This Day in Eritrean History.
Posted: 30 Sep 2019, 06:17
This Day in Eritrean History.
On September 30, 1993, 43 years after the UN unjustly decided Eritrea to be federated with Ethiopia, President Isaias Afewerki addressed the 48th session of the UNGA as the Leader of the Sovereign State of Eritrea.

Some excerpts from the historic Speech;
On September 30, 1993, 43 years after the UN unjustly decided Eritrea to be federated with Ethiopia, President Isaias Afewerki addressed the 48th session of the UNGA as the Leader of the Sovereign State of Eritrea.
Some excerpts from the historic Speech;
I feel special privilege & honor to address the UNGA on behalf of a people who struggled for half a century to regain their fundamental human & national rights & who, despite the outright military victory that they won took the unprecedented step of organizing a free & fair referendum, so as to join the community of independent states on the basis of their freely expressed wish & on solid legal grounds.
As I speak here today, I cannot help but remember the appeals that we sent year in and out to this Assembly & the member countries of the UN, describing the plight of our people and asking for legitimate sympathy, support and recognition.
We appealed to the UN not only in its capacity as a representative of the International community, but also because of its special responsibility to Eritrea.
For it was the UN that decided in 1950, at the beginning of the Cold War, to deny the colonized people of Eritrea their right to self-determination, thereby sacrificing their national and human rights on the altar of the strategic interests of the superpowers.
In passing that resolution, the UN affirmed that it "remained an international instrument" which the GA "could be seized of" at any time. But for the next 41 years, as a brutal war of aggression was conducted against the Eritrean people, initially with the active support of the US & later with a much worse & massive involvement of the Soviet Union & despite the repeated appeals of the Eritrean people, the UN refused to raise its voice in the defense of a people whose future it had unjustly decided & whom it pledged to protect..
Not once in 41 years did Eritrea, scene of the longest war in Africa, & victim of some of the grossest violations of human rights, figure in the agenda of UN. This deafening silence pained our people. It also gave a free hand to the aggressors, thereby prolonging our suffering.
But it neither shook our resolve nor undermined our belief in the justness of our cause & the inevitability of our victory. As an Eritrean proverb says, "The rod of truth may become thinner but it cannot be broken." Indeed, Justice has finally prevailed.