Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices 2006
Eritrea
Released by the Bureau of Democracy,
Human Rights, and Labor
-
March 6,
2007
-
Eritrea,
with a population of approximately 3.6
million, is a one party state that
became independent in 1993 when
citizens voted for independence from
Ethiopia. The People's Front for
Democracy and Justice (PFDJ),
previously known as the Eritrean
People's Liberation Front, is the sole
political party and has controlled the
country since 1991. The country's
president, Isaias Afwerki, heads the
PFDJ, the national legislature, and
the military. The government
continuously postponed presidential
and national legislative elections;
national elections have never been
held. Despite international efforts to
resolve the situation, an ongoing
border dispute with Ethiopia seriously
hindered international trade, affected
the government's external relations,
and was used by the government to
justify severe restrictions on civil
liberties. Civilian authorities
generally maintained effective control
of the security forces.
The
government's human rights record
worsened, and it continued to commit
numerous serious abuses, including:
abridgement of citizens' rights to
change their government through a
democratic process; unlawful killings by
security forces; torture and beatings of
prisoners, some resulting in death;
harsh and life threatening prison
conditions; arbitrary arrest and
detention; executive interference in the
judiciary and the use of a special court
system to limit due process; government
infringement on privacy rights;
government roundups of young men and
women for national service; arrest,
incarceration, and torture of family
members of national service evaders,
some of whom reportedly died of unknown
causes while in detention; severe
restrictions on basic civil liberties,
including freedoms of speech, press,
assembly, association, and religion,
particularly for religious groups not
approved by the government; restrictions
on freedom of movement and travel for
diplomats, humanitarian and development
agencies, and UN Mission to Eritrea and
Ethiopia (UNMEE) personnel; government
circumscription of Non-governmental
organization (NGO) activities; violence
and societal discrimination against
women and the widespread practice of
female genital mutilation (FGM);
governmental and societal discrimination
against members of the Kunama ethnic
group and homosexuals; and limitations
on workers' rights.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1
Respect for the Integrity of the Person,
Including Freedom From:
a.
Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of
Life:
There were no
reports that the government or its
agents committed any politically
motivated killings; however, the
government continued to authorize the
use of deadly force against anyone
resisting or attempting to flee during
military searches for deserters and
draft evaders, and deaths reportedly
occurred during the year. Several
persons detained for evading national
service died after harsh treatment by
security forces (see section 1.c.).
There were reports of summary executions
and of individuals shot on sight near
the Ethiopian border, allegedly for
attempting to cross the border. There
were reports that individuals were
severely beaten and killed during
government roundups of young men and
women for national service (see section
1.c.).
Persons
arrested and detained because of their
religious affiliation died from security
force abuses (see section 2.c.).
There was no
additional information regarding action
taken against military personnel who
shot and killed 161 youths who were
trying to escape from Wia Military Camp
in June 2005 as reported by the
London-based NGO, Eritreans for Human
and Democratic Rights.
According to
the Government Commission for
Coordination with the UN
Peacekeeping
Mission, there were an estimated three
million landmines and unexploded
ordnance in the country left over from
the country's 30-year war of
independence and the 1998-2000 conflict
with Ethiopia. The Eritrean Islamic
Jihad Movement and others laid some new
mines during the year. The UN reported
three deaths and eight injuries from
landmine incidents during the year; at
least two of the deaths and seven of the
injuries involved newly laid landmines.
It was probable that there were
additional, unreported deaths in remote
areas. The government's demining program
continued; however, statistics from this
program were unavailable at year's end.
The UN demining programs continued
throughout the year, although their
effectiveness was limited by a
government order in October 2005
grounding all UN helicopters (see
section 2.d.). As a result, UNMEE
transferred most of the demining
activities to Ethiopia.
b.
Disappearance:
There were no
reports of politically motivated
disappearances during the year; however,
there were unresolved disappearances
from previous years.
The
whereabouts of an unknown number of
Kunama, members of an ethnic group
residing predominantly along the border
with Ethiopia who were detained in 2005
because of their association with other
captured or killed Kunama insurgents,
remained unknown.
