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Zmeselo
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(BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Zmeselo » 29 Dec 2022, 15:15



Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention


IMAGE SOURCE, CATHOLIC GHEEZ. Bishop Fikremariam Hagos was detained after he returned from Europe

By Teklemariam Bekit

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-64110849

BBC Tigrinya, Nairobi

4 hours ago

A leading Catholic bishop in Eritrea has been freed from detention after being held without trial since October, reliable sources have told the BBC.

Bishop Fikremariam Hagos was released along with a parish priest, Abba Mihretab Stefanos.

No reasons were given by the authorities for their detention.

The Catholic Church has repeatedly called for an end to one-party rule in Eritrea, and for democracy to be embraced.

The Catholic Archbishop of Asmara and a small congregation gathered to welcome the clerics after their release.

Eritrea has not held a national election since it gained independence from Ethiopia in 1991.

It has been ruled since then by President Isaias Afwerki. His regime has been accused of human rights abuses - including violating religious rights.

The bishop had been detained since 15 October after he returned to the capital, Asmara, from a trip to Europe.

In 2019, the authorities shut Catholic-run schools and hospitals, saying that religious bodies could not run such institutions.

Catholics make up about 4% of Eritrea's population. The church is one of only four religious groups allowed to operate in Eritrea, along with the Eritrean Orthodox, Evangelical Lutheran, and Sunni Muslim groups.

Zmeselo
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Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Zmeselo » 29 Dec 2022, 15:41



Home News
'I want to be the next African history writer': Meet the young riders inspired by Biniam Girmay

Before May, no Black African had ever won a Grand Tour stage. Then Biniam Girmay came along and gave belief to the next generation


Biniam Girmay celebrating Giro d'Italia stage win
(Image credit: Getty)


BY TOM DAVIDSON

https://www.cyclingweekly.com/news/i-wa ... iam-girmay

10 HOURS AGO

There’s one piece of advice that 19-year-old Kiya Rogora has never forgotten. It was a warm September morning in 2021 and the Ethiopian was in the gothic Belgian city of Leuven, grabbing a coffee with his new hero Biniam Girmay.

The day before, the teenager had watched on as the Eritrean became the first Black African to win a medal at the Road World Championships, https://www.cyclingweekly.com/news/road ... n-flanders claiming silver in the men’s under-23 road race. Until that moment, Rogora had never seen someone like himself, someone with black skin, on a podium in Europe.

In Girmay’s feat, Rogora saw what was possible. He was desperate to know what he had to do to reach the same level, so he planned out a few questions and went to meet the silver medallist.
He told me to think, ‘That guy has two legs and I also have two legs.'
Rogora tells Cycling Weekly.
There’s nothing different. Hard work makes the difference.
Little did Girmay know what this mentality would lead him to achieve in 2022. When he lined up at the Giro d’Italia https://www.cyclingweekly.com/racing/giro-ditalia in May, he was already a history-maker. The 22-year-old’s victory at Ghent-Wevelgem https://www.cyclingweekly.com/racing/bi ... t-wevelgem five weeks prior made him the first Black African to win a Classic, and now his sights were set on becoming the first to claim a Grand Tour stage.

That moment came in Jesi, an unassuming, medieval town in the east of Italy. Frustrated by a string of top-five finishes, Girmay lashed down on his pedals in the finale of stage 10 and tore away from Mathieu van der Poel, https://www.cyclingweekly.com/tag/mathieu-van-der-poel the man who beat him to the pink jersey on the opening day. This time, the Dutchman was defeated. Van der Poel sat down in his saddle, gasped for air and dealt his opponent a congratulatory thumbs up. Girmay had done it again. https://www.cyclingweekly.com/news/bini ... en-victory
I realise I’m making history,
the Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert Matériaux rider said after the race, but sadly he wouldn’t continue.

Almost blinded by a stray bottle cork https://www.cyclingweekly.com/news/bini ... eye-injury on the podium, the sprint ended up being Girmay’s last action in the Italian Grand Tour. Its impact, though, had been felt worldwide.


Girmay collapses after his victory at Ghent-Wevelgem (Image credit: Getty Images)

For Rogora, Girmay became an even bigger role model.
I’m riding with a lot of nations from Africa right now at the World Cycling Centre and they are all inspired,
the 19-year-old says.
I think we have all seen that it’s possible and we’re trying to be the next one. For me personally, I have gained a lot of confidence from his wins.
Today, Rogora is Ethiopia’s road and time trial champion. He has also taken top-20s in one-day races in France and Switzerland, always keeping Girmay’s advice in mind.
This year I got a lot of good results because I was thinking we’re all the same. White people, Black people, we’re the same. If you can do it, I can do it.
It’s this feeling of belief, shared across young African riders, that is likely to be the real legacy of Girmay’s season.

