Flag Description

red isosceles triangle (based on the hoist side) dividing the flag into two right triangles; the upper triangle is green, the lower one is blue; a gold wreath encircling a gold olive branch is centered on the hoist side of the red triangle; green stands for the country's agriculture economy, red signifies the blood shed in the fight for freedom, and blue symbolizes the bounty of the sea; the wreath-olive branch symbol is similar to that on the first flag of Eritrea from 1952; the shape of the red triangle broadly mimics the shape of the country

Background:After independence from Italian colonial control in 1941 and 10 years of British administrative control, the UN established Eritrea as an autonomous region within the Ethiopian federation in 1952. Ethiopia's full annexation of Eritrea as a province 10 years later sparked a violent 30-year struggle for independence that ended in 1991 with Eritrean rebels defeating government forces. Eritreans overwhelmingly approved independence in a 1993 referendum. ISAIAS Afworki has been Eritrea's only president since independence; his rule, particularly since 2001, has been highly autocratic and repressive. His government has created a highly militarized society by pursuing an unpopular program of mandatory conscription into national service, sometimes of indefinite length. A two-and-a-half-year border war with Ethiopia that erupted in 1998 ended under UN auspices in December 2000. A UN peacekeeping operation was established that monitored a 25 km-wide Temporary Security Zone. The Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission (EEBC) created in April 2003 was tasked "to delimit and demarcate the colonial treaty border based on pertinent colonial treaties (1900, 1902, and 1908) and applicable international law." The EEBC on 30 November 2007 remotely demarcated the border, assigning the town of Badme to Eritrea, despite Ethiopia's maintaining forces there from the time of the 1998-2000 war. Eritrea insisted that the UN terminate its peacekeeping mission on 31 July 2008. Eritrea has accepted the EEBC's "virtual demarcation" decision and repeatedly called on Ethiopia to remove its troops. Ethiopia has not accepted the demarcation decision, and neither party has entered into meaningful dialogue to resolve the impasse. Eritrea is subject to several UN Security Council Resolutions (from 2009, 2011, and 2012) imposing various military and economic sanctions, in view of evidence that it has supported armed opposition groups in the region.

Total Area: 117,600 sq km

Land Area:101,000 sq km

Water Area:16,600 sq km

Land Boundries Total:1,840 km

Border Countries:Djibouti 125 km, Ethiopia 1,033 km, Sudan 682 km

Coastline:2,234 km (mainland on Red Sea 1,151 km, islands in Red Sea 1,083 km)

Lowest Point:near Kulul within the Danakil Depression -75 m

Highest Point:Soira 3,018 m

Population:6,380,803 (July 2014 est.)

Population Growth Rate:2.3% (2014 est.)

Religion:Muslim, Coptic Christian, Roman Catholic, Protestant

Literacy(%):0.689

Literacy(%) Male:0.795

Literacy(%) Female:59% (2011 est.)

Independence Day:24 May 1993 (from Ethiopia)

National Holiday:Independence Day, 24 May (1993)

Add Comment

* Required information
1000
Drag & drop images (max 3)
What is the sum of 1 + 2 + 3?
Captcha Image
Powered by Commentics

Comments

No comments yet. Be the first!