Country they fled has long tentacles

Regime taps Eritrean refugees for cash

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They thought coming to Canada would free them from the oppressive Eritrean regime, but many new Winnipeggers are being squeezed for money by agents of the government they fled.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 25/11/2011 (5154 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

They thought coming to Canada would free them from the oppressive Eritrean regime, but many new Winnipeggers are being squeezed for money by agents of the government they fled.

Daniel Awshek told the Free Press he was shocked when he first arrived and attended a community gathering — where he was hit up for money to support the dictatorial regime in the African country.

“They asked every family to pay $500 each for the Eritrean Defence Forces to fight against Ethiopia,” said Awshek, a nurse and refugee minister at the Eritrean Pentecostal Church.

Winnipeg Free Press
BORIS MINKEVICH/ WINNIPEG FREE PRESS 
Daniel Awshek (left) and Ghezae Hagos say seeking pro-government cash from refugees is inappropriate.
Winnipeg Free Press BORIS MINKEVICH/ WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Daniel Awshek (left) and Ghezae Hagos say seeking pro-government cash from refugees is inappropriate.

“That’s crazy. Let’s focus on child development and community development,” and not support fighting, he added.

When Awshek needed a transcript of his public health degree from the University of Asmara in Eritrea’s capital, he had to pay two per cent of his income and provide a copy of his income tax return. And anyone who wants a visa to visit Eritrea or an official document has to pay the annual two per cent tax.

He said it’s wrong to ask people to support the government that’s driven them out.

Men and women are conscripted out of high school and expected to serve the military for 16 months. Many Winnipeggers say that commitment ends up being years.

One man who came to Canada in 2008 said he fled the country when he realized his 16-month mandatory military service would never end. If he stayed, he believes he’d be stuck in the military for life earning 432 nakfa a month (about C$10 a month), he said.

He doesn’t want to be identified because he fears it will put his family in Eritrea at risk. His father was fined 50,000 nakfa by the government when it found out he left, he said.

In Winnipeg, he found a full-time job and wanted to register for university classes. He refused to pay the Eritrean agent in Winnipeg the two per cent tax to get his transcript from Asmara.

He’s even more adamantly opposed to pro-government agents in Winnipeg handling Eritrean refugee sponsorships.

As a government-sponsored refugee, he didn’t know where to go to sponsor his nephew and a friend. He applied through the Eritrean Community in Winnipeg Inc.

“Last year I got a call — ‘Can you come to the community centre? We have your sponsorship papers. There are errors. We want to correct it with you.’ “

He gave up a shift at work for the appointment at the centre on Hargrave Street.

“When I got there, there were 100 people,” he said. “I thought it was just me.” There were no documents for him to correct.

Instead, he said an agent for the Eritrean government got up and berated the crowd for sponsoring young people to come to Canada.

He was shocked.

“I just felt as if I was in Eritrea,” he said. “I was scared.”

The people running the community centre support the Eritrean government and are receiving information about the sponsored people, where they’re staying and what they’ve said about the regime, he said.

“It compromises the integrity of the sponsorship program,” said Ghezae Hagos, a journalist and refugee from Eritrea. He wants the Canadian government to make sure groups that sponsor refugees aren’t working with the government of the country they fled.

“We need to become aware of the concern,” said John Nychek, with Citizenship and Immigration Canada. “If some impropriety is confirmed, then I think we need to take a serious look at the sponsorship agreement-holder to see whatever the concern is and address it and alleviate those concerns.”

In Winnipeg, the president of the community centre said it has nothing to do with the government of Eritrea.

But a copy of a financial report one of its members gave the Free Press shows the biggest expense of the Eritrean Community in Winnipeg Inc. in 2000 was a $12,237.38 donation to the Eritrean Defence Forces.

“The community centre is one leg of the government of Eritrea,” said another refugee, through a translator.

carol.sanders@freepress.mb.ca

 

Leak reveals big squeeze

In a classified report made public by Wikileaks, U.S. Ambassador Ronald K. McMullen said the two per cent tax on Eritreans in the diaspora collected by embassies and local community centres accounts for 11 per cent of Eritrea’s GDP. Proof of payment is required to maintain family and property ties, he said.

“… Many Eritreans in the diaspora choose to remain silent rather than speak out against a government they disapprove of… it is common for the (Eritrean government) to arrest or harass family members of outspoken individuals.”

A resolution before the UN Security Council would ban the Eritrean government from collecting remittances from abroad. The UN already imposed sanctions against Eritrea demanding it cease arming, training and equipping armed groups and their members, including Al-Shabaab, which aimed to destabilize the region.

 

— sources: Engaging the Eritrean Diaspora, United Nations

Carol Sanders

Carol Sanders
Legislature reporter

Carol Sanders is a reporter at the Free Press legislature bureau. The former general assignment reporter and copy editor joined the paper in 1997. Read more about Carol.

Every piece of reporting Carol produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

 

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