Overview
Country, eastern Africa.
It extends about 600 mi (1,000 km) along the Red Sea coast and
includes the Dahlak Archipelago. Area: 46,774 sq mi (121,144 sq km).
Population (2008 est.): 5,028,000. Capital: Asmara. There is no official
religion or language. The varied population is about half
Tigrinya-speaking (see Tigray) Christians, with a large minority of
Muslims and diverse other peoples. Arabic, English, and Italian are also
spoken. Currency: nakfa. The land varies from temperate central
highlands to coastal desert plain, with savanna in the western lowlands.
The economy is based on livestock herding and subsistence agriculture.
Industry, based in Asmara, includes food products, textiles, and leather
goods. Eritrea’s form of government is a transitional regime with one
interim legislative body; the head of state and government is the
president. As the site of the main ports of the Aksumite empire, it was
linked to the beginnings of the Ethiopian kingdom, but it retained much
of its independence until it came under Ottoman rule in the 16th
century. In the 17th–19th centuries, control of the territory was
disputed among Ethiopia, the Ottomans, the kingdom of Tigray, Egypt, and
Italy; it became an Italian colony in 1890. Eritrea was used as the main
base for the Italian invasions of Ethiopia (1896, 1935–36) and in 1936
became part of Italian East Africa. It was captured by the British in
1941, federated to Ethiopia in 1952, and made a province of Ethiopia in
1962. Three decades of guerrilla warfare by Eritrean secessionist groups
ensued. A provisional Eritrean government was established in 1991 after
the overthrow of the Ethiopian government, and independence came in
1993. A new constitution was ratified in 1997 but was never implemented.
A border war with Ethiopia that began in 1998 ended in 2000, but
boundary disputes persisted into the 21st century.
Profile
Official name State of Eritrea
Form of government transitional regime1 with one interim legislative
body (Transitional National Assembly [150])
Head of state and government President
Capital Asmara
Official language none
Official religion none
Monetary unit nakfa (Nfa)
Population estimate (2008) 5,028,000
Total area (sq mi) 46,774
Total area (sq km) 121,144
1New constitution ratified in May 1997 was not implemented in
mid-September 2008.
Main
country of the Horn of Africa, located on the Red Sea. Eritrea’s
coastal location has long been important in its history and culture—a
fact reflected in its name, which is an Italianized version of Mare
Erythraeum, Latin for “Red Sea.” The Red Sea was the route by which
Christianity and Islam reached the area, and it was an important trade
route that such powers as Turkey, Egypt, and Italy hoped to dominate by
seizing control of ports on the Eritrean coast. Those ports promised
access to the gold, coffee, and slaves sold by traders in the Ethiopian
highlands to the south, and, in the second half of the 20th century,
Ethiopia became the power from which the Eritrean people had to free
themselves in order to create their own state. In 1993, after a war of
independence that lasted nearly three decades, Eritrea became a
sovereign country. During the long struggle, the people of Eritrea
managed to forge a common national consciousness, but, with peace
established, they faced the task of overcoming their ethnic and
religious differences in order to raise the country from a poverty made
worse by years of drought, neglect, and war. Eritrea’s capital and
largest city is Asmara (Asmera).
Land
Eritrea’s coastline, forming the northeastern edge of the
country, extends for roughly 600 miles (1,000 km) from Cape Kasar, in
the north, to the Strait of Mandeb, separating the Red Sea from the Gulf
of Aden in the south. The country is bounded to the southeast by
Djibouti, to the south by Ethiopia, and to the west by The Sudan.
Relief
Eritrea’s land is highly variegated. Running on a north-south axis
through the middle of the country are the central highlands, a narrow
strip of country some 6,500 feet (2,000 metres) above sea level that
represents the northern reaches of the Ethiopian Plateau. The highest
point is Mount Soira, at 9,885 feet (3,013 metres). Geologically, the
plateau consists of a foundation of crystalline rock (e.g., granite,
gneiss, and mica schist) that is overlain by sedimentary rock (limestone
and sandstone) and capped by basalt (rock of volcanic origin). The upper
layers have been highly dissected by deep gorges and river channels,
forming small, steep-sided, flat-topped tablelands known as ambas.
