Eritrea: UN expert warns about persisting human rights violations linked to the national service

GENEVA (31 March 2014) – The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Eritrea, Sheila B. Keetharuth, today expressed deep concern about persisting human rights violations in the country in the context of the Eritrean national service.  

“National service dominates life in Eritrea entirely,” Ms. Keetharuth said at the end of an official visit to Germany and Switzerland from 17 to 28 March 2014 during which she collected first-hand information from Eritrean refugees and migrants on the human rights situation in Eritrea.

The bulk of what the human rights expert documented reconfirmed her earlier findings: “The main reasons spurring Eritreans to flee their country are linked to the indefinite national service and the constant fear of being targeted,” she said.

Young people are conscripted into the military without any prospect of demobilization. Once they complete military training, they are assigned to various Government sectors, including in the civilian administration.

A conscript who spent almost 14 years in national service told the Special Rapporteur that ‘some families have three or four sons and daughters in the national service. The salary is paltry – too low to cover the prevailing cost of living, let alone support family members, especially children, the elderly or siblings.’ 

During the interviews with the Special Rapporteur, refugees described in great detail the widespread insecurity that every Eritrean citizen experienced, irrespectively of whether he or she was a national service conscript.

“In addition to regular round-ups by the military, citizens are targeted arbitrarily for reasons that remain mostly unknown to the victims or beyond their control, or at times on charges of ‘plotting to leave the country,’” the independent expert explained. 

Severe punishment, including of family members of those who fled, often takes the form of arrest and detention, sometimes for prolonged periods in inhumane conditions and systematic ill-treatment. Other forms of punishment may include the payment of heavy fines, thus depriving entire families of their means of livelihood.
Harassment and intimidation of family members, including elderly parents, is routine.

“Accountability mechanisms do not exist, leaving victims without any access to justice and perpetuating a climate of impunity and fear which extends beyond the borders of the country,” the Special Rapporteur warned. 

Ms. Keetharuth also expressed concern about the plight of 276 Eritreans detained in Nagad, Djibouti, with two having reportedly died while in custody. “I reiterate my call on the international community to strengthen efforts to ensure the protection of those fleeing from Eritrea by granting at least temporary refuge or protection in line with their obligations under international refugee and human rights law.”

“I request the Eritrean Government to demonstrate its willingness to deal with its human rights challenges by taking immediate positive steps to reverse the climate of impunity and fear and by inviting me to assess the situation of human rights in the country first hand so as to find lasting solutions,” she stressed.

Eritrea continues to refuse to cooperate with the country mandate created unanimously by the UN Human Rights Council and has not yet granted the Special Rapporteur a visa to visit the country.

“Due to lack of access to Eritrea, I will continue to link up with Eritrean refugees and migrants outside of their home country, as well as with all others concerned by human rights in Eritrea, including those who consider themselves to be victims of alleged human rights violations, human rights defenders and other civil society actors,” Ms. Keetharuth said.

The result of her findings, which will be strictly limited to the situation inside Eritrea, will be reflected in her second report to the Human Rights Council in June 2014.

Sheila B. Keetharuth was appointed as the Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in Eritrea during the 21st Session of the UN Human Rights Council in September 2012.  She took her functions on 1 November 2012.  As Special Rapporteur, she is independent from any government or organization and serves in her individual capacity.  A lawyer from Mauritius, she has extensive experience in monitoring and documenting human rights violations, advocacy, training and litigation in human rights in Africa.

By: United Nations – Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR)

 

 

 

EU-Africa Summit 2014 Off Limits To Eritrea Tyrant!

The 4th EU-Africa Summit takes place in Brussels on 2-3 April 2014. It brings together African and EU leaders, as well as the leaders of EU and African Union institutions. Under the theme ”Investing in People, Prosperity and Peace”, participants discuss topics including peace, security, investment, climate change and migration.

More than 90 countries from two continents are gathering in Brussels for the EU-Africa Summit 2014 taking place 2 – 3 April. But, rightly so, certified Human and Human Rights Abuser Eritrea Tyrant Isias Afareki is not one of them! The summit is off limts to the tyrant!

 

 

ነጋውስ ባሕሪ-ነጋሽ – ራብዓይን ናይ መወዳእታን ክፋል

ነጋውስ ባሕሪ-ነጋሽ ራብዓይን ናይ መወዳእታን ክፋል

ሰማI ዝሰኣኑ ብኣባላት ሚኒስትሪ ሃብቲ ባሕሪ ዝተልዓሉ ሕቶታትንለበዋታትን፡-

ቀንዲ ቤ/ጽ ሚ/ሪ ሃብቲ ባሕሪ ኤርትራ ባጽዕ ጥዋለት እዩ፡፡ ቅርጺ ሚኒስትሪ ሃብቲ ባሕሪ፡

  1. ቤ/ጽሕፈት ሚኒስተር፡
  2. ክፍሊ ልምዓት ሃብቲ ባሕሪ፡
  3. ክፍሊ ምቁጽጻርን ኣገልግሎትን ሃብቲ ባሕሪ ክኾኑ ከለዉ ሕድሕዶም ብርክት ዝበሉ ጨናፍር ኣለውዎም፡፡

 

PDF: ናይ መወዳእታን ክፋል                                                                                                             

ናብ ቀዳማይ ክፋል 

 

 

 

 

2015 Africa Cup of Nations: Eritrea withdraw from qualifiers

 Eritrean-Football-Players Eritrea have pulled out of the qualifiers for the 2015 Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco, the Confederation of African Football has confirmed.

They had been due to face South Sudan in the first round of the preliminary phase over two legs in April.

South Sudan, entering the competition for the first time, will now go though to the preliminary phase second round.

No reason has been given for Eritrea’s withdrawal, but recent defections by players may have led to the decision.

Seventeen players from the Eritrean squad, plus the team doctor, absconded at the 2012 East and Central Africa Senior Challenge Cup in Uganda.

In 2011, 13 Eritrean players sought asylum in Tanzania after the same tournament, while 12 members of the Eritrea squad disappeared and sought asylum in Kenya during the regional tournament in 2009.

Four Eritrean athletes also left their base and sought political asylum in Britain after the London Olympics in 2012.

Between 2,000 and 3,000 Eritreans flee the small east African country every month, a United Nations report said last year.

South Sudan will find out who they will play in the second round when the draw is made on Sunday, 27 April in Cairo.

 
BBC

 

 

 

 

መዓልቲ ሓዘን ስውእ ተጋዳላይ ኣሕመድ ናስር

መዓልቲ ሓዘን ስውእ ተጋዳላይ ኣሕመድ ናስር

ብምኽንያት መስዋእቲ ጅግና ገዲም ተጋዳላይ ኣሕመድ መሓመድ ናስር ናይ ሓዘን መዓልቲ መዲብና ኣሎና።

ብሓብር ነዚ ስውእ ጅግና ንክንዝክሮ ናይ ሓዘን መዓልቲ ንቀዳም ምያዝያ (ኣፕሪል)5 ስዓት ሰለስተ ድሕሪ ቀትሪ ኣብ ኣዳራሽ ማሕበር ምትሕግጋዝ ኤርትራውን ስይትልን ከባቢኣን ክንርከብ ንኹሉ ፈታው ሰላምን ፍትሕን  ንሕብር።

                            ኣዳላዊት ሽማግለ
                                  ስያትል