teams from the US, Ethiopia, Nepal and Eritrea, all focused on delivering high-quality eye care. (Photos provided by Christopher Briscoe)
Last edited by Zmeselo on 19 Nov 2019, 14:07, edited 1 time in total.

Zmeselo
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Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 19 Nov 2019, 14:04



Eritrea introduces MIHAP to the world

Written by Ministry of Agriculture

http://www.shabait.com/articles/nation- ... the-world-

Articles



The Ministry of Agriculture is introducing its small-scale farmers’ strategy commonly known as the Minimum Integrated Household Agricultural Package (MIHAP) to the world, through different promotional activities.

Eritrea used the 3rd Regional Forum of African Initiative for Combating Desertification (AI-CD) which was held in Muguga, Kenya from 14th-17th May, 2019 to promote MIHAP as a good adaptation strategy towards climate change and improvement of small-scale farmers’ livelihood.

The forum considered MIHAP as a good practice and the AI-CD secretariat uploaded the strategy document along with its video formats, it in its official website.



According to the AI-CD uploaded YouTube views, more than a thousand people have so far viewed the MIHAP video just in the past few final days of May, 2019.

It is to be noted that MIHAP plays a vital role, in transforming the traditional farming system which is contributing to a great deal of land degradation in to semi-intensive agriculture.

MIHAP minimizes overgrazing, deforestation and soil erosion. On the contrary it contributes to wise use of land and water by promoting increased productivity, tree planting, soil and water conservation, pollination through bee keeping etc. At the end of the day, it promotes sedentary life style and thereby improved livelihood. Generally MIHAP is a good model of Climate Smart Agriculture.

The concept of MIHAP was developed by the Ministry of Agriculture of the State of Eritrea, in early 2013.

The main components of this package are as follows:

1. One improved local or cross-breed with holstein in-calf heifer or 6 shoats to be provided on a pass-on program i.e. the farmer gives back the first female calf of about one year or 5 female kids/ lambs and one male.
2. Twenty five chicks (22 females and 3 males) on a loan basis to be paid back in cash.
3. Two bee hives also on a loan basis to be paid in cash.
4. Vegetable seeds also on loan basis to be paid in cash.
5. Twenty tree seedlings of which 10 fruit trees, 5 leguminous trees (such as moringa, leucinia, pigeon pea etc. as a supplement to the cow feed but also excellent human supplementary diet in the case of moringa and pigeon pea.

The other 5 seedlings are fire-wood trees to be prunned regularly for household purposes, using our improved energy-saving stove. These seedlings will also be provided, on loan basis to be paid in cash.

The package is constantly evolving to include the improved stove, solar lighting, laterine, bio-gas etc.

The above-mentioned plot of a quarter of a hectare i.e. 2,500 sq. meters, will be used as follows:

- 1,000 sq. meters for the production of green feed for the cow mainly alfalfa, maize, colombos or elephant grass.
- 1,000 sq. meters for the production of cereals for the family preferably hybrid maize which can yield around 1.2 tons in two cycles.
- 500 sq. meters for vegetable production.

As can be understood from the above narrative, families included in the package will have milk, eggs, meat, vegetables, fruits and honey which provide the required nutrition for the family and for sale. However, as is already happening, the package will not continue to generate primary products only but transform into value addition starting with dairy products and byproducts. Milk collection, processing and packaging facilities will be installed and connected to the market.



The total cost of establishing MIHAP for each beneficiary household is USD 4000.00 and the payback period is a maximum of two years.

Moreover, the Ministry of Agriculture has also prepared a pragmatic strategy for small and medium commercial farmers.

According to the Information, Communication and Documentation Unit of the Ministry, the strategy is in the process of printing and will soon be distributed to all relevant stakeholders.

It is to be noted that the Small and Medium Commercial Farmers Strategy (SMCFS) is a continuation of MIHAP, that blueprints the transformation of MIHAP and other small-scale farmers into a modern farming systems.

In another area, the Ministry of Agriculture gave national Fall Armyworm training. The training of trainers (ToT) on Fall army worm (FAW) was conducted from 13th – 17th May, 2019 in Mendefera city, Southern Region.

The training was officially opened by Mr. Teklu Beraki, Director of crop production division in the Southern Region. In his opening remark, Mr. Teklu underscored the importance of capacity building in the fight against Fall army worm. He added,
thanks to the mass awareness campaign and strengthening capacity of experts done in the year 2018, the small outbreaks of FAW were effectively managed.
According to Mr. Tedros Sium, Head of Migratory Pests Control Unit, the training included Background of FAW and Risk map, Early warning and forecasting of FAW, FAW biology and identification, Geographical information systems (GIS) application on FAW, Scouting Methods and Trapping techniques as well as Integrated Pest Management (IPM). In this first round training, 33 trainees, of which 40 percent were female experts, who represented all sub regions of Maekel and Debub region, National Agricultural Research Institute (NARI), Regulatory Services Department and National Animal and Plant Health Laboratory participated in the ToT.