Encouraged by the steady expansion of cultivation, soil erosion on the
plateau has left few wooded areas.
In the north of Eritrea the highlands narrow and then end in a system
of hills, where erosion has cut down to the basement rock. To the east
the plateau drops abruptly into a coastal plain. North of the Gulf of
Zula, the plain is only 10 to 50 miles (15 to 80 km) wide, but to the
south it widens to include the Danakil Plain. This barren region
contains a depression known as the Kobar Sink (more than 300 feet [90
metres] below sea level), the northern end of which extends into
Eritrea. The coastal plain and the Danakil Plain are part of the East
African Rift System and are sharply delimited on the west by the eastern
escarpment of the plateau, which, although deeply eroded, presents a
formidable obstacle to travelers from the coast.
The western flank of the central highlands is a broken and undulating
plain that slopes gradually toward the border with The Sudan. It lies at
an average elevation of 1,500 feet (460 metres). The vegetation is
mostly savanna, consisting of scattered trees, shrubs, and seasonal
grasses.
Off the coast in the Red Sea is the Dahlak Archipelago, a group of
more than 100 small coral and reef-fringed islands. Only a few of these
islands have a permanent population.
Drainage
The Eritrean highlands are drained by four major rivers and numerous
streams. Two of the rivers, the Gash and the Tekeze, flow westward into
The Sudan. The Tekeze River (also known as the Satit) is a major
tributary of the Atbara River, which eventually joins the Nile. The Gash
River reaches the Atbara only during flood season. As it crosses the
western lowlands, the Tekeze forms part of Eritrea’s border with
Ethiopia, while the upper course of the Gash, known as the Mereb River,
forms the border on the plateau.
The other two major rivers that drain the highlands of Eritrea are
the Baraka and the Anseba. Both of these rivers flow northward into a
marshy area on the eastern coast of The Sudan and do not reach the Red
Sea. Several seasonal streams that flow eastward from the plateau reach
the sea on the Eritrean coast.
Climate
Eritrea has a wide variety of climatic conditions, produced mainly
by differences in elevation. The effects of elevation are seen most
clearly in the wide range of temperatures experienced throughout the
country. On the coast, Massawa (Mitsiwa) has one of the highest averages
in the world (the mid-80s F [about 30 °C]), while Asmara, only 40 miles
(65 km) away yet roughly 7,500 feet (2,300 metres) higher on the
plateau, averages in the low 60s F (about 17 °C).
Mean annual rainfall on the plateau is about 16 to 20 inches (400 to
500 mm), while on the western plain it is less than 16 inches. In both
the highlands and the western lowlands, rainfall comes in summer,
carried on a southwesterly airstream. Toward the northeastern extremes
of the plateau, the amount of precipitation decreases, and the length of
the rainy season becomes shorter. The eastern edges of the plateau and,
to a lesser extent, the coastal fringes receive much smaller quantities
of rain from a northeasterly airstream that arrives in winter and
spring. The interior regions of the Danakil Plain are practically
rainless.
People
Ethnic groups and languages
Eritrea’s population consists of several ethnic groups, each with
its own language and cultural tradition. In addition to the languages
spoken by the various ethnic groups, Arabic and English are widely
understood. Italian is occasionally used as well.
The bulk of the people in the Eritrean highlands are Tigray. The
Tigray make up about half the country’s total population; they also
occupy the adjacent Ethiopian region of Tigray. The Tigrayan language,
called Tigrinya, is one of two major indigenous languages in Eritrea.
Inhabiting the northernmost part of the Eritrean plateau, as well as
lowlands to the east and west, are the Tigre people. The Tigre, who
constitute nearly one-third of Eritrea’s population, speak the other
major Eritrean language—Tigré. Tigré and Tigrinya are written in the
same script and are both related to the ancient Semitic Geʿez language,
but they are mutually unintelligible.
Also occupying the northern plateau are Bilin speakers, whose
language belongs to the Cushitic family. The Rashaida are a group of
Arabic-speaking nomads who traverse the northern hills. On the southern
part of the coastal region live Afar nomads. The Afars—who also live
across the borders in Djibouti and Ethiopia—are known to surrounding
peoples as the Danakil, after the region that they inhabit. The coastal
strip south of Massawa, as well as the eastern flanks of the plateau,
are occupied by Saho pastoralists. In the western plain the dominant
people are Beja pastoralists; Beja also live across the border in The
Sudan. Two small groups speaking Nilotic languages, the Kunama and the
Nara, also live in the west.
