Eritrean Militia for Internal Security (Italian Empire)

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Eritrean Militia for Internal Security
Milizia Eritrea per la Sicurezza Interna
GNR - Insignia - ISR - 3145m3d.jpg
Active1968 - present
CountryEritreaItalianaFlag.png Principality of Eritrea
AllegianceItalian Empire Flag RSI - ISR.jpg Italian Empire
BranchGNR - Insignia - ISR - 3145m3d.jpg M.V.S.N.
TypeFascist militia
RoleInternal security
Size30,000
Garrison/HQAsmara
Motto(s)Anche se tutti, noi no
Commanders
Current
commander
Consul General Gioacchino Rossi

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security (Italian: Milizia Eritrea per la Sicurezza Interna, M.E.S.I) is the paramilitary militia of the Principality of Eritrea.

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is composed of citizens released from the national service. Italians and select Eritreans between the ages of 18 and 50 who are not currently engaged in national service must complete weapons training and accept the weapons and uniforms issued to them by the government.

The members of the M.E.S.I. keep their current jobs but they have to undertake military training prior to starting their function and are given an assault rifle with ammunition.

Name

The official name of the corps is Milizia Eritrea per la Sicurezza Interna. Due to the numerous languages in Eritrea, the only language used for official names is Italian, although every Italian name has unofficial translations in every language.

History

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is the direct evolution of the Colonial M.V.S.N. in Eritrea. In 195ì3, a Territorial Cohort of the M.V.S.N. was established in Eritrea. In 1936, the M.V.S.N. in Eritrea was expanded and reorganised as 2nd Legion "Ivo Oliveti" and placed under the 2nd Africa Legions Group.

Until the African War, the M.V.S.N. followed the unitary policy in Italian East Africa. Italy granted to its colonies the status of "Special Government Regions" in 1963. The Eritrean National Republican Guard was established in 1968 in order to provide Eritrea with a fully integrated indigenous force. At the same time, the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security was established by grouping all Eritrea-based M.V.S.N. and Italian Africa Police units not included into the Eritrean National Republican Guard itself or in the Eritrean Gendarmerie.

The newly-established Eritrean Militia for Internal Security mirrored the subdivisions of the Italian M.V.S.N. Nonetheless, it was a markedly different organisation, being in charge of active policing tasks. Until 1971, the M.E.S.I. maintained two Autonomous Detachments of the Port Militia in Massaua and Assab, as well as accepting Eritreans as full legionnaires.

In April 1974, with the instability of the neighbouring Arab countries following the Yom Kippur War, a government decision was passed establishing the M.E.S.I. as support organization for the Eritrean Gendarmerie. The enlargement of duties entrusted to the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security was in line with the Fascist doctrine in its bending toward an integration of the individual efforts within the overall guidance provided by the State through dedicated institutions.

During the 1970s, several specialist units were established. The Sniper Unit was set up in 1974, an Investigative Division was opened the following year, while the Traffic Auxiliary Unit was first organised independently by the Gendarmerie and then passed to the M.E.S.I. in 1980. The cohexistence between M.E.S.I. and Gendarmerie led to some friction. In order to appease the Gendarmerie, the Investigative Division was transformed in 1983 into the Intelligence Service, tasked with contributing to intelligence gathering. In 1989, units close to border areas began to support the Border Guard of the Eritrean Gendarmerie, and in 1990 a dedicated speciality was established.

Early 1990s were marked by the return of the M.E.S.I. in the detective police work, albeit under a different strategy. In 1991, the Delinquency Prevention Unit was established as a fusion centre of the Gendarmerie, the M.E.S.I. and the Eritrean Lictor Youth (Gioventù Eritrea del Littorio, G.Er.L.). In the same years, the M.E.S.I. expanded its scope also with nonmilitary community assistance, in particular to weak and elderly populations, reception of new waves of Italian colonisation, etc.
In 1995 the Traffic Auxiliary Unit was reorganised into the Traffic Routes Protection Unit, with tasks more oriented to military traffic policing.

