African Nation's Response to Aid: No, Thanks

Eritrea refuses food and money, raising worries over isolation
By Jason Farago,  Newser Staff
Posted Oct 2, 2007 1:42 PM CDT

Eritrea, one of the world's poorest nations, has a novel response to offers of foreign aid: refusal. President Isaias Afwerki argues that African nations that accept money from the World Bank or food from the UN are "crippled societies." In a time of global connection, the LA Times looks at a country that's willfully shutting itself down.

"It's like they have self-imposed sanctions; they're turning into an Albania or North Korea," says one American diplomat. The president, once hailed as a democratic hero, now seems an autocrat. Afwerki has many in Washington worried, and US accusations that Eritrea sponsors Somalian terrorists are straining relations further. But the president's message is simple: "Leave us alone." (More Eritrea stories.)

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