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Network
of Eritreans for Constitutional
Governance
(NECG)

Eritrea:
A Lonely Nation Under A Glass Dome
14
December 2009
I set
off for Asmara having read about Eritrea's extraordinary liberation
struggle against Ethiopia, about its fierce sense of independence and
its experiment in self-reliance.
 At
the immense workshop called Medeber in Asmara, the Eritrean capital,
workers in blue coveralls turn heaps of scrap metal into useful
items, such as the blue stoves at left.
I also
knew that many people now consider Eritrea to be one of the most
repressive nations on Earth. I had read about its desert prisons full
of journalists, believers in banned religions, army deserters. One
U.S. official outside the country -- citing allegations that Eritrea
is sponsoring al-Qaeda-linked rebels in Somalia -- described Eritrea
to me as "an aspiring rogue state."
And
yet the feeling upon arriving in Asmara was anything but rogue.
At
first, it just felt lonely, almost abandoned. In contrast to chaotic,
crowded African airports I've been through, Asmara's was almost
empty. My 115-passenger jet had had 14 passengers. It was one of only
two jets on the long runway. At the clean-swept, gray-marbled arrival
hall, which was the size of a convenience store, the loudest noise,
literally, were crickets.
Though
there were no lines, a friendly government minder ushered me
VIP-style through the gauntlet of passport-checking and declaring of
currency, and soon we walked out into the mostly vacant parking lot
and the crisp, orangey light of a late Saturday afternoon.
It
took about 10 minutes to reach Asmara. And that is the first thing
you notice about this pretty, palm-lined capital: how small it is,
how petite, really. It feels as if it was placed, intact, on its high
plateau.
For
the week I was there, the weather was conventionally perfect, each
day bright and warm, each evening refreshing and cool. Asmara is a
famously crime-free city of art deco buildings built by Italian
colonizers, who once envisioned it as the jewel of their
never-realized African empire. It was built, in a way, to manifest
that dream, and for that reason and others, the city feels like a
movie set. Its ice-cream colored palette, its fantastic buildings and
many cafes, its bicycles, its older men dressed in sharp hats and old
suits, convey the feel of a benign netherworld operating at the
behest of some unseen director.
Soon,
though, a slightly less benign feeling settled in. I was told to
expect that my phone calls would be monitored, that anyone I spoke
to, especially Eritreans, did so at great personal risk, and, at
lunch at an outdoor café one day, that the man sitting rather
conspicuously alone at the next table was probably a spy. He was a
nice-seeming spy, a kind of comic book version -- an older man in a
suit, taking notes in a little black book. My lunch companion sent
him a beer, and the man waved, smiled and nodded a thank you.
Walking
around, I began to notice how empty many of the shops were of
products and customers. Eritrea's economy operates almost completely
at the behest of the government, and the mood of hustle in many
African cities is oddly absent here. People essentially sell what
they are told, work when they are told, and even eat what they are
told, as most Eritreans subsist on an array of government-subsidized
rations.
Though
one U.S. dollar was officially trading at 15 nakfa, the local
currency, I was told that the black market rate was around 41. (The
price for using the black market, however, is detention.)
Foreigners
and Eritreans alike began to tell me, always anonymously, how they
saw Asmara. "My own personal 'Truman Show,' " was one
description. "Animal Farm," came another. One young
Eritrean explained the country's system of indefinite national
service as a kind of never-ending forced labor camp. Another,
explaining how complete social control is here, told me: "Resistance
is futile -- the only escape is to flee!"
The
fact that Eritrea produces more asylum seekers than all but one other
country on the planet became more striking with each gently passing
afternoon.
Many
Eritreans told me they had brothers, husbands, uncles and others who
had disappeared over the years, presumably into desert prisons.
Sometimes, just as mysteriously, they would reappear, often with
scars. One person told me a friend reappeared with brain damage.
I
asked whether ordinary Eritreans discussed this situation in their
homes, and several people told me no. The repression is so common,
one young man explained, that it has become a kind of quiet
understanding, something so commonplace that it is no longer
remarkable. The other explanation was that no one trusts each other,
that even family members have been known to turn one another in.
By the
second or third day of the trip, Asmara began to feel like a kind of
snow globe, a city hermetically sealed under a glass dome, an
alternate, un-globalized universe where virtually nothing comes or
goes.
One
day, a man walking down the street began screaming into the quiet
afternoon. His words, a few explicatives inappropriate for a family
newspaper, bounced around the pale pink and yellow buildings. Then he
stopped, and kept walking.
It was
incongruous with this lovely and subdued capital, and yet, somehow,
understandable. Posted on Sunday, December 13, 2009 By
Stephanie McCrummen
Washington
Post Staff Writer under the title:
Eritrean
Field Notes- A lonely nation under a glass
Read
also:
As
thousands flee regime, Eritrea goes it alone
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