Religion
Historically, religion has been a prominent symbol of ethnic
identity in the Horn of Africa. Christianity was established in the 4th
century ce on the coast and appeared soon afterward in the plateau,
where it was embraced by the Ethiopian highlanders. The monophysite
creed of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church remains the faith of about half
the population of Eritrea, including nearly all the Tigray. Following
the rise of Islam in Arabia, Muslim power flowed over the Red Sea coast,
forcing the Ethiopians to retreat deep into their mountain fastness.
Islam displaced other creeds in the lowlands of the Horn, and it remains
the faith of nearly all the people inhabiting the eastern coast and the
western plain of Eritrea, as well as the northernmost part of the
plateau. Thus, while Islam claims nearly all the pastoralists,
Christianity is dominant among the cultivators. Muslims are also
significantly represented in all towns of Eritrea, where they are
prominent in trade. In the perennial competition between cultivators and
pastoralists over land, water, control of trade, and access to ports,
religion has played an ideological role, and it remains a potent
political force.
During the time of Italian colonial rule (1889–1941), Roman Catholic
and Protestant European missionaries introduced their own version of
Christianity into Eritrea. They had considerable success among the small
Kunama group, and they also attracted a few townspeople with the offer
of modern education.
Settlement patterns
The environment is a determining factor in the distribution of
Eritrea’s population. Although the plateau represents only one-fourth of
the total land area, it is home to approximately one-half of the
population, most of them sedentary agriculturalists. The lowlands on the
east and west support a population mainly of pastoralists, although most
of them also cultivate crops when and where weather conditions permit.
As a rule, pastoralists follow various patterns of movement set by the
seasons. Only the Rashaida group in the northern hills is truly nomadic.
During the colonial period, Eritrea’s urban sector flourished with
the establishment of Asmara as the capital city, Asseb (also spelled
Assab or Aseb) as a new port on the Red Sea, and a host of smaller towns
on the plateau. In addition, Massawa, an old and cosmopolitan port with
strong links to Arabia, was expanded considerably. By the end of the
colonial period, Eritrea had by far the largest proportion of urban
residents in the Horn of Africa—approximately 15 percent of the
population—although a large percentage of urban dwellers were Italian
nationals who eventually left the country. Subsequently, a population
drift from the countryside to the towns was largely offset by emigration
of Eritreans abroad. By the early 21st century about one-fifth of the
population was considered urban.
Economy
Agriculture
Agriculture is by far the most important sector of the country’s
economy, providing a livelihood for about four-fifths of the population
and accounting for a large portion of Eritrea’s exports. Small-scale
cultivation and traditional pastoralism are the main forms of
agricultural activity. These are not mutually exclusive occupations,
since most cultivators also keep animals and most pastoralists cultivate
grains when possible. Both cultivators and pastoralists produce
primarily for their own subsistence, and only small surpluses are
available for trade.
The area of cultivation is limited by climate, soil erosion, and the
uneven surface of the plateau. Under Italian and Ethiopian rule,
irrigated plantations produced vegetables, fruit, cotton, sisal,
bananas, tobacco, and coffee for the growing urban markets, but this
agricultural sector was disrupted by the long period of warfare leading
to independence. Today staple grain products include sorghum, millet,
and an indigenous cereal named teff (Eragostis abyssinica). Pulses,
sesame seeds, vegetables, cotton, tobacco, and sisal also are produced.
Among the livestock raised are sheep, cattle, goats, and camels.
Resources
Salt mining, based on deposits in the Kobar Sink, is a traditional
activity in Eritrea; there is a salt works near the port of Massawa.
Granite, basalt, and coral are also mined. Deposits of gold, copper,
potash, and iron have been exploited at times in a minor way, and
numerous other minerals have been identified, including zinc, feldspar,
gypsum, asbestos, mica, and sulfur. The proximity of the oil-rich
Arabian basin has occasionally raised expectations of discovering
petroleum in Eritrea, but intermittent exploration since the days of
Italian rule has failed to produce results.
