ERITREA

ĕrĭtrēˈə, officially State of Eritrea, republic (1995 est. pop. 3,579,000), c.48,000 sq mi (124,320 sq km), NE Africa. It is bordered on the northeast by the Red Sea, on the southeast by Djibouti, on the south by Ethiopia, and on the northwest by Sudan. Eritrea also includes the many islands of the Dahlak Archipelago, which is located in the Red Sea. Asmara is the capital and largest city. Other cities include Aseb and Massawa, Eritrea's chief ports.

Land and People

The southern part of the country is made up of a low, largely desert coastal strip c.30 mi (50 km) wide; in N Eritrea there is a narrower, level coastal zone adjoining a ruggedly mountainous inland plateau (3,000–8,000 ft/914–2,438 m high). Most of the country supports only a sparse population of pastoral nomads. The central plateau, however, has many fertile valleys where settled agriculture is pursued. The inhabitants of Eritrea belong to several ethnic groups, primarily the Tigrinya, Tigre and Kunama, Afar, and Saho, each of whom has a distinct language. Arabic is also spoken. The population is about equally divided between Christians and Muslims.

Economy

Eritrea's largely agricultural economy was devastated by its 30-year-long indepedence war with Ethiopia and hurt again by the strain of the 1998–2000 border war. Some 70% of the population is involved in farming and herding. The country's agricultural products include sorghum, wheat, corn, cotton, coffee, and tobacco. Cattle, sheep, goats, and camels are raised, and hides are produced. There is a fishing industry and some pearl fisheries remain in the Dahlak Archipelago. The country's natural resources include gold, copper, potash, zinc, iron, and salt, but they have not yet been exploited. Offshore oil exploration was begun in the mid-1990s. Eritrea has little manufacturing beyond food processing, textiles, and building materials. Many Eritreans work outside the country, and their remittances substantially augment the GDP. Imports (consumer goods, machinery, and petroleum products) greatly exceed the value of exports (livestock, sorghum, and textiles). The country's main trading partners are Ethiopia, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, and Italy.

Government

Eritrea is governed under the constitution of 1997. The president, who is elected for a five-year term, is both chief of state and head of government. There is a unicameral 150-seat national assembly. The country is divided into eight provinces.

History

Eritrea formed part of the ancient Ethiopian kingdom of Aksum until the 7th cent. Thereafter Ethiopian emperors maintained an intermittent presence in the area until the mid-16th cent., when the Ottoman Empire gained control of much of the coastal region. Beginning in the mid-19th cent. Ethiopia struggled against Egypt and Italy for control of Eritrea. In the 1880s, Italy occupied the coastal areas around Aseb and Massawa, and by 1890 had extended its territory enough to proclaim the colony of Eritrea (named after the Roman term for the Red Sea, Mare erythraeum). The colony was later the main base for Italy's conquest (1935–36) of Ethiopia.

In World War II, Eritrea was captured (1941) by the British. Ethiopia had long demanded control of Eritrea on the ground of ethnic affinity, but Britain occupied Eritrea after the war and, beginning in 1949, administered it as a UN trust territory. In 1950 the United Nations decided that Eritrea was to be made independent as a federated part of Ethiopia, and in late 1952 this decision became effective. In late 1962 the Eritrean assembly voted to end the federal status and to unify Eritrea with Ethiopia. After 1962, Eritreans who opposed union carried on sporadic guerrilla warfare against Ethiopia and the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF) was founded. In 1972 a rival insurgent group, the Eritrean Popular Liberation Forces (EPLF), was formed and battled the ELF for supremacy.

After Emperor Haile Selassie's overthrow in a military coup in 1974, the two insurgent groups united to fight against the Ethiopian government's forces. Fighting increased and by 1976 the Eritreans had virtually forced the government forces out of the province. However, the Ethiopian government, with massive amounts of aid and troops from the USSR and Cuba, was able to defeat the Eritreans in 1978. After their defeat the insurgents were forced to return to sporadic guerrilla warfare. During the 1980s the rebels continued their attacks on Ethiopian troops and eventually Eritreans controlled most of the countryside.