Mid 1990s marked the main shift of the M.E.S.I. towards a support police role. The regulations of the M.E.S.I. amended in 1996 stated that "the Gendarmerie may request the assistance of the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security, without prejudice for its security tasks, to preserve the safety of people and property". The regulations listed many areas in which the police may be assisted by the M.E.S.I.: "patrolling, traffic, detectives, maritime policing, tourism, casualty rescue, cavalry, assistance to the sabotage array and snipers." With the amendment of the regulations, the M.E.S.I. became more oriented to police work than counter-guerilla operations and its areas of activity were defined by law, including training, as a condition for the professional operation of the volunteer.

Early 2000s, with the Proclamation of the Principality and the US-led War on Terror, somewhat halted the expansion of police duties and reoriented the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security towards a renewed, albeit somewhat different from the past, counter-terrorist and political security role.

The security infrastructure includes: command and control, standby units, armed, motorised and foot patrols and a training routine. Over the decades, the M.E.S.I. shifted its role from a reserve organization to a security assistance and counter-terrorist force.

Mission

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is officially at the service of God, of Italian Fatherland and of Eritrea. As an official security force, the M.E.S.I. has a manyfold mission.

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is a volunteer military organization offering a permanent state of readiness. The task of the M.E.S.I. is to support the Eritrean National Princely Guard and the Eritrean Gendarmerie, as well as the emergency services, and other government authorities.

Security mission

First and foremost, the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is tasked to protect and safeguard the Fascist Revolution, the Italian Empire and the Eritrean State, as well as to undertake various duties, from guarding public sites to contributing to development projects. The ensuing role M.E.S.I. is to allow the Eritrean Gendarmerie to focus on police work while disengaging from territorial control not related to police patrol, as well to allow the Eritrean National Princely Guard to perform its mission while guarding the rear area. Members of the M.E.S.I. carry out tasks as patrols, guards or emergency workers on national development projects. They are assigned tasks that range from guarding public sites, looking for petty crimes to undertaking development projects.

The second duty of the M.E.S.I. is to guard Italian settlement villages from attacks, especially by Sudanese Arab gangs or nomadic groups in the North or from banditry in the South. The The M.E.S.I. also trains Italian settlers in counterterrorism techniques and the use of weapons to guard Italian outposts and settlements against terror attacks.

The force’s primary focus is on targeting indigenous subjects of Eritrea. Being heavily armed – with both weaponry as well as surveillance tools — the M.E.S.I. is utilized to deter and violently disperse indigenous rebellious and/or anti-Italian mobilization. Eritrea's M.E.S.I. is deployed to facilitate arbitrary arrest, harassment, and assault of indigenous subjects, as well as to allow indigenous community cohesion only within the framework of Italian supremacy and maintain the institutionalization Eritrea’s system of apartheid.

Italian identity mission

The third aim of the M.E.S.I. operations is to “create a palpable Italian presence”. In the event of a criminal encounter, the involved unit is to address the situation and, if necessary, to request assistance from the Eritrean Gendarmerie. The M.E.S.I. operates in a rural settlement and colonisation context with the aim of helping farmers cope with harassment, looting and other violence. Therefore, incidents addressed by its operations are mainly rural in nature while teeming with violence and agricultural crime: sales of combat weapons, the axing of pine trees, the deliberate destruction of crops, the torching of picnic tables.

Agricultural and civilisation mission

While the main tasks of the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security focus on security, its mission is not limited to being a security provider. The M.E.S.I. runs some agricultural schools in cooperation with the Agriculture Ministry in order to enhance farming skills of African peoples. The presence of volunteers versed in agriculture enables the deepening of civilisational work. This, paired with the membership open to all Eritrean Italian citizens, enables the force to be a stability factor.

The agricultural mission is tied up with the educational mission. In cooperation with the Eritrean Lictor Youth, high-school students are invited in prominent settlements known for their support of Fascism for school trips and for social involvement. These educational activities take place within a framework of pre-military and ideological education.

