صدى البلد البلد سبورت قناة صدى البلد صدى البلد جامعات صدى البلد عقارات
Supervisor Elham AbolFateh
Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie
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Eritrea Accused of Forcibly Repatriating Nationals Caught up in Sudan Fighting


Mon 08 May 2023 | 01:16 PM
H-Tayea

When fighting broke out between the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group in Khartoum in mid-April, Eritrean brothers Abdel and Dahlak* said goodbye to each other in the Sudanese capital.

Dahlak, the younger of the two, had some savings, so could afford to flee the city on a bus with other Eritreans. He headed east towards refugee camps in the vicinity of Kassala, a town near the Eritrean border that is home to a large Eritrean community.

According to an Eritrean human rights activist based in Khartoum who asked to remain anonymous for their safety, Dahlak and the other Eritreans on the bus were turned away from the refugee camp. They were sent to an area called Gate 13 near the border, from where they were ordered by Eritrean security officials to cross into Eritrea.

What happened to Dahlak next remains a mystery.

Dahlak had deserted the Eritrean army and fled to Sudan a year and a half earlier from the northern Ethiopian region of Tigray, where he and thousands of other Eritrean troops had been sent to fight alongside Ethiopian forces during the federal government’s war against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front.

Eritrea is one of the world’s most authoritarian states, and like thousands of young men before him, Dahlak had been forced to join the army under the country’s policy of universal, indefinite conscription.

“I am frightened about my little brother, we do not know what will happen to him,” his brother Abdel said. “I didn’t have money to go with my brother, otherwise I would have travelled with him.”

Abdel said he had tried to work out what happened to his brother by speaking to other Eritreans who boarded the evacuation bus from Khartoum, but they were too afraid to speak. Relatives in the Eritrean capital, Asmara, told Abdel that Dahlak had not returned to the family’s home there.

According to the Eritrean human rights activist, Dahlak is one of more than 3,500 Eritreans who have been forcibly deported over the border to the town of Teseney in recent weeks. Among those allegedly deported, 95 were taken to a prison, including eight women, the activist said. Some of those detained were known political activists who opposed the regime of the Eritrean dictator, Isaias Afwerki, the activist said, but the majority were men who had escaped military service. The activist did not say if they knew what had happened to Dahlak.

The activist said they had been told by people at the United Nations refugee agency the UNHCR that some Eritreans were turned away from camps because the camps did not have enough food and lacked the resources to buy more food. The UNHCR has been contacted for comment.

“The Eritrean regime is brutal,” the activist said. “I am worried that some of them will disappear forever, especially those who had opinions on Afwerki.”

The majority of the Eritreans not taken to prison have been given permission to see their families in Asmara and in other cities, the activist said.