Manufacturing
A generation of war damaged Eritrea’s modest manufacturing sector,
which appeared during the Italian colonial period and provided many
Eritrean workers with skills that later enabled them to find work
abroad. Today, as it was in the colonial era, the sector is based
largely on the processing of agricultural products; goods produced
include food products, beer, tobacco products, textiles, and leather.
Asmara is the main industrial centre, although light manufacturing
enterprises are found in and around Massawa (which has a cement works),
Keren, and other urban areas. A petroleum refinery in the Red Sea port
of Asseb, built by the Soviet Union for Ethiopia, was closed in 1997.
Trade
Along with food and live animals, fish from the Red Sea constitute a
significant percentage of the country’s exports. Principal imports
include food, machinery, road vehicles, and chemicals and chemical
products. Italy has been Eritrea’s most consistent trading partner,
though other European Union countries, the United States, The Sudan, the
United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia have all been significant
partners at one time or another in the early 21st century.
Transportation
Asseb and Massawa are major ports of entry into Eritrea. About
one-fifth of the country’s roads are paved. A railway was built by the
Italians from Massawa to Asmara, Keren, and Akordat. There is an
international airport in Asmara, and major airfields are located in
Asseb and Massawa.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
After liberation from Ethiopia in May 1991, Eritrea was ruled by a
provisional government that essentially consisted of the central
committee of the Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF). On May 19,
1993, shortly after a national referendum, this body proclaimed the
Transitional Government of Eritrea. The intention was that this
government would rule the country for four years, until the promulgation
of a constitution and the election of a permanent government. The
transitional government’s legislative body, called the National
Assembly, consisted of the original 30-member central committee of the
EPLF augmented by 60 new members.
The National Assembly elected independent Eritrea’s first president,
Isaias Afwerki, in 1993. Following his election, Afwerki consolidated
his control of the Eritrean government. As president, he was head of
state and of government; he also presided over the legislature and the
State Council, an executive body whose members were presidential
appointees. In addition, he became commander in chief of the army and
chair of the country’s sole political party, the EPLF, renamed the
People’s Front for Democracy and Justice in 1994.
A constituent assembly ratified a new constitution in May 1997, but
it was not implemented, and the anticipated parliamentary and
presidential elections never took place. The 150-member Transitional
National Assembly, an interim legislative body established in 1997,
remained the de facto legislature into the 21st century, and President
Afwerki maintained his powerful position. Citing national security
concerns, he shut down the national press in 2001.
Health and education
Chronic drought and decades of war took a toll on the health of
Eritreans in the second half of the 20th century, although conditions
had improved somewhat after the first decade of independence. In the
early 21st century the infant mortality rate was slightly higher than
the world average but significantly lower than the African average. The
average life expectancy was in the mid-50s for men and about 60 for
women—about a decade shorter than the world average for each sex.
More than three-fifths of Eritreans over age 14 are literate; the
male literacy rate is significantly higher than the rate among females.
Children are taught in their native languages, and in the higher grades
they are also taught foreign languages, especially Arabic and English.
There is a university in Asmara.
Cultural life
The “golden oldies” of Tigrinya pop, a style that was popularized
throughout Africa in the late 1960s by such artists as Beyene Fre,
Tewolde Redda, and Alamin, remain popular in Eritrea. Contemporary
popular musicians in Eritrea include Sami Berhane, Wedi Tukul, and
Faytinga. Reggae, which originated in Jamaica, also has a presence in
Eritrea.
Eritrean cuisine has not yet gained the popularity that its Ethiopian
counterpart has found in many countries around the world. The two
cuisines share some ingredients, techniques, and staples, including
injera, a chewy flatbread made of teff, wheat, or sorghum flour, and
kitcha, an unleavened bread. Meals typically are served on a communal
platter, and diners use bread, rather than utensils, to serve themselves
portions of such dishes as zigni (a stew made of fish, vegetables, and
meat), ful (baked beans), dorho (roasted chicken), ga’at (porridge), and
shiro (lentils). These dishes are seldom eaten without a side dish of
fiery berbere, a locally produced pepper that figures prominently in
Eritrean cooking. Eritrean food also shows many influences from the
country’s erstwhile Italian occupiers, with such dishes as capretto
(goat), frittata (vegetable omelet), and pasta featured on many menus.