At year's
end, the whereabouts of 11 senior PFDJ
and National Assembly members and
several journalists and employees of
diplomatic missions arrested by the
government in 2001 remained unknown;
however, there were unconfirmed reports
during the year that several had died in
detention and the rest were being held
in solitary confinement.
c. Torture
and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment:
The law and
unimplemented constitution prohibit
torture; however, there were numerous
reports that security forces resorted to
torture and physical beatings of
prisoners, particularly during
interrogations. There were credible
reports that several individuals,
including young men and women rounded up
for national service, died following
torture or severe beatings by security
forces. During the year security forces
severely mistreated and beat army
deserters, draft evaders, and members of
particular religious groups (see section
2.c.). Security forces subjected
deserters and draft evaders to various
disciplinary actions that included
prolonged sun exposure in temperatures
of up to 120 degrees Fahrenheit or the
binding of hands, elbows, and feet for
extended periods.
There were
reliable reports that torture was
widespread in an unknown number of
detention facilities. In addition to
psychological abuse, escapees reported
the use of physical torture and abuse at
a few prisons. Authorities suspended
prisoners from trees with their arms
tied behind their backs, a technique
known as almaz (diamond). Authorities
also placed prisoners face down with
their hands tied to their feet, a
technique known as the "helicopter."
There were
reports that, on October 17, two men
detained in a military camp for holding
religious services in a private home
died as a result of injuries sustained
during torture (see section 2.c.).
There were
reports that some women drafted to the
national service were subjected to
sexual harassment and abuse. There were
unconfirmed reports that instructors
raped female students at Sawa Military
Camp.
Prison and
Detention Center Conditions:
Prison
conditions for the general prison
population were harsh and life
threatening. There were reports that
prisoners were held in underground cells
or in shipping containers with little or
no ventilation in extreme temperatures.
The shipping containers were reportedly
not large enough to allow all those
incarcerated to lie down at the same
time.
There were
substantive reports that the detention
center conditions for persons
temporarily held for evading military
service were also harsh and life
threatening. Unconfirmed reports
suggested there may be hundreds of such
detainees. Draft evaders were typically
held for one to 12 weeks before being
reassigned to their units, although some
were held for as long as two years. At
one detention facility outside Asmara,
detainees reportedly were held in an
underground hall with no access to light
or ventilation and sometimes in very
crowded conditions. Some detainees
reportedly suffered from severe mental
and physical stress due to these
conditions.
Unlike in the
previous year, there were no reported
deaths from adverse conditions.
Women and
their young children were held
separately from men. There is no
juvenile detention center in Asmara, and
juvenile offenders often were
incarcerated with adults. There were
reports that juveniles held in adult
facilities were sodomized. Pretrial
detainees generally were not held
separately from convicted prisoners;
however, in some cases detainees were
held separately. Visitors were allowed
sometimes, and prison authorities
permitted family members to leave food
and supplies for detainees at jails,
prisons, and detention centers; released
detainees reported that they received
these items even if they were unable to
meet with visitors.
Local groups
and human rights organizations were not
allowed to monitor prison conditions.
The government prohibited the
International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC) from visiting the unknown number
of Ethiopian soldiers, who the
government claimed were deserters from
the Ethiopian army, or any Eritrean
detainees or prisoners, although the
ICRC was allowed to visit and register
Ethiopian civilian detainees in police
stations and prisons. Authorities
generally permitted three visits per
week by family members, except for
detainees arrested for reasons of
national security or for evading
national service.
d.
Arbitrary Arrest or Detention:
The law and
unimplemented constitution prohibit
arbitrary arrest and detention; however,
arbitrary arrest and detention were
serious problems.
Role of
the Police and Security Apparatus:
Police are
officially responsible for maintaining
internal security, and the army is
responsible for external security;
however, the government can call on the
armed forces, the reserves, and
demobilized soldiers in response to both
domestic and external security
requirements. Agents of the National
Security Office, which reports to the
Office of the President, are responsible
for detaining persons suspected of
threatening national security. The
military has the power to arrest and
detain persons.
