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What's so difficult to understand?
Posted: 30 Dec 2021, 20:03
by Zmeselo
Eritrea has the inalienable right to enact its lawfully proclaimed National Service Program to defend its sovereignty from the persistent existential national security threat emanating mainly from the now defunct TPLF Ethiopian "gov't", recently labeled a terrorist organization! Period!
__________
At least Tiffany is half Eritrean and advertizes for the country at every opportunity, from the Red Carpet to radio & TV interviews. What do you say about this embarassing worship of a random celebrity above, led by the ugume Patriarch himself?
Re: What's so difficult to understand?
Posted: 30 Dec 2021, 20:22
by Zmeselo
ሸርኢ ንሸርኢ ጌርወን ኔሩ ደርግ፡ ኣብ ሽረ።
Re: What's so difficult to understand?
Posted: 30 Dec 2021, 21:31
by Temt
The 64 million question that has not been genuinely answered remains the same, and that is,
Why? But why do the Weyanes keep on telling lies after lies as if there was no tomorrow?
Re: What's so difficult to understand?
Posted: 30 Dec 2021, 21:41
by quindibu
I always get perplexed where the US derives its self- anointed moral superiority from, given its history of institutionalized slavery, the treatment of blacks, the chasm between the haves and the have-nots.........
Glad to see however, this 'diplomat' turns into a cyber warrior, shows the level of his frustration.......
"Prison inmates are picking fruits and vegetables at a rate not seen since Jim Crow.
Convict leasing for agriculture—a system that allows states to sell prison labor to private farms—became infamous in the late 1800s for the brutal conditions it imposed on captive, mostly black workers.
Federal and state laws prohibited convict leasing for most of the 20th century, but the once-notorious practice is making a comeback.
Under lucrative arrangements, states are increasingly leasing prisoners to private corporations to harvest food for American consumers."
https://psmag.com/social-justice/anti-i ... the-fields
Re: What's so difficult to understand?
Posted: 30 Dec 2021, 22:03
by Zmeselo
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Re: What's so difficult to understand?
Posted: 31 Dec 2021, 11:51
by Aba
Release the Eritrean people from unrelenting oppression and imprisonment

Re: What's so difficult to understand?
Posted: 31 Dec 2021, 12:58
by Aba
Re: What's so difficult to understand?
Posted: 31 Dec 2021, 14:20
by Aba
Fleeing North Korea
Tens of Newly Arrived Eritreans Flood Ethiopia
Gedab News 5 days ago Gedab News 3
[Gedab News, Dec 26, 2021] Reports from Ethiopia indicate that since the beginning of 2020, more than 65,000 Eritrean escapees have arrived in Ethiopia, including some who abandoned the army.
According to our sources, the number represents about a third of the actual number. Many new arrivals avoid reporting their presence to the concerned Ethiopian authorities but melt in the society and stay with relatives and acquaintances.
The same sources indicate around 75% the new arrivals are Eritreans, surpassing the number of newly arrived Sudanese, Somali and others.
Last month, The Ethiopian Administration for Refugee & Returnee Affairs (ARRA) that coordinates refugees affairs with the UNHCR, was told to freeze its operations. The above mentioned report is expected to be handed to the UNHCR as a yearend report and will be the last unless ARRA is allowed to resume its activities.
Concentrated around Goffa neighborhood, many of the new arrivals from Eritrea took advantage of an unannounced relaxation of exit visa and issue of Eritrean passports. A large number of Eritrean were smuggled to Ethiopia through the Assab-Bure highway and disembarked in the surrounding of Semera, in the Afar region, before continuing to Addis Ababa and other places.
Since 2018, the trickling traffic of Eritrean escapees and refugees through the central section of the Ethiopian-Eritrean border, has drastically increased during November 2021 unannounced visa relaxation by Eritrean authorities.
Two of the newly arrived Eritrean refugees said, “we paid smugglers to drive us from Assab to Ethiopia.” Asked about the reason for the one-month relaxation of exit visa restriction an escapee said, “I believe the higher-ups relaxed it to smuggle their children and relatives.”
A considerable number of Eritrean escapees and refugees have already established themselves, mainly in Addis Ababa and other major cities. They have started small businesses like restaurants and grocery shops. Also, thousands have also travelled to the West to visit or to be reunited with their relatives, while thousands more are hoping to be resettled by the UNHCR.
Reported by T.A. (Ethiopia) Abraham T (USA) and Awatestaff