Coffee is an important ingredient of Eritrean social life. Making a
good cup of coffee, Eritreans say, requires both patience and skill. The
commonly accepted method of making coffee suggests the need for both:
coffee beans are roasted in a skillet or oven, pounded and ground with a
mortar and pestle, and then poured into a pot that is half full of cold
water and, sometimes, ginger root. After the mix is boiled, it is poured
through an oxtail filter and served in small porcelain cups with sugar
cubes. Popcorn or other snacks may be eaten as accompaniments to the
coffee.
Eritreans enjoy playing sports, especially football (soccer), which
was introduced during the Italian occupation. Eritrea’s national
football team is known as the Red Sea Boys. Eritreans also participate
in basketball, cycling, and athletics (track and field). Outdoor
activities include fishing and snorkeling, which is especially popular
on the Dahlak islands.
History
Precolonial Eritrea
Rule from the highlands
Beginning about 1000 bce, Semitic peoples from the south Arabian
kingdom of Sabaʾ (Sheba) migrated across the Red Sea and absorbed the
Cushitic inhabitants of the Eritrean coast and adjacent highlands. These
Semitic invaders, possessing a well-developed culture, established the
kingdom of Aksum, which, by the end of the 4th century ce, ruled the
northern stretches of the Ethiopian Plateau and the eastern lowlands. An
important trade route led from the port of Adulis, near modern Zula, to
the city of Aksum, the capital, located in what is now the Ethiopian
province of Tigray.
After extending its power at times as far afield as modern Egypt and
Yemen, Aksum began to decline into obscurity in the 6th century ce.
Beginning in the 12th century, however, the Ethiopian Zagwe and
Solomonid dynasties held sway to a fluctuating extent over the entire
plateau and the Red Sea coast. Eritrea’s central highlands, known as the
mereb melash (“land beyond the Mereb River”), were the northern frontier
region of the Ethiopian kingdoms and were ruled by a governor titled
bahr negash (“lord of the sea”). The control exercised by the crown over
this region was never firm, and it became even more tenuous as the
centre of Ethiopian power moved steadily southward to Gonder and Shewa.
Highland Eritrea became a vassal fiefdom of the lords of Tigray, who
were seldom on good terms with the dominant Amhara branch of the
Ethiopian family.
Contesting for the coastlands and beyond
Off the plateau, the pastoralist peoples in the west and north knew
no foreign master until the early 19th century, when the Egyptians
invaded the Sudan and raided deep into the Eritrean lowlands. The Red
Sea coast, having its strategic and commercial importance, was contested
by many powers. In the 16th century the Ottoman Turks occupied the
Dahlak Archipelago and then Massawa, where they maintained with
occasional interruption a garrison for more than three centuries. Also
in the 16th century, Eritrea as well as Ethiopia was affected by the
invasions of Aḥmad Grāñ, the Muslim leader of the sultanate of Adal.
After the expulsion of Aḥmad’s forces, the Ottoman Turks temporarily
occupied even more of Eritrea’s coastal area. In 1865 the Egyptians
obtained Massawa from the Turks. From there they pushed inland to the
plateau, until in 1875 an Egyptian force that reached the Mereb River
was annihilated by Ethiopian forces.
Meanwhile, the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 had made the Red Sea
a scene of rivalry among the world’s most powerful states. Between 1869
and 1880 the Italian Rubattino Navigation Company purchased from the
local Afar sultan stretches of the Red Sea coast adjoining the village
of Asseb. In 1882 these acquisitions were transferred to the Italian
state, and in 1885 Italian troops landed at Massawa, Asseb, and other
locations. There was no resistance by the Egyptians at Massawa, and
protests made by the Turks and Ethiopians were ignored. Italian forces
then systematically spread out from Massawa toward the highlands.