Active duty
police officers were in charge of key
police divisions. The police force was
adequate in enforcing traffic laws and
combating petty crime. Generally the
police did not have a role in cases
involving national security, but
beginning in 2005 the police became
involved in the rounding up of
individuals evading national service.
During the year the police, the
military, and internal security forces
engaged in arrests and detentions.
Police and security forces frequently
used violent tactics, such as beating
and shooting in the air to control
crowds in social settings and during
roundups.
Corruption
was not prevalent; however, there were
reports that police demanded bribes to
release detainees and that military
forces accepted money to smuggle
citizens out of the country. There were
no mechanisms to address allegations of
abuse among the police, internal
security, or military forces, and
impunity was a problem.
Arrest and
Detention:
The law
stipulates that detainees must be
brought before a judge within 48 hours
and may be held for a maximum of 28 days
without being charged with a crime. In
practice authorities often detained
persons suspected of crimes for much
longer periods. The law stipulates that,
unless there is a "crime-in-process,"
police must conduct an investigation and
obtain a warrant prior to an arrest. In
cases of national security, this process
may be waived. In practice very few
individuals were arrested with a
warrant. Authorities often did not
promptly inform detainees of the charges
against them. Often detainees did not
have access to legal counsel (see
section 1.e.) or appear before a judge,
and incommunicado detention was
widespread. There was a functioning bail
system, except for cases involving
national security or for which capital
punishment might be handed down.
Arbitrary
arrest and detention were serious
problems. For example, on September
16-17, police reportedly arrested more
than 2,000 persons at several nightclubs
in Asmara. In one of the nightclubs,
police reportedly surrounded the club,
entered, and began to check the
identification cards of those inside.
After initially arresting only specific
individuals, police changed their
approach and arrested without charge
everyone inside the club--approximately
250 persons--using sticks and threats to
control the crowd. Most of those
detained were subsequently released
after posting bail. No trials were held
in connection with the incident.
Security
forces continued the practice begun in
2005 of detaining and arresting parents
of individuals who had evaded national
service duties or fled the country,
although there is nothing in the legal
code to warrant such arrests (see
section 1.f.). In December security
forces in Asmara and surrounding areas
arrested over 500 family members and
spouses of national service evaders.
Those who were arrested continued to be
detained, reportedly under harsh
conditions, at year's end.
Security
forces arbitrarily arrested dual
nationals and foreigners and detained at
least two foreign diplomats during the
year, often under the guise of national
security. There were reports that
plainclothes agents of the National
Security Office entered homes and
arrested occupants. There also were
reports that individuals were threatened
by security forces over extended periods
of time.
Security
forces detained, generally for less than
three days, many persons during searches
for evaders of national service, even if
they had valid papers showing that they
had completed or were exempt from
national service (see section 1.c.).
There were reports that individuals who
spoke out against the government or
publicly questioned government actions
were arrested and detained without due
process.
The
government continued to arrest and
detain members of nonregistered
religious groups. Some members of
nonregistered religious groups have been
detained for more than 11 years (see
section 2.c.).
Security
forces arbitrarily arrested journalists
during the year (see section 2.a.). The
government continued to detain
journalists it took into custody in 2001
(see section 2.a.).
Ethiopian
nationals reportedly were singled out
for arrest because they were unable to
pay the necessary fees to renew their
residency permits every 12 months (see
section 2.d.).
The
government detained without charge an
UNMEE official, who was released in
October. (see section 4).
The three
union leaders arrested in March 2005
reportedly were being held incommunicado
at year's end.
There were no
further reports about the several
hundred politically motivated detentions
in 2005 of persons who were seen as
critical of the government, and many of
those detained remained in prison at
year's end. Many were perceived to have
ties to political dissidents or were
believed to have spoken against
government actions. Most of these
detainees had not been tried and did not
have access to legal counsel. The ICRC
was not authorized to visit these
detainees.
