Eritrea inder democratic dictator Afwerki continue to prosper have set a more humane system that shun western aid. Afwerki is quoted saying that western aid continue to cripple africa ability to innovate ways of self sufficiency in food.
I was intrigued with this idea of
Africa's North Korea as some sort of self-sufficient paradise, which the other North Korea too claims it is. So I took a closer look. The place is, and has been getting aid (including food aid) from various places, but it's channeled in a way that is not entirely obvious.
Mr. Afwerki---if that's his real name, then it's quite appropriate---did indeed vow to make his country self-sufficient. To that end, especially around 2011, he kicked out a lot of foreigners. Next? Not entirely what one might have expected.
He then went on to negotiate a
Strategic Partnership Cooperation Framework with the UN, under which the "donors" who were kicked out put up most of the money, but because it's coming via the UN, Eritrea is supposedly not getting any "aid" from "donor". And, of course, they don't need food aid; but they have no objection to "nutritional assistance" and "famine-prevention assistance". From the UN.
According to the UN:
donor community.
http://www.un-eritrea.org/news/donor_briefing.htmlThe "donor countries", of course, have to tell their taxpayers how their money is being spent; they can't just go around throwing money about, all lumped as "to the UN" or whatever. So if one goes, "donor" by "donor", through the relevant public information, a better picture of the real story emerges. For example:
Project profile: Eritrea - Food and Nutrition Assistance - Development and Peace 2015:
Eritrea is facing a serious humanitarian situation due to the effects on food production of both chronic drought and the exodus of an increasing number of young men to avoid national military service. Although government restrictions make it difficult to assess the situation in Eritrea, current estimates indicate that between 1.4 and 2.7 million Eritreans (out of a population of 6.5 million) will face acute food insecurity in 2015. Global acute malnutrition rates have been reported at above 50%, or more than triple the accepted 'emergency threshold' of 15%, in some rural communities, a situation that is exacerbated by extremely low levels of access to safe water sources and proper sanitation facilities outside urban areas.
http://www.acdi-cida.gc.ca/cidaweb/cpo.nsf/fWebCSAZEn?ReadForm&idx=00&CC=ER#countryonlyAnd right now, it looks like Eritrea has decided to accept EU aid, in return for keeping more of its people away from Europe:
The European Union aims to agree on 200 million euros (145.65 million pounds) in development aid for Eritrea by year-end to help stem an exodus of people from the poor Horn of Africa nation to Europe, a senior EU official said on Thursday.
...
The new EU programme was drawn up after Asmara offered an opening for renewed cooperation.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-europe-migrants-eritrea-idUKKCN0RH1MU20150917(From the latest news, it looks like a done deal.)