Organization

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is subordinated to the Lieutenant General of the Duce and it is governed by the Eritrean Fascist Coalition. The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security adopts an integrated organisational approach, with a threefold organisation and some branches.

The Central Command ensures command and control, planning, and coordination to the whole Militia, while coordinating two types of organisations:

  • Territorial Organisation;
  • Mobile Organisation.

The three Organisations are not necessarily provided with an unified command authority of their own, and may contain more than one branch. Branches are:

  • Mobile units: long-range and elite operations
  • City units: urban self-defence and garrison duty, assistance to Army/Gendarmerie/Eritran Princely Guard. City units are organised by profession (e.g. teachers’ militia, artists’ militia, etc.) or by neighborhood.
  • Village units: localised protection of rural settlements
  • Training units: training and refresher courses

While Village units reflect the ethnic composition of their own settlement, other unit types are usually ethnically mixed. Each community has one or more M.E.S.I. units.

Central Command

The Central Command is the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security top authority. The M.E.S.I., through the Central Command, reports directly to the Eritrean Fascist Coalition as the government authority in charge for training, equipment and personnel management.

The M.E.S.I. has a combined military and political leadership. The Commandant of the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is responsible for the training and posting of units and managing the M.E.S.I. The Commissioner of the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is responsible for recruitment and the political guidance to the M.E.S.I. The Commissioner is always the Secretary of the Eritrean Fascist Coalition.

The Central Command directly manages a number of specialist units and services:

  • Intelligence Service: tasked with contributing to intelligence gathering to support Eritrean O.V.R.A. by coordinating Political Offices of Investigations;
  • Delinquency Prevention Unit: a fusion centre between the Gendarmerie, the M.E.S.I. and the Eritrean Lictor Youth;
  • Traffic Routes Protection Unit, tasked with military traffic policing;
  • Border Militia Service: tasked with coordination of M.E.S.I. border units and support to the Border Guard of the Gendarmerie.

Central Commander

The Central Commander of the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is an officer of the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security who, at the time of his appointment, holds the rank of Consul General. He is appointed by decree of the Duce, on the joint proposal of the Secretary of the Eritrean Fascist Coalition and of the Minister of Interior, after hearing the Commandant-General of the M.V.S.N., on which he depends. Within the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security, the Central Commander is hierarchically superior to all the General Officers and, in case of absence, impediment or vacation of the office, is replaced by the Deputy Central Commander.

The Central Commander hierarchically depends on the Commandant-General of the M.V.S.N. for administration, discipline and Empire-wide matters, but functionally depends on the Secretary of the Eritrean Fascist Coalition for what pertains to political matters as well as assistance to Somali State authorities.

The Central Commander is in charge of leading the M.E.S.I., of deploying the Mobile Units, and of overseeing the Eritrean National Princely Guard, while providing it of support services.

Chief of Staff of the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security

The Chief of Staff of the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is a Consul General tasked of being the chief consultant and collaborator of the Central Commander, on which he directly depends. He receives from the Central Commander the directives for the activity to be carried out and directs the activities of the General Staff and defines, where necessary, the additional elements to translate the decisions of the Central Commander into orders and plans.

As Chief of Staff, he represents the Central Commander and issues orders in his name, when authorized, and has some departments and units under his direct dependencies: Health and Administration Directorates, the Secretariat, the Autonomous Unit of the General Command and the Head of the Spiritual Assistance Service (military chaplains).

Territorial organisation

The Territorial Organisation is the bulk of the Eritrean Miltia of Internal Security and mainly consists of Village and City Units, while having also Mobile and Training Units.

At each level of command of the Gendarmerie (national, provincial and district) a counterpart is determined in the M.E.S.I. (Commandant of the M.E.S.I., Commander of the M.E.S.I. Legion and Commander of the M.E.S.I. District Cohort). At the basic unit level, the Commander is determined in the city, and neighbourhood Commanders are appointed in the larger cities. When a M.E.S.I. unit enters an area under the jurisdiction of a Gendarmerie command or district, it is activated by the local Gendarmerie commander in a coordinated manner in order to ensure clear territorial command structures.

