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Eritrea:
the miracle
by Merrill Findlay
Feature article first published in Habitat Australia, 1989.
The
cost of war: an orphaned child is cared for by a young
fighter in a nursery constructed from bags labelled 'Gift
of Australia'. Photo by Merrill Findlay, 1988.
Take
one small strategically placed former Italian colony,
deny its four million people education, health care and
their right, under international law, to self-determination;
give it no military assistance but let both East and West
supply its adversary with military and/or economic aid;
bombard it, attempt to starve it, degrade and deforest
it - and what do you have?
Against
all odds, you have one of the world's most remarkable
social transformations being effected by arguably the
world's most sophisticated liberation movement, the Eritrean
People's Liberation Front.
Eritrea,
the scene of this miracle, is a narrow strip of land wedged
between Sudan, Djoubouti, Ethiopia and the Red Sea Its
colonial borders were defined under international law
one hundred years ago during the great European land grab
in Africa. By some accident of history, Italy claimed
it then. Later, after Mussolini's defeat in Africa, Great
Britain administered it. Now Ethiopia claims it. But all
the Eritrean people want is their right to decide their
own future - and they've been fighting for that right
of self-determination for twenty-seven years.
The
other side of the war: a mother who fled with her children
to a refugee camp in Sudan. Photo by Merrill Findlay,
Kassala, Sudan, 1988.
The
commitment to a free Eritrea runs deep. Tecle Frezghi,
my companion on my recent trip into Eritrea, for example,
gave up his postgraduate course in organic chemistry in
the United States to join the liberation movement. Like
many Eritrean intellectuals abroad, he says he just couldn't
bear to remain away knowing his country needed him. He
participates in the struggle from behind a desk now, as
a senior bureaucrat within the EPLF, but carries many
scars from his fighting days. Brhana, his wife, a young
doctor trained by the EPLF's Department of Health, works
behind enemy lines on the western front. They see one
another rarely. But this is the price individuals must
pay for national self-determination, and they pay willingly.
The military struggle is fundamental to everyone's life
in Eritrea.
As
we drove across the arid mountains at night and in the
early hours of the morning to avoid aerial attack, Tecle
repeatedly asked our young driver to stop the vehicle
so he could tune in to the faint Voice of the Masses,
the EPLF's radio frequency, for an update on the fighting.
The progress of the latest battle near the road between
the port of Massawa and Asmara, the capital city, was
on everyone's lips. (A whole Ethiopian division was being
defeated by the EPLF in a small but meticulously planned
tactical offensive.) And the signs of militarisation were
everywhere: tanks parked under acacia trees; convoys of
trucks loaded with heavy artillery shell casings going
to the metal workshops to be melted down and recycled;
hidden anti-aircraft guns; underground workshops where
the captured Soviet tanks, trucks etc were being repaired;
orphaned children and disabled combatants.
Nearly
every night we gave lifts to young fighters, both men
and women, going to or from, the front. As they seated
themselves beside me in the 4WD, they tenderly cradled
their captured Soviet-made kalashnikov rifles on their
laps and wrapped them in their kashooks, the long cotton
garment that is usually worn either around the head or
around the waist.
One
day Tecle and I sat together on a rock in the sun overlooking
a quiet, rural valley dotted with juniper trees and native
African olives. "This is a good place for a battle," he
commented as we gazed across the rocky slopes of Rora
Hubub. "If we'd been able to fight here instead of on
the open plains, the war would have been over years ago."
I
could see what he meant. The scene was a military strategists'
dream. But my spirit protested. This lovely place a war
zone?
In
a sense, this peaceful Rora plateau is already a "war
zone", because in Eritrea, militarist language has been
appropriated by the social engineers. For here, according
to Andrebrhan Welde Giorgis, the Harvard educated Director
of Education and member of the EPLF's Central Committee,
"the war against illiteracy, against ignorance, against
disease, against backwardness" is being waged. In this
"war", the front line is in every Eritrean community and
on every degraded mountain slope, valley or field.
If
the military conflict is a struggle for self-determination,
then this parallel "war" is a struggle for what, in the
Hegelian sense, could be called self-realisation; a social
revolution that is transforming what was predominantly
a feudal, illiterate, agrarian and generally very poor
population into a literate, democratic society which will,
one day, be able to define its own future and sustain
itself culturally, economically and ecologically as a
self-sufficient and independent nation state. All the
political, economic, social and indeed, military decisions
of the EPLF are made with this long term vision in mind.
The
effect on people's lives of this apparently peaceful revolution,
or parallel "war" of self-realisation, cannot be underestimated.
