Google – AFP, 10 October 2013
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Coffins of
child victims in a hangar at Lampedusa airport on October 5, 2013
after a boat
with migrants sank killing more than 300 men, women and children
(AFP, Alberto
Pizzoli)
|
Nairobi —
Eritrea's government has issued a furious attack on the United States, blaming
it for the deaths of more than 300 men, women and children last week in a
shipwreck off the Italian island of Lampedusa.
A statement
from Asmara accused the country's enemies of using human trafficking as a
"ploy" aimed at "paralysing the indomitable people and
government of Eritrea".
"The
prime responsibility for the gross loss of human life... squarely rests on the
US administration that assigns agents of international and regional bodies, in
addition to deploying various officials and spy agencies of different
governments," said the statement, which was released late Wednesday.
It did not
make fully clear how Washington was responsible for last Thursday's shipwreck
off Italy, which saw scores of Eritrean migrants drowning near the
Mediterranean island of Lampedusa after their boat caught fire.
Asmara has
a long track record of accusing America -- and specifically the CIA -- of
trying to damage the country, especially because Washington is seen as close to
Eritrea's neighbour and rival Ethiopia.
The
statement, which warned of "various forms of political, military and
economic conspiracies", also called for an investigation into the tragedy,
saying the "criminal human traffickers (were) in violation of all
international laws and human values".
The
statement is the first mention of the tragedy in state-run media in the
country, ranked last worldwide, below North Korea, for press freedom by media
watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF).
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Rescued
migrants on a boat near Lampedusa on October 3 (GUARDIA
COSTIERA/AFP)
|
The news
was first relayed to the Red Sea state via a Paris-based radio station,
although Eritrean Foreign Minister Osman Saleh Mohammed offered his condolences
to the families of the victims from New York.
Those who
flee the country are viewed as traitors by the government.
The UN
estimates as many as 3,000 Eritreans flood into Sudan and Ethiopia every month,
from a country of some five million people and about the size of England.
Many are
running from open-ended military conscription imposed by the isolated
government of the Red Sea state.
Eritrea,
which broke away from Ethiopia in 1991 after a brutal 30-year independence
struggle, has consistently raised fears domestically that Addis Ababa is
scheming to re-take the country.
This has
allowed the government to conscript most adults into the army or force them to
perform compulsory labour.
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