Speaking to Cycling Weekly, South African former cyclist Xylon van Eyck says that, by having role models at the highest level of the sport, Black Africans can now start to trust more in themselves and their future careers.
They say that you can’t be what you can’t see, and it’s just natural to relate to people who look like you,
Van Eyck says.
We should have 20, 30, 40 Biniams. It is possible. He’s showing that it’s possible.
In his career as a media executive, Van Eyck has worked with a number of African teams and riders. He says he was never good enough to go professional himself, but felt his opportunities were capped when he first started racing in his local scene.
We were told before that cycling is a European thing. They’d say, ‘It’s going to take you 10 years to get used to riding in the bunch and how to sit on the wheel.
Merhawi Kudus openly speaks about first getting into the pro peloton and riders actively not wanting to sit on his wheel, because they assumed he didn’t know how to ride in a bunch.

What Biniam is doing now is he’s showing we can do this. We have the talent to do this. We can beat the best and be the best. I don’t think it’s long before he wins a Tour de France stage. I absolutely think he’s going to be the first Black African to win a Tour de France stage. It’s going to happen.
In order to reach the same heights, Van Eyck stresses, up and coming African riders need “access” across the sport of cycling.
Access to Europe, access to development, access to teams,
he adds.
There were zero Black riders in the Tour de France this year because of lack of access, not lack of talent or because the pool is small.

Biniam is taking it to a whole new level, showing that it’s not just making up the numbers, it’s actually being competitive.

Eric Muhoza at the 2022 Tour du Rwanda (Image credit: Getty)

Today, owing in part to Girmay’s successes, more and more talent scouts are looking to Africa for the next cycling champion. Rwandan 20-year-old Eric Muhoza hopes it might be him.
I want to ride the Tour de France, https://www.cyclingweekly.com/racing/tour-de-france
he tells Cycling Weekly.
I want to do the best competitions in the world.
Next season, Muhoza will join Continental team Bike Aid in Germany, edging closer to his ultimate goal.
I have the dream to be like Biniam Girmay,
he says.
Biniam is my favourite rider from Africa. I want to be like him. I want to ride in the WorldTour.
Double Ethiopian champion Rogora is also joining the European Continental ranks for 2023, hoping to follow in the footsteps of the man he met for coffee last September.
I want to be the next African history writer,
he says.
I want to do something in cycling that African cyclists won’t forget, like Biniam Girmay.
As long as he has two legs, the Eritrean might tell him, anything is possible.
Last edited by Zmeselo on 29 Dec 2022, 18:07, edited 1 time in total.

Zmeselo
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Posts: 37347
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Zmeselo » 29 Dec 2022, 15:45




📸 G.M.A. Visafric

Zmeselo
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Posts: 37347
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Zmeselo » 29 Dec 2022, 15:51


Delina and Iman

“You Can’t Buy the Good Personality but I think the People in Eritrea are Born with it” Delina Aman

By: Mussie Efriem

https://shabait.com/2022/12/29/you-cant ... lina-aman/

Q & A

Dec 29, 2022

Our guests today, Delina Aman and Iman Aman, were born and raised in California, USA. They are on their very first visit to Eritrea and recommend to the young Eritrean diaspora to visit their country of origin and be in touch with their roots.

Welcome to Eritrea, your country of origin. Tell us something about yourselves.

My name is Delina Aman, and I am 24 years old. I studied Sociology at the University of California at Berkeley and graduated in 2020. I am studying medicine to become a doctor. And right now, I am preparing for the Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT).

My name is Iman Aman, and I am 23. I was born and raised in the city of Orange, Orange County in California, USA. I also went to the University of California at Berkeley and got a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering and computer science. My goal is to get a PhD. in computer science. My sister and I are now in Asmara on our first visit to Eritrea.

What are your first impressions here?

Iman: This is our first visit to Eritrea. It’s amazing that everybody we see is welcoming, and it’s so nice to speak in our mother tongue. People here are very warm in welcoming us and are very close to one another. Here, in Eritrea, I feel the most peaceful I’ve ever felt.

Delina: We’ve found quality people with very nice personalities. Wherever you go here in Eritrea you meet kind people. They treat you like a family, so it feels like we are surrounded by a great family. And it makes us proud to be part of such an amazing group of people. Another thing I’ve noticed is how creative and hardworking everyone is. You can’t buy that good personality but I think the people in Eritrea are born with it.

Does the reality here match what you were imagining in the USA?

Delina: Our parents were always telling us about our home country and we have a community in the USA that gives us a glimpse of Eritrea. So, I did find some of what I expected, but the reality here is much more intense than what I was expecting. I feel a sense of belonging a lot more here than I did before coming here, and that is delightful.

Tell us about your parents’ role in integrating you with the homeland, and about the Eritrean community in California.

Delina: We grew up learning our culture, our values, and our language. Our parents speak only in Tigrinya (our mother tongue) at home so that we could communicate with our families when we come to Eritrea. So my first language was Tigrinya, and I didn’t use English before I started schooling. Our parents also tell us about the history of our ancestors. And in California, we have a very good and strong community. We are not big and so we know one another. We hang out every weekend and are very close to each other like a family. I am very grateful for that as well.



What places have you visited during your stay here?

Iman: The first place we saw was Dirfo and it was very beautiful. I haven’t seen such fog and mist touch the floor, and the weather was amazing. We’ve also visited the National Agricultural Research Institution in Halhale. We met the director of the institution and he showed us around. We’ve visited Mendefera, the origin of my parents, and Keren, a beautiful and clean city, and many important sites in Asmara. We are now planning to go to Massawa.