There were no
developments in the 2002 arrests of
individuals associated with the 11 PFDJ
National Assembly members who were
detained in 2001 and of Eritrean
diplomats who were recalled from their
posts. At least four of these detainees,
in addition to many detained in previous
years, remained in prison without charge
at year's end. Among the detainees were
former ambassador to China Ermias
Debessai (Papayo) and Aster Yohannes,
wife of former foreign minister Petros
Solomon.
Two citizens
who worked for a foreign embassy have
remained in detention without charge
since 2001. Two additional citizens who
worked for a foreign embassy, who were
arrested in 2005 and 2006, respectively,
also remained in detention at year's
end.
There were
reports that the government continued to
hold without charge numerous members of
the Eritrean Liberation Front, an armed
opposition group that fought against
Ethiopia during the struggle for
independence.
The
government held numerous pretrial
detainees during the year; however,
there were widespread reports that the
government released an unknown number of
detainees held without charge during the
year. An unknown number of persons
suspected of antigovernment speech,
association with the 11 former PFDJ
members arrested in 2001, Islamic
elements considered radical, or
suspected terrorist organizations
continued to remain in detention without
charge, some of whom have been detained
for more than 10 years. These detainees
reportedly did not have access to legal
counsel and were not brought before a
judge.
e. Denial
of Fair Public Trial:
The law and
unimplemented constitution provide for
an independent judiciary; however, the
judiciary was weak and subject to
executive control. Public trials
generally were perceived as fair, but
virtually all cases involving
individuals detained for national
security or political reasons were not
brought to trial. The drafting into
national service of many civilians,
including court administrators,
defendants, judges, lawyers, and others
involved in the legal system, continued
to have a significant negative impact on
the judiciary. The government has not
issued licenses to lawyers wishing to
enter private practice for seven years.
The judicial
system has two parts: civilian and
special courts. The civilian court
system consists of community courts,
regional courts, and the High Court,
which also serves as an appellate court.
Appeals can be made in the civilian
courts up to the High Court. The High
Court took an average of four to six
months to decide if it would hear an
appeal and, at year's end, had a backlog
of approximately 400 cases. Minor
infractions involving sums of less than
approximately $7,300 (110,000 nakfa) are
brought to community courts. More
serious offenses are argued before
regional courts, but a significant
proportion of cases involving murder,
rape, and other felonies are heard by
the High Court. A single judge hears all
cases, except those argued before the
High Court, where panels of three judges
hear cases. A panel of five judges hears
cases in which the High Court serves as
the court of final appeal.
The
executive-controlled special courts
issue directives to other courts
regarding administrative matters,
although their domain was supposed to be
restricted to criminal cases involving
capital offenses, theft, embezzlement,
and corruption. The Office of the
Attorney General decides which cases are
to be tried by a special court. No
lawyers practice in the special courts.
The judges serve as the prosecutors and
may request that individuals involved in
the cases present their positions. The
special courts, which do not permit
defense counsel or the right of appeal,
allowed the executive branch to mete out
punishment without respect for due
process.
The judges in
the special court in both branches are
senior military officers, with no formal
legal training. They generally based
their decisions on "conscience," without
reference to the law. There is no
limitation on punishment, although the
special courts did not hand down capital
punishment sentences during the year.
The attorney general also allowed
special courts to retry civilian court
cases, including those decided by the
High Court, thereby subjecting
defendants to double jeopardy. In rare
instances, appeals made to the Office of
the President reportedly resulted in
special courts rehearing certain cases.
Most citizens
only had contact with the legal system
through the traditional community
courts. Judges heard civil cases, while
magistrates versed in criminal law heard
criminal cases. Customary tribunals were
sometimes used to adjudicate local civil
and criminal cases. The Ministry of
Justice offered training in alternative
dispute resolution to handle some civil
and criminal cases.
Shari'a law
for family and succession cases could be
applied when both litigants in civil
cases were Muslims. In these cases, the
sentences imposed cannot involve
physical punishment.
Trial
Procedures:
The judicial
system suffered from a lack of trained
personnel, inadequate funding, and poor
infrastructure that in practice limited
the government's ability to grant
accused persons a speedy and fair trial.
