Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Despite their peace deal with Ethiopia, Eritrean refugees afraid to go back home

- By Antoaneta Roussi

When Samuel Berhe thinks of Eritrea, he sees the sand-colored buildings and turquoise water of Asmara’s shoreline. He sees his sister’s bar under the family home in the capital’s center that sells sweet toast and beer. He sees his father who, at 80 years old, is losing his eyesight but is still a force to be reckoned with. He thinks of his home, a place that he cannot reach.

Mr. Berhe, like many Eritreans, fled the country some years ago to escape mandatory national service, which the government made indefinite following the 1998-2000 border war with Ethiopia. The war cost the countries an estimated 100,000 lives, while conscripti­on created a generation of Eritrean refugees. The UNHCR said that in 2016 there were 459,000 Eritrean exiles out of an estimated population of 5.3 million.

So, when the leaders Ethiopia and Eritrea signed a sudden peace deal in July 2018, citizens of the Horn of Africa nations rejoiced. Many took to the streets bearing the two flags. Others chose social media to express their happiness, and some even dialed up strangers, as phone lines between the nations were once again reinstated. It felt like a new era of harmony and prosperity had begun.

But for Mr. Berhe, the moment was bitterswee­t.

“I was happy because it is good for our people but I was also sad, because it doesn’t make any change for me,” he said from his home in Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa. “I will stay as a refugee.”

Like many other Eritrean emigrants, Mr. Berhe fled the country illegally to escape national service. He fears that if he returns, he will wind up in jail, or worse. He does not have a passport and has not left Ethiopia since he arrived on the back of a cargo truck 13 years ago. His two daughters, Sarah, 9, and Ella, 11, for whom he is an only parent, have never seen their grandparen­ts or their father’s homeland.

Now that there is a direct flight, Mr. Berhe is planning on sending the girls to see their relatives. But before he considers returning, he will need some sort of guarantee from Eritrea’s President Isaias Afwerki, who leads the ruling People’s Front for Democracy and Justice, that he will pardon those who left.

“The people that illegally escaped, the government thinks that we are traitors,” he said. “There are many, many like me, all over the world, too afraid to go back.”

Still, hundreds fought to board the first flights between the two capitals throughout July and August. Asmara’s and Addis Ababa’s airports became symbols of the reunificat­ion as hordes of people awaited their relatives with bouquets daily, some whom they hadn’t seen for more than two decades.

 ?? AFP/Getty Images ?? Eritrean women rejoice after crossing the border, reopened after 20 years, between Ethiopia and Eritrea on Sept. 11 in Zalambessa, northern Ethiopia.
AFP/Getty Images Eritrean women rejoice after crossing the border, reopened after 20 years, between Ethiopia and Eritrea on Sept. 11 in Zalambessa, northern Ethiopia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States