Tell us your plans regarding your education.

Iman: My plan is to have some work experience and skills and have a Ph.D. in computer science. After that, I would love to come here and contribute in terms of technology. My parents worked hard to raise me, educate me, and make me who I am. I would love to pay them back. And helping my country is a huge part of my plan. Every Eritrean is part of the Eritrean history, and it’s my pleasure to be part of this.

Delina: I will continue my education in medicine, and after completing my studies, I really want to come to Eritrea and share my knowledge with my people. I consider myself very lucky to have parents who understand very well the importance of education. They invested a lot in our education. My mom has a Ph.D., and she inspired me to focus on education. So I wouldn’t be here without their dedication. I am also proud of my grandparents who were dedicated activists for the freedom of Eritrea during the struggle for independence. We also have aunts and uncles who were freedom fighters. So, I have so many influences on my life that helped me to know Eritrean values and history. A huge part of my plan is to be able to repay my society.



What message would you give young Eritreans living abroad?

We want to say come here and see your country because you need to be in touch with your roots. Young Eritreans raised abroad, in particular, need to know exactly where they come from because it’s part of their identity. We would love to tell them that if they come here, they will be very proud to be Eritrean and realize how lucky they are to be part of the people.

We thank everybody who has shown us around, especially our cousin, Fuad Kahsay, who made our visit very beautiful. We also thank the Ministry of Information for giving us this opportunity. We’ll go back to America with a sense of pride that we are Eritrean.

Thank you so much!

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 37347
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Zmeselo » 29 Dec 2022, 16:58

Ethiopia: ኤርትራን ከኢትዮጵያ II የሰላም ስምምነቱ ያበሳጨው አሜሪካዊ


Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 37347
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Zmeselo » 29 Dec 2022, 17:41



Ethiopia: Why does the Eritrean army not withdraw from Tigray?

Text by: Leonard Vincent

https://www.rfi.fr/fr/afrique/20221229- ... tigr%C3%A9

29/12/2022


Eritrea has already said that its army was engaged at the request of Addis Ababa and therefore only Ethiopia could ask it to leave. Here, Eritrean President Issayas Afewerki is received by Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed in Addis Ababa, July 14, 2018 (illustration). © Mulugeta Ayene / AP

Translated from French by Google

In Ethiopia, the application of the peace agreement between the federal government and the Tigray authorities is progressing day by day. Humanitarian aid, basic services, transport resume. One question, however, remains unresolved: that of the withdrawal of the Eritrean army from Tigray. Eritrea does not envisage without solid guarantees for its security.

The Joint Committee consisting of the Ethiopian Federal https://www.rfi.fr/fr/afrique/20221226- ... tigr%C3%A9 and Tigray military leaders met for the first time in the town of Shire in northwestern Tigray on December 1. However, this would not have been possible without the Eritrean army, which had recently occupied the city, withdrawing from it, explains an expert in the Eritrean military.
It is therefore a sign that Eritrea is not totally deaf to calls to withdraw its troops from Tigray https://www.rfi.fr/fr/afrique/20221121- ... tigr%C3%A9,
in accordance with the Pretoria peace agreement, https://www.rfi.fr/fr/afrique/20221112- ... C3%A0-tous says this source.

That said, according to her, the Eritreans have only moved closer to the Ethiopian border territories, in the current state, and would not have received the order to go further.

An opportunity for Asmara to establish itself well in Ethiopia


Fathi Osman
For President Issayas Afewerki, the military commitment in Tigray is an investment he will not give up,
explains former Eritrean diplomat Fathi Osman, now a journalist.
Because the rapprochement with Ethiopia not only brought him out of his diplomatic isolation, but it also allowed him to establish himself militarily in Ethiopia,


confirms the source close to the Eritrean military.

On the one hand in Tigray, but also in intelligence, in the Amhara city of Gondar – where the Eritreans train the special forces – as well as in terms of political influence.

According to the director of Radio Erena Biniam Simon, Eritrean President Issayas Afewerki especially wants
guarantees that the Tigrayans do not threaten him.


Because when the Tigrayan troops were getting dangerously close to Addis Ababa, during the summer of 2021, the political leadership of the rebels suggested that the next step would be to “march on Asmara”, the Eritrean capital.

The Eritrean head of state therefore intends to keep the border territories around Badmé and Zalambessa, which were occupied by Tigrayans before the war, in violation of the Algiers peace agreement, signed in 2000. Intentions authorities in Mekele are still unclear about these two border areas.
Eritrea therefore seeks to maintain this situation of neither war nor peace,
adds Biniam Simon.
Thus, the Tigrayans remain for Issayas Afewerki a life insurance and a scarecrow serving to maintain its population in a state of siege.


The two journalists finally agree on another point.

The original Eritrean war aim of “destroying the TPLF” was not achieved. But at least the Pretoria agreement formalizes the significant military weakening of the Tigrayan party, which also governed Ethiopia until 2018.
We wanted
sums up Fathi Osman,
but we have to take what we got.
Last edited by Zmeselo on 31 Dec 2022, 05:41, edited 2 times in total.

