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“What Eritrea looks like from a distance and the real time experience I had with the community..." UNICEF-RD

Posted: 10 Nov 2021, 06:29
by Zmeselo


“What Eritrea looks like from a distance and the real time experience I had with the community show huge discrepancy” UNICEF Regional Director

By Ruth Abraham

https://shabait.com/2021/11/10/what-eri ... -director/

Q & A

Nov 10, 2021



UNICEF Regional Director for East and Southern Africa, Mr. Mohammed Malick Fall, conducted a three-day visit to Eritrea from 3 to 6 November. He met and had talks with high level government officials and visited basic development and social service sites, in Anseba region. Following are excerpts of an interview with the director, upon concluding his visit.

Welcome to Eritrea, Mr. Malick, and thank you for agreeing to have this interview.

What is the purpose of your visit?

I was due to visit Eritrea before the world got into the covid-19 crisis, but was delayed because of the pandemic. The prime reason for my visit is to tour and see; to socialize and understand and to watch and learn the realities in Eritrea as an agent of UNICEF in this region. I came to see the progress achieved and problems that remain unsolved and discuss them with the government and enhance our cooperation framework.

Mr. Malick, what was your stay like?

It was a three-day mission, limited in time but very intense with a series of activities that allowed me to interact across the board. I interacted with stakeholders, members of the government, members of the UN, UN staff, and development partners. Most importantly, I interacted with the community which was eye opening on what Eritrea is today.

How do you see Eritrean progress on issues that concern UNICEF and the Government?

This trip was important because it has helped me to open my eyes on the realities and to rearrange some of the convictions that I had, before coming here. We are confronted with challenges in today’s world: the climate issues, conflicts and the pandemic. It is true that we need resources but unlike what we think, it is not the only critical element that one needs for development. What I found to be more important is the determination, the commitment, the vision and the engagement of the community; people of all ages and genders working together towards a common goal. I think this trip was extremely important for me, because it helped me build a new narrative around Eritrea. Unlike when looking from a distance, you see tangible progress as you get to the country.

I was struck by the level of immunization, 94% immunization of children, and increasing funds from the government for the procurement of vaccines. There are many advanced countries, that have a hard time reaching that threshold. I have seen government funding match, the funds from Global Partnership of Education (GPE). I have seen the determination of the people and their insights of education; girls outnumbering the boys in schools was an amazing feature. I could see the desire to learn in the eyes of the children. I have also seen barefoot doctors travelling on foot and on camels trying to ensure the well-being and vaccination of every child, in hard-to-reach areas. Therefore, all those experiences have helped me to learn that to make progress in social and development sectors, it is not wealth and resources that you need but the determination and commitment of the people and government. I see this taking place in Eritrea. We need to work together to craft a new narrative of the country, which is different from the pre-established assessments.

What further measures do you suggest should be taken to achieve the goals (SDGs) important to Eritrea, in line with its national priorities?

There are a lot of initiatives for which we need to scale up our efforts, now. I visited a water distribution center for villages that had difficulty accessing clean water; now they have solar- powered pumps. I have seen the Government helping to build schools, to meet the increasing demand of education. I have also seen a health system where children are referred to for treatment, prevention of malnutrition and vaccination with utmost devotion of health workers. I have seen pregnant women, coming for antenatal care. Now, while I saw all that, all I could think was how we can intensify the development to keep pace with the needs of the people in all sectors. I think, that is the direction we need to march on. In Eritrea, all the ingredients and the ground we need to get it right as in the rate of vaccination are met. What we need to increase is the effort to have the quality, speed and scale of service provided. If those elements are pulled together, I think Eritrea is going to be in the development landscape in an area which will surprise a lot of people. What Eritrea looks like from a distance and the real time experience I had with the community, show a huge discrepancy. We should close the gaps, by telling the real stories.

Give us an overview of your visit of the Anseba Region.

First of all, the commitment and determination are outstanding. I have seen workers that did not have a lot of means, but the determination of continuing to deliver the services that people needed. There are teachers who barely had what they needed to teach properly, but they are there doing it with grace and hard work. I could say a lot about the sectors in which I saw service being delivered to the people by the people, assisted by the government. That is why I say, this is a development driven by the community.

I am an African; from West Africa which has the same challenges. That is why when I gave the speech I spoke as the son of this continent, not simply as the Regional Director of UNICEF. I have learned that sometimes all the services can be in place but if the community does not demand it, it may not be utilized. Here [in Eritrea], I could see it was otherwise. All the services are fully utilized, because there is full demand and thirst for access to the services. All the villages in the sub-zone that I visited have declared Open Defecation Free (ODF) because they demanded it and adopted it, which is another big milestone. You cannot have health, if you do not have sanitation or nutrition. We need to integrate the package and that integration was evident in the places I have visited. That impact is priceless and to have that impact you would need the government, UNICEF, and other partners. But most of all, you would need the community to come towards the services and demand them.


