WSWS : News &
Analysis : Africa
Eritrea: two students die in government clampdown
By David Rowan 24 August 2001
Use this version to print | Send this link by
email | Email the
author
Two students have died and up to 2,000 others are being detained in a
detention camp following protests against the government. The camp in Wia,
30 kilometres from the Eritrean port of Massawa, is located in a desert
region, and temperatures can reach as high as 49 degrees Centigrade (120
degrees Fahrenheit). It is reported that the students are being detained
without adequate food, water and shelter.
Yirga Yosef and Yemane Tekee, who both died of heat stroke, were
students at Asmara University in the country’s capital. The 2,000 students
were arrested and detained at the desert camp for refusing to sign up for
a compulsory work programme organised by the People's Front for Democracy
and Justice (PFDJ) government, and for demanding the release of the
student union chairman Semere Kesete.
The students were arrested either in their dormitories or outside the
high court where they had gathered to attend a court hearing involving
Kesete. They were kept overnight in a soccer stadium before being bussed
out to Wia.
Kesete was arrested on July 31 for giving a speech at a graduation
ceremony, in which he criticised the obligatory nature of the government’s
summer work programme. He also condemned the inadequate facilities at
Asmara University and the government’s interference in its affairs. The
forced labour programme, which consists of students being sent to areas
damaged in the recent war fought between Eritrea and Ethiopia, is
organised under the “Situational Assessment Programme” and is financed by
the World Bank and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).
After the mass arrests, police broke up a meeting outside Asmara
University of anxious parents who had gathered to demand the release of
their children. One woman whose son and daughter are being detained
desperately pleaded, “They have taken them to a very hot place, with no
food, no water. It is 49 degrees there. More will die. They must take them
out of that place—that’s what we’re begging”.
Another mother said, “My son is there. I have nephews and nieces there.
They are being punished just because they asked for their rights. The
government just wants to show its strength.”
The president of Asmara University, Woldeab Isaak, condemned the action
taken by the students and called it “illegal”.
The PFDJ government’s brutal action against the students is part of a
national clampdown that has also led to the arrest of journalists and
oppositionists. After gaining independence by breaking away from Ethiopia
in 1993 with the support of the Western powers, the PFDJ declared that
this would lead to the establishment of a “peaceful, just, democratic and
prosperous” Eritrea. But over the last eight years the nationalist
politics of the PFDJ (mirrored in Ethiopia by the EPRDF—Ethiopian Peoples’
Revolutionary Democratic Front) whipped up anti-Ethiopian chauvinism and
led to a two and a half year war that cost the lives of tens of thousands
of soldiers and displaced one million people. It has inflicted terrible
misery and suffering on the people of Eritrea and has brought the country
to the brink of economic collapse.
Over the last few months, a major political crisis has developed within
the PFDJ ruling elite. The Central Committee (CC) recently split, after 15
of its members issued an open letter accusing President Issaias Afwerki of
operating in an “illegal and unconstitutional” manner and of moving
towards a dictatorship.
The 15 CC members, who present themselves as reformers, are seeking to
blame Afwerki personally for the social and economic catastrophe that the
country is facing. They are calling for a constitutional government and
“free and fair elections” that will lead to a “transparent, accountable,
institutionalised and legal administration”. Particular criticism is made
of the Special Court, a secret institution set up by presidential decree
in 1996. Another presidential decree at the beginning of this year set up
a Special Committee of Investigation to deal with those committing “crimes
against the state”. It can overrule the decisions of other courts, and can
send cases to the Special Court, where the accused may not even be allowed
to appear in person.
The 15 represent a section of the Eritrean bourgeoisie who are seeking
to distance themselves from Afwerki and are concerned about the growing
resentment to his rule. They are all long-standing members of the PFDJ and
its forerunner, the Eritrean Peoples Liberation Front (EPLF) who supported
the war with Ethiopia. It is probable that the opposition to Afwerki
within the ruling clique reflects concerns over the loss of support from
the West. Those who have recently criticised Afwerki include the Eritrean
ambassador to Sweden, Norway and Finland, who resigned her post, and the
ambassador to Germany, who was recalled and may face prosecution by the
Special Court. Afwerki is known to favour closer relations with Arab
countries and hopes to join the League of Arab States.
See Also: Fragile
peace in Ethiopia-Eritrea war [6 July 2000]
Top of page
The WSWS
invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008 World Socialist Web Site All rights
reserved |