At
one tiny timber and mud brick school in the Rora Hubub
region, not far from where Tecle and I had sat on our
rock and talked military strategies, a young teacher,
Alefesh Asfarha, curled up on my borrowed bed in the principals
office one night and, in a gentle whisper (and perfect
English), told me how, at just fifteen, she had run away
from occupied Asmara "to fight for my country."
Now,
at 21, having completed her secondary education at Zero
School (the EPLF's boarding school for 4,000 students
hidden in an arid, rocky valley) plus ten weeks teacher
training with the Education Department, she is liberating
her country not with a kalishnikov, but a blackboard.
Her students, both young and old, sit on rocks in their
brand new class rooms and learn about a world they never
knew existed until this young teacher and her colleagues
arrived.
Student
collecting wood for cooking. Photo by Merrill Findlay, 1988.
Each
year, for hundreds, perhaps thousands of years, the Rora
Hubub families had lived the semi-nomadic existence of
agro-pastoralists, moving with their stock between the
lowlands and this plateau region. Here they would stop
awhile, erect their black tents and plant their traditional
crops, then, as surface water dried up, move on again
with their animals. They had no access to health care
beyond their own traditional practices, no education beyond
what they passed on orally from generation to generation;
no roads nor other services. And if the rains failed,
if their stock died or were stolen or killed by the Ethiopian
army ...
In
1986, following the 84/85 drought crisis that displaced
thousands of Rora Hubub's seasonal residents, life began
to change. For it was in that year that the EPLF, with
humanitarian finance raised by the Eritrean Relief Association
(an indigenous non-governmental aid organisation), began
its integrated rural development program for the region.
The revolution had arrived, and slowly life was transformed
in Rora Hubub. For the first time there were roads, schools,
clinics, and, most fundamental of all, dams to provide
a year around water supply.
"Availability
of the drinking water supply has been a serious problem
in the area, so we are trying to provide the people with
drinking water for themselves and their livestock," explained
ERA's field co-ordinator, Gabramichael Menghistu.
"This
will enable women to stay in the rural area even in the
winter time and also help the people who would like to
send their children to school to stay there. Without the
water supply that we have started providing them, this
would not have been possible. Most of the people normally
leave the district simply because they cannot get drinking
water," he told me.
Camels
carry food aid to isolated communities in Eritrea, 1988.
Photo by Merrill Findlay.
Once
the basic needs of the people were met, consideration
could be given to improving long-term agriculture and
animal husbandry practices to raise productivity and stop
environmental degradation.
And
the degradation is excessive. Every mountain slope tells
the story of despair, of long years of drought when the
African olives trees meant the difference between life
and death for hungry pastoralists who lopped them to feed
their starving stock, and hence, themselves. Many of the
trees never recovered - though the people survived. Just.
With
the trees and grass cover gone, the soil on the steep
slopes simply washed or blew away. Hungry goats, sheep,
cattle and camels meant natural regeneration was impossible.
"Now
we are trying to make the people aware of the need for
reforestation," Gabramichael continued. " Because without
the participation of the people, and without making the
people aware of the need for re-afforestation, any re-afforestation
or soil and water conservation cannot work. We believe
that by showing them in practice what it means then we
are raising the awareness of the people and eventually
it will be sustained development -- because of the participation
of the people. So the whole approach is to make the people
aware and to hand over the management of the program to
them."
"And
the people have started to benefit from the program now,"
Gabramichael continued, "by the supply of drinking water,
cash money, and they have even started to realise that
the fertility of the fields that have been terraced is
higher than those not terraced. So now they have really
started to internalise it, you know, to appreciate the
changes, and associate themselves with the program."
As
Regbe Bayre, a once illiterate young mother, told me (through
a translator) as we sat together in a stone cottage surrounded
by juniper trees: "When we were leading a nomadic life,
we did not have education and we did not know anything.
We were only able to temporarily solve the problems of
our daily life. Here we have gained education and we have
been working on our land. Our land is now enriched and
is giving us produce. And our children have been saved
from the hardships they suffered before."
Here
in Rora Hubub, the "war" against illiteracy, drought,
deforestation, land degradation, poor health, isolation
and all the other factors that have maintained Eritrea's
Third World status is being won. The victory can be measured
in tangible terms - like improved crop yields, surplus
food production, an emerging cash economy, healthy kids,
reduced infant and maternal mortality, access to permanent
water, grain mills, terraced wood lots of eucalyptus and
nurseries for indigenous species - and men and women who
were once illiterate, hungry and vulnerable, now taking
control of their lives, of their future.
But
in the real war, the struggle for national liberation
that rages only hours by mountain track from peaceful
Rora, young men and women, both Eritreans and Ethiopians,
continue to die. Resources that could be used to transform
and enrich the lives of all people throughout the Horn
of Africa, are being used to kill, maim and destroy, in
this, one of the poorest parts of the world. And the world
remains silent.
