Home WebMail
| Calgary -1.1°C
Regions Advertise Login Contact
Action News Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Canada
  • US
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • US pushes for ceasefire in Sudan’s civil war as Kordofan violence escalates
  • Bangladesh holds state mourning, funeral for slain uprising activist
  • How chess helped me understand grief
  • UN’s top court to hold Myanmar genocide hearings in January
  • “Moral courage” needed after Bondi shooting
  • Conviction overturned in murder of rap star Jam Master Jay, Run-DMC member
  • Anthony Joshua knocks out Jake Paul in sixth round of heavyweight bout
  • US sanctions more relatives, associates of Venezuelan President Maduro
  • Trump’s name added to Kennedy Center exterior, one day after vote to rename
  • Villareal vs Barcelona: La Liga – teams, start, lineups, kickoff
  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,395
  • Trump government suspends visa lottery linked to Brown University suspect
  • Trump says US launched large-scale attacks on ISIL in Syria
  • Al-Majd Europe: The shell company involved in forced evacuations from Gaza
  • Five key takeaways from US State Secretary Rubio’s year-end briefing
  • Musk wins US appeal to restore 2018 Tesla pay package
  • Joshua knocks out Paul to win heavyweight fight – as it happened
  • Greece rescues more than 500 asylum seekers off coast of Crete
  • ‘Trump-Kennedy Center’: Trump’s name added to venue’s facade
  • US Justice Department begins releasing government Epstein files
  • Trump announces new deal with pharma companies to cut drug prices
  • 29-day-old baby boy dies of hypothermia as temperatures drop in Gaza
  • UN chief Guterres condemns Houthi detention of 10 more UN staff in Yemen
  • Is Russia’s war on Ukraine coming to an end? Putin won’t say
  • Pro-Palestinian hunger strikers face death in jail, doctors say
  • US pushes for ceasefire in Sudan’s civil war as Kordofan violence escalates
  • Bangladesh holds state mourning, funeral for slain uprising activist
  • How chess helped me understand grief
  • UN’s top court to hold Myanmar genocide hearings in January
  • “Moral courage” needed after Bondi shooting
  • Conviction overturned in murder of rap star Jam Master Jay, Run-DMC member
  • Anthony Joshua knocks out Jake Paul in sixth round of heavyweight bout
  • US sanctions more relatives, associates of Venezuelan President Maduro
  • Trump’s name added to Kennedy Center exterior, one day after vote to rename
  • Villareal vs Barcelona: La Liga – teams, start, lineups, kickoff
  • Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,395
  • Trump government suspends visa lottery linked to Brown University suspect
  • Trump says US launched large-scale attacks on ISIL in Syria
  • Al-Majd Europe: The shell company involved in forced evacuations from Gaza
  • Five key takeaways from US State Secretary Rubio’s year-end briefing
  • Musk wins US appeal to restore 2018 Tesla pay package
  • Joshua knocks out Paul to win heavyweight fight – as it happened
  • Greece rescues more than 500 asylum seekers off coast of Crete
  • ‘Trump-Kennedy Center’: Trump’s name added to venue’s facade
  • US Justice Department begins releasing government Epstein files
  • Trump announces new deal with pharma companies to cut drug prices
  • 29-day-old baby boy dies of hypothermia as temperatures drop in Gaza
  • UN chief Guterres condemns Houthi detention of 10 more UN staff in Yemen
  • Is Russia’s war on Ukraine coming to an end? Putin won’t say
  • Pro-Palestinian hunger strikers face death in jail, doctors say
The Eritreans fleeing to Ethiopia

The Eritreans fleeing to Ethiopia

Relations may be tense between the neighbouring countries but some Eritreans are crossing the disputed border.

By Al Jazeera Published 2017-04-27 08:36 Updated 2017-04-27 08:37 3 min read Source: Al Jazeera
Explained Human Rights Science & Technology Poverty and Development

Badme, on the border between Eritrea and Ethiopia – The disputed border town of Badme is where war broke out between Ethiopia and Eritrea in 1998. It lasted for two years and devastated both countries. In 2002, a Hague boundary commission ruled that Badme was part of Eritrea. It was a ruling that both countries initially accepted. But Ethiopian troops continue to occupy the town.

Nowadays an uneasy standoff exists between the two country’s armies along the still-contested border a few kilometres north of Badme, at the tip of Ethiopia’s Yirga Triangle, which juts into Eritrea.

But now there are others moving along the border: Eritreans who travel through the region’s hills, trying to keep out of sight of their own military, to escape into Ethiopia.

“After crossing at night we tried to sleep but could hear the hyenas around us,” said 22-year-old mother-of-two Yordanos. “We started shouting and then Ethiopian soldiers came for us.”

Once picked up by the Ethiopian army, Eritrean refugees are deposited at Badme’s so-called “entry point”, a compound of simple buildings that marks the start of their journey to gain asylum in Ethiopia.

With Yordanos is another mother-of-two, as well as 15 boys and young men aged between 16 and 20 who crossed to avoid enforced and indefinite military service.

“After receiving a letter to join up I hid for five months in the rural areas,” said one 18-year-old. “But then I heard the government was looking for me, so I crossed.”

There are 12 entry points along Ethiopia’s 910km border with Eritrea from where refugees are moved to a screening and registration centre in the town of Endabaguna. Afterwards they are assigned to one of four refugee camps in the Tigray region bordering Eritrea.

“We are brothers and sisters,” said Luel Abera, a reception coordinator at the entry point in the town of Adinbried, about 50km southeast of Badme. Most highland Eritreans from around the capital, Asmara, share the same language, the same Christian Orthodox religion and the same culture as Tigray’s Ethiopian inhabitants.

In February 2017, 3,367 Eritrean refugees arrived in Ethiopia, according to the Ethiopian Administration for Refugee and Returnee Affairs.

Ethiopia currently houses around 165,000 Eritrean refugees and asylum seekers, according to the UN refugee agency. Thousands more Eritreans are thought to live in the country outside the asylum system.

“They even come through the Afar and the world’s lowest depression,” said Estifanos Gebremedhin from Ethiopia’s Administration for Refugee and Returnee Affairs.

In the Afar’s Danakil Depression, a desert straddling the Eritrean border to the east of the Tigray highlands, daytime temperatures frequently soar above 50 degrees Celsius, accompanied by a fierce gale known as the Gara (Fire Wind).

“They are using every chance they can,” Estifanos said.

Share this page

  • 𝕏 X/Twitter
  • 🔗 LinkedIn
  • 📘 Facebook
  • 💬 WhatsApp
  • ✉️ Email
Action News logo

Action News

A division of WestNet Continental Broadcasting

About

Part of WestNet N.A.

Action.News

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Action News Code of Ethics

Connect

  • Facebook.com/ActionNews
  • YouTube.com/@actionnew
  • Twitch.com/ActionNews
  • WhatsApp
  • Contact the Newsroom

© 2025 Action News™. All Rights Reserved.

Action News is a trademark of WestNet Continental Broadcasting. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

🔴 LIVE
Action News Live ✖
🔊 Click to unmute