With Amb. Abdella Mussa, Governor of Anseba region

In how many places in Africa can one find females, outnumbering males in primary school? Females tend to be fewer in schools, because of the responsibilities they have in their homes at an early age. But here, even in conditions that are not ideal, the ratio of females was more than or equal to males. Their desire for education, can be easily seen on their faces.

Is there anything special in the new UN cooperation framework?

The new cooperation framework is just a stage in a journey, that started a long time ago. It is part of a long succession of plans, that has been developed in this country. We need to build on the important accomplishments that I have mentioned, in all sectors. We shouldn’t turn our backs to the success we have accomplished, but should learn a lesson. For instance, UNICEF has been here since the early 90s and some challenges persist. We might need to reflect and be critical if there is anything we can do differently to avoid repeating the same solutions, that are not taking us anywhere toward ending our problems. This is why, the notion of speed and scale are necessary. Another important factor that I have seen and that we need to encourage is innovation. I saw some young people showing me a mobile app, that they used to spread news and Covid 19 guidelines to the people. This speeds up the behavioral change in adopting certain things and accelerates the solution delivery.

Though Africa accounts for a very minor percent of carbon emission, we need to look at the challenges we are facing. How would you address climate change if you do not have tools and interventions; such as a solar power system to generate power for services and daily lives? The idea of barefoot doctors in itself, is something that all African countries should adopt. It not only ensures service delivery but it is affordable, effective and community-oriented.

The education system and training of young people is basic and directly related to the development needs of their country. There is also a new area of social protection, that we need to explore. If we have a scheme that transfers resources, we can also expand and accelerate the constraints children face to access these services. I have been discussing with the team, that we need to figure out why our pace of development is slow and work on it in our new country program. The biggest challenge is how to accelerate the achievement that we have already scored, in partnership with the government. What we are facing is a challenge, that every development actor is facing. I think those are the paradigms, that we need to integrate.

What was your meeting with Eritrean officials like?

It was extremely good and cordial. For someone who has arrived for the first time, I had a warm welcome and great hospitality. I met with Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of Finance, Minister of Health, Governor of Anseba region, Minister of Education and many other officials. The meetings were extremely candid across the board; very open discussions where I could hear and learn what the Government’s main concern really are. That was the reason of my stay here; an eye opening experience because it was open and frank discussion. There were no bureaucratic complications, in the meetings that I had. I was struck by the openness and positively impressed by the determination, vision, self-reliance, commitment and the people-centered approach of the officials I met.

Thank you so much, Mr. Malick.


_________________



Congratulations, Dr. FikreJesus!



Re: “What Eritrea looks like from a distance and the real time experience I had with the community..." UNICEF-RD

Posted: 10 Nov 2021, 07:35
by Zmeselo

On Nov.8, 1996 Eritrea & Cuba established diplomatic relations. Cuba provided military assistance to the ELF, beginning Mar 1967. In the 1960s, Cuba promoted the Eritrean question among non-African developing countries & lobbied for Eritrean membership in the Non-Aligned Mov't. On May 16, 1978, Ethiopia/Derg launched the largest military offensive since the start of the Armed Struggle in 1961. 500 of the 17,000 troops that Cuba provided to Ethiopia were in the Port City of Massawa, as military advisors.

In Feb. 1978, Cuba denied involvement & then Vice Pres. Dr. Carlos R said,
Col. Mengistu is not entitled to use Cuban military specialists against Eritrean rebels as Eritrean self-determination is an internal problem which requires a political solution.
Our forces buried many dead foreigners, fighting with the Ethiopian troops. We have documents that prove, direct Soviet & Cuban military intervention.These had not been released up to now, because they included military & strategic plans.
Al-Amin M Said, EPLF spokesman in 1978.

Former Cuban Leader Fidel Castro toured Africa from Mar 1 to 31, 1977. During this trip, Castro advocated a Red Sea alliance of progressive states including Somalia, Ethiopia, Djibouti, with Eritrea being an autonomous region within the proposed federation.
History of Eritreaታሪኽ ኤርትራ.تاريخ إريتريا: @Erihistory

Re: “What Eritrea looks like from a distance and the real time experience I had with the community..." UNICEF-RD

Posted: 10 Nov 2021, 07:55
by Zmeselo


ፕሮፌሽናል ሰኣላይን፡ ንጡፍ ኣብ ማሕበራዊ መራኸቢታትን ዝዀነ ኣቶ ጊደዎን ሙሳ ኣሮን፡ ናይ ምስጋናን ኣድንቖትን ምስክር ወረቐት ካብ ኢድ ሚኒስተር ቱሪዝም ወ/ሮ ኣስካሉ መንቀርዮስ ተቐቢሉ፡፡ እንቃዕ ሓጎሰካ፡ ብጻይ ጊዳዎን 📷 መዘክር ታሪኽ


