Our Special Correspondent
Saba Makeda
Somewhere in Eritrea, 7th January 2014
(3 – continues)
In the second part of this story Saba Makeda
writes how the dictatorship killed the free press.
You can find the article here
The first part is on
the Eritrea Constitution
that the dictator didn’t want to implement.
You can find the article here
Prisons etc…
Soon after independence efforts were made to differentiate between the civilian police and the military. We have all seen that with time all such pretence has been abandoned and we have all seen how uniform a civilian police can be easily interchanged for that of a soldier. Consequently it is difficult to differentiate between police lock ups and military lock up. Over time it has become increasingly clear that any facility can become a prison.
This is a Google Earth image of Era Ero, the high security prison in Eritrea where all the journalists and the officials who criticized the president are kept.
In 2001 for a period of time the Eritrean Institute of Management facility in Embatkalla, a site developed with the support of the UN, was used as prison for members of the G15 group.
Just like facility in Embatkalla increasingly various sites are used as prisons such as :
The abovementioned list is not exclusive and does not include the facilities that are used by the National Intelligence services.
Tertiary education facilities (i.e. Colleges etc.) built with the support of donors to decentralise the education system and to make tertiary education accessible to more Eritrean, have in fact become an extension of the SAWA military camp.
In 2005 the Government introduced an additional year of high school grade twelve (12). This final year of high school can only be completed in SAWA. Originally the justification was Sawa was the only place in the country with the infrastructure to cater for the extra year of high school. Since then there have been no efforts to improve the infrastructure in other parts of the country. There are a number of issues with the final year of high school being at SAWA. Some of the issues are:
Sawa is not safe for the students and there is no safeguard to prevent unscrupulous officers from kidnapping students and trafficking them as has happened to more than 100 students in 2010/2011.The movement of these students was not voluntary they were kidnapped and trafficked because the trafficker (Eritreans from the Eritrean Defence Force) knew that they had relatives in the diaspora who would pay a ransom to save their lives.
Makeda Saba
Makedasaba@ymail.com
(3 – continues)
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Very articulate and credible article. Looking forward to the next part. Well done!