From: Biniam Tekle (biniamt@dehai.org)
Date: Tue May 04 2010 - 08:37:27 EDT
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/LDE63T109.htm
Rebel groups pledge to depose Eritrean president
02 May 2010 09:13:24 GMT
Source: Reuters
* Opposition figures say ethnic groups targeted * Says strong military front
ready in six months
* Government says rebels have betrayed Eritrea
By Jeremy Clarke NAIROBI, May 2 (Reuters) - Eritrean rebel groups are
building a joint military front to depose a government they say is pursuing
ethnic persecution and becoming a growing threat to regional security, an
opposition leader told Reuters. The Red Sea Afar Democratic Organisation
(RSADO) -- one of many opposition movements based in nearby Ethiopia -- said
the government of President Isaias Afwerki targets ethnic groups, such as
the Afars, and will soon face military attacks.
The African nation allows no opposition groups inside the country and rights
groups say thousands of political prisoners are detained in underground
jails without charge.
"Innocent Eritreans are being hunted down like animals and this has to
stop," RSADO's leader Ibrahim Haron said in remarks made by telephone and in
e-mail exchanges.
"During the past two years the Eritrean government has killed at least 300
innocent Eritrean ethnic Afars ... Hundreds of others are in secret jails,
or whereabouts unknown," said Ethiopian-based Haron.
The Afars live mainly in northern Ethiopia but also in neighbouring Eritrea
and Djibouti.
Officials from the Eritrean Ministry of Information could not be immediately
reached for comment.
The government says rebel groups are traitors who have belittled "the
struggle": a 30-year war for independence fought and won against much larger
and better funded Ethiopian forces.
Rebels celebrate President Isaias for his role as a guerrilla leader during
the war which ended in 1991, but say he has betrayed its ideals by not
sharing power. Isaias says he has no plans to allow elections in Eritrea or
permit opposition.
Eritrea is on the cusp of a gold mining boom with some 16 foreign companies
now operating in the country.
MILITARY FRONT
Rebel groups regularly say they have carried out attacks inside Eritrea but
these claims are impossible to verify independently due to severe travel
restrictions. Much of the country remains off limits to foreigners and many
Eritreans.
RSADO says it has killed and wounded hundreds of government soldiers in
attacks inside Eritrea since early 2009.
"Isaias has ruined the nation. Unless his regime is deposed the world will
witness another Somalia in the Horn of Africa," Haron said. "He is a threat
to security in the region."
Somalia, which is beset by violence and piracy, is without an effective
government and much of the country is controlled by Islamist groups,
including one linked to al Qaeda.
In December, the United Nations imposed sanctions on Eritrea for provoking
insecurity in Somalia and Djibouti. Eritrea strongly denies the allegations
and accuses Washington of fabricating the charges.
RSADO -- formed in 1998 -- is now a member of an alliance of Eritrean rebel
groups, the Eritrean Democratic Alliance (EDA), which says it plans to
depose Isaias by force.
"A joint military front is about to be established ... massive military
actions will follow," Haron said.
EDA spokesman Qernelios Osman told Reuters that a strong military front
would be ready within six months. "We need to coordinate and unite all our
forces and do some visible, tangible and productive measures against the
regime." (Additional reporting by Tesfa-Alem Takle in Makelle, Ethiopia;
editing by David Stamp)
----[This List to be used for Eritrea Related News Only]----