Finally, the trainees recommended continuous capacity building trainings and awareness campaigns; as well as NARI’s active involvement in FAW management research be conducted. Similar training will be given to the rest of the sub-regions of the country in the months of June and July, according to Mr. Tedros Sium.

Selam/
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Joined: 04 Aug 2018, 13:15

Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by Selam/ » 19 Nov 2019, 14:10

Stunning Art Deco
Zmeselo wrote:
19 Nov 2019, 13:18


ARCHITECTURE

From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Gillian Darley

https://www.apollo-magazine.com/eritrea ... hitecture/

19 NOVEMBER 2019


The Fiat Tagliero service station in Asmara, designed by Giuseppe Pettazzi and completed in 1938. Photo: © Edward Denison, 2013

In 2017 Asmara, the capital of Eritrea, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site, a move that can be seen as the beginning of more hopeful times for the country. The following year Eritrea and Ethiopia, its much larger neighbour (from whom it had gained independence in 1993) signed a declaration ending a state of war that had existed since 1998; this was followed in the autumn by the opening of the mutual border and the lifting of UN sanctions against Eritrea.

The remarkable architectural heritage that earned Asmara this listing was largely the product of Italian imperialism. Until 1897, Asmara was a village; its fortunes were transformed when the Italian colonists decided to move their administrative capital inland from the Red Sea port of Massawa. At more than 2,300 metres above sea level, Asmara was a far cooler and healthier spot for European functionaries to develop as their centre. Colonial architects produced an extraordinary, eclectic range of Italianate architecture, inspired by home but incorporating local materials such as a red-black or grey-black stone that, painted in white, gives a rough-hewn and cheerful finish to many of these early buildings. Brick was reserved for the most important and official buildings. The earliest church was in a Lombard style and the ambitious cathedral complex which replaced it in 1923 followed suit. Brick villas and offices for the water company took the Tuscan medieval for inspiration, with suitably Romanesque detailing. The Asmara Theatre (later a cinema), was designed in around 1919 by the engineer Odoardo Cavagnari, the leading planner of the new capital. Looking to the Florentine Renaissance, the building has a portico recalling the Ospedale degli Innocenti, which is approached by a pair of sweeping stairs leading up from the street through a terraced garden.

When younger architects began to aggrandise Asmara in the name of Mussolini from the late 1920s onwards, they were urged to change direction and look purposefully forward. The earlier buildings, loaded with decoration and a host of historical references, were followed by another generation of structures designed in a modernist idiom. Hotels, offices, villas and apartments were designed for the climate, with balconies and courtyards constructed of heavy concrete with arbitrary ornament and a wash of render. These are tough buildings, simply detailed and well-made, the earliest of which was the Casa del Fascio – now the Ministry of Education.

The extraordinary [deleted] of the central area of the town has been left largely undisturbed by the usual pressures of commercialisation, intrusive tourism and the rest; the dire legacy of Italian segregationist town planning also remains, spilling across the surrounding hillsides. No new construction has been allowed in the key historic district since 2001. The World Bank underwrote an important programme, the Cultural Assets Rehabilitation Programme (CARP), which ran from then until 2007; in those years, a wide programme of repair and upgrading of key buildings took place, as well as the intensive research that eventually led to UNESCO recognition. Twelve years later, both those who take direct responsibility for the old town’s buildings and those who offer help from the sidelines – notably Edward Denison who, with his wife Guang Yu Ren, worked on the archives for the submission to UNESCO and co-wrote a book on Asmara – hope for new political will and funding.


The Cinema Impero, Asmara, designed in 1937 by Mario Messina. Photo: the author

Meanwhile, some building types are still used for their original purposes. The Cinema Impero, designed in 1937 by Mario Messina, was originally intended to seat 1,800. It is still immense even in a more modest incarnation, and fills to capacity for streamed sporting events (football and cycling in particular). The cafes and bars, deco or modernist, are also little changed. Factories, on the other hand, have found new uses after the Italian automobile industry moved on, leaving a remarkable built legacy that ranges from the little Agip petrol station of 1937 (now owned by Shell), and the most famous modernist building in Eritrea, the Fiat Tagliero service station, designed by Giuseppe Pettazzi and completed in 1938.

These buildings may be tough, but many need care and maintenance. Pettazzi’s service station, which was renovated under the CARP programme, is again a sorry sight, isolated by a roundabout, disused and fading among weeds and broken paving. Conservation plans have been drawn up but there is no indication of when work might begin.

Asmara is not the only city that stands to benefit from the normalisation of relations with Ethiopia. The opening of the border suggested that Eritrea might provide the landlocked country with access to the coast; and a new focus fell upon the port of Massawa. In the early 20th century the Italians had connected it to Asmara by a railway line that offered a spectacular 12-hour journey. That line is now unused, except by a few steam-train enthusiasts, and the only direct link between the two towns is a three-hour mountain drive.


