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A Reply to Dr. Tekie Fissehatsion As we only skimmed through Chatham’s report and Dr. Tekie Fissehasion and his co-writer’s response to the report, but based on Dr. Tekie’s similar articles in the past over the same issue and our overall observations for the last five years of the world’s reluctance to enforce internationally arbitrated border ruling, we take it for granted that Dr. Tekie’s response is appropriate. Our message to any international forces who may assume that Eritrea’s internal challenges are opportunities to redefine and spin the border decision should remain cognizant that we are united in our beliefs that UNSC has abdicated its responsibility and that this body is creating dangerous precedence. The border decision should be implemented without further delay. What is creating our consternation is Dr. Fissehatsion’s latest article in as many days, “The Perils of a Proxy Invasion”. This is yet another ‘he said, she said, we said’ article that draws dangerous and ominous conclusions designed to create more havoc than to address fundamental issues. There are some statements and observations that are inducing our indigestions, Dr. Tekie said, “There might be lots of unflattering things that one can say about the Eritrean Government …” This is understatement of the century. How can one call the imprisonment of Eritreans without due of process of the law and kept incommunicado as just “unflattering things that one can say”? Dr. Tekie, what “your government” is doing is illegal, criminal and crimes against humanity. Even as we speak, six hundred of our brothers and sisters are suffering physical and mental anguish in Libya dreadful of what awaits them if returned to Eritrea. There fears aren’t unfounded as earlier forced returnees A Defined Struggle
Aside from our specific observations of Dr. Tekie’s article, our disappointment is with the entire tone and purpose of the article. Dr. Tekie is fully aware of the fundamental issues that are occupying Eritrea today. Yet, Dr. Tekie has chosen to address the symptoms rather than the illness that have afflicted our cherished Eritrea. We all had hoped and expected such learned and experienced person such as Dr. Tekie to articulate our challenges and to propose creative solutions to address a whole range of burning issues. Instead, Dr. Tekie is reduced to regurgitating what we read in Haddas Eritrea. His article doesn’t provide any value-added analysis or solutions. What occupies every Eritrean mind is, what next? The reality is that Ethiopia has refused to proceed with the demarcation; UNSC has refused to live up to its responsibility; and the world powers have refused to force Ethiopia to abide by the border decision. So what next, Dr. Tekie? “Kab Seb Zitetsebeye Bidewu Beleye” is a wise saying. How long do we hold our breaths until the world decides to demarcate the border? Will the border be demarcated in 1-year, 5-years, or 10-years? By putting all its eggs in one basket, isn’t the PFDJ leadership gambling with our nation? Dr Tekie, how long are you willing to look the other way while thousands continue to perish in PFDJ dungeons under the pretext of patience until border demarcation? Is it another one-year, five-year, or ten years? Are you waiting until those who are exiled by PFDJ reach the 80,000 evicted by Woyane from Ethiopia? Are you waiting until the world declares that PFDJ is responsible for genocide of its own people? How long, Dr. Tekie? Fully aware that the world will drag its feet to force Ethiopia to proceed with demarcation, PIA has pursued its belligerent policies and sole political philosophy of ‘Might is Right’ to circuitously demarcate the border. First, no one with an ounce of scruples can support PIA’s attempts to destabilize the entire horn region and thus endangering Eritrea’s long term interests for the possibility of demarcating the border. Second, ordinary Eritreans can’t be simple spectators and continue to suffer while PIA formulates the next strategy after the UIC debacle to force the world to proceed with demarcation. Do you know what the biggest tragedy is, Dr. Tekie? Eritrean people have began to say if ‘our own government’ can do this to us – imprisoning incommunicado, ‘giffa’, torturing, killing and exiling its own people – what worse things have our enemies done to us? ‘Woyane’ doesn’t become the enemy just because Haddas Eritrea plasters its hate message everyday in its headlines, but is based on our own experiences of what our enemy has done to us that our own government hasn’t done to us. How do you define tyranny from your own government? The answer isn’t lost with you.
It can’t be lost with Dr. Tekie what the issues and challenges are,
Symptoms
of PFDJ’s Eritrea’s illnesses are: Border, Woyane, Somalia, US,
illegal detentions, giffas, slavery campaign, etc… Yet, Dr. Tekie has chosen to write endless articles on the symptoms rather than the illness itself. Dear Dr. Tekie,
Let us continue our
rebuttal by quoting
Min. Haile Woldetensae, Some of you attempt to label the current opposition struggle as if this is between ‘patriots vs. traitors/woyanes’ or between ‘pro-Shaebia vs. anti-Shaebia’ or between ‘pro-PIA vs. anti-PIA”. But this is cheap propaganda by the very people who are gambling with our nation and with the lives of our people.