In 1991 the insurgents succeeded in capturing Asmara and the ports, giving them control of the province. That same year the United Nations scheduled a referendum on Eritrean independence. In 1993, after 30 years of warfare and the death of an estimated 200,000, Eritreans overwhelmingly voted for independence, and Isaias Afwerki, formerly the principal leader of the EPLF, became the new nation's first president. His party, renamed the People's Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ), became the only viable political organization. The new government enacted legislation to promote trade and investment and provide for the privatization of many state firms.

In the mid-1990s, Eritrean and Yemeni forces clashed over control of the Hanish and other island groups in the Red Sea; the dispute was resolved in 1998, largely in Yemen's favor. A border war between Ethiopia and Eritrea broke out in 1998 when Eritrean forces occupied disputed territory. Fighting was largely inconclusive, with many thousands killed on both sides, until May, 2000, when Ethiopian forces launched a major offensive, securing the disputed territory and driving further into Eritrea. A cease-fire agreement signed in June called for a truce, the establishment of a 15.5 mi (9.6 km) UN-patrolled buffer zone (in Eritrean territory), and the demarcation of the border by UN cartographers. The war hampered Eritrea's efforts to rebuild its economy and made the previously self-reliant young nation dependent on foreign aid to feed its citizens.

Peacekeeping forces arrived in significant numbers by Dec., 2000, and there was steady, if sometimes fitful, progress towards the goals of the cease-fire agreement in 2001. Late in the 2001 the government arrested a number of opposition leaders and journalists and closed private newspapers; elections scheduled for that December were indefinitely postponed. In Apr., 2002, the Hague Tribunal issued a complex ruling on the disputed border that favored Eritrea in some locations and Ethiopia in others, but Ethiopian resistance has delayed finalization of the border. Four years of drought led to a food crisis in Eritrea by 2002, requiring substantial international assistance, and conditions have not improved significantly since then.

Bibliography

See N. Tekeste, Italian Colonialism in Eritrea: 1882–1941 (1987); L. and D. Cliffe, ed., The Long Struggle of Eritrea for Independence and Constructive Peace (1988).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Eritrea  - 1802 results

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...MoE) (1999) Education for all in Eritrea: Policies, strategies and prospects...MINISTRY OF EDUCATION (MoE) (2000a) Eritrea: Basic education statistics 1999/2000...MINISTRY OF EDUCATION (MoE) (2000b) Eritrea: Essential education indicators 199912000...
...environment that can attract investors. References Bank of Eritrea (1996), Eritrea - Profile of Foreign Exchange Administration: A Guide to Investors , January 17. Asmara: Bank of Eritrea. CCE (January 1995), International Symposium...
...29 Eritrean nationalists argued that Eritrea was colonized by the Ethiopians people...for Africa ) and named their new colony Eritrea, after the Latin name for the Red Sea...colonial entity. When the Italians colonized Eritrea, they did not intend to limit themselves...
...progressive nation. The EPLF continues to lead Eritrea as a provi- sional government. Much...Christianity and Islam have long histories in Eritrea. Christianity was introduced into the...encompassing present-day Ethiopia and Eritrea in the fourth century by two Syrians...
...Self-Determination and Realpolitik in Eritrea Cynical as it might seem, noted the head...Office in June 1948, the question of Eritrea and Somaliland must not be allowed to...achievement of our aims. 62 In the case of Eritrea the deliberate subordination of the conflicting...
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journal articles on: Eritrea  - 561 results

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...Language, Education, and Public Policy in Eritrea by Tekle M. Woldemikael Introduction Eritrea consists of about three million people, who...Afro-Semitic. The Nilotic languages in Eritrea are Nara and Kunama. The Nara- and the Kunama...
Recent Fertility Decline in Eritrea: Is It a Conflict-led Transition...Woldemicael 1. Introduction Although Eritrea is one of the countries that have witnessed...and 1998, but after this period, Eritrea experienced severe economic declines...
...Supra-subduction Terrane in Northern Eritrea, Ne Africa by C. R. de Souza , Filho...of all these components are present in Eritrea. The spatial association of calc-alkaline...Nubian Shield (Windley et al. 1996). Eritrea, for which no geological maps at scales...
...Politiche Sessuali Interrazziali Nella Colonia Eritrea (1890-1941). by Irma Taddia SORGONI...politiche sessuali interrazziali nella colonia Eritrea (1890-1941). (Anthropos 36). x...and the policy of sexuality in colonial Eritrea. The authors ambition is to compare the...
...Political Development in Ethiopia and Eritrea, 1941-74. by Girma Y. Getahun SANDRA...Political Development in Ethiopia and Eritrea, 1941-74. Eastern African Studies...selecting case study areas within Ethiopia and Eritrea. These countries were chosen for their...
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magazine articles on: Eritrea  - 802 results