______________



ንኣብ ሃገርክን ህዝብኽን መንግስትኽን ብዓቢኡ ከኣ ኣብ ስዋኣትክን ዘለኪ ኣኽብሮትን ብልቢ ከመስግነኪ እፈቱ ግርምቲ ኤርትራዊት ሓፍተይ፡ ሓድነት ቀለታ፡፡ ኣብ ነብስወከፍ ጉዕዞኺ፡ ዓወትን ኣሳልጦን እምነየልኪ፡፡ ❤️🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷❤️

Eritrea1991: @Eritrea19911

Re: “What Eritrea looks like from a distance and the real time experience I had with the community..." UNICEF-RD

Posted: 10 Nov 2021, 08:40
by Eripoblikan
aye aya shikor :lol: :lol: :lol:

Only in Mao's Little Red Book is defending a dictaor equated to defending the nation s/he 'leads' to destruction.

:cry: :cry: :cry:
Zmeselo wrote:
10 Nov 2021, 07:55


ፕሮፌሽናል ሰኣላይን፡ ንጡፍ ኣብ ማሕበራዊ መራኸቢታትን ዝዀነ ኣቶ ጊደዎን ሙሳ ኣሮን፡ ናይ ምስጋናን ኣድንቖትን ምስክር ወረቐት ካብ ኢድ ሚኒስተር ቱሪዝም ወ/ሮ ኣስካሉ መንቀርዮስ ተቐቢሉ፡፡ እንቃዕ ሓጎሰካ፡ ብጻይ ጊዳዎን 📷 መዘክር ታሪኽ


______________



ንኣብ ሃገርክን ህዝብኽን መንግስትኽን ብዓቢኡ ከኣ ኣብ ስዋኣትክን ዘለኪ ኣኽብሮትን ብልቢ ከመስግነኪ እፈቱ ግርምቲ ኤርትራዊት ሓፍተይ፡ ሓድነት ቀለታ፡፡ ኣብ ነብስወከፍ ጉዕዞኺ፡ ዓወትን ኣሳልጦን እምነየልኪ፡፡ ❤️🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷❤️

Eritrea1991: @Eritrea19911

Re: “What Eritrea looks like from a distance and the real time experience I had with the community..." UNICEF-RD

Posted: 10 Nov 2021, 09:02
by Zmeselo
Viva, Mao! :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:



Eripoblikan wrote:
10 Nov 2021, 08:40
aye aya shikor :lol: :lol: :lol:

Only in Mao's Little Red Book is defending a dictaor equated to defending the nation s/he 'leads' to destruction.


Zmeselo wrote:
10 Nov 2021, 07:55


ፕሮፌሽናል ሰኣላይን፡ ንጡፍ ኣብ ማሕበራዊ መራኸቢታትን ዝዀነ ኣቶ ጊደዎን ሙሳ ኣሮን፡ ናይ ምስጋናን ኣድንቖትን ምስክር ወረቐት ካብ ኢድ ሚኒስተር ቱሪዝም ወ/ሮ ኣስካሉ መንቀርዮስ ተቐቢሉ፡፡ እንቃዕ ሓጎሰካ፡ ብጻይ ጊዳዎን 📷 መዘክር ታሪኽ


______________



ንኣብ ሃገርክን ህዝብኽን መንግስትኽን ብዓቢኡ ከኣ ኣብ ስዋኣትክን ዘለኪ ኣኽብሮትን ብልቢ ከመስግነኪ እፈቱ ግርምቲ ኤርትራዊት ሓፍተይ፡ ሓድነት ቀለታ፡፡ ኣብ ነብስወከፍ ጉዕዞኺ፡ ዓወትን ኣሳልጦን እምነየልኪ፡፡ ❤️🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷🇪🇷❤️

Eritrea1991: @Eritrea19911

Re: “What Eritrea looks like from a distance and the real time experience I had with the community..." UNICEF-RD

Posted: 10 Nov 2021, 15:42
by Zmeselo




Re: “What Eritrea looks like from a distance and the real time experience I had with the community..." UNICEF-RD

Posted: 10 Nov 2021, 17:10
by Zmeselo


Rumour Mongering: Klopp Wants Alexander Isak for Liverpool

By Audun Manum

https://liverpooloffside.sbnation.com/l ... ciedad-40m

Nov 9, 2021


Photo by Juan Manuel Serrano Arce/Getty Images

Another international break is upon us, the Reds have failed to win in consecutive matches and Roberto Firmino has been ruled out for at least four weeks with a hamstring injury. If you’ve been around for any length of time you know what this means; Striker Speculation Szn!