Let me quote
Thomas Jefferson, Make no mistake, Dr. Tekie, the opposition has a defined struggle. Today’s opposition struggle is about determining the direction of the future of Eritrea. The question is, do we begin building the foundations of evolving democratic Eritrea, or do we allow our Eritrea to suffer under the whims of successive tyrants. Constitution is only a piece of paper. But the spirit of constitution – the ideals of democracy, rule-of-law, human rights – is found in people’s struggle to protect these ideals. The thousands of Eritrean petitions, rallies, critical articles, political detentions are the very foundations of Eritrea’s future democracy. As undoubtedly you consider yourself as a proponent of democracy, it is not lost with you that democracy is never handed down to the people on silver platter. As you are even witnessing in your adopted country, even mature democracies have momentary lapses in which leaders attempt to usurp power from the people and other branches of government under the pretext of national security and threats. It is a constant war-of-tugs. Democracy is defined by the struggle fought during difficult times – never benevolently handed down by unaccountable leaders. Although our campaigns are against PIA, our struggle is beyond PIA and against any form of dictatorship and tyranny, unaccountability and to reclaim the future direction of our cherished country. By drawing the line with PIA, we are drawing the line against all future tyrants. If we allow PIA to use ‘national threat’ to undermine everything we value dear in our nation and everything we hold close to our hearts, we are creating dangerous precedence for our future. We might as well write-off our nation, our values, our thirty-year miracle, and what our fallen heroes fought for. Eritrea isn’t a unique nation that we can’t learn from the experiences of other nations and peoples. When we gained our independence, we thought we would learn from the mistakes of others, but instead we have committed worse mistakes. We can longer afford to give blank checks to PFDJ. Some of you say that once the border is demarcated, we can return to the task of implementing Eritrea’s Constitution and running our country as it should. There are a couple of problems with this argument,
a. First and foremost, no amount of development can ever justify violations of human rights – period. b. National development is beyond steels and concrete and is about the more subtle components of development including human resource development and developing properly functioning institutions. It can’t be lost with you, Dr. Tekie, development is multi-dimensional and multi-faceted. c. Warsai Yikealo is all about destroying the youth. No one knows how Warsai Yikealo campaign fits into our long-term socio-economic direction. Building a couple of roads and some residential houses can’t constitute a vision or direction. d. Private sector has been destroyed and replaced by army officers enriching themselves - squandering away our precious wealth on Black Label Johnnie Walker. It is disappointing, to say the least, that some of you, including those who recanted from the Berlin Manifesto and others, have reduced the much bigger question of the directions of a country to politics at personal level. Eritrea is much bigger than one man or one small group. Eritrea is about those innocent elders, political prisoners, journalists, the exiled and the vast majority Eritreans who are suffering in silence. Eritrea is about each one of us and what each one of us holds dear in our hearts. Regardless of the political treacheries around us, we have to be able to rise above it and become the rallying point for the future of Eritrea we all aspire. Dr. Tekie, what is your role today to alleviate our people’s severe and unnecessary sufferings and to establish the solid foundations for future Eritrea? We, in the opposition, know exactly what we stand for – and it was eloquently articulated by Min. Haile Drue seven long years ago. Our questions to ordinary Eritreans can only be “Are you better off today than yesterday?” If the answer is no, then we have to consider change of direction, esp. if the answer still remains negative after few weeks and definitely if longer than ONE year. [One reason calendar was introduced was to put time limits on everything. PFDJ doesn’t want to commit to timetables but to decide our fate at its whims. That is always an ominous sign when a leader refuses to commit to a timetable while the people’s situations deteriorate by the day.] Dear Dr. Tekie, We, in the opposition, have a defined struggle. Our beliefs are based on our traditions and the trusts our martyrs left behind for us. It isn’t complicated. It is about human respect, courtesy and dignity. Our beliefs are based on tolerance, inclusiveness, compassion and wider consultations. We don’t think of ourselves as intellectual Army Generals who comfortably justify the sacrifices of thousands of innocent people for one political victory, but as tormented people who go to bed every night and wake up every morning saying ‘isn’t there a better way? Is it absolutely necessary to create so much internal upheaval?’ The rest of us would have preferred to engage all our fellow countrymen with wider discussions and debates, learn from our mistakes, and chart new courses as needed. This is the only way we can live as a nation. What we want you to know, Dr. Tekie, is that although we criticize you with our pens, our hearts are always open for you, for the Sophias and for the Mikes. We reject PFDJ’s desperate ploys of ‘labeling’ and divisive politics. We reject ‘you are either with us or against us’ mentality. To us, every Eritrean is precious, born from the very soils nurtured by our fallen heroes, and needed for the bigger tasks that await us. Dr. Tekie, we don’t build a thick wall to separate us as PFDJ does. Ours is only a very thin wall that you can easily break by just admitting to yourselves (not to us) your momentary lapse of judgment, as we all do, and accept that human dignity and rule-of-law is above all else. Dr. Tekie, you are worth significantly more than regurgitating “Haddas Eritrea”. We have enough ‘yes men’. Instead, what we need is your real wisdom and experience! We hope your next article will use your vast experience to articulate a bold direction for Eritrea that takes into account the true socio-political, economic and diplomatic situations in today’s Eritrea. Good luck! Congratulations to Eritrean Youth for Change! Berhan Hagos February 11, 2007 |
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2007-02-12 23:42 :Copyright © 2005 Last modified |
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