Independence of Eritrea In April 1993, a
United Nations-supervised
referendum on independence was held, and the following month Eritrea achieved
de jure independence. Isaias was elected as the president of the State of Eritrea by the
National Assembly and declared the first
head of state, a position he has held ever since the end of the war for independence. Isaias undertook a series of economic reforms. In May 1994, he implemented a national service program in which individuals would serve for 18 months. Military training was the focus for the first six months, followed by awareness of the country and expansion of its agricultural sector. However, a parliamentary election scheduled in 2001 was later postponed indefinitely. Although police are responsible for upholding internal security and the armed forces' external security, eyewitness reports exist of the armed forces engaging with demobilizing soldiers or civilian militias to complete the hybrid tasks of both. Civil authorities sometimes involve themselves with security forces in an
abuse of power. In 2014, Isaias declared the 1997 constitution to be "dead" and announced plans for a new constitution. However, as of 2026, no new constitution has been proposed. On 18 September 2001, Afwerki closed all independent national press and prominent opposition leaders were arrested. 11 of the G-15 were arrested and as of 2026 have not been released. The key elements were to include ambitious infrastructure development campaigns both in terms of power, transport, and telecommunications, as well as with basic healthcare and educational facilities. According to the
World Bank, Eritrea's recent growth has been associated with the agricultural (one-third of the economy and 20 percent of gross domestic product (GDP)) and mining sectors (20 percent).
Real GDP grew by 12 percent in 2018, but fell 2.7 percent from 2015 to 2018.
Deflation existed from 2016 to 2018 due to a currency change, and continued in 2018 after economic and trade ties with Ethiopia were reestablished.'s Peter Clottey interviews Isaias in New York, 2011On 18 May 2012, Isaias said in a
VOA interview that the country's development over two decades of independence was "a success story". As a result of regional insecurity in 1998, Eritrea has a strong
fiscal policy caused by a sharp drop in capital spending and reductions in revenue. Fiscal pressures, however, are likely to increase. The government has banned independent newspapers and arrested journalists critical of Isaias since 2001, including
G-15: a group of People's Front for Democracy and Justice officials who appealed for an open election. Eritrea is closed to human-rights organizations, who are forced to obtain information from
émigrés. The government has been accused of
enforced disappearances; torture; arbitrary detention, censorship; libel; human trafficking; criminalizing
same-sex activity; arbitrary and unlawful violations of privacy, judicial independence, freedom of speech, association, movement and
religion; and forced labor (including national service
past the 18-month legal obligation). An August 2015
Human Rights Watch (HRW) report documented the use of unlawful force (torture and battery) by security authorities against prisoners, national service evaders, army deserters, asylum seekers without travel documents, and religious groups. In June 2018, a thirty-year-old man reportedly died as a result of torture and delayed medical treatment. He was arrested while attending the burial that March of Hajji Musa Mohammed Nur, director of an Islamic school.
Freedom in the World rated Eritrea "not free" in 2022; the country scored one out of 40 for
political rights and two out of 60 for
civil liberties.
Foreign relations Ethiopia During the
Ethiopian Civil War, the
Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) was initially inspired by the Eritreans and received assistance for their independence. By the 1980s and 1990s, the TPLF emerged as a powerful rebel group that increased its military skills in the revolutionary struggle. The groups disagreed and broke up in 1985. , a relic of the
Eritrean–Ethiopian War (1998–2000) Eritrea has engaged in border conflicts since its independence, most notably a
war between 1998 and 2000. The war began after Eritrea invaded Ethiopia over the disputed border of
Badme on 6 May 1998, and resulted in hundreds of thousands of deaths within two years. On 12 December 2000, Eritrea signed the
Algiers Agreement to end the war; however, the countries remained in a "no-war-no-peace" stalemate. Eritrea has security concerns about Ethiopia, particularly its support of weak, splintered Eritrean opposition groups. Isaias uses the disputed border to maintain a war footing and justify indefinite mass mobilization and repression. Eritrea supported Ethiopian rebel groups such as the
Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) and the
Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) to undermine regional Ethiopian influence. In
Somalia, Eritrea has trained, armed, and financed militias opposed to the Ethiopian government during its
transitional government. The UN Monitoring Group on Somalia recommended an embargo against Eritrea, Ethiopia and other states. In late 2008, the relationship between the countries was deemed strained; the Ethiopian Border Commission (EEBC) did not outline the border in November 2007. The United Nations Missions in Ethiopia and Eritrea (UNMEE) ended in 2008, and Eritrean troops briefly occupied the Temporary Security Zone. Ethiopia remained in control of the EEBC's border inside Eritrea and reached Badme, triggering mass mobilization and high troop concentrations in the area. Eritrea's unchanged stance reinforced the EEBC's decision, which was backed by international law; Ethiopia remained in
de facto compliance and had strong relations with the UN. On 16 September, Abiy signed another peace treaty with Isaias in
Jeddah. Saudi Foreign Minister
Adel al-Jubeir tweeted that the agreement "will contribute to strengthening security and stability in the region at large". This was widely acknowledged by numerous world leaders, with the
UAE Government awarding Isaias the
Order of Zayed (First Class) in recognition of his efforts to end the conflict. After July 2018, the
Ethiopian and
Eritrean intelligence agencies started a close cooperation. This worried Eritrean refugees in
Addis Ababa, some of whom were temporarily detained for three weeks, acquitted by Ethiopian courts, and only released two weeks after their acquittal. After several weeks of Ethiopian government denial of the presence of Eritrean troops in Ethiopia, the Ethiopian Prime Minister admitted to the presence of Eritrean troops in Ethiopia and agreed to withdraw them. Under international pressure, on 26 March 2021, after a meeting between Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and Isaias, it was announced that Eritrean troops would withdraw from the
Tigray Region.
