This
is Awate's unofficial translation of an undated letter
written in Tigrigna and provided by Elsa Chyrum, an Eritrean human
rights activist in the United Kingdom on June 29,
2005. The notes in brackets [ ] are ours. The rest,
including the information provided paranthetically, is as close to a
literal translation as possible. All errors in translations
are our responsibility. We hope our readers will heed the call
of the writer and rise up to say "Enough!" to the brutality that our
compatriots are suffering at the hands of PFDJ. - Awate
Team
Dear
Eritreans:
This message was
relayed to me by people who have close knowledge of Carshelli
[localized version of the Italian word for prison, Carcere.
The main prison is simply thus known] Because I have found it
noteworthy, I have decided to share it with websites so the people
will be made aware. I
will try to present the message as is.
Elsa
Chyrum
London, UK
29 June
2005
Carshelli: A Place
of Abuse and Suffering
As many know,
Carshelli is large prison found in the heart of the city of
Asmara. It has been serving as
prison since the time of Italian rule of Eritrea. All our
forefathers who were imprisoned for the sake of their
country had stayed at Carshelli before they were moved to
Massawa, Nakura or Assab.
Although one cannot speak with certainty, it can be estimated
that the prison has been around for at least 100 years.
Recalling the history
of the jail does not bring about good memories. This is because it was used
as a place to stifle the patriotic sentiments of our
forefathers. Thus, the
stain it [Carshaelli] left on the history of our people cannot be
easily forgotten.
This period, one which
generates bitter memories, beginning with that of our forefathers
who, during the Italian rule era, never returned from their jail
stays in Carshelli to Massawa, Nakura and Assab, and ending with the
Derg [former Ethiopian ruling regime] should be studied with great
care and chronicled.
And now should have been the time to do it. It is very saddening that
this post-independence period continues to witness the imprisoning
and suffering of Eritreans.
What is ironic is that
it would not be remarkable if the previous [foreign] rulers did not
respect human rights: oppression and suppression is the trait of
occupiers.
Notwithstanding this, what is known in the history of the
prison by all Eritreans is that, beginning with the Italian rule all
the way to the Derg,
[our] mothers, whose husbands and children were incarcerated,
were able to visit the jails with meal boxes and bread baskets. It is also a widely-known
fact that they were also able to pick up their [the prisoners']
dirty laundry and drop off fresh clothing. Even the Derg, which was
notorious for its cruelty, did not have a single day of rule when it
forbade visitation rights to the family members of the
incarcerated.
At this time, when the
cities and the wilderness of Eritrea have been
converted into prison, the bitter privation and brutality that
Eritreans are going through is known not only by those at its
receiving end but by the world at large. It has been several years
since the regime of PFDJ or EPLF has been accused of, and criticized
for, human rights violations.
Although its suppressive and brutal behavior has resulted in
its isolation from the world community, because it does not learn
from its mistakes, it has amplified its arrest and infliction of
pain [on the people.]
Thus, it can be said that there are no people [anywhere] who
are more humiliated, disgraced and dishonored than the Eritrean
people.
Let’s leave that issue
for another time and day and turn our attention to the brutality,
harm, and mistreatment at Carshelli. With multiple rooms or
cameras but now overcrowded to the point where one cannot find
moving or breathing space—the incarcerated being men and women; the
elderly and the young; boys and girls; priests and monks; the civil
and the military—this jail is a place of exploitation, brutality and
pain. While present in
the world, all Eritreans in this Carsheli jail can be counted as
practically dead.
Why? Because
nobody knows they are there.
They have no family or relatives to visit them. This brutality, which by no
means can be endured by all, is practiced right at the center of
Asmara, at
Carsheli.
It can be said that
there is no one who does not know that the political prisoners at
Carsheli, like other Eritreans who are enduring suffering in the
hands of the cruel PFDJ, are going through this pain after being
arrested but without receiving a verdict or a legal process. But there are brutalities
that the people are not aware of. And that is this: in a manner reminiscent of
the Gestapo’s torture practices in Germany and Europe, from 1:00 AM until dawn, the jail
shakes with the screams of prisoners receiving severe beating. When one asks: what for? The
answer is: the older prisoners are accused of being influenced by
the arrested ministers [the G-15] and the young ones [members of the
conscripted military] are accused of absence-without-leave.
Because the arrested
do not get adequate medical care and food, there are many for whom
there is little expectation that they will come alive from the holes
they are in. And
the regime who, with its incessant bragging of “by my muscles! by my
might! by my klashin!” has denied God His Glory cannot handle the
criticism it receives from the people and continues to take insane
and crazy steps. Because many of those who are
receiving the beating find it hard to endure, it is doubtful
that they will come out alive.
It is estimated that
there are around 1000 prisoners at Carsheli. To mention the names of a
few of them: Major General
Habtesion Hadgu [formerly the Commander of Eritrean Air Force];
Ermias Debessay [former
Eritrean ambassador to China]; Colonel Solomon (Rashaida);
the famous Division commander Bitweded [in jail since
1993]; the journalist Dawit Isaac (who has
Swedish citizenship); Ne’amen Tekie; Said Abdulmenan (who has
British citizenship); Pastor
Gebremedhen Gebregiorghis;
Dr Pastor Fitsum Gebrenegus; Dr Pastor Tekleab; Dr Kiflu;
Pastor Tesfatsion Hagos; Hassen Kekia; Mengisteab
Tekletsion; Father Tekleberhan Desalegn (from Debresina); Senait
Debessay [sister of aforementioned Ermias Debessay]; Tesfay Geremariam (Adi Nefas);
Ande Mehari (combatant)….
Well, at this time, it
is not possible to talk and write about, in totality, the brutality
that goes on at Carsheli. The people of
Eritrea have been plunged
to rule under a regime whose defining traits are its oppression and
cruelty. Well
then, those of you Eritreans who live in America, Europe as well as
other continents should be able to, in a loud voice, speak on behalf
of the humiliated and dishonored people to the international
community. You
should be able to say, “Enough with the brutality! Enough with pain! Enough
with oppression! Enough
toying with the power of the people! Enough of being above the law
and galloping without restraint!” But if you don’t do
this, your conscience shall nag you and history shall accuse
you.
Related Awate
Reports
Report on “Sidistegna”
Prison (Interview with Semere Kesete)
http://www.awate.com/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/12/74
Report on Adi Abeito
Prison (report from Asmara by “Events
Monitor”)
http://www.awate.com/artman/publish/article_3747.shtml
Testimonies of Mehari
Yohannes & Mehari Abraham on The Executed
http://www.awate.com/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/11/1090
The re-arrest of Major
General Habtesion Hadgu
http://www.awate.com/artman/publish/article_1849.shtml
The re-arrest of
Ermias Debessay and arrest of Senait Debessay
http://www.awate.com/artman/publish/article_2628.shtml
The arrest of Hassen
Kekia
http://www.awate.com/artman/publish/printer_1332.shtml