Temt
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Joined: 04 Jun 2013, 22:23

Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Temt » 29 Dec 2022, 17:56

ሕጂ ግርም! ቀጽሎ ደኣ ወድ'ዛ ሓላል መሬት!

Zmeselo
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Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Zmeselo » 29 Dec 2022, 19:12

Temt wrote:
29 Dec 2022, 17:56
ሕጂ ግርም! ቀጽሎ ደኣ ወድ'ዛ ሓላል መሬት!

Check this out, brother!

The latest Eritrean American Harmony Magazine presented by the #NPDGEri-American newsletter:





https://www.flipsnack.com/npdtf/ncea-s- ... -view.html

Abe Abraham
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Posts: 14414
Joined: 05 Jun 2013, 13:00

Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Abe Abraham » 29 Dec 2022, 19:46


The Catholic Church has repeatedly called for an end to one-party rule in Eritrea, and for democracy to be embraced.
The Catholic Church during the Woyane invasion was writing anti-Eritrean messages to the outside world.

When Ethiopia announced that it was prepared to respect the law and make peace with Eritrea and the government of Eritrea was exploring the new situation the Catholic Church in Asmara came out with this words : Eritrea is not interested in peace.



-

Abe Abraham
Senior Member
Posts: 14414
Joined: 05 Jun 2013, 13:00

Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Abe Abraham » 29 Dec 2022, 21:07

Zmeselo wrote:
29 Dec 2022, 15:51

Delina and Iman

“You Can’t Buy the Good Personality but I think the People in Eritrea are Born with it” Delina Aman

By: Mussie Efriem

https://shabait.com/2022/12/29/you-cant ... lina-aman/

Q & A

Dec 29, 2022

Our guests today, Delina Aman and Iman Aman, were born and raised in California, USA. They are on their very first visit to Eritrea and recommend to the young Eritrean diaspora to visit their country of origin and be in touch with their roots.

Welcome to Eritrea, your country of origin. Tell us something about yourselves.

My name is Delina Aman, and I am 24 years old. I studied Sociology at the University of California at Berkeley and graduated in 2020. I am studying medicine to become a doctor. And right now, I am preparing for the Medical College Admissions Test (MCAT).

My name is Iman Aman, and I am 23. I was born and raised in the city of Orange, Orange County in California, USA. I also went to the University of California at Berkeley and got a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering and computer science. My goal is to get a PhD. in computer science. My sister and I are now in Asmara on our first visit to Eritrea.

What are your first impressions here?

Iman: This is our first visit to Eritrea. It’s amazing that everybody we see is welcoming, and it’s so nice to speak in our mother tongue. People here are very warm in welcoming us and are very close to one another. Here, in Eritrea, I feel the most peaceful I’ve ever felt.

Delina: We’ve found quality people with very nice personalities. Wherever you go here in Eritrea you meet kind people. They treat you like a family, so it feels like we are surrounded by a great family. And it makes us proud to be part of such an amazing group of people. Another thing I’ve noticed is how creative and hardworking everyone is. You can’t buy that good personality but I think the people in Eritrea are born with it.

Does the reality here match what you were imagining in the USA?

Delina: Our parents were always telling us about our home country and we have a community in the USA that gives us a glimpse of Eritrea. So, I did find some of what I expected, but the reality here is much more intense than what I was expecting. I feel a sense of belonging a lot more here than I did before coming here, and that is delightful.

Tell us about your parents’ role in integrating you with the homeland, and about the Eritrean community in California.

Delina: We grew up learning our culture, our values, and our language. Our parents speak only in Tigrinya (our mother tongue) at home so that we could communicate with our families when we come to Eritrea. So my first language was Tigrinya, and I didn’t use English before I started schooling. Our parents also tell us about the history of our ancestors. And in California, we have a very good and strong community. We are not big and so we know one another. We hang out every weekend and are very close to each other like a family. I am very grateful for that as well.



What places have you visited during your stay here?

Iman: The first place we saw was Dirfo and it was very beautiful. I haven’t seen such fog and mist touch the floor, and the weather was amazing. We’ve also visited the National Agricultural Research Institution in Halhale. We met the director of the institution and he showed us around. We’ve visited Mendefera, the origin of my parents, and Keren, a beautiful and clean city, and many important sites in Asmara. We are now planning to go to Massawa.

Tell us your plans regarding your education.

Iman: My plan is to have some work experience and skills and have a Ph.D. in computer science. After that, I would love to come here and contribute in terms of technology. My parents worked hard to raise me, educate me, and make me who I am. I would love to pay them back. And helping my country is a huge part of my plan. Every Eritrean is part of the Eritrean history, and it’s my pleasure to be part of this.

Delina: I will continue my education in medicine, and after completing my studies, I really want to come to Eritrea and share my knowledge with my people. I consider myself very lucky to have parents who understand very well the importance of education. They invested a lot in our education. My mom has a Ph.D., and she inspired me to focus on education. So I wouldn’t be here without their dedication. I am also proud of my grandparents who were dedicated activists for the freedom of Eritrea during the struggle for independence. We also have aunts and uncles who were freedom fighters. So, I have so many influences on my life that helped me to know Eritrean values and history. A huge part of my plan is to be able to repay my society.