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Letter from Eritrea. by Dan Eritrea Connell and Asmara The present lull in the fighting between Eritrea and Ethiopia may lead to a shift in their bitterly fought contest to the negotiating table, but an end to hostilities between two of the poorest...
Eritrea: A Revolution in Process. by Dan Connell...enjoyed since defeating the Ethiopian Army in Eritrea two years ago. But the sheer size of the...Eritreas provisional government, declared Eritrea "a sovereign country." Within hours...
Eritrea Gets Back on Track: When Eritrea Gained Independence, Its Devoted Railway Veterans Came out of...shady palm-lined boulevards of Asmara, the highland capital of Eritrea. On this, the first journey to the Red Sea port of Massawa...
Eritrea: Starting from Scratch. Shortly after...is slimmer than ever before, although Eritrea is getting bits and pieces from surprising...magnitude of postwar reconstruction needs. Eritrea gained its independence from Ethiopia in...
Eritrea: Old World, New Charm. by Jacky Sutton Just three years into independence, Eritrea is Africas newest country. Despite suffering...for the adventurous traveller. Travellers to Eritrea, whether bound for business or leisure, should...
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Eritrea serves as a model of self-reliance...the 3.5-million-strong nation of Eritrea seems committed to doing it its own way...American officials who expressed the hope that Eritrea might some day serve as a model for other...
Ethiopias tragic war with Eritrea The war that broke out between my country and Eritrea is often described as senseless and tragic. I...have been avoided. It could have been avoided if Eritrea were willing to negotiate our border dispute 10...
Eritrea pulls itself up by its bootstraps: War...country smells success by David Orr ASMARA, Eritrea - Despite spending 14 years in Los Angeles...regrets about his decision to return to Eritrea, the land of his birth. After three years...
Zenawi vows to pursue relations with Eritrea by Gus Constantine Ethiopian Prime Minister...that "war is over" with neighboring Eritrea and pledged to move posthaste toward concluding...border incident that sparked the conflict. Eritrea, a former Italian colony, wants the...
Eritrea Plotted to Attack Leaders at Summit; Targeted...Marieke van der Vaart, THE WASHINGTON TIMES Eritrea planned and financed an attempted terrorist...U.N. Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea, which included testimony by gunmen who...
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encyclopedia articles on: Eritrea  - 27 results

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ERITREA eritre , officially State of Eritrea, republic (2005 est. pop. 4,562,000), c.48,000...on the south by Ethiopia, and on the northwest by Sudan. Eritrea also includes the many islands of the Dahlak Archipelago , which...
...900 sq km), NE Africa. It borders on Eritrea in the north, on Djibouti in the northeast...of Djibouti, and Aseb and Massawa , in Eritrea. The border war that began in 1998 ended...Ethiopia. The country was combined with Eritrea and Italian Somaliland to form Italian...
...on the Gulf of Aden. It is bounded by Eritrea (N), Ethiopia (W, S), Somalia...There also were border clashes with Eritrea during the mid-1990s. Djibouti was...fighting erupted briefly between Djibouti and Eritrea near the Bab el Mandeb; Djibouti had...
...Allies; Italys empire included Libya, Eritrea, and Italian Somaliland. Movement...for Libya in 1951; independence for Eritrea in federation with Ethiopia in 1952 (later absorbed by Ethiopia, Eritrea became fully independent in 1993...
...sa w , city (1984 pop. 15,441), Eritrea, a port on the Red Sea. Before Eritrean...by rail with Asmara . Agreements with Eritrea gave Ethiopia continued access to its...was the capital of the Italian colony of Eritrea. Until Etritrean independence it was...
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