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is subdivided into Territorial Legions, having the same boundaries of the Provinces. The eight Legions are grouped into two Legions Groups, with headquarters in Asmara and Addì Caieh.

Each basic unit is comprised of several dozen local civilians with military experience who serve as a special alert squad. These reserve units operate in times of emergency and routine, as a supply force to the Gendarmerie and the Guard. All City and Village Units are organised into Cohorts, Maniples and Squads according their size.

Legions Group

The Legions Groups coordinate and support Provincial Legions. As of 2019, there are two Legions Groups:

  • 1st Eritrean Legions Group: headquartered in Asmara, in charge for Amasien, Barca Senit, and Sael;
  • 2nd Eritrean Legions Group: headquartered in Addì Caieh, in charge for Acchellè-Guzai, Serae, Semhar, and Dancalia.

Each Legions Group has a Group Command, a Depot, a Medical Section and a Training Centre. The Medical Section coordinates the Legion and Cohort Medical services, provides medical logistics and provides sick and wounded transfers. Legions Groups also directly control training establishments whithin their jurisdiction, as well as the educational operations in cooperation with the Eritrean Youth of Lictor.

Provincial Legion

The Provincial Legion is the M.E.S.I. echelon tasked to provide security service, support to internal security and to political defence for the relevant Province. There are eight Legions, one for each Province. Aside from command and control functions, which are organised according a traditional pattern, the Provincial Legion Command is home to most specialist units: the Political Office of Investigations, which is the overt territorial branch of the Eritrean O.V.R.A., the Security Assistance Unit, which is the branch tasked with developing local units, the Legion Search and Rescue Squad, the Medical Unit, and the Agriculture and Settlement Maniple.
Alongside the Provincial Legions, also the Special Mobile Legion exists.

District Cohort

In each of the 60 Districts of Eritrea, a Cohort is established. The District Cohort has territorial surveillance roles, as well as immediate assistance to subordinate village and town units.

The M.E.S.I. territorial organisation also has specialist units such as search-and-rescue teams, divers, translators, and drivers, whose members have to go through additional training and have a higher level of commitment, belonging to the Mobile Units branch. Such specialist units are tasked to augment capabilities of City/Village units. These units are framed within the District Mobile Maniple:

  • 1 x K9 unit;
  • 1 x Staff platoon;
  • 1 x Signal platoon;
  • 1 x Alpine reconnaissance platoon;
  • 1 x Medical platoon;
  • 2-3 x Infantry platoons.

City command

In every Eritrean town and city a City Command is established under the District Cohort. In Urban District, the City Command coincides with the District Cohort. The City command is headquartered in the relevant Municipal Crisis Centre togheter with the Municipal government and local Fascist Party office.

A City command mostly controls units from the City Units Branch (of both Urban Security Units and Coroporatist subdivisions) and from the Training Units Branch, but it may also control Mobile Units (especially if the City coincides with the District).

Village command

The Village Command is the command element in charge fro M.E.S.I. forces in a given rural village, Italian settlement or outpost. The Village command controls units from the Village Units Branch, with very few Commands controlling units from other branches.

M.E.S.I. Village Commander

In each village, the M.E.S.I. Village Commander is the Officer (or, more rarely, the Subofficer) in charge for command or control of the units assigned to his command and to his village. The M.E.S.I. Village Commander serves as the security leader of the settlement in absence of a Gendarmerie station. M.E.S.I. Village Commanders are subject, when they exercise their duties, to the Military Law. They are specifically trained by the Italian Army and they are empowered to personally perform policing functions when there is no Gendarmerie personnel to direct them.

In the exercise of their duties as security leaders, and in absence of Gendarmerie personnel, M.E.S.I. Village Commanders are Officers of Judicial Police. The capacity of Officer of Judicial Police ceases with the presence of any Gendarmerie member, even if the latter is not an Officer of Judicial Police.
In the exercise of their duties as security leaders, M.E.S.I. Village Commanders are Officers of Public Security. The capacity of Officer of Public Seurity does not cease with the presence of any Gendarmerie member.