What message would you give young Eritreans living abroad?

We want to say come here and see your country because you need to be in touch with your roots. Young Eritreans raised abroad, in particular, need to know exactly where they come from because it’s part of their identity. We would love to tell them that if they come here, they will be very proud to be Eritrean and realize how lucky they are to be part of the people.

We thank everybody who has shown us around, especially our cousin, Fuad Kahsay, who made our visit very beautiful. We also thank the Ministry of Information for giving us this opportunity. We’ll go back to America with a sense of pride that we are Eritrean.

Thank you so much!


ካብ መዓስ እዮም ኣስላም ተጋሩ ኤርትራውያን ዝኾኑ ? ኣብ ትግራይ ኬድካ እንዳ ተዋጋእካዮም ኣብ ኤርትራ ተመሊስካ ከመይ ጌርካ ብሓይሊ ደቂ ሃገር ክትገብሮም ዝህቀን ? ህግደፍ ተጸሊሎም ክኾኑ ኣለዎም ። ንደቂ ሃገር ደቂ-ኣንስትዮ ኦርቶዶክስ ከይተረፋ ንውግእ እንዳ ለኣኽካ ንባዕዲ ኣብ ውሽጢ ኣስመራ/ሓማሴን ምሕብሓብ እንታይ ኣድለየ ? ተሓታትነት ስለ ዘየለ ድዩ ? እቲ ህዝቢ እንታይ ኮይኑ እዩ ኣስላም ተጋሩ ክርእይ እንከሎ ዝፈርሕ ? ኣስላም ተጋሩ ዓጋመ ኣይኮኑን ድዮም ዋላስ ዓጋመ ማለት ክርስትያን ጥራሕ ማለት እዩ ? ኣብ ክንደይ መስዋእቲ ዝተኸፍላ ሃገር ስለምንታይ ጃጀውትን ሓሰውትን ይህልዉና ? ንኣስላም ተጋሩ ብሓይሊ ደቂ ሃገር ክትገብሮም ምፍታን ምሕሳውን ምጅጃውን እዩ ዝቑጸር ። ካብ ዓሊ ዓብዱ ዘይትፈግዱ ስለምንታይ ? ዓሊ ዓብዱ ቅድሚ ምህዳሙ ንሓንቲ ኣብ እንዳ ዜና ትሰርሕ መስክነይቲ ኤርትራዊት ካብ ትግረ ብሓይሊ ክዕምጻ ፈቲኑ ተጠንቀቕ ምስ በለቶ ጭርኡ ዶጒሉ ኣንሳሒቡ ።


Meleket
Member+
Posts: 5071
Joined: 16 Feb 2018, 05:08

Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Meleket » 31 Dec 2022, 05:00

ነቲ ታሪኽ መመስመሩ ከነትሕዞ'ዶ፧ ንሕና ኤርትራውያን ደያኑ ማእከልን መስመርን ብኤርትራዊ ጭዉነት ሓበንን ፍናንን!
Zmeselo wrote:
09 Jul 2019, 05:00
Abe Abraham is not my concern, Asswash is.

So you stick with correcting Abe Abraham, & I will stick with fighting asswash.
Abe Abraham wrote:
29 Dec 2022, 19:46

The Catholic Church has repeatedly called for an end to one-party rule in Eritrea, and for democracy to be embraced.
The Catholic Church during the Woyane invasion was writing anti-Eritrean messages to the outside world.

When Ethiopia announced that it was prepared to respect the law and make peace with Eritrea and the government of Eritrea was exploring the new situation the Catholic Church in Asmara came out with this words : Eritrea is not interested in peace.

Meleket wrote:
01 Jul 2019, 02:49
Meleket wrote:
29 Apr 2019, 05:13
Abe Abraham wrote:
27 Apr 2019, 17:12
... ብደም ተዋህዶ ነጻ ዝወጽአት ሃገር ...
ኣንታ መን ክሓፍረልኻ ኢዩ! ወይ ነገር “ዲጅታል ወያነ” ብጨናኻ ትፍለጥ! ደቂ ኤለትረያ ደኣ በዅርን ሕሳስ ልደን ኣስላማይን ክስታናይን፣ ተውሓዶኡ ኮተሊኹ ኬንሽኡ እንደኣሉ “ሃገር ቢሉ” ብሓድነት መኪቱን ተዓዊቱን ንጸላእቲ ሃገረ ኤለትረያ ዘሕፍሮምን “ሕዚ’ዶ ሓይሽ ዉይዉይ” ዝብሎም ዘሎ!!! ወላሒ!!! :lol:

እንታይ’ሞ ኣጣቈስቲ መኣስ ልርደኣዅም ዀይኑ

“ከምዡይ ገቢሩሎም ወ ጎሚዳ ኣባ ብልሓቱ - - - ” ትብል ደርፊ ጋቢዘካ ኣሎኹ!
:mrgreen:
Abe Abraham wrote:
29 Dec 2022, 21:07
Zmeselo wrote:
29 Dec 2022, 15:51

