Ethiopian News, Current Affairs and Opinion Forum
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Fed_Up
- Senior Member+
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- Joined: 15 Apr 2009, 10:50
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by Fed_Up » 15 Aug 2019, 09:52
Thank you Shabia. Job well done!
Be my gust and listen the interview from the beginning.
Thank you Mr. Sanders for laying out what real human rights are.
Mr. Sanders I have good news for ya, your idea of reducing tuition to every Americans youths are doable. in Eritrea education is free. What about that? Are you impressed? That is what you dreaming to your great nation and that is what truly human rights means in your own definition. Let me add one more thing , in Eritrea health care is absolutely free....
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Awash
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- Joined: 07 Aug 2010, 00:35
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by Awash » 15 Aug 2019, 12:32
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Awash
- Senior Member+
- Posts: 30273
- Joined: 07 Aug 2010, 00:35
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by Awash » 15 Aug 2019, 12:44
Pussikin,
LiHas MITRI wedi MiTrin berad.
:
Sudan camp 'struggling with Eritrean arrivals'
Source: BBC. Date: 12-08-2019 Time: 04:08:55:pm
Many Eritreans at Shagarab camp are believed to have fled conscription, which is supposed to last 18 months but can continue indefinitely.
A refugee camp in Sudan is struggling to cope with the high number of people fleeing Eritrea each month, the UN refugee agency has told the BBC.
The Shagarab camp in eastern Sudan currently hosts more than 47,000 refugees, with an average of almost 1,000 new arrivals each month between January and June 2019, the UNHCR said.
Most of the new arrivals are from Eritrea, thought to be fleeing the country’s indefinite national service.
Last month, refugees in the camp told BBC Tigrinya that there was a shortage of basic necessities like food, water and shelter – and said they were at risk of contracting typhoid and malaria during the ongoing rainy season.
UNHCR said despite continuous efforts to improve the lives of the refugees, the limited available resources were not sufficient to respond - and new arrivals further stretched capacity.
It said it was working to solve water and shelter problems by constructing additional houses and by installing a new solar energy system.
https://www.myjoyonline.com/world/2019/ ... 2U5tz8Odqk
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Awash
- Senior Member+
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- Joined: 07 Aug 2010, 00:35
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by Awash » 15 Aug 2019, 12:58
Pussikin,
LiHas MITRI wedi MiTrin berad.
:
From school to the grave, military service tears families apart in Eritrea
Indefinite national service is causing heartache and fuelling migration to Europe
Sally Hayden in Kampala. about 11 hours ago
...Many Eritreans have stories like Hamid’s, of families torn apart by forced labour on a scale activists say is similar only to what happens in North Korea. Eritreans recall losing friends who were shot while trying to flee, or being imprisoned and tortured underground if they are caught alive. One teenager, now in Europe, told me how his father died in the Sinai desert trying to get away, after decades of being kept in the military, far from his family...
https://www.irishtimes.com/news/world/a ... AXC8UecIY0