In the exercise of their duties as security leaders, and in absence of Gendarmerie personnel and of the relevant village authority, M.E.S.I. Village Commanders are Local Authorities of Public Security. The capacity of Local Authority of Public Security ceases with the presence of any Gendarmerie member or of the relevant village authority, even if the former is not an Officer of Public Security.

Mobile Organisation

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security also maintains the Special Mobile Legion, directly depending on the Central Command. Special Mobile Legion consists of ca. 2,000 troops. Those Legionnaires keep equipment at home and are available for immediate action. As of 2020, there are three Mobile Cohorts:

  • 1st Rapid Reaction Cohort, headquartered in Barentù;
  • 2nd Rapid Reaction Cohort, headquartered in Assab;
  • Light Mechanised Cohort, headquartered in Asmara.

Branches

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security subdivides its units and organisations among four Branches (It.: Branca):

  • Village Units;
  • City Units;
  • Mobile Units;
  • Training Units.

Each Branch is headed by a Branch Inspectorate.

Village units

M.E.S.I. propaganda poster (1965).

Village Units Branch forms the largest component of the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security. Local settlement units function as semiregular paramilitary units in order to protect Italian settlements from indigenous threats. This leads to daily confrontations and conflict between Village Units and African farmers. In some cases, African farmers are prevented from cultivating their land.

Village Units embody the myth of warrior-farmer of the Fascist propaganda.

Border Village Units

The Border Village Units are a subcomponent of the Village Units branch. Italian communities located to 4 kilometers from the external borders of Eritrea have their Village Units under the additional supervision of the Italian Armed Forces, while the other Village Units are tasked to support the Gendarmerie.

Regular armed corps and Border Village Units regularly work hand in hand to enforce and further strengthen Italian presence in border regions. The heavy integration between the Italian Army and Border Village Units is bolstered by the rotational deployment of elite combat brigades from the Italian Army or from Guards of other Realms of the Italian Empire.

In most cases, M.E.S.I. Village Units and soldiers conduct joint operations directed at African communities across the external Eritrean border. Village units of the M.E.S.I. carry out aggressive operations that are beyond the remit of official Army/Guard/Gendarmerie units.

Village units are made up of local M.E.S.I. Legionnaires, usually former military, who train together and serve as first-response teams, holding the line until regular troops arrive. Border Village Units in parts of the Eritrean external border facing increased security risk are also provided armoured personnel carriers and anti-tank weapons. While fully part of the M.E.S.I., Village Units are distinctively bound to their home settlement.

City units

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security garrisons urban centres with locally-recruited units. Usually a city forms a District of its own. Therefore, the command element is organized as a District Cohort Command. Line Legionnaires are organised into separate units according their ethnicity, if their numbers warrant the establishment of at least a Platoon. City Units include, in turn, two branches: Civil Security Units and Corporatist Militia Units.

Urban Security Unit

The basic security element of city units is the Urban Security Unit (Reparto Sicurezza Urbana), tasked with providing rapid response capabilities to an individual city or town neighboroughood. The purpose of Urban Security Units is to provide reinforcements to the Gendarmerie during emergencies. Urban Security Units also provide enhanced security to small towns and communities in Eritrea’s periphery, where the Gendarmerie has a lighter presence.

Each Urban Security Unit consists of local volunteer residents who serve as civilian operational reserve forces, available for rapid deployment to assist security forces during security events and emergency situations.
The members of Urban Security Units are male full citizens (both Eritrean and Italian), who join the M.E.S.I. as volunteers in a special security track. Most of the personnel of the Urban Security Units are Reserve and Advanced Legionnaires. Each Urban Security Unit contains a minimum of 10 and a maximum of 20 members. Each Urban Security Unit has a Commander and a Deputy Commander, with prior military and/or security experience. A strict requirement for volunteering with an Urban Security Unit is having served in a combat role in one of the security forces of the Italian Empire. This requirement prevents certain ethnic groups, which do not usually join the armed corps and present uncertain loyalty to the Italian Empire, from volunteering in these Urban Security Units.

