The Star Early Edition

US embassy advises its citizens to be cautious

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NAIROBI: The US embassy in Eritrea said it has received reports of gunfire in several parts of the capital, Asmara, after protests erupted in one of Africa’s most secretive nations.

“The embassy advises US citizens to avoid the downtown area where protests appear to be more prevalent,” it said in a statement late on Tuesday.

“Avoid areas where demonstrat­ions are taking place and exercise caution when in the vicinity of any large gatherings, protests, or demonstrat­ions.”

It was not immediatel­y clear what had caused the protests.

Opposition outlets said the incidents were triggered after the government tried to close down an Islamic school in a predominan­tly Muslim district.

In some footage posted online, shots are heard being fired to disperse crowds.

Via Twitter, Informatio­n Minister Yemane Ghebremesk­el downplayed the protests, saying: “Small demonstrat­ion by one school in Asmara dispersed without any casualty.”

Eritrea, which sits on the Red Sea coast next to one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes, seceded from Ethiopia in 1991, after a three-decade war for independen­ce.

Conflict broke out once again seven years later over a border spat with Ethiopia, and the UN has since accused the government in Asmara of committing crimes against humanity under the guise of national security.

A UN Commission of Inquiry report last year said that atrocities – including an indefinite military national service programme that amounted to mass enslavemen­t – had been committed since the country’s independen­ce and were ongoing.

Eritrea denies the charges. – Reuters

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