The Italians’ expansion onto the plateau was initially opposed by
Emperor Yohannes IV, the only Tigray to wear the Ethiopian crown in
modern times, but Yohannes’s successor, Menilek II, in return for
weapons that he needed to fight possible rivals, acquiesced to Italian
occupation of the region north of the Mereb. In the Treaty of Wichale,
signed on May 2, 1889, Menilek recognized “Italian possessions in the
Red Sea,” and on Jan. 1, 1890, the Italian colony of Eritrea was
officially proclaimed. From Eritrea the Italians launched several
incursions into Ethiopia, only to be decisively defeated by Menilek’s
army at the Battle of Adwa on March 1, 1896. Menilek did not pursue the
defeated enemy across the Mereb. Soon afterward he signed the Treaty of
Addis Ababa, obtaining Italian recognition of Ethiopia’s sovereignty in
return for his recognition of Italian rule over Eritrea.
Colonial Eritrea
Rule by Italy
In precolonial times there were no towns on the Eritrean plateau,
urban centres being limited to the Red Sea coast. Under Italian rule,
however, Eritrea’s urban sector flourished. Tens of thousands of
Italians arrived, bringing with them modern skills and a new lifestyle.
Asmara grew into a charming city in the Mediterranean style, the port of
Massawa was modernized and the port of Asseb improved, and a number of
smaller towns appeared on the plateau. Road and rail construction linked
the various regions of the colony, and a modest manufacturing sector
also appeared, in which Eritreans acquired industrial skills.
At the same time, a sizable portion of Eritrea’s best agricultural
land was reserved for Italian farmers (although only a few actually
settled on the land), and a small plantation sector was established to
grow produce for the urban market. Eritrea’s population grew rapidly
during this period. Combined with the appropriation of land for Italian
use, population growth created a shortage of land for Eritrean farmers.
This in turn stimulated a drift to the cities, which further expanded
the urban population and produced an Eritrean working class.
Still, Eritrea had no valuable resources for exploitation and was not
a wealth-producing colony for Italy. In fact, the colony was subsidized
by the Italians, an extraneous factor that gave the local economy an
artificial glow. Investment in education for Eritreans was negligible.
There were very few schools for them, and these were limited to the
primary level. Also, Eritreans were not employed in the colonial service
except as labourers and soldiers. As preparations for the Italian
invasion of Ethiopia got under way in the mid-1930s, several thousand
Eritreans were recruited to serve in the invading army.
From Italian to Ethiopian rule
Italy’s invasion and occupation of Ethiopia beginning in
1935—including Ethiopia’s annexation and incorporation into Italian East
Africa in 1936—marked the last chapter in Italian colonial history. The
chapter came to an end with the eviction of Italy from the Horn of
Africa by the British in 1941, during World War II. The following
decade, during which Eritrea remained under British administration, was
a period of intense political and diplomatic activity that shaped the
future of Eritrea.
Landlocked Ethiopia, coveting Eritrea’s two seaports, launched an
early campaign to annex the former colony, claiming that it had always
been part of Ethiopia’s domain. Lobbying of the Allied powers was
carried out, and within Eritrea, with the help of Ethiopian Orthodox
clergy, support for annexation was mobilized on the basis of religious
loyalty. In order to promote the union of Eritrea with Ethiopia, a
Unionist Party was formed in 1946; it was financed and guided from the
Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa.
Eritrea’s Muslims had every good reason to oppose union with
Ethiopia, where Christianity was the official religion and Muslims
suffered discrimination in many areas of life. In order to counter
Christian mobilization for union, a Muslim League was founded in 1947 to
campaign for Eritrean independence. Thus, although there were some
Christians who favoured independence and a few Muslims who were
favourable to union with Ethiopia, the political division was drawn
largely along sectarian lines.
Federation with Ethiopia
Adoption of the federal scheme
In 1950 the United Nations (UN), under the prompting of the United
States, resolved to join Eritrea to Ethiopia within two years. The
proposed federation would provide Eritrea with autonomy under its own
constitution and elected government. Elections to a new Eritrean
Assembly in 1952 gave the Unionist Party the largest number of seats but
not a majority; the party thus formed a government in coalition with a
Muslim faction. The Eritrean constitution, prepared by the UN in
consultation with Emperor Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia, was adopted by
the Eritrean Assembly on July 10, 1952, and ratified by Haile Selassie
on August 11. The act of federation was ratified by the emperor on
September 11, and British authorities officially relinquished control on
September 15.
