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United Nations Security Council Resolution 1907, adopted on December 23, 2009, imposed an arms embargo on Eritrea, travel bans on its leaders, and froze the assets of some of the country's political and military officials after accusing the Eritrean government of aiding Al-Shabaab in Somalia and reportedly refusing to withdraw troops from its disputed border with Djibouti, following a conflict ...
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Eritrea's government maintains a “national service” program that conscripts Eritreans into prolonged and indefinite terms of forced labor, generally under abusive conditions. It is through this forced labor program that mining companies run the most direct risk of involvement in the Eritrean government's human rights violations.
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The economy of Eritrea has undergone extreme changes after the War of Independence.It experienced considerable growth in recent years, indicated by an improvement in gross domestic product in 2011 of 8.7 percent and in 2012 of 7.5% over 2011, [3] and has a total of $8.090 billion as of 2020.
The Bisha Mine in Eritrea, where the Nevsun plaintiffs worked. Nevsun Resources Ltd (Nevsun)—later acquired by Zijin Mining—was a mining firm incorporated under British Columbia law and headquartered in Vancouver, British Columbia. It held a 60 percent stake in Bisha Mining Share Company (BMSC).
Bisha could refer to one of the following. A place, location or structure: Bisha - a city in Saudi Arabia Bisha University; Wadi Bisha - a wadi beside the city of Bisha in Saudi Arabia; Bishia (also called Bisha) - a small locality and the terminus of the Eritrean Railway; Bisha Mine - a zinc-copper mine near Bishia in Eritrea; A ceremony:
There are four Nara dialects according to Rilly (2010:178): [6] Higir, the standard literary dialect spoken just to the north of Barentu, Eritrea; Mogoreeb, spoken from the outskirts of Haykota to Bisha village in western Eritrea