alexander siyum teaches german at its language school. his pupils are young eritreans who are interested in germany, as they tell me cautiously. three of the young women are married to eritreans who live in germany. so they'll soon be allowed to emigrate. >> it's a highly developed country. i want to continue my education there and think i can live better there than here. >> alexander siyum grew up in wuppertal in germany. he's been back in eritrea for ten years, but still feels german. >> for ordinary eritreans it's normal to live here like this. it's not normal for me. i grew up differently. i have a different mentality, a different way of thinking more democratic and you have to tolerate some things. >> for instance, the fact that there's no press freedom. the city is full of satellite dishes with unlimited reception of international channels, but in eritrea itself there is just one newspaper and one government tv station. the average annual income is the equivalent of about 600 euros, lower than almost anywhere else in the world. agai