Failure of the federal scheme
The federal scheme was short-lived, mainly because the imperial
government in Addis Ababa was unwilling to abide by its provisions.
First, the Eritrean constitution sought to establish an equilibrium
between ethnic and religious groups. It made Tigrinya and Arabic the
official languages of Eritrea, and it allowed local communities to
choose the language of education for their children. In the spirit of
the constitution, it became a practice to ensure parity between
Christians and Muslims in appointment to state office. This delicate
balance was destroyed by Ethiopian interference, and Muslims were the
initial losers, as Arabic was eliminated from state education and
Muslims were squeezed out of public employment.
Furthermore, the Ethiopians were anxious to eliminate any traces of
separatism in Eritrea, and to that end they harassed the leaders of the
independence movement until many of them fled abroad. With the
collaboration of their Unionist allies and in express violation of the
constitution, they also suppressed all attempts to form autonomous
Eritrean organizations. Political parties were banned in 1955, trade
unions were banned in 1958, and in 1959 the name Eritrean Government was
changed to “Eritrean Administration” and Ethiopian law was imposed.
Eventually, even Ethiopia’s Eritrean allies were alienated—by crude
intervention in the running of the Eritrean Administration, by financial
disputes between Asmara and Addis Ababa, and by mounting pressure on the
Eritreans to renounce autonomy. The federation was already dead when, on
Nov. 14, 1962, the Ethiopian parliament and Eritrean Assembly voted
unanimously for the abolition of Eritrea’s federal status, making
Eritrea a simple province of the Ethiopian empire. Soon afterward
Tigrinya was banned in education; it was replaced by Amharic, which at
the time was the official language of Ethiopia.
The war of independence
Beginning of armed revolt
Muslims had been the first to suffer from Ethiopia’s intervention in
Eritrea, and it was they who formed the first opposition movement. In
1960, leaders of the defunct independence movement who were then living
in exile announced the formation of the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF).
The founders, all Muslims, were led by Idris Mohammed Adam, a leading
political figure in Eritrea in the 1940s. By the mid-1960s the ELF was
able to field a small guerrilla force in the western plain of Eritrea,
and thus it began a war that was to last nearly three decades. In the
early years the ELF drew support from Muslim communities in the western
and eastern lowlands as well as the northern hills. It also sought
support from The Sudan, Syria, Iran, and other Islamic states; used
Arabic as its official language; and adopted Arab nomenclature in its
organization. Ethiopian authorities portrayed the movement as an Arab
tool and sought to rally Eritrean Christians to oppose it. Deteriorating
economic and political conditions in Eritrea, however, combined to
produce the opposite result.
During the 1930s and ’40s the Eritrean economy had been stimulated by
Italian colonial activity and by the special conditions created by World
War II. After the war the local economy deflated, and it remained
stagnant during the entire period of federation with Ethiopia. Many
thousands of Eritreans were forced to emigrate to Ethiopia and the
Middle East in search of employment. The suppression of the nascent
trade-union movement further embittered this class, and many Eritrean
workers—Muslims and Christians alike—rallied to the nationalist
movement. In addition, the banning of Tigrinya in state education helped
to turn an entire generation of Eritrean Christian students toward
nationalism. Christians began to join the ELF in significant numbers at
the end of the 1960s. Among them were students who had become
politically radicalized in the Ethiopian student movement, which itself
became a centre of opposition to the regime of Haile Selassie in the
1960s and ’70s.
The spreading revolution
The ELF was now able to extend its operations to the central
highlands of Eritrea—the home of the Tigray. However, the arrival of the
radical students coincided with the emergence of a serious rift between
the leadership of the ELF, which was permanently resident in Cairo, and
the rank and file, which remained in the field. The newcomers joined the
opposition to the leadership, and in 1972 several groups that had
defected from the ELF joined forces to form the Eritrean Liberation
Front–People’s Liberation Forces (ELF–PLF). For several years the two
rival organizations fought each other as well as the Ethiopians. After a
series of splits and mergers, the ELF–PLF came under the control of
former students, among whom Christians predominated, and was renamed the
Eritrean People’s Liberation Front (EPLF), a Marxist and secular
organization.