Unlike in the
special court system, the law and
unimplemented constitution provide
specific rights to defendants in the
regular court system. Although
defendants could hire a legal
representative at their own expense,
most detainees could not afford to do so
and consequently did not have access to
legal counsel. The government frequently
assigned attorneys to represent
defendants accused of serious crimes
punishable by more than 10 years in
prison and who could not afford legal
counsel. In the High Court, defendants
have the right to confront and question
witnesses, present evidence, gain access
to government-held evidence, appeal a
decision, and are presumed innocent;
these rights were upheld in practice.
Political
Prisoners and Detainees:
There were no
confirmed reports of new political
prisoners; however, there were numerous
reports of persons detained for
political reasons (see section 1.d.).
Civil
Judicial Procedures and Remedies:
The civilian
court system consists of community
courts, regional courts, and the High
Court, which also serves as an appellate
court. Individuals with civil cases can
also request their case be considered by
the special courts. Most civil law
relies on the Ethiopian legal code of
1957, as well as proclamations issued by
the government. The judiciary purports
to be independent and impartial.
Property
Restitution:
There were
reports that the government seized
property without restitution. The
government failed to compensate
foreigners for property taken by
preindependence governments or to
restore the property to them. There were
no reports of the seizure of the private
property of foreign nationals. Upon the
ordered closure of several NGOs, the
government required that all property be
turned over to it, including items such
as computers, printers, and vehicles.
f.
Arbitrary Interference with Privacy,
Family, Home, or Correspondence:
The law and
unimplemented constitution prohibit such
actions; however, the
government
infringed on the right to privacy.
The
government deployed military and police
throughout the country using roadblocks,
street sweeps, and house to house
searches to find deserters and draft
evaders as well as parents of deserters
and draft evaders. There were reports
that security forces targeted gatherings
of unregistered religious groups and
searched the homes of foreigners.
The
government monitored mail, e-mail, and
telephone calls without obtaining
warrants as required under the law.
Government informers were believed to be
present throughout the country.
There were
reports that military officials and
government officials seized residences
and businesses belonging to private
citizens. There were reports they rented
the property, used it as housing for
senior military officers' and government
officials' families, or occupied the
property for government and military
use.
There were
reports that the government forced the
resettlement of individuals residing in
Massawa in preparation for the
construction of a new duty-free zone.
Security
forces continued the practice begun in
June 2005 of detaining and arresting
parents of individuals who had evaded
national service duties or fled the
country (see section 1.d.). They
required the parents to pay a fine of
$3,300 (50,000 nakfa) per child and
bring their children back before they
would release them. During the year the
government began to allow families to
pay the fine in installments as opposed
to all at once. During the year the
government also detained spouses of
individuals who had evaded national
service or fled the country, and the
government prevented spouses of such
individuals from departing the country.
While
membership in the PFDJ, the government's
only sanctioned political party, was not
mandatory for all citizens, the
government coerced membership in the
PFDJ, particularly for individuals
working in government positions or
assigned through national service to
serve in government institutions.
Section 2
Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom
of Speech and Press:
The law and
unimplemented constitution provide for
freedom of speech and of the press;
however, the government severely
restricted these rights in practice.
Citizens did not have the right to
criticize their government in public or
in private. The private press remained
banned, and most independent journalists
remained in detention or had fled the
country, which effectively prevented any
public criticism of the government. The
government intimidated remaining
journalists into self-censorship.
The
government controlled all media,
including three newspapers, two
magazines, one radio station, and one
television station. The law does not
allow private ownership of broadcast
media or foreign influence or ownership
of media, and there was no private media
in the country. The government banned
the import of foreign publications;
however, individuals were permitted to
purchase satellites and subscribe to
international media. The government had
to approve publications distributed by
religious or international organizations
before their release, and the government
continued to restrict the right of the
religious media to comment on politics
or government policies. The press law
forbids reprinting of articles from
banned publications. The government also
required diplomatic missions to submit
all releases for approval before their
publication in the government media.
The
government permitted two reporters
representing foreign news organizations
to operate in the country; however, it
frequently prevented them from filing
stories with their news organizations.
