@kiflaymaebel1@YouTube Just shut up get lost they are just like you lairs and a tiffs you will never find a woman’s running a way from any thing the felled or sports that is why most of you guys don’t have any credibility or integrity but talking nonsense::
🇪🇷| President Isaias Afewerki on #RedSea#MaritimeSecurity
"Each littoral State & its people must be committed to the fundamental principle of safeguarding, as a sovereign entity, its maritime endowments through its own internal capabilities."
#Eritrea#HornOfAfrica#Geopolitics
#ኤርትራውያን#መንእሰያት_ህግደፍ ሎሚ መዓልቲ ኣብ ስዊዘርላን ብወግዒ ተኸፊቱ።
#Welcome to the official live stream of the Opening Ceremony of the 20th YPFDJ Euro Conference, held in Switzerland from April 3-6, 2026.
Eritrean cyclist Monaliza Araya is set to compete today in the Under-23 category at the 2025 #UCI Road World Championships in #Kigali, #Rwanda. She enters the race as the reigning 2025 #Eritrean Champion.
Wishing her the best of luck!
@MichaelHadgu87@UCI_cycling#Eritrea 🇪🇷🚴♀️
#Eritrea & #USA
The meeting concluded with both parties agreeing to continue exchanges in the coming months, signaling a cautious but hopeful start to renewed bilateral relations.
Statement delivered by H. E. Osman Saleh, Minister of Foreign Affairs, of the State of #Eritrea
Special High-Level Event on Climate Action
Eritrea like many nations on the frontlines, has been experiencing severe and escalating impacts of climate change. Increasing temperatures and erratic precipitation are driving disasters that undermine our economy and threaten the livelihoods of our people.
In the face of these challenges, the State of Eritrea is fully committed to a path of climate resilience and low-carbon development. As a testimony of this, we have prepared our ambitious third Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC), which will be submitted prior to COP30.
In this regard our message today is focused on three pillars: ambition, clarity and partnership.
First, on ambition: Eritrea is putting forward a robust conditional target which represents its highest possible ambition. With our internal resources, we commit to an 8.6% reduction below business-as-usual. If international support is secured, Eritrea can do much more in achieving a 24.4% reduction by 2030. This will actually bend our emissions curve downward, bringing them below our 2018 levels.
Second, on clarity: We have a clear, investment-ready pipeline to get there. Our strategy is focused on two transformative pillars: a clean energy transformation and large-scale, nature-based solutions.
And third, on partnership: Achieving this highest ambition requires partnership. The total investment needed is approximately 1.3 billion USD. While we are investing significantly ourselves, we call on our development partners to support 63.4% of this total. This is not merely a request; it is an invitation to invest in high-impact projects that will deliver measurable results for the climate and for the most vulnerable.
Eritrea is ready to do its part within its internal capacity to deter the effects of Climate change in particular and environmental degradation at large. The Government of the state of Eritrea remains politically committed in mobilizing its financial and human resource. Having said that, we call upon the international community and specially most polluter countries to live up to their historical responsibility in doing what is required from them, by taking the lead in addressing ground breaking measures domestically and sharing the knowledge, skill and technology they acquired and mobilizing adequate financial resource that are reliable and accessible to who needs and when they need it most. Eritrea believes concerted effort can make a big difference.
https://t.co/w72BjccUAt
#AbiyAhmedAli Wedi Beshasha is not leading Ethiopia he is serving the #UAE. His ties are not partnership but master–slave obedience. Ethiopia’s sovereignty is being sold for his survival.
This is not partnership. This is slavery disguised as politics.
#Ethiopia#NoMoreSlavery
Good Read - A Reckless Fantasy Threatening Regional Stability and International Law; by Shabait Staff
The dangers of Ethiopia’s irredentist strategy extend far beyond its borders. Revisionist claims and reckless rhetoric risk destabilizing an already fragile region, inflaming mistrust, and undermining prospects for cooperation. Ethiopia’s neighbours, already wary of its erratic policies, cannot be expected to accommodate unlawful ambitions without consequence.
https://t.co/j79vMH2xw8
Abiy Ahmed’s reckless threats to seize Eritrea’s Port Assab—while denying Eritrea the right to act in self-defense—are not just delusional, they are dangerous. By openly declaring that Ethiopia will “take Assab by force,” Abiy has effectively given Eritrea carte blanche to take preemptive measures anywhere in Ethiopia.
This reckless adventurism revives the same toxic myths that fueled decades of bloodshed: the idea that population size, geography, or nostalgia can redraw maps and override sovereignty. As Ambassador Sophia noted, this is “cartographic wishful thinking disguised as strategy”—ambition replacing law, nostalgia replacing diplomacy. Minister Yemane rightly called it “political blasphemy of the highest order,” a red line no one should contemplate crossing.
Meanwhile, Abiy fantasizes about being Africa’s climate guru, building a nuclear-armed Ethiopia, and striking oil riches—all while Ethiopia is shackled by IMF debt, consumed by internal wars, and pressed hard by Egypt and Sudan over the Nile. Glittering development pledges are rolled out, not as genuine visions of progress, but as authoritarian tools to mislead Ethiopians and deceive the world. But development cannot take place under these conditions—where war, repression, and delusion replace stability, law, and cooperation.
Abiy is not a visionary. He is a confused leader adrift in fantasy, destabilizing the Horn of Africa and endangering its future. And by his own reckless words, he has legitimized Eritrea’s right to act decisively in defense of its sovereignty.
#Eritrea #Ethiopia #HornOfAfrica #Assab #RedSea #Geopolitics #Sovereignty #InternationalLaw #AbiyAhmed #Authoritarianism