“You Can’t Buy the Good Personality but I think the People in Eritrea are Born with it” Delina Aman

By: Mussie Efriem

https://shabait.com/2022/12/29/you-cant ... lina-aman/


ካብ መዓስ እዮም ኣስላም ተጋሩ ኤርትራውያን ዝኾኑ ? ኣብ ትግራይ ኬድካ እንዳ ተዋጋእካዮም ኣብ ኤርትራ ተመሊስካ ከመይ ጌርካ ብሓይሊ ደቂ ሃገር ክትገብሮም ዝህቀን ? ህግደፍ ተጸሊሎም ክኾኑ ኣለዎም ። ንደቂ ሃገር ደቂ-ኣንስትዮ ኦርቶዶክስ ከይተረፋ ንውግእ እንዳ ለኣኽካ ንባዕዲ ኣብ ውሽጢ ኣስመራ/ሓማሴን ምሕብሓብ እንታይ ኣድለየ ? ተሓታትነት ስለ ዘየለ ድዩ ? እቲ ህዝቢ እንታይ ኮይኑ እዩ ኣስላም ተጋሩ ክርእይ እንከሎ ዝፈርሕ ? ኣስላም ተጋሩ ዓጋመ ኣይኮኑን ድዮም ዋላስ ዓጋመ ማለት ክርስትያን ጥራሕ ማለት እዩ ? ኣብ ክንደይ መስዋእቲ ዝተኸፍላ ሃገር ስለምንታይ ጃጀውትን ሓሰውትን ይህልዉና ? ንኣስላም ተጋሩ ብሓይሊ ደቂ ሃገር ክትገብሮም ምፍታን ምሕሳውን ምጅጃውን እዩ ዝቑጸር ። ካብ ዓሊ ዓብዱ ዘይትፈግዱ ስለምንታይ ? ዓሊ ዓብዱ ቅድሚ ምህዳሙ ንሓንቲ ኣብ እንዳ ዜና ትሰርሕ መስክነይቲ ኤርትራዊት ካብ ትግረ ብሓይሊ ክዕምጻ ፈቲኑ ተጠንቀቕ ምስ በለቶ ጭርኡ ዶጒሉ ኣንሳሒቡ ።
Meleket wrote:
17 Feb 2022, 09:54
ክቡር ሓዉና kerenite ነዡን ከምዡን ዝበለ ነዉራም ዘረባ ሰሚዑ ዘጽቅጥ “ኤርትራዊ’የ” ዚብል ሰብ እንተልዩ፡ እሞ ድማ ጽባሕ ድሕሪ ጽባሕ ከይሓፈረን ከይሓነኸን “ብዛዕባ ስዉኣት” ኪዛረብ ዚፍትን “ኤርትራዊ’የ” ዚብል ሰብ ኣብ መረጃ እንተልዩ፡ ኅልንኡ ዛየጽረየ፡ ብ"ድርብ ዕያር" ዚመዝን፡ ንኸብዱ ጥራሕ ዚነብር ሰብ’ዩ ዚብል እምንቶ ስለዛሎኒ’የ፡ ነዙይ መቓቓላይ ገማማዓይ ጐበዛይ ወዲ . . . . መሊሸሉ ዛሎኹ። :lol:

ኪገርመካ Sabur ከምዡ’ዩ kerenite ድማ ከምዚ’ዩ እናበሉ ብዛዕባ መንነት ሰባት ዘህተፍትፉ “ኤርትራዉያን ምሑራት መረጃ”፡ ከምዡይ ዝኣመሰለ Abe Abrhamaዊ ነውራምን ደረቀይና ዘረባን ኪኹንኑ መዓንጣ ኪስእኑ እንከለዉ፡ ኤርትራዉያን ደያኑ ማእከልን መስመርን ንኦኦምዉን ኢና “ዓገብ” ንብሎም ብኤርትራዊ ጭዉነት።
:mrgreen:
kerenite wrote:
16 Feb 2022, 12:53
Meleket wrote:
16 Feb 2022, 03:32
ጐበዛይ ቆልዓ . . . . ፡ ኣብ ኤርትራና ‘ድርብ ዕያር’ ኣይሰርሕኒ። ስለምታይ ኣብ “ትግራዋይ ኣስላማይ” ጥራሕ ትግደስ “ትግራዋይ ክስታናይ’ከ” የልቦን ዲዩ፧ እንተተበሃልካ እንታይ ክትብል ኢኻ፧ ዶስ ስራሕ ምግምማዕኻ ንምስልሳል ኢዩ፡ ፈሊካ ን"ትግራዋይ ኣስላማይ" ተጥቕዕ ዛሎኻ፧ ሄ ሄ ሄ ኣብዡይ ዘመን፡ በዚን ከምዚን ዚዕሾን ዚደናገርን ወዲ ኤረትርያ ዛሎ’ዶ ይመስለካ፧ :mrgreen:

ከምዡይ ዚርደኣና ዛሎ፡ እዞም “ትግራዋይ ኣስላማይ” ትብሎም ዛሎኻ ሰባት፡ ኣብቱይ ሃገረ ስደትካ ብፍላይ ኣብቱይ ቋንቋ ዓረብ ዝተመሃርካሉ ሃገራት፡ ብኵልንትናኦም ብፍልጠቶምን ትምህርቶምን ዓብሊሎምካ፡ ኣብኡ ከይትሕሱ ገጥ ኣቢሎም ሒዞምኻ ስለዝነበሩ፡ ክቱር ቂምታ ኣሕዲርካሎም ዛሎኻ ኢኻ ትመስል እምበር ወደይ ክንድዡ’ዶ ብኣርኣያ ስላሴ ዝተፈጥረ ሰብ ይጽላእ፧ ንብል ኤርትራዉያን ደያኑ ማእከልን መስመርን
:mrgreen:
Abe Abraham wrote:
15 Feb 2022, 12:40
JudgementDay1234 wrote:
13 Feb 2022, 23:56
Never trust any jeberti muslim from shire tigrai.
The trust problem will disappear once the Tigrayan muslim invaders are sent back to Tigray. . . . ትግራዋይ ኣስላማይ እንተ በልና ዓዲ ገሊኦም ጸርፊ ዝመስሎም ኣለዉ ። ትግራዋይ ኣስላማይ ማለት ኣስላማይ ኮይኑ ዓዱ ትግራይ ዝኾነ ሰብ ማለት እዩ ።
Meleket lebam Abi seb,

I am proud to have an eri brother of your caliber.

Abe abraham is a poisonous snake who is spewing his deadly venom to stir-up not only regional strife rather to cause sectarian civil war in eritrea and which is unique to our country.

Unlike our neighbors, we eris never ever fought, be it in our recent or ancient history against each other based on regional or sectarian issues. We are living in harmony since time immemorial and it will remain so.

Any how thanks brother meleket.

Meleket
Member+
Posts: 5071
Joined: 16 Feb 2018, 05:08

Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Meleket » 31 Dec 2022, 05:16

Zmeselo wrote:
29 Dec 2022, 15:15
(BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention
Meleket wrote:
29 Dec 2022, 09:22
መሬት ተንቀጥቅጦ .. .. .. [ሰሞንኛው ኤርትራዊ ግጥም]
(የሃዋርያት ስራ 16:26)


ጳውሎስና ሲላስ ቀደምቱ ምስክር፡
በእግዝሄር ተኣምር፡
መሬት ተንቀጥቅጦ እንደወጡ ከእስር፡
የሃዋርያት ስራ ገልጾ ሲዘረዝር . . .

በአፍሪካ ቀንዷ በየዋሆች ሃገር፡
በኣማኞቹ ምድር በጀግኖቹ ሰፈር፡
በነ ፈንቅልና ባባ ጥመር መንደር፡

አሁን በኛ ዘመን፡ በ21ኛው፡
ተደገመ ታሪክ ልክ እንደ ወዲያኛው፡. . .

የሰው ልብ ሊያስቅሩ ሕዝብ ሊያስሸፍቱ፡
እንቶኔ እና እንቶኒት ሴራ ፈተፈቱ፡
በዲያብሎስ 'ምክር' ተንኮል ፈተፈቱ፡
መንፈሳዊ አባትን ድፍን ሁለት ወራት እንትን ውስጥ ከተቱ፡

ወደር ስሌለው አምላክ ቸርነቱ፡
ወሰን ስሌለው የእግዚኣብሔር ምህረቱ፡
መሬት ኣንቀጥቅጦ ልክ በሳልስቱ፡
ኣቡነ ፍቕረና ኣባ ምሕረተኣብ ደምቀው ከበፊቱ፡
ይበልጥ በእምነት ጸንተው አሁን ከበፊቱ፡
በህዝብ እንባና በጸሎት ተፈቱ፡

ይብላኝ ለእንቶኔዎች ነገር ለዶለቱ፡
ነጩን ጥቁር ብለው ደከሙ ለከንቱ። :mrgreen:

አቡነ ፍቅረማርያም ሓጎስ ጳጳስ ዘመንበረ ሠገነይቲ እና ኣባ ምሕረተኣብ እስጢፋኖስ ቆሞስ ቤተ ቤተክርስትያን ቅዱስ ሚካኤል ሠገነይቲ እንኳን ለዚህ ኣበቃችሁ፡ በማለት መንፈሳዊ ኣባቶቻችን በዕለተ ቅዱስ ገብርኤል በመፈታታቸው ደስ እንዳለን ለመግለጥ ነው፡ እኛ ኤርትራውያን የመሃልና የመስመር ዳኞች፡ በኤርትራዊ ጭዋነት ኩራትና ትህትና ጭምር።

ይህን የተወዳጁን የአቡነ ፍቅረማርያም ሓጎስ ፎቶ "የዓመተ 2022 ምርጥ ፎቶ" ብለነው እንደነበር ይታወቃል :mrgreen:


https://www.volcanodiscovery.com/earthq ... iopia.html

https://crisis24.garda.com/alerts/2022/ ... ion-dec-26

"ክብር ለመንፈሳዊ ኣባቶቻችንና እናቶቻችን በሙሉ!" ... "ዘለዓለማዊ ክብርና ምስጋና ለሥላሴ" . . . ታሪክም እማደል እዬጻፍን ያለነው . . . :mrgreen:

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 37347
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: (BBC): Eritrean Catholic Bishop Fikremariam Hagos freed from detention

Post by Zmeselo » 31 Dec 2022, 06:59



Catholic bishop, priest released after two months in Eritrea prison


Bishop Fikremariam Hagos Tsalim of Eritrea's Segheneity Eparchy | InfoVaticana

By Kevin J. Jones Denver, Colo.

https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news ... rea-prison

Dec 29, 2022

After more than two months in detention in Eritrea, Bishop Fikremariam Hagos Tsalim and Father Mehereteab Stefanos have been released, several sources reported Thursday.