First out in what is certain to be a long two weeks is of similar stories, Alexander Isak. According to reports https://www.elnacional.cat/ca/esports/k ... 5_102.html from El Nacional, Jürgen Klopp has asked Liverpool https://liverpooloffside.sbnation.com/ leadership to go out and get him the Swedish international in order to fix Liverpool’s goalscoring(?) problems. A bid in the region of €40m has been suggested, although the striker has a release clause of €70m.

Now, the 22-year old is one of the hotter attacking properties in European football at the moment, having put up solid numbers in consecutive seasons at a young age for an exciting Real Sociedad side, as well as shining for Sweden at the Euros this summer, but there is significant doubt he would be a particularly good fit for the Reds.

First of all, despite having deceptively quick feet and slick ball control for a 6’3 frontman, and doing plenty of work deeper in the pitch with his back to goal, Isak just doesn’t put up the sort of pressing numbers necessary to contribute in Klopp’s team. There is also a lack of passing range and mastery, which, although the Reds have plenty of good passers in the side, does limit how much the former Willem II striker would be able to contribute to Liverpool’s approach play.

Finally, La Real are not selling their star striker in the middle of their first legitimate shot at winning the league title for 40 years. Not to Liverpool, and not to anybody else. There is always a chance he could be available when the summer rolls back around, but as a January purchase, Isak simply won’t be for sale.

Alexander Isak is a very talented striker who is likely to move on to bigger things in the not too distant future, but it definitely won’t be in the next three months, and it will likely never be to Merseyside.


_________________





Arsenal transfer rumours: Pep Guardiola opens up on Raheem Sterling, Alexander Isak to Liverpool

By: Bobby Vincent

https://www.football.london/arsenal-fc/ ... g-22122344

10 NOV 2021

With the January transfer window now on the horizon, Arsenal could look to strengthen their squad for the remainder of the season despite their busy summer.

The Gunners https://www.football.london/arsenal-fc spent almost £150million over the summer transfer window on six new players, and they have all settled in well at the Emirates Stadium.

Despite the new signings, Mikel Arteta https://www.football.london/all-about/mikel-arteta may be keen on adding to his squad again over the winter - with a host of players being linked every day.

With that being said, football.london takes a look at the latest transfer rumours and stories regarding Arsenal from around the continent.

Lacazette price-tag

According to a report from El Nacional, via the Hard Tackle, http://www.thehardtackle.com/news/2021/ ... lacazette/ €10million (£8.5m) would be enough for Arsenal to sell Alexandre Lacazette https://www.football.london/all-about/a ... -lacazette in the January transfer window.

The Frenchman, 30, sees his contract with the Gunners expire at the end of the season and the north London club are reportedly open to selling the striker in January in order to generate some funds for his services.

Barcelona and Newcastle United have both been linked with a move for the Arsenal star, who has forced his way back into Arteta's plans in recent games, over the last couple of weeks.


Alexandre Lacazette sees his Arsenal contract expire at the end of the season (Image: Getty Images)

Guardiola speaks on Sterling's future

Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola https://www.football.london/all-about/pep-guardiola believes Barcelona could sign Raheem Sterling https://www.football.london/all-about/raheem-sterling if they were seriously interested in the winger.

Sterling has been strongly linked with a move to Arsenal in recent months, but Barca have also been credited with an interest, and Guardiola has spoken about his winger's future at the Etihad Stadium.
Honestly I have no idea. I don’t know anything. Not that I would tell you anyway,
Guardiola said to reports, via the Manchester Evening News. https://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk ... a-22109556
If Barcelona are interested in any of our players, I am convinced that they can get them. Barca continues to be an attractive club, more than attractive. The city, the club, the history and this for the trainers, for the players always seduces a lot.

If Barcelona interests one of our players, they will set up the machinery into operation, it is a liner.

Barca can use their media to influence signings. That’s the thing about Barcelona; they can do what they want, good or bad.
Isak twist

Liverpool are prepared to make an offer for reported Arsenal target Alexander Isak in the January transfer window, according to El Nacional. https://www.elnacional.cat/ca/esports/k ... 5_102.html

Isak, who signed a new long-term contract with Real Sociedad earlier in the year, was being linked with a move to the Gunners over the summer, but the Reds are now said to be interested in the Sweden international's signature.

With Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane both representing their countries - Egypt and Senegal, respectively - at the Africa Cup of Nations, Jurgen Klopp is apparently keen on adding to his front line in January.

If Liverpool do make a move, then it could force Arsenal, if their interest is genuine, to try and stop their Premier League rivals as Arteta looks to bolster his attacking line with Lacazette looking likely to leave the club soon.