Since last month the government of Eritrea is preoccupied in advertising and facilitating the exportation of poor women to Kuwait for exchange of hard currency. The scheme is designed to raise hard currency to the government by sending the poor women who are suffering from extreme poverty as the result of the government policy to work in Kuwait as cleaners- exploiting them for being poor. Under this scheme the poor women enter contractual agreement for a period of two years with a Kuwaiti company to work as cleaners and will be paid monthly salary of USD 173. The criteria to get permission to make the contractual agreement deal are: - the women must be over 25 years old and married before 1998 and must have children or must be mothers;
- their husbands who most of them, except the martyrs, are away in the national service must sign statement that express their consents to their wives’ work abroad;
- the women must enter agreements for a monthly salary of USD 173 from which they would cover their food consumption costs;
- The women must enter agreements with the government of Eritrea that deny them their right to receive salary in hard currency. According to this agreement the government will have the absolute control of the remaining money after covering of the costs of food where the money will be transferred to the banks in Eritrea and the government will distribute the money to their families at the official exchange rate (USD 1 = 15 Nakfa), while the market exchange rate is at USD 1 = 40 Nakfa.
Given the miserable living conditions the women are experiencing and the level of poverty prevalence in the country, large numbers of women are going to Kuwait to work, leaving their children behind without thorough assessments of the social and economic problems that lie ahead of them. It is known that the gulf countries have poor records of foreign workers abuses. The implications are that as the men are absent from the families, tied up in the national service, the children are being left parentless, becoming orphans while their parents are still alive. This will create social crisis in the country. Also as there are no or little economic gains that would accrue to the families of the working women because it is likely that larger part of their salary will be used to cover the costs of the food, the women would be left only with small part of their salaries which becomes nothing when exchanged at the official exchange rate, putting them overall on the loser side. The only beneficiary from this scheme is the government because it is getting the much needed hard currency from the poverty it has created in the first place.






Noting his conditions, the health personnel collaborated and extended their support to him by providing him accommodation to sleep with them (as the temperature is relatively better outside than in the underground cell and there is fresh air outside) and supplied him food from their own rations which were relatively better than the food provided to the prisoners. Later in that night, the prison officer (now I forgot his name) who was next in rank to “Wedi Granite” in authority learned that the health personnel had collaborated with the patient and he was very much angry that Kibrom had been staying outside the underground cell. He threatened the health personnel with punishment for their actions and ordered Kibrom to be returned to the underground cell.
Sources from Asmara (Eritrea) indicate that the Afwerki administration has been on a panic mood since the day the UN has passed the resolution to impose sanctions on Eritrea. President Isaias Afwerki has fallen into old proven tactics that served him well in times of crisis. Information leaked out from Colonel Tesfaldet Habteselasie office (President’s Office) indicate that as a number of people that have been sidelined for a long time (in the Orwellian language of the PFDJ ruling party, “frozen”) are being “reactivated” to resume important posts, various reshufflings are also being made.