The rationale behind the Urban Security Units is to prepare for a multi-front scenario in which the security forces are stretched thin.

Corporatist Militia

The Corporatist Militia (Milizia Corporativa) is a branch of the city units tasked to ensure that the infrastructure in the relevant city works also during unauthorised strikes or other emergency circumstances. The Corporatist Militia units consist of technicians specialised in the relevant area of expertise. Corporatist Militia units are organised in the three branches of Energy, Telecom and Railways.

Mobile Units

Mobile Units are specially training standing units of the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security, designed to rapidly deploy and intervene in the event of a major crisis or to provide specialist support to the territorial organisation.

The Mobile Units branch consists of units assigned to the territorial organisation as well as of units assigned to the Special Mobile Legion.

Rapid Reaction Unit

The Rapid Reaction Unit (Reparto Reazione Rapida) is the spearhead of the combat force that consists of specially selected, educated and equipped personnel. The force can be mobilized rapidly and is a country-wide resource.

Legionnaires of the Rapid Reaction Unit often come from operational armed forces and commit themselves to a minimum of 3 years service each and can be ordered on a sharp mission in the Italian Empire. They must continuously maintain their own combat readiness.

There is one Rapid Reaction Unit per Legions Group, in total 1,500 men. The Rapid Reaction Unit has top priority when concerning weapons, material and training resources. The force is ready to respond within hours to acts of terrorism, bomb threats, and or other emergencies. In peacetime, the Rapid Reaction Units can support the Eritrean Gendarmerie and political authorities with a variety of tasks.

The Rapid Reaction Units consist of several different platoons. In this way, each district will be able to respond to any kind of incident that could occur, without having to rely on outside help. Each district (with some variations) will have trained operators in these different types of units:

  • 1 x Ranger platoon;
  • 1 x Sniper platoon;
  • 1 x Military Police platoon;
  • 1 x K9 unit;
  • 1 x Staff platoon;
  • 1 x Signal platoon;
  • 1 x Desert Patrol platoon;
  • 1 x Medical platoon;
  • 5 x Infantry platoons.

Training

For the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security places high priority on pre-military, security and military training, in order to provide a satisfying pool of recruits for other armed corps and for enabling its own units. By 2008 the M.E.S.I. had trained more than 100 "rapid response teams" of Italian settlers in Eritrea, mainly in the northern border regions.

Recruits of the M.E.S.I. which have completed their national service outside the regular armed corps undergo accelerated basic training for three weeks, after which they are formally inducted as Legionnaires, equipped armed and stationed in their places of residence.

Not counted among the on-duty shifts, training activity is scaled according need of different categories of the Legionnaires. Short military practices or training are held regularly, in some cases every two weeks.

The Italian National Royal Army provides assault rifles, and ammunition to authorized teams. Settlers with civilian gun licenses also carry personal handguns. The Italian Army and the Eritrean Princely Guard also allow the M.E.S.I. to use their bases for training. The training takes place over a year and involves marksmanship and fitness components.

Composition and service

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security consists of a force composed of active-duty Legionnaires, reserve officers, and volunteers. Its manpower mainly consists of civilian volunteers who have served in the military (Army or Eritrean National Princely Guard). Members are trained to provide the initial response to a security situation until regular Gendarmerie or Guard arrive. Most M.E.S.I. volunteers are armed with M1 carbines, or more recently, CAR-15 carbines, and personal handguns (if the member has a civilian gun license). Units meet regularly, one day per week or one week per month.

The M.E.S.I. is composed mainly of volunteers who do patrols in car or on foot. They go through basic sector-specific training and have powers as agents of public security while on duty. They may apprehend a suspected person or make an arrest if necessary. In times of tension and war, the military commands assume command over the activated M.E.S.I. units.