Sudan Relations between Eritrea and
Sudan were initially hostile; shortly after independence in 1993, Eritrea charged Sudan with supporting the activities of
Eritrean Islamic Jihad, which carried out attacks against the Eritrean government. Eritrea broke relations with Sudan at the end of 1994, became a strong supporter of the
Sudan People's Liberation Movement/
Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), and permitted the opposition
National Democratic Alliance to locate its headquarters in the former Sudan embassy in Asmara. A year later, Isaias and Sudanese president
Omar al-Bashir met for the first time since 2001 in
Khartoum. On 10 May 2014, the state-owned
Sudan News Agency announced during Isaias' visit to the Al Jeili oil refinery that Sudan had agreed to supply Eritrea with fuel and boost its economic partnership. It was also reported that the Sudanese Electricity Company planned to supply a power line from
Kassala to the Eritrean town of
Teseney. On 4 May 2021, Isaias visited Khartoum to discuss the ongoing border dispute between Ethiopia and Sudan. In conversation with
Abdel-Fattah al-Burhan, head of Sudan's
Transitional Sovereignty Council, he raised regional issues and the long-time dispute over the
Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.
Djibouti Relations between Eritrea and
Djibouti date back to 1991. The countries waged war in April 1996 when Djibouti accused Eritrea of shelling
Ras Doumeira, a small village bounded by Ethiopia's
Afar Region. Eritrea was also accused of redrawing the map of the area. Eritrea denied both claims. The conflict worsened until May 1996, when Eritrean forces retreated from the area and Djibouti retracted the allegations. The Eritrean–Ethiopian War was a threat to and an opportunity for Djibouti. Ethiopia diverted trade through Djibouti via Eritrean ports, strengthening economic ties in accordance with the 1996 protocol. In 1999, Djibouti and Ethiopia signed a military cooperation agreement. In 1998, Eritrea accused Djibouti of using its port to supply military equipment to Ethiopia. In June of that year, Djibouti deployed military force in the north to avoid an incursion during the war; French troops were involved with their Djiboutian counterparts. In 1999, France sent two frigates to guard against any approaches toward Ethiopia and Eritrea. Djiboutian President
Hassan Gouled Aptidon's November 1998 attempt to mediate the Eritrean–Ethiopian War during the
Organization of African Unity (OAU) summit was rejected by Eritrea for perceived partiality. Djibouti expelled its Eritrean ambassadors, and Tekest Ghebrai, an Eritrean national and the former executive secretary of the
Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), was dismissed.
Russia at the Kremlin in
Moscow on 31 May 2023Along with Belarus, Syria, and North Korea, Eritrea was one of only four countries not including
Russia to vote against a
United Nations General Assembly resolution condemning Russia's
invasion of Ukraine in 2022. In July 2023, Isaias attended the
Russia–Africa Summit in Saint Petersburg and met with Russian President
Vladimir Putin. During the meeting with Putin, Isaias openly denied the existence of a war between Russia and
Ukraine.
Forto incident About 100 soldiers broke into
Forto, the building housing the information-ministry correspondent for state television Eri-TV, on 21 January 2013 and surrounded the staff. They forced station director Asmelash Abraha to read a demand to release all prisoners of conscience and political prisoners and to implement the 1997 constitution. After he read two sentences, the station went off the air. Isaias' bodyguards were urged to protect him, his palace, and his airport. Eri-TV returned to the air at 10 a.m. to report a snowstorm in Paris. The mutiny subsided after the government negotiated the release of the ministry's employees. ==Personal life==