Eritrea: UN Human Rights Council Urged to Act on Citizens’ Rights Violation
By Henry Neondo
ASMARA--The Government of Eritrea has been petitioned to end its use of arbitrary detention and torture of its citizens.
Reacting to the call by close to 44 countries from around the globe, Christian Solidarity Worldwide, Human Rights Concern - Eritrea and the East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders Project welcomed this long overdue attention paid to the widespread and systematic human rights violations continuing in Eritrea for over a decade.
In a statement to the UN Human Rights Council, states from Africa, Asia, Caribbean, Europe, Latin America and North America expressed their concerns about the government’s refusal to hold national elections or allow opposition parties, independent media or international non-governmental organisations to operate; as well as the severe restrictions on freedom of religion and belief. The States also expressed concern about reports of inhumane prison conditions, disappearances, arbitrary detention and extrajudicial killings.
In a statement, Christian Solidarity Worldwide, Human Rights Concern - Eritrea and the East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders Project said they believe that the credibility of the Human Rights Council is at stake when such a human rights record persists unchallenged, and now for over a decade.
They lauded the statement from the 44 countries and said it is a positive first step in addressing the human rights violations in Eritrea. “But it is not enough,” said the four organisations.
The organisations urged the High Commissioner for Human Rights to brief the Human Rights Council on the human rights situation in Eritrea at its 20th session in June 2012 as requested by the statement by the 44 states, and called on the members of the Human Rights Council to mandate a Special Procedure to monitor and report on the human rights situation in Eritrea as a matter of priority.
They said the use of forced conscription into mandatory national service and the use of extortion to collect the 2 per cent “diaspora tax” are also cause for concern.
According to the four organizations, in Eritrea there is no independent judicial process. Unions cannot be formed; political parties cannot be created. Citizens cannot protest peacefully and domestic human rights organisations do not exist.
Eritrea is ranked last of 179 countries by Reporters Without Borders because there is no press freedom. All independent media organisations were closed in 2001 and their journalists, and editors imprisoned.
Repression for any form of dissent is severe.
Thousands of Eritreans are detained arbitrarily for political purposes, suffering routine deprivation and torture.
An estimated 2000-3,000 Christians alone are detained without trial inhumanely and indefinitely, including many from “approved” churches including Patriarch Antonios, head of the Orthodox Church.
Army conscripts, including the under-aged, endure indefinite terms of service and face forced labour in development projects, farms, or the burgeoning mining sector.
The situation in Eritrea has direct and profound consequences for the region and for the wider international community.
The four organizations said the fact that thousands of Eritreans that flee their country on an annual basis should be of concern to the UN and the Member States that accommodate them. The exodus, they said, also contributes to regional instability through trafficking and associated international crime.