The Governor’s Palace in Massawa – built in 1872, later used by Haile Selassi as his winter residence, and badly damaged in 1990 during the Ethiopian bombardment of Eritrea. Photo: Andrew McConnell/Alamy Stock Photo

Massawa has long been moribund as a port, but its old town is a place of seductive, if dormant, beauty. The town’s radial street plan was ingeniously calibrated to take maximum advantage of any available breeze, with the narrow street blocks angled towards the open sea while also catching whatever shade might be found. Largely built from coral, on an island of which the town stands – the dominant vernacular architecture is a blend of the influences of past colonisers – the Ottomans, who ruled for 300 years, and the Egyptians, who were in charge from 1865 until the Italians arrived. Then and now the two towns are economically, religiously and physically very distant from one another. When the traveller James Bruce visited Massawa in 1769 he noted that although the governor was a Turkish appointment, all customs duties received were divided with the negus (monarch) of Abyssinia (as Ethiopia was known until the Second World War) in return for his protection.

Massawa lies in a tectonically active region. The most dramatic earthquake was in 1921, which prompted the Italian administration to propose total reconstruction. Fortunately, the wise counsel of local people prevailed, and both the plan and historic construction methods were retained in repair and reconstruction. Traditionally, the coral limestone blocks are sandwiched by timber, which is relatively shock-proof. But timber is now in very short supply in Eritrea, and recently concrete has replaced it, making the buildings more vulnerable. The old town may lack UNESCO recognition, but it is a candidate for serious and urgent attention.

Zmeselo
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Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 19 Nov 2019, 14:12

ERi-TV- ዕላል ጥበባት፡ ዕላል ምስ መምህር ኣብርሀት ምስግና ደራሲት መጽሓፍ "መሳልል ስነ ጽሑፍ"




Zmeselo
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Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 19 Nov 2019, 14:18



Eye Health Hero: Solomon Zewengiel



https://www.iapb.org/member/the-fred-ho ... oundation/

Solomon is a Program officer, at Eritrea national blindness prevention office. He is a committed and self-driven young man that has navigated many challenges, to ensure that blindness prevention interventions are implemented.

He has taught himself and learnt so much about, all there is in eye care. He is the pillar, of the national blindness prevention activities in Eritrea. He not only supports the Eritrea Trachoma elimination activities, but also overseas the comprehensive eye care programme implementation; as well as the operations of the programme in the country.

Solomon is a trainer of Graders and recorders for Trachoma impact surveys and recently undertook a Tropical data training, where he was certified as such. Before that he coordinated Global Trachoma mapping project in Eritrea, supporting data entry in a country where access to internet is a huge challenge. Solomon successfully coordinated the Eritrea national RAAB and over 35 district based Trachoma surveys. Despite limited professional development opportunities, Solomon has not been deterred in his quest to advance blindness prevention.

His dedication, hard work, commitment, and teamwork approach has earned his exceptional respect among the key stakeholders in the country. Solomon has a Masters Degree in Global Health and is the future of eye health and blindness prevention in Eritrea

Nominating Organisation: The Fred Hollows Foundation https://www.iapb.org/member/the-fred-ho ... oundation/

The role has allowed me to serve this country in the elimination of avoidable blindness. I started in this role as part of my national youth service. From the time I was assigned this role and got to understand the prevalence of blindness in my country, I was greatly motivated to do more to ensure that no Eritrean is blind from preventable causes. I have taught myself about Trachoma elimination and comprehensive eye care considering that in my country we have dire gaps in human resources for eye health. I have been able to lead teams of ophthalmic nurses to multi task across different projects since we do not have the luxuries of various eye care positions in the country. I feel motivated that despite the challenges the country faces, we are on track to eliminate trachoma and reduce the barriers to access comprehensive eye care services for all Eritreans.

pastlast
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Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by pastlast » 19 Nov 2019, 22:32

USELESS PFDJ, no different then the USELESS SERvice Station that you are So Proud of...Lol! Schitmeselo....NOONE in the world is Jealous of Useless Buildings in Eritrea...or a USELESS dictator in Eritrea...

Zmeselo
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Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by Zmeselo » 19 Nov 2019, 23:49


pastlast wrote:
19 Nov 2019, 22:32
USELESS PFDJ, no different then the USELESS SERvice Station that you are So Proud of...Lol! Schitmeselo....NOONE in the world is Jealous of Useless Buildings in Eritrea...or a USELESS dictator in Eritrea...

pastlast
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Posts: 2250
Joined: 19 May 2019, 18:02

Re: From cinemas to service stations – the modernist marvels of Eritrea

Post by pastlast » 20 Nov 2019, 03:41

So, that’s the tragedy. And, as Karl Marx said, “history repeats itself: first as tragedy, second as farce.” And the farce will come in December when President Isaias Afwerki, in an interview (year-in-review) with his obedient media, will tell us that nothing works and everything is fucked up. His survival instinct is to pretend he is an auditor reviewing the work of the government and not the organism presiding over the whole edifice of decay.

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