The 52-year-old bishop heads the Eritrean Catholic Eparchy of Segheneity. Father Stefanos, before his imprisonment, was a parish priest at St. Michael’s Parish in the same eparchy. It is still unknown whether another priest, Capuchin Friar Abbot Abraham, has been released.

Security agents had arrested Bishop Tsalim and two priests Oct. 15 at Asmara International Airport upon the bishop’s arrival from Europe. The three clergymen were detained at Adi Abeto prison, according to Agenzia Fides.

The two released prisoners were welcomed by a group that included Archbishop Menghesteab Tesfamariam of Asmara, head of the Eritrean Catholic Church, BBC News reports.

Catholics make up about 4% of Eritrea’s 6 million people. The Eritrean Catholic Church is one of the 23 Eastern Catholic Churches in full communion with the Holy See. It has an estimated 168,000 members in the northwestern African country and in diaspora communities around the world.

Authorities did not state a reason for the arrests of the three clergymen, BBC News reports.

The three detained clergy were accused of criticizing human rights violations in their homilies, CNA’s sister agency ACI Africa reported in October, citing a source who did not want to be named for security reasons. The objects of their criticism included the forced military enlistment of young people and evictions and confiscation of property of those who refused to go to war.

The release of the bishop and the priest comes amid agreements to end the civil war in Ethiopia, where the Eritrean government has sided with the Ethiopian government against the regional leaders of the Tigray province.

Critics of the bishop’s arrest included the U.K.-based groups Christian Solidarity Worldwide and Human Rights Concern-Eritrea.

Eritrea has aligned with the Ethiopian government’s war against the Tigray People's Liberation Front. This group’s leaders dominated Ethiopian politics for decades but the group now controls the Ethiopian region of Tigray, on the southern border of Eritrea. Since the war began in November 2020, the conflict has killed thousands of people. Hundreds of thousands of people have been put at risk of famine and millions of people have been displaced from their homes.

On Nov. 2 the Ethiopian government and Tigrayan forces signed a peace agreement to permanently end hostilities. Both parties also signed a Nov. 12 agreement concerning disarmament, humanitarian access and the Ethiopian military’s entry, Reuters reports. They are now discussing the withdrawal of Eritrean troops from Tigray.

Eritrea became independent from Ethiopia in 1991. Since then, the country has not held a national election. Its president, President Isaias Afwerki, has held office since independence.

Only four religious communities are legal in the country: the Coptic Orthodox Church of Eritrea, Sunni Islam, the Catholic Church, and the Lutheran-affiliated Evangelical Church of Eritrea.

Even legal groups face persecution. The Eritrean government has periodically targeted Catholic and other religious institutions.

In August, the Eritrean government took over the Hagaz Agro-Technical School, a Catholic institution founded and run by the Lasallian Brothers. The school trains students in farm machinery, agriculture, soil conservation, and animal husbandry.

Government officials shut down several Catholic-run schools and hospitals in 2019, saying religious bodies could not run these institutions, BBC News reports. Their legal pretext is a 1995 regulation that restricts social projects and welfare projects to the state. The regulation has been used intermittently to limit religious institutions’ activities and to pursue perceived critics of the government.

Eritrea’s Catholic bishops have opposed the application of the regulation, arguing that the Church’s social services are not in opposition to the government.

The government has drawn international criticism, including a May letter sent to Estifanos Habtemariam Ghebreyesus, the Eritrean ambassador in the United Kingdom and Ireland.

In that letter, officials of Christian Solidarity Worldwide, Church in Chains-Ireland, Release Eritrea, Human Rights Concern-Eritrea, and the Eritrean Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom highlighted multiple instances of human rights violations. These included forced conscription of minors and
unjust, arbitrary and indefinite detention
of tens of thousands of citizens who are imprisoned in
harsh conditions.
Hundreds of Christians are imprisoned
solely on account of their faith.
The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, an advisory body to the U.S. government, has said that Eritrea has
one of the worst religious freedom records in Africa.
Since 2004 the U.S. State Department has designated Eritrea as a Country of Particular Concern for its religious freedom abuses.


Kevin J. Jones is a senior staff writer with Catholic News Agency. He was a recipient of a 2014 Catholic Relief Services' Egan Journalism Fellowship.




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Eritrea's 2019 response on accusations of religious persecution (Pdf-file)
https://tesfanews.net/wp-content/upload ... Report.pdf

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