Both reporters departed the country in
June, and the government delayed the
arrival of their designated replacements
for several months. The Swedish reporter
who was held by the government for
nearly four years, released for medical
treatment in November 2005 and then
detained again a few days later,
remained in detention without charge at
year's end. There are two international
reporters operating in Eritrea.
In November
the government arrested nine state
journalists employed by the Ministry of
Information; these individuals continued
to be detained at year's end.
The
government continued to refuse to issue
exit visas to the four Oromo journalists
who came to the country in 2005 at the
invitation of the government to seek
refuge from Ethiopia. The four have an
agreement with a foreign country to be
repatriated.
At least 15
local journalists who were arrested in
2001 remained in government custody at
year's end.
Internet
Freedom:
There were no
official government restrictions on the
use of the Internet; however, all
Internet service providers were required
to use government-controlled Internet
infrastructure to provide service. The
government owned a significant
percentage of the three Internet service
providers. In September the police
closed one of the Internet service
providers for unknown reasons, although
there were reports they had reopened by
year's end. There were reports that the
government severely restricted the
bandwidth available to private Internet
service providers, thus interfering with
their ability to provide services.
There were
reports that the government monitored
Internet communications. In urban areas,
individuals were able to access the
Internet through Internet cafes for a
fee or through an at-home service
provider.
Academic
Freedom and Cultural Events:
The
government restricted academic freedom;
freedom of speech, movement of students,
and the right to assemble were not
respected in the academic context. The
government issued a directive in 2002
reconfiguring the University of Asmara,
which effectively shut down the
university's undergraduate programs. As
a result, prospective students have not
been allowed to enroll in the university
and instead were directed by the
government to attend the Mai Nafhi
Technical Institute (see section 5).
During the summer the government
transferred most of the university's
undergraduate programs to vocational
training schools spread throughout the
country. Only the medical training
programs remained in Asmara. Students
finishing high school were not permitted
to choose their next course of study and
were assigned to specific vocational
programs based on their performance on
the matriculation exam. A few graduate
level programs remained at the
university; however, the law school was
effectively closed, as new students were
not permitted to enroll.
The
government did not provide exit visas to
some students who wanted to study
abroad. University academics who wished
to travel abroad for further study or
training were required to seek
permission from the university president
and from the government prior to travel.
The
government monitored and controlled
which films were shown at the cinema.
International film festivals were
closely monitored, and all films had to
be approved by the government.
b. Freedom
of Peaceful Assembly and Association:
The law and
unimplemented constitution provide for
freedom of assembly and association;
however, the government did not permit
freedom of assembly or association. For
gatherings of more than three persons,
the government requires those assembling
to obtain a permit.
The
government did not allow the formation
of any political parties other than the
PFDJ.
On May 30,
approximately 40 women and elders from
the Debub region gathered at the
Presidential Palace of Asmara to ask for
information about their husbands, who
had been detained in retribution for
their children fleeing the country to
evade national service; security forces
arrested the women and elders for not
having a permit to assemble. There was
no information on the status of their
cases at year's end.
c. Freedom
of Religion:
The law and
unimplemented constitution provide for
freedom of religion; however, the
government restricted this right in
practice. Only four religious groups
whose registrations had been approved by
the government were allowed to meet
legally during the year. These were:
Orthodox Christians, Muslims, Catholics,
and members of the Evangelical Church of
Eritrea, an umbrella group of several
Protestant churches affiliated with the
Lutheran World Federation. Members of
the nonregistered churches continued to
be arbitrarily arrested throughout the
year. Security forces continued to
abuse, arrest, and detain members of
nonregistered churches; sometimes such
abuse resulted in death.
Compass
Direct reported that, on October 17,
Immanuel Andegergesh and Kibrom
Firemichel died from injuries and severe
dehydration in a military camp outside
the town of Adi-Quala according to
credible reports. The two men were
arrested two days earlier for holding a
religious service in a private home.
