I TOO WAS PART OF THE WAR BETWEEN TWO BROTHERS
Saturday November 04th 2006, 7:32 pm
Filed under: General
(An eye witness account from Asmara)
This week, I am remembering one of the most painful
nights: the night of the 4th of November of 2004. It’s nearly
two years since that terrible night. Even if I am not good
at writing in a foreign language, I’ll try to say
something about our existence here in Eritrea because our
world (the international community) seems to know so little.
Thursday, the 4th of November 2004, was the first time
I saw people being shot to death and falling right in
front of me. Until noon of that day, it was just like
any other
Thursday. School was over at exactly twelve mid-day but
I didn’t see the time when I was about to arrive
home because I was so hungry I could eat a horse. I was
100 meters away when I encountered three soldiers – one
with a stick and the two other with guns. One approached
me and after asking for my menqesaqesi (an ID permit for
moving around), he took it and kept it with him and the
other soldier told me to join a group of young people.
They had rounded up other young people. Around fifty
arrive in a truck from as far as the peripheries of Asmara – close
to Bideho School to the south-east of the city. We couldn’t
believe what was happening because there were thousands
of young people surrounded by well-armed soldiers standing
at 3 meters from each other. We were encircled.
Nobody could imagine what could possibly happen – perhaps
not even the soldiers. We were students in uniforms with
books in our hands, teachers, people who were doing military
service in Asmara and also many religious people. At 5:30
pm, an order came and it said, “Send them to Adi
Ab’yeto.”
We arrive there. The prison was already full. On one
side, there was a building space with walls of 4 meters
in height
and a ground area of 60 by 70 meters - roughly.
We were forced to enter like a herd of sheep. Each person
had space for their two feet only. We stood as straight
as a standing pole – cramped like sardines in a tin.
We were divided in five groups. It was dark already.
At 7:00 in the evening, there was screaming all over
the place. We started throwing stones at the soldiers
who were
sitting outside the walls. Some have been hit on the
head. They were ready to shoot.
After half an hour, some of the groups stopped protesting – including
the one I was in. Later, it was our group that made things
happen. We took a ten-minute pause to organize ourselves.
We burned car tyres that we found in one corner, started
throwing more stones at the soldiers and pushing the wall
together until we managed to break bits and pieces here
and there. I don’t remember how many but some people
were killed by the shootings. The fire kept on burning.
Now, when I watch TV and see people burning something,
I know there must be a reason to do so.
When the wall collapsed, a lot of young people escaped – especially
those who did not possess the ID permit for moving around.
Many of these were shot and killed by the soldiers and
many were seriously wounded while others managed to escape.
At about 9:00 pm, hundreds of soldiers arrived with 3
armed vehicles to control and stop the uprising. First,
they
opened fire over our heads and it went on for five minutes
(in the morning, we saw the walls behind us sprayed with
bullet holes that looked like ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;).
From those who were in front, we could hear the last
desperate
voices. About ten were dead. Terrified and trying to
run away from the soldiers, some had run to another part
of
the prison camp where they were shot and their bodies
were one on top of the other. At that moment, I saw the
dead
body of a 15-year-old boy beside my feet. He had long
hair and was in his work uniform. We tried to pick him
up but
there was no point. He was already gone.
We spent the whole night standing on our feet because
we received strict orders not to move at all. In the
morning,
a friend of the dead boy was telling us (with tears in
his eyes) that the boy used to work in the morning and
go to school in the afternoon. He had to support his
family because he was the eldest. His father has been
in military
service since 1998.
Later, an ISUZU with military plate (EDF) arrives and
takes away 15 dead bodies and those who were wounded
and injured
because, other than being shot at, some had received
hand blows on their noses, heads and backs. It was normal
to
see shirts soiled in blood from ones own or from some
other person. We were so hungry that we could faint any
minute.
One by one, most were freed but we were kept till late
Friday evening without eating or drinking.
Late in the morning, I saw something I couldn’t believe.
Two young people, one armed and in military uniform and
the other with a blood-stained shirt from that painful
night: one was telling the other about what happened the
night before – each from his point of view. At times,
they were exchanging a laugh or two. They were brothers
who fought against each other the night before.