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Eritrea's Isaias Afeworki/AFP

Africa

Eritrea’s Issaias Afeworki: reviled and revered ex-rebel

Eritrea's Isaias Afeworki/AFP

Eritrea’s Isaias Afeworki/AFP

NAIROBI, Aug 20 – Hero, freedom fighter, dictator: Eritrean President Issaias Afeworki has ruled the Horn of Africa nation with an iron grip from independence in 1993, following an epic 30-year liberation war.

Authoritarian and austere, 67-year old Issaias led one of Africa’s most remarkable rebel armies in a bitter struggle against a far larger Ethiopian army, backed first by the United States, then the Soviet Union.

At independence, Eritrea was held up as a beacon of hope for Africa by Western governments, and Issaias was hailed as a “renaissance leader” by then US President Bill Clinton.

But attitudes changed sharply as Marxist-inspired Issaias tightened control of the one-party state run by his People’s Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ) and as he began backing regional rebels, including accusations of supporting Islamist Somali insurgents linked to Al-Qaeda.

Born in 1946 in Asmara into an Orthodox Christian family, Issaias moved to the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa to study engineering but, aged 20, left to join a fledgling separatist rebel movement fighting for Eritrea’s independence.

Tall, handsome and with a fearsome temper, Issaias rose through the ranks to command an impressively well-organised independence movement whose guerrillas dug a warren of bunkers to hold out against Ethiopian fighter jets.

The rebels finally liberated Asmara in 1991, followed by an overwhelming vote for independence in a referendum two years later.

But Eritrea’s dream of freedom turned sour, relations with Ethiopia broke down and a bloody 1998-2000 border war broke out that left at least 80,000 dead.

An international court awarded the flashpoint border town of Badme to Eritrea, but Ethiopians have refused to withdraw, fuelling long-running tensions that prompted Issaias to ship guns to regional rebels to needle Ethiopia.

Partly prompted by criticism of his handling of the war, Issaias launched a brutal purge in September 2001, arresting 11 top party figures — close colleagues from the independence struggle — and forcing a wave of others to flee.

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He brooked no criticism, shrugging off a long list of international condemnation, including for throwing out a United Nations peacekeeping mission and expelling international aid agencies in a draconian policy of self-reliance.

Issaias closed all independent media and jailed critical journalists. Eritrea dropped below North Korea as the world’s worst nation for press freedom, according to rights group Reporters Without Borders.

Religious minorities including evangelical Christian sects are jailed in grim conditions — often locked in shipping container prisons in baking heat — because Issaias believes they are a foreign plot to foment divisions in a nation officially split equally between Islam and Christianity.

A keen admirer of Mao Zedong after training in China during the chaos of the Cultural Revolution, he still plays “a mean game of ping pong”, according to US diplomatic cables, although his once close ties to Beijing have waned in recent years.

Issaias, who like all Eritreans is known by his first name, shunned the cult of personality beloved by other African strongmen. His portrait was not put on the country’s banknotes and is rarely seen outside official buildings.

Indeed, Issaias once would take regular evening strolls down the streets of the mountain capital Asmara with its elegant Italian-era colonial architecture, popping into smoky bars for a drink, apparently keen to cultivate a “man of the people” image.

However, in recent years the “isolated and mercurial dictator” — as leaked US diplomatic cables describe him — has became increasingly paranoid, fearing assassination attempts which he said were backed by the US spy agency, the CIA.

His popularity slumped in the tightly restricted country, where the young are conscripted into mass national service that can last for decades, and where military police prowl the streets to round up those skipping the army service.

Thousands have fled to neighbouring Sudan or Ethiopia despite a reported shoot-to-kill policy by border patrols, with families of those left behind risking being punished by crippling fines or imprisonment.

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As the economy has stagnated, rumours have grown of Issaias’s heavy drinking, furious temper and shouting fits railed at cowed officials.

Although nominally under civilian rule, Eritrea under Issaias has been carved up into zones of control by army generals, who run a flourishing networks of corrupt businesses and cream off lucrative profits.

But with opposition figures jailed and government media warning of a constant threat of Ethiopian attack, many feel there seems little alternative to the unelected president, still viewed as a hero of the independence war.

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