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is a force mainly staffed by Italian Eritreans (79%), but units of different ethnic origin also exist. Tigray people is the second source of volunteers, amounting to 15% of the total force, while other ethnicities make up the rest (6%).
Volunteers of the M.E.S.I. are also characterized by including relatively many with professional training. The educational profile of M.E.S.I. volunteers is thus different from the population as a whole, even if the average length of education corresponds to the average in the general population. Compared to everyone in the adult population, there are relatively fewer in the M.E.S.I. who do not have vocational training, but also fewer with higher education.

The M.E.S.I.'s equipment generally consists of black military fatigues, flashlight, radio, firearm, handcuffs and whatever else may be required particular to the assignment. Unit equipment is returned at the end of the shift.

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is rarely used in isolation, but rather as part of a broader strategy and often in conjunction with the Eritrean Gendarmerie and the Italian National Royal Army and/or Eritrean Princely Guard. The M.E.S.I. can collect intelligence about hostile groups. Because of their permanent presence in villages and interaction with the local population in a different way from the Gendarmerie, M.E.S.I. members can tap into private information about the structure and organization of hostile groups, logistics, support networks, collaborators, movement, and tactics and techniques. This surveillance of the population conducted in a manner different from police control enables intelligence, military and police forces to target hostile groups more accurately.
In absence of rebellions or insurgencies, the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security is a feature of the village life, carrying out functions related to civil defence, night watch, and local branches of the retired servicemen’s associations and, at the same time, being involved in collecting information and hunting down thieves and unsanctioned political activists.

Personnel categories

Within the Eritrean Militia for Internal Security there are three levels of service:

  • Reserve Legionnaire: Reserve Legionnaires of the M.E.S.I. serve for about one shift a week (2 to 4+ hours), while the minimum requirement is 12 hours a month. About 15,000 Legionnaires belong to this category.
  • Advanced Legionnaire: Advanced Legionnaires serve for three shifts a week, while the minimum requirement is 48 hours a month.
  • Special Legionnaire: Special Legionnaires serve for at least 24 hours a week with no set shift limit, while the minimum requirement is 80 hours a month. Special Volunteers receive advanced training and mostly serve in the Mobile Units. All Officers not in Permanent condition are Special Legionnaires.
  • Permanent Legionnaire: Permanent Legionnaires serve full-time. All Senior Officers and the core staff of the Mobile Units are Permanent Legionnaires. Permanent Legionnaires are a small minority of the corps.

Militia funds and slary

A M.E.S.I. Legionnaire may serve in a reservist capacity while keeping a job or a professional activity. In order to enable Legionnaires to serve while keeping a job, there is a system of service retribution. When there is overlap between Militia duty and work hours, the salary is offset against the Militia funds to ensure there is no double payment. If the Militia funds exceed the actual salary payment, the employee receives the excess alongside the regular salary paid by the employer, while the employer receives the amount of the salary. If the reserve benefit is less than the salary payment, the employer may charge the employee the difference. There is no obstacle to an employee working and receiving a salary, and also serving on reserve duty without interruption to his work hours. Thus, the employee will recieve a reserve benefit in addition to his salary.
Only active service in coordination with other authorities, emergency service, as well as exercises are paid.
The payment scheme does not cover instances in which people volunteer at their own initiative. Ordinary training is part of the membership to the Eritrean Miltiia for Internal Security and thus on a "voluntary" (i.e. unpaid) basis. “On-call” days, in which the employee does not actually report for service, do not entitle the employee to Militia funds.
In case of a professional, the hourly salary is calculated assuming a yearly income corresponding to the amount declared the previous year and dividing it for the average week hours of the related professional sector.
In case of Permanent Legionnaires, salary and Militia funds are replaced by regular M.E.S.I. salaries.

Funding and financement

The Eritrean Militia for Internal Security draws its funds from a variety of sources. The main income is from the Eritrean Interior Ministry and from the Eritrean Fascist Coalistion, but it has been nourished over the years by donations from generous Italian Fascist philanthropists and who also heap money on Italian settlements. The M.E.S.I. is currently budgeted also by the Education Ministry due to its involvement in pre-military and agricolture/settlement education.

See also