The EPLF had made its presence felt by 1974, when the imperial regime
in Ethiopia collapsed. While a power struggle for the succession was
waged in Addis Ababa, the two Eritrean fronts liberated most of Eritrea.
By 1977 the nationalist revolution seemed on the verge of victory. Yet
it was not to be. A military dictatorship—also espousing Marxism—emerged
in Addis Ababa, and, armed and assisted by the Soviet bloc, the new
Ethiopian regime was able to regain most of Eritrea in 1978. Warfare on
a scale unprecedented in sub-Saharan Africa raged for the next two
decades. The Ethiopians made enormous efforts with massive land attacks
and heavy weaponry, but they had no success against the small and
lightly armed guerrilla forces.
The violence of war and indiscriminate oppression in their homeland
turned most Eritreans against Ethiopia, thereby producing a steady
stream of young recruits for the nationalist movement. Throughout the
1980s the fighting was carried out by the EPLF, which by 1981 had
succeeded in eliminating the ELF and had emerged as the unchallenged
champion of Eritrean nationalism. In the latter part of the decade, the
Soviet Union terminated its military aid to Ethiopia. Unable to find
another patron and faced with armed rebellion in other parts of the
country, the regime in Addis Ababa began to falter. The final act
occurred in 1991, when a rebel military offensive, led by the Tigray
People’s Liberation Front (a group that had long been fighting for the
autonomy of Tigray in Ethiopia), swept toward the capital. The Ethiopian
army disintegrated, and in May the EPLF assumed complete control of
Eritrea.
Three decades of war had produced among Eritreans a sense of unity
and solidarity that they had not known before. Indeed, an entire
generation had come of age during the struggle for independence, which
was now to become a reality. The new regime in Ethiopia supported
Eritrea’s independence, and a separation was effected amicably. In a
referendum held two years after liberation, on April 23–25, 1993, the
overwhelming majority of Eritreans voted for independence. On May 21
Isaias Afwerki, the secretary-general of the EPLF, was made president of
a transitional government, and on May 24 he proclaimed Eritrea
officially independent.
Geoffrey Charles Last
John Markakis
Independent Eritrea
Following independence, Eritrea enjoyed a thriving economy but
maintained poor relations with neighbouring countries—with the
noteworthy exception of Ethiopia. Tension with The Sudan throughout the
1990s centred on mutual allegations that each had attempted to
destabilize the other. In late 1995 and 1996 Eritrea engaged in a brief
but violent conflict with Yemen over the Ḥanīsh Islands, an archipelago
in the Red Sea claimed by both countries but ultimately recognized as
Yemeni.
Postindependence relations with Ethiopia, initially warm and
supportive, became strained over trade issues and the question of
Ethiopia’s access to Eritrea’s Red Sea ports. In 1998 relations
deteriorated rapidly when a border dispute, centred around the hamlet of
Badme, exploded into violence. Following two years of bloodshed, a peace
was negotiated in December 2000, and the UN established a peacekeeping
mission along the border in question. An international boundary
commission agreed on a border demarcation, but Ethiopia rejected the
decision and refused to leave territory that the commission had
recognized as Eritrean. Meanwhile, tension had been growing between the
UN peacekeepers and the Eritrean government, which accused several UN
workers of being spies. The UN withdrew its mission in 2008. In the same
year, another boundary dispute, this one with Djibouti, escalated when
Eritrea amassed troops along the Ras Doumeira border area. Fighting
between Eritrean and Djiboutian soldiers led to the deaths of more than
30 people.
The postindependence conflicts shattered Eritrea’s earlier economic
and political progress. Amid economic distress, loss of life, and a new
flood of displaced persons, voices of discontent with the government
leadership were raised in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Calls
were made to promulgate the country’s constitution, which had been
ratified in 1997, and to hold parliamentary and presidential elections,
which had been postponed indefinitely. Opposition was hampered, however,
by the closure of the national press in 2001 and a ban on the formation
of new political parties. President Afwerki and his party, the People’s
Front for Democracy and Justice—the successor to the EPLF—remained
firmly in power.
Ed.