There were
reports that three members of
nonregistered churches received a
two-year sentence for violation of the
government restriction on belonging to
an unregistered religious group. During
the year there continued to be reports
that security forces used extreme
physical abuse such as bondage, heat
exposure, and beatings to punish those
detained for their religious beliefs,
and that numerous detainees were
required to sign statements repudiating
their faith or agreeing not to practice
it as a condition for release. There
also continued to be reports that
relatives were asked to sign for
detainees who refused to sign such
documents.
During the
year there were reports that hundreds of
followers of various unregistered
churches (mostly Protestant) were
detained, harassed, and abused. While
some were detained for short periods of
time and released, approximately 2,000
individuals remained in detention at
year's end because of their religious
affiliation, according to the NGO
Compass Direct.
Many of those
detained were held in military prisons
for not having performed required
national military service, and many
belonged to unregistered religious
groups. Several pastors and dozens of
women were among the imprisoned. Several
were released after recanting their
faith; however, many refused to recant
their faith and continued to be detained
in civilian and military detention
facilities across the country.
There were no
developments in the continued detention
of 13 members of the Rema Church
detained in 2004 or the detention of 11
members of unregistered churches in May
2005; it was believed that all of these
individuals remained incarcerated at
year's end.
In January
there were reports that the Holy Synod,
under pressure from the government,
deposed Patriarch Abune Antonios of the
Eritrean Orthodox Church on putative
charges that he had committed heresy and
was no longer following church doctrine.
The synod selected a new patriarch,
Dioscoros. Deposed Patriarch Antonios
remained under house arrest and
continued to challenge the circumstances
of Patriarch Dioscoros's selection at
year's end. The lay administrator
appointed by the government in August
2005 remained the head of church; the
administrator was neither a member of
the clergy nor an appointee of the
patriarch as required by the
constitution of the Eritrean Orthodox
Church. This effectively put the
government in control of the Orthodox
Church. The government also continued to
monitor, harass, threaten, and arrest
members of the Orthodox Medhane Alem
group, whose religious services it had
not approved. The three ministers who
led Medhane Alem and who were arrested
in October 2004 remained imprisoned
without charge at year's end.
In December
the government established the practice
of taking possession of the weekly
offerings given by parishioners to the
Orthodox Church. The
government-appointed lay administrator
of the Orthodox Church claimed that the
government used the money from the
offerings to pay priests and provide
alms for the poor.
There were
reports that in September the government
ordered the Kale Hiwot church to
surrender all church property to the
government.
The
government prohibited political activity
by religious groups and faith based
NGOs. The government's Office of
Religious Affairs monitored religious
compliance with this proscription.
The
government does not excuse individuals
who object to national service for
religious reasons or reasons of
conscience, nor does the government
allow for alternative service. In
November the government decreed that
church leaders from the four
state-sanctioned religions were required
to perform military and national
service; previously, religious leaders
such as priests and clerics were exempt
from military and national service. The
government continued to harass, detain,
and discriminate against the small
community of members of Jehovah's
Witnesses because of their refusal, on
religious grounds, to vote in the
independence referendum and the refusal
of some to perform national service.
Although members of several religious
groups, including Muslims, reportedly
have been imprisoned in past years for
failure to participate in national
military service, the government singled
out Jehovah's Witnesses for harsher
treatment than that received by
followers of other faiths for similar
actions. In the past, the government
dismissed members of Jehovah's Witnesses
from the civil service, and many were
evicted from or not allowed to occupy
government owned housing. Members of
Jehovah's Witnesses frequently were
denied passports and exit visas, and
some had their identity cards revoked or
were not issued them at all.
According to
the Office of General Counsel for the
Jehovah's Witnesses, 27 Jehovah's
Witnesses remained imprisoned without
charge. Although the maximum penalty for
refusing to perform national service is
three years' imprisonment, three of the
individuals have been detained for more
than 11 years. Of the members of
Jehovah's Witnesses detained, 12 were
reportedly held at Sawa Military Camp
and one was in prison in Asmara. At
year's end, eight of the 40 Jehovah's
Witnesses arrested during a home prayer
meeting in 2004 remained incarcerated.
