Fresh start: has it helped?
In an initial evaluation report produced at the end of the first phase, the SDC says that “compared to the outset in 2017, Switzerland has much more information about the situation on the ground than it did in the past, it has access to government departments, it has built a basis of trust, and it has created an opening in view of new developments”.
For the second phase too, the SDC commissioned an external evaluation, the conclusions of which will be published shortly. For Radical-Liberal parliamentarian Damian Müller, however, the results to date are insufficient. He proposes a change of strategy, arguing that the one in place is a mistake. “The fact that Eritrea continues to reject forced repatriations is proof of this,” he says. Müller is a member of the House of Representatives’ foreign policy committee. He maintains that Eritrea has no interest in development aid from this country.
Sibel Arslan takes a different view. The Green Party politician says projects in Eritrea are important and that Switzerland should go on supporting them. She opposes the federal government’s approach of linking international cooperation strategically with migration policy.
“Solidarity, support for populations in need and the fight against poverty are [values] enshrined in our constitution,” points out Arslan, the current vice-president of the House of Representatives’ foreign policy committee. “The Greens have always been against the idea of mixing international cooperation with migration policy. This kind of linkage is mistaken.”
Arslan favors instead the search for solutions through dialogue, where Switzerland has a long tradition. So does Müller. “I propose to put the emphasis on political dialogue, as Italy is doing,” he says.
Last January, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni met the Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki in Rome. At the end of June, Minister of Enterprises and Made in Italy Adolfo Urso went to Asmara with a sizable delegation of heads of large Italian companies, and another delegation followed from the Italian Senate’s foreign relations and defense committee. These missions to Eritrea are part of what is known as the Mattei Plan, which aims to strengthen Italy’s role in Africa. Apart from reinforcing cooperation in development and partnerships with various African states, with this funding programme of €5.5 billion (CHF5.1 billion), Italy intends to stop migrants from arriving on its shores.
No-one goes back willingly
The federal government’s website states that diplomatic relations between Switzerland and Eritrea are not very strong, although they have deepened in recent years. “Cooperation with Eritrean authorities has improved, especially in the area of identification,” Jonas Montani, foreign ministry spokesman, told SWI swissinfo.ch. Furthermore, Secretary of State for Migration Christine Schraner Burgener told the newspaper Sonntagsblick that Switzerland will appoint a liaison officer based in Nairobi, who will frequently visit Eritrea to pursue dialogue with Asmara.
“No civil servant will achieve any results,” says Furrer, who believes that only a high-level meeting between Justice Minister Jans and his Eritrean counterpart will lead to meaningful negotiations.
Until now, all diplomatic efforts to resolve the Eritrean issue have been unsuccessful. Two Swiss federal ministers, Didier Burkhalter and Simonetta Sommaruga, met with the Eritrean foreign minister in 2016. Current Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis has visited Asmara twice, in 2018 and 2019. In 2021, a meeting between special presidential advisor Yemane Gebreab and Secretaries of State Livia Leu and Mario Gattiker yielded no tangible results.
Eritrea refuses to change its position. It rejects any forced repatriation of its citizens from Switzerland or any other countries, insisting that repatriation must be voluntary.
One of the goals of the project managed by Furrer was to create an incentive for Eritreans to return. The Massawa Workers Vocational Training Center aimed to provide opportunities even for Eritreans in the diaspora.
“The idea was to give Eritrean asylum seekers the opportunity to do a year-long apprenticeship in Switzerland and then continue at our vocational school in Massawa,” explains Furrer. “Yet this idea was never implemented, partly because no one willingly returns to Eritrea due to fear of repression by the regime.”
This is not surprising. The latest United Nations report on Eritrea highlights systematic repression of basic freedoms and a dire human rights situation. The country is known for its use of “arbitrary and incommunicado detention” and indefinite military conscription, which is comparable to forced labor.