[dehai-news] (Africa Review) What the Horn of Africa could learn from Eritrea


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From: Biniam Tekle (biniamt@dehai.org)
Date: Mon Aug 15 2011 - 08:25:36 EDT


http://www.africareview.com/Blogs/Eritrea++aid+dependency++afewerki++development++famine++drought/-/979192/1219190/-/view/asBlogPost/-/i8ktu3/-/
What
the Horn of Africa could learn from Eritrea

 By SAMANTHA SPOONER (@samooner)Posted Monday, August 15 2011 at 13:18

Eritrea is labelled as the Horn of Africa’s 'bad boy', but in this time of
drought a resilient, and almost courageous, impression of the small state
emerges. Despite the struggle to rebuild the nation following decades of
fighting with neighbours, Eritreans are coping with the disaster better than
more stable nations in the region. Millions are being pledged from various
nations and organisations to helping the countries affected by drought and
famine, but Eritrea silently works away at her own model of development
which keeps the donors and dependency at bay.

Following a trip to the nation, Gordon Peters, a member of the World
Democratic Movement<http://wdm.org.uk/blog/we-should-learn-more-different-development-models>,
observed a situation where “people are poor but nobody is really starving”
and a country-wide philosophy and practice of self-sustainability. In a
telephone interview, Peters said that he was very impressed by the country’s
community development and restoration programmes which include agriculture
and forestry. And whilst it is a common perception that there has been a
large-scale diversion of resources and manpower to the military, the
national service is greatly involved in facilitating this development.

So, whilst the rest of the Horn of Africa struggles with starving
populations and refugee movements, Eritrea’s “managing to restore its
terraced agricultural land, to re-forest, to help returnees set up land
holdings, to educate children and give women an equal say in the economy and
society - and to extract something like 6 per cent of profits from mining
companies for social development.”

*Self-Reliance*

Peters believes that this shows that there is a sustainable alternative to
asking for aid: self-reliance. A path not many African nations can claim to
take!

Eritrea has been clear on its determination to go it alone as it believes
it’s in its best interests to do so. In a
letter<http://foxnews.com/projects/pdf/Eritrea_-_Extension_of_Current_UNDAF.pdf>to
the United Nations early this year, the country's Minister of Finance
made said that they wanted to opt out of long-term development agreements as
they believe the UN makes problems worse, not better.

The letter stated that ‘aid only postpones the basic solutions to crucial
development problems’ and that ‘national development will never materialise
if it is done by depending on grant financing from UN agencies or other
(bilateral) sources’.

Despite relying on agriculture-led development, Eritrea does have potential
to get in there with the big boys. Peters believes that agriculture provides
a “basis for other things to happen”. It alleviates immediate poverty and
can foster the growth of the service sector. Peters also mentioned that
Eritrea has great interest in developing a tourist industry, but they are
“isolated geopolitically which limits this”.

Nevertheless, the country has promise in other sectors. In June, an
independent feasibility study conducted by Eritrea’s Colluli mine revealed a
ground value of $150billion worth of potash. South Boulder
Mines<http://proactiveinvestors.com.au/companies/news/17252/south-boulder-mines-feasibility-studies-continue-to-define-a-world-class-potash-project-in-eritrea-17252.html>,
an Australian mining company, has already been licensed for exploration and
development. This project has the potential to dramatically advance the
country’s economy and provide a brilliant source of a key mineral in
agriculture for domestic use.

The Horn of Africa needs to finally learn some lessons from this disaster,
and Eritrea can evidentially teach them a few. The most important being that
a reactive, rather than proactive, political situation can be the result of
high aid dependency: why waste money on infrastructure when an aid agency
will be there to bail you out? If a nation ranked 30th in the failed state
index can get it right then the rest of the governments have no excuse.

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