The army
resorted to various forms of extreme
physical punishment to force objectors,
including some members of Jehovah's
Witnesses, to perform military service
(see section 1.c.).
Societal
Abuses and Discrimination:
There were
negative societal attitudes toward
members of some religious denominations
other than the four sanctioned ones.
Some citizens approved of the strict
measures levied against unsanctioned
churches, especially the Pentecostal
groups and Jehovah's Witnesses.
There was a
very small Jewish population in the
country; there were no reports of
anti-Semitic acts.
For a more
detailed discussion, see the
2006 International Religious Freedom
Report.
d. Freedom of
Movement Within the Country, Foreign
Travel, Emigration, and Repatriation
The law and
unimplemented constitution provide for
these rights; however, the government
restricted some of them in practice.
While citizens could generally travel
freely within the country and change
their place of residence, the government
restricted travel to some areas within
the country, particularly along the
border with Sudan and Ethiopia. Military
police periodically set up roadblocks in
Asmara and on roads between other cities
to find draft evaders and deserters (see
section 1.d.).
In October
2005 the government ordered the
grounding of all UN helicopters. The
order continued to constrain UNMEE's
ability to supply troops in the field,
monitor the temporary security zone
area, and support medical evacuations.
On March 1, a UNMEE soldier died from
heart failure; the ban on helicopter
flights was believed to have contributed
to his death as his access to medical
treatment was significantly delayed.
In June the
government further tightened
restrictions on travel for all
noncitizens. All diplomats, humanitarian
organization and UN staff, and foreign
tourists were required to obtain advance
permission from the government in order
to leave Asmara. Travel restrictions
were enforced by the use of military
checkpoints. The granting of permission
to travel was not a transparent process.
While some foreign nationals obtained
permission to travel to certain
locations, the government refused to
issue travel permits to others traveling
to the same place. The government often
failed to respond to requests for
travel.
There were
reports that Ethiopians who remained in
the country were not allowed to live in
the Debub Province bordering Ethiopia.
Citizens and
foreign nationals were required to
obtain exit visas to depart the country.
There were numerous cases where foreign
nationals were delayed in leaving for up
to two months or initially denied
permission to leave when they applied
for an exit visa. Persons routinely
denied exit visas included men under the
age of 50, regardless of whether they
had completed national service, women
age 18 to 27, members of Jehovah's
Witnesses (see section 2.c.), and other
persons out of favor with or seen as
critical of the government. During the
year the government began refusing to
issue exit visas to children 11 years
and older. The government also refused
to issue exit visas to children, some as
young as five years of age, either on
the grounds that they were approaching
the age of eligibility for national
service or because their diasporal
parents had not paid the 2 percent
income tax required of all citizens
residing abroad. Some citizens were
given exit visas only after posting
bonds of approximately $6,600 (100,000
nakfa).
The law has
no provisions concerning exile, and the
government generally did not use exile.
In general
citizens had the right to return;
however, citizens had to show proof that
they paid the 2 percent tax on their
income to the government while living
abroad to be eligible for some
government services, including exit
visas, upon their return to the country.
Applications to return filed by citizens
living abroad who had broken the law,
contracted a serious contagious disease,
or had been declared ineligible for
political asylum by other governments
were considered on a case by case basis.
During the
year, in conjunction with the ICRC, the
government repatriated approximately 988
Ethiopians to Ethiopia.
Internally
Displaced Persons (IDPs)
Approximately
20,000 IDPs from the conflict with
Ethiopia were permanently resettled
during the year. Approximately 22,000
IDPs remained in seven camps in the
Debub and Gash Barka zones at year's
end. Camp facilities were rudimentary,
but conditions generally were adequate.
There also was a large but unknown
number of IDPs residing outside camps
during the year. The government allowed
UN organizations to provide assistance
to IDPS. In May 2005 the government
seized approximately 45 vehicles of the
Office of the UN Human Rights
Commissioner (UNHCR), which seriously
impacted their ability to monitor
programs and provide follow-up. The
vehicles were not returned by year's
end.
Protection
of Refugees:
The law and