Thread: Eritrea
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10-08-16 01:23 #96Senior Member

Posts: 268No change
Happy to learn that things did not change since several years ago (cf my posts). I spent three weeks with a cheerful nice girl (at 10 Usd a day) who covered me with gifts when I left. I picked her first night in this bar.
Originally Posted by OnlyTeco
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07-27-16 11:37 #95Senior Member

Posts: 57Recent update
I am back from Asmara and for anyone looking for girls there is a small hotel with a bar beside Asmara palace, choose your girl at night and enjoy.
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11-29-14 18:44 #94Regular Member

Posts: 5So they "allow" you now to freely change your foreign currencies?
Originally Posted by Botaki6
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10-14-14 07:41 #93Senior Member

Posts: 1195No more currency declaration
As long as you bring less then 10.000 Dollar, you don't need to fill out a currecy declaration anymore.
Originally Posted by Interracial
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Valid since middle 2013.
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09-07-14 14:59 #92Senior Member

Posts: 66Asmara
I have a business trip coming up, will be in Asmara for 4 days in November, anyone with some updates?
Originally Posted by SHewate
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11-03-13 10:00 #91Regular Member

Posts: 1Hello guys,
I am going to Asmara next week so could you help me where can I find girls and about the money for over night thank you.
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09-17-13 15:35 #90Regular Member

Posts: 2Going to Eritrea in December 2013
Hello guys,
I have read the whole blogs from the beginning. The only thing what my suprised was that the blogs stopped in somewhere in 2011. Has somebody recently been in Eritrea? Are the described cases like currency declaration, hotels and bars to pick up chicks are still the same or something has changed?
Thank you.
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05-20-13 01:42 #89Regular Member

Posts: 5Visiting Asmara
I will be visiting Asmara in late June, and seeing that this thread is almost 2 years since the last posting, I'm wondering if any of you would be willing to shed the light on the scene of Asmara? Mainly, I'm coming to see the wonderful Art Deco architecture of Asmara as a tourist, but I'd be happy to greet the locals and get to know what Asmara's all about. So any latest info about hangouts would be appreciated!
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07-19-11 21:37 #88Senior Member

Posts: 250You are right but a bit of trust and luck. No problem
I lived in Eritrea so I had a bit of time to meet a girl who became my regular. Once she depended on me for cash, she knew if she cheated me she was gone so it worked out just fine. But if you are only there for a small time it may be risky. But definitely pay them in dollars at 40 Nakfa to the dollar you should not pay more than $15 for an overnight session. You could test her with small amounts first, like $20 and see what happens.
Originally Posted by Steve German
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07-19-11 18:31 #87Senior Member

Posts: 489Do you really believe I ll giving my money to a local girl?
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07-19-11 14:01 #86Senior Member

Posts: 250Yes, under declare your hard currency and never change it yourself, the girls will
Hope the currency is clear now, what you declare in hard currency when you arrive is compared against what you cashed while there and if it doesn't add up to what you have left over when you leave, you can get trouble. All of this is done on paper (what you declare, what you cash into Nakfa) I strongly urge you to under declare and put the hard currency in your crotch, they don't Xray you just your luggage. I never was XRayed. The girls will gladly change your currency and get somebody to change it for you. I guess you have to trust the girl.
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07-06-11 21:27 #85Senior Member

Posts: 489But enough is enough; there are also other countries.
On this planet
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07-06-11 17:21 #84Senior Member

Posts: 63Selam
Okay, that was the clarification I was looking for. I couldn't understand how the gvnt was going to sweat people about declarations when they are leaving, but you explained it by saying they give people a "stamped receipt". I have never been to a country that worried about money exchanged. There were times I needed my passport or they gave me a receipt and I think they tracked those.
Originally Posted by Tigedejade
[View Original Post]
Transactions because of the employee and not the tourist.
I was worried about strip searching because I carry a tube sock that goes around my calf. I always carry this simple piece of cloth with the bulk of my money. I was thinking of hiding maybe a $100 bill in there and say I just over looked it. If they don't strip you down, then can you just outright lie and under declare? It seems like they have a trust system if they just ask you what you have.
I asked my Eritrean friend about her Eritrean friend who got caught with extra currencies, how did she get caught and she said they saw the money from the x-ray system. They fined her and kicked her loose. I was concerned after reading the incident with the tourist that gave euros and was almost jailed. I have a bad habit of giving US dollars along side of local currencies.
I don't plan to spend a lot since I know my friend will insist that I stay at her family's place, but I will still bring good money because that is how I roll. I would rather just give them (the lovelies) a good amount of Nakfa and not have to worry about pissing off any official. I am probably only going to go there once-unless something magical happens and then I want to go back.
They say I look like the Pres. So maybe I should be getting some free play. I am just going to experience the people and their culture and if I get any action then that will be an added bonus, I am not trying to conquer the women like I do in other countries.
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06-27-11 23:06 #83Senior Member

Posts: 268I see there is no change on this topic of currency exchange and blackmarket since my last trip (cf my long report)
Originally Posted by Thaijuan14
[View Original Post]
If you come as a tourist : the critical moment is when you ENTER in the country at the airport.
You are not stripped! But in an african desorder, you have to declare on a paper the currencies you carry with you. A stamped receipt of your declaration is given back to you and each time you will change strong currencies against Nakfa (at official exchange offices owned by the state; or in some authorised currency dealers hotels) ; your precious stamped copy will be stamped with deduction of currencies officially exchanged;
By difference, when you will leave, the customs at the airport will not strip you, but ask you to show your remaining currencies that you are fully entitled to bring back home.
If you cannot show these currencies in hand; it is the proof for them that you exchanged money at half rate on black market. As currencies disappeared without an official exchange!
Then fine (?) or jail (?) or call at your embassy. And in any case you might be blocked to miss your flight (as my embassy told me: once a group of tourists of my nationality visited the country and gave here and there tips or gratuities in euros. The consulate had to plead that it was mistake of simple tourists not currency smuggling. And they were blocked several days!)
So never give currencies as a gift to anybody EXCEPT the currencies you underdeclare when arriving in the country (so I did to my girl friend last time dividing by two my mongering cost. As she might change my currencies at black market and for her it represented the double. Personnally I never changed in blackmarket in the streets and do not advise to do it as it my be a police spy!)
The technique is to UNDERDECLARE when you arrive (and show exactly the difference at customs when you leave. You will not be stripped: if in fact you have more remaining currencies because you would have been especially reasonnable. As was my situation with my sweetie at USD 10 a day, no problem I just showed the exact difference and hidded the remaining in my pockets!)
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06-23-11 13:22 #82Senior Member

Posts: 250Is there a double standard for natives and foreigners?
Absolutely with Eritrea showing the worst extremes. Everywhere in Africa there is a 2 tier pricing system where foreigners get over-charged compared to locals since they don't know what the local prices are. On top of that, my 1 year in Eritrea was nothing but 'backwards nationalistic racism' where the elites (Eritreans at the UN, landlords etc) would tell you Eritrea is a 'peaceful' knowing full well that 1% of its population escapes to Sudan to get out of the lack of freedom and torture and imprisonment for anyone who gets caught escaping or criticizes the dicktatorship. And Eritreans can't accept any form of criticism. I've seen grown men (who have been in combat) behave like children anytime Eritrea is criticized.
Smuggle your dollars in, the going rate for long time is about 500 Nakfa, that's about $15 at black market rate of $1 = 40 Nakfa








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