"It's
the world who should be responsible," Dr Abrahet, a women
who is daily saddened and angered at the price her people
must pay for this long war, told me at her small stone
clinic at the EPLF's Central Hospital at Orotta. "We cannot
say East or West - we give this to all the world.
And they should at least try to open their eyes to see
what is going on. Open their ears to hear what is happening."
Says
Dr Abrahet, "Such things are happening because the world
has turned a deaf ear to the Eritrean question."
Brief history
of the military conflict in Eritrea
The
current military conflict in Eritrea had its genesis four
decades ago, in 1949, when the international community
considered the future of Italy's former African colonies
in the fledgling United Nations. Somalia and Libya were
offered independence, but little Eritrea, that strip of
land on the Red Sea within cooee of the Middle East, the
Arabian Peninsular and the Suez canal, with its long-established
deep-water port and scatter of islands that would make
such excellent military bases, was considered much too
valuable to be free.
Instead
of independence, Eritrea was granted a United Nations
Commission of Investigation to, amongst other things,
"examine the question of the disposal of Eritrea" and
to "ascertain more fully the wishes and best means of
promoting the welfare of the inhabitants..."
Various
and conflicting proposals were presented to the General
Assembly, but, given the politics of the time, it is hardly
surprising that the US sponsored Resolution 390 (A)V,
was carried in 1952. As then US Secretary of State, John
Foster Dulles, said: "From the point of view of justice,
the opinions of the Eritrean people must receive consideration.
Nevertheless the strategic interests of the United States
in the Red Sea basin and consideration of security and
world peace make it necessary that the country has to
be linked with our ally, Ethiopia."
So
- justice was never done in Eritrea, and the opinions
of the people were never considered (though both British
and US surveys indicated that a majority clearly wanted
independence). Eritrea was federated as an autonomous
state with Emperor Haile Selassie's feudal and landlocked
empire.
Not
unexpectedly, Ethiopia violently annexed Eritrea as its
fourteenth province in 1962, in complete disregarded of
the provisions of Resolution 390 (A)V and of the Eritrean
constitution.
By
this time, the inevitable armed struggle for self determination
had already began. And though, for political reasons,
the resulting conflict has never been widely recognised
as a legitimate war of liberation under international
law relating to decolonisation, it can clearly be interpreted
as such.
From
the Ethiopian point of view (both under Haile Selassie's
regime, and that of the Soviet Union's current ally, President
Menghistu), the hundreds of thousands of civilians and
combatants involved in this liberation movement are merely
"secessionist bandits", "shiftas" or "counter-revolutionaries."
To the Ethiopians, the war is simply an "internal matter".
Thus any attempt to intervene or seek a political resolution
is viewed as a threat to Ethiopia's national sovereignty.
Officially
the Australian government supports the Ethiopian view,
though there is increasing recognition that, because of
Eritrea's colonial history, the war can be considered
an international conflict and a case of incomplete decolonisation.
The
Eritreans have now been fighting for twenty-seven years.
Their army is made up of unpaid volunteers and their weapons
are captured. While they have clear military superiority
on the ground, they are not yet in the position to effect
a definitive military resolution to the conflict - mainly
because they do not have an airforce. Both EPLF combatants
and Eritrea's civilians remain vulnerable to bombing and
napalming from Soviet supplied MiG fighters and helicopter
gunships.
Recent
information suggests that Ethiopian military capacity
is being supplemented by hardware supplied by the United
States of America and West Germany, as well as from the
Eastern Bloc. A senior EPLF spokesperson told me recently
that the US has supplied at least two Lockhead C130 aircraft,
which are designed to carry military freight (tanks etc)
and troops, while at least two landing craft have been
received from West Germany. The same source said that
the Ethiopian government had approached Britain to supply
arms - with the encouragement of the USSR! Such are the
complexities of this war.
To
most informed observers it is clear that the conflict
can only be resolved by either direct political pressure
from the Soviet Union or by diplomatic intervention of
the international community through a now much more mature
United Nations system. Peres de Ceullar, the Secretary
General of the UN, indicated last November that this may
be possible. In such a diplomatic resolution to the conflict
in Eritrea, Australia may well have a role to play.
STOP
PRESS: Eritrea won its independence in 1992, and not at
all in the way I might have expected in 1988. How things
have changed in the world since then, and how unpredictably!!!
mf. 1999.
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Content last revised 5 January 2005. This page created 21 January 2008. |
|

Eritrean
farmer, Regbe Bayre (right), with the author, Merrill Findlay, in a displaced persons'
settlement during Eritrea's War of Liberation. Photo by EPLF Commander, Tecle Frezghi, Eritrea 1988 . |