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Eritrea Hosts Sudan’s New Prime Minister Kamil Idris, Underscores Solidarity

A senior Sudanese delegation led by Prime Minister  Dr. Kamil Idris  arrived in Asmara on Thursday for a two-day working visit — a trip that has drawn attention not only for its timing but for the message it carries about regional solidarity in a time of deep Sudanese crisis. The

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Eritrea Calls Ethiopia’s UN Letter “Deceitful Charade,” Reaffirms No Appetite for War

Eritrea’s Minister of Information, Yemane G. Meskel, has sharply rebuked Ethiopia’s latest communication to the United Nations, describing it as “an act of duplicity in its extreme” and “a deceitful charade” aimed at misleading both Ethiopians and the international community. The

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Ethiopia’s UN Letter Can’t Erase a Year of Escalation

If you only read Addis Ababa’s 2 October letter to the UN, you’d think Ethiopia is a beleaguered neighbor fending off an Eritrean onslaught and some shadowy “Tsimdo” plot. Reality is less theatrical and far more documented: for a full year Ethiopia’s leadership has normalized tal

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End Sanctions As First Step To Normalize Eritrea-US Relations

There is a popular Eritrean song titled “Abey Alo Btsay Tegadalai” (where is my comrade freedom fighter) that poignantly describes the sheer level of sacrifice and difficulties endured, voluntarily, by Eritrean freedom fighters. The song rhetorically asks “but by whose order” did

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Ethiopia's Propaganda Outfit Horn Review’s Fantasy: No, Eritrea’s Sovereignty Is Not Reversible

When "Think Tanks" Drift Into Fantasy It is often said that politics in the Horn of Africa suffers from a chronic shortage of clear-eyed realism and an overabundance of wishful thinking. Few recent publications capture this affliction as vividly as a September 30 essay by  Horn R

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Eritrea’s Call for a Just Global Order: From the Margins to the Heart of the Debate

When Eritrea’s Foreign Minister addressed the 80th United Nations General Assembly in New York, the words were not clothed in diplomatic vagueness. They carried the clarity of a nation that has endured sanctions, external pressure, and marginalization — yet still insists on voici

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Eritrea’s Stand on Palestine: Sovereignty Over Spectacle

For years, Eritrea’s position on the Palestinian question has been caricatured or misrepresented, often reduced to a soundbite: “Eritrea does not recognize Palestine.” Such claims ignore Eritrea’s official record, its foreign policy philosophy, and its voting history at the Unite

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Eritrea and U.S. Signal Opening for Renewed Engagement at UNGA80

Eritrea’s Foreign Minister Osman Saleh has held a series of high-level meetings on the sidelines of the 80th UN General Assembly, signaling renewed momentum in the country’s international engagement after years of strained ties. On Wednesday, Saleh met with Massad Fares Boulos, S

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Eritrea Warns Against Manufactured Red Sea Crisis Amid Abiy Ahmed’s Escalating War Rhetoric

Eritrea has sharply condemned what it calls a “political frenzy” by Ethiopia’s ruling Prosperity Party (PP), accusing Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government of deliberately manufacturing a regional crisis around access to the Red Sea. In a statement posted on X, Eritrea’s Ministe

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Abiy Ahmed’s Red Sea Fantasies: Manufactured Conflicts and the Isolation of a Failing Regime

On September 8, ahead of the inauguration of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed once again ignited regional tensions by declaring on state-run EBC that “it is only a matter of time before Ethiopia regains control of the Red Sea port o

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Bahti Meskerem: From Adal’s First Shots to Eritrea’s Unbroken Path of Sovereignty

Sixty-four years ago, in the rugged plains of Adal, a small band of Eritrean fighters led by Hamid Idris Awate opened fire on forces that had sworn Eritrea’s erasure. It was September 1, 1961 -  Bahti Meskerem  - the day Eritreans mark not as the beginning of violence, but as the

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The Red Sea Corridor and the Battle for the Region’s Soul

There are battlefields defined by tanks and trenches, and there are those fought in boardrooms, backchannels, and behind closed doors - silent but no less brutal.  The Red Sea corridor is one such battleground. It is not simply a waterway. It is the spine of global commerce, the

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