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2 /2 /2008
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Eritrea
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30 January 2008
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Independent journalist Seyoum Tsehaye, the
most recent winner of the Reporters Without
Borders - Fondation de France press freedom
prize, is still alive and is being held in a
secret prison camp called “Eiraeiro,” located
near the village of Gahtelay in a mountainous
desert region north of the Asmara-Massawa
road. Seyoum is in cell No. 10 of block A01,
which is reserved for the most sensitive
political prisoners.
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Reporters Without Borders learned this and
other details this month from an Eritrean who
has had access to the prison, where many
political leaders are held. The source must
remain anonymous for his protection.
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According to this source, Seyoum was
transferred to Eiraeiro in about 2003. He was
seen being beaten by guards a year or two
after arriving in the camp. Very agitated,
with his head shaved and a long beard, he
rebelled several times against the guards in
charge of him, refusing the prison food and
repeating : “I did my duty,” “it is my
responsibility” and “I don’t care if I die
here.”
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Head of public television immediately after
independence, Seyoum subsequently went back to
being a freelance photographer and filmmaker.
He and around 10 newspaper publishers and
editors were arrested in the course of a
round-up ordered by President Issaias Afeworki
and his aides in September 2001 after several
leading members of the ruling party (the only
one permitted) and the military had publicly
called for democratic reforms.
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He went missing within the Eritrean prison
system in April 2002, when the authorities
transferred him and several other prisoners of
conscience led by Fessehaye “Joshua” Yohannes
to secret locations in order to conceal the
hunger strike they had begun with the aim of
pressing their demand to be taken before a
court.
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The Reporters Without Borders source described
this high-security prison complex in detail,
how it operates and the conditions in which
the detainees are held. Some initial
information about the camp was published in
2006 in a report compiled by the Ethiopian
intelligence services. But it consisted of
second-hand information. This report
summarizes the information provided by a
first-hand witness directly to Reporters
Without Borders. It confirms the initial
information published about this prison, which
is described as “not the worst of Eritrea’s
prisons.”
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Access
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Detainees are blindfolded when they are taken
in 4WD vehicles to Eiraeiro, located a few
kilometres from the village of Gahtelay in
Northern Red Sea province, in a region where
the temperature can fluctuate from 40 Celsius
by day to several degrees below zero at night.
After Filfil, a new road leads into a
mountainous area where there used to be a
coffee plantation. After about 45 minutes, the
road is blocked by an initial checkpoint
manned by several guards. No one is let
through without a laissez-passer stamped by
the president’s office. The guard in charge
must telephone the camp administrator and have
the vehicle searched before allowing the
prisoner and his escort to continue on their
way to the place identified as “hill 346” on
the military high command’s maps.
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Since 2005, the special units in charge of
guarding the camp have worn beige camouflage
uniforms and caps. Previously they wore the
sand-coloured uniform called Milano, which the
Eritrean independence fighters used to wear.
They are armed with AK-47 assault rifles and
clubs. Before taking up the post, they must
swear an oath pledging never to reveal
anything about Eiraeiro.
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About one kilometre after the barrier are the
barracks of Eiraeiro’s guards, then the outer
perimeter of the camp itself, delineated by
barbed wire on this side and by a minefield on
the north side of the camp. After this second
checkpoint, the prisoners are taken to the
administrator’s office in an L-shaped building
on the edge of the complex. This building also
houses a bakery, a medical post, a pharmacy
and a bedroom for senior officials from Asmara
such as President Issaias himself.
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The prisoners are taken before the camp
administrator, Lt. Col. Isaac Araia, also
known as “Wedi Hakim.” They and their escorts
- and even official visitors who come from
Asmara to interrogate a detainee - must empty
their pockets and leave behind any pieces of
paper or pencils they may have brought with
them. The administrator checks the
laissez-passer and visit schedule in a room
with two surveillance cameras. He makes the
prisoners sign a form that identifies them by
name and he gives them a uniform consisting of
a blue shirt and trousers, together with
military blankets and a sleeping mat.
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An African gulag
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Barefoot, under escort and strictly forbidden
to talk to, or even look at, the other
detainees or guards they pass on the way, the
prisoners enter the camp proper, which is
surrounded by a four-metre-high wall and are
taken to one of the three buildings that hold
the cells.
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On a flat area below the administration
building, the prison camp is an E-shaped
complex of three cement buildings, each
containing a total of 64 separate cells
separated by thick walls. Each wing is
identified by a letter and a number. The three
sections holding the most politically
sensitive detainees, including the
journalists, are A01, B01 and B03.
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A cell in Eiraeiro seen by an architect
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In each wing, a first row on cells gives on to
the outside, and a second row gives on to a
corridor running through the building. “The
blocks were built on the principle that the
doors of the cells give on to a wall, so that
you cannot see the other detainees,” the
Reporters Without Borders source said.
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The cells are windowless rooms, 3 metres
square, with ceilings high enough to be out of
reach, and lit 24 hours a day by a bulb behind
an opaque plastic globe. They have a numbered
metal door with a 10-centimetre-square spyhole
through which the guards give the prisoner his
food. Inside the cell, to the right of the
door, a hole in the ground serves as a
latrine. Above it is a pipe that delivers
water but only the camp administrator can turn
on the supply.
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A one-metre-high metal bar projecting from the
floor at the far end of the cell, opposite the
door, is used for punishments. If the guards
think a prisoner has behaved badly (a look or
comment to another prisoner or to a soldier,
for example), the prisoner is bound to the bar
by the feet and by the hands behind the back,
in a squatting position. They are forced to
remain like this “for at least 40 hours,” the
Reporters Without Borders source said.
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The daily hell
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The prisoners are kept day and night under the
light of an electric bulb and in complete
isolation. Some are manacled by the feet or
hands. Others are not. When they are not shut
up in their cells, the prisoners are taken to
one of the three interrogation rooms. The
interrogation sessions are often conducted by
Abdulla Jaber, the security chief of the
ruling People’s Front for Democracy and
Justice, or other senior officials such as
Yemane “Monkey” Gebread, President Issaias’
advisor. The prisoners are tortured during
these sessions. They are hit with plastic
whips, for example. There are messages written
over the doors of the interrogation rooms. One
says : “Did you see who died before you ?”
Another says : “If you don’t like the message,
kill the messenger.”
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The heads of the prisoners are shaved every
two months by a barber, who is accompanied by
a guard to prevent him talking to them. They
are given food twice a day in a plastic bowl -
a soup of lentils, vegetables or potatoes.
They also have a glass of tea in the morning
and six pieces of bead. They are only allowed
one litre of water a day. Detainees in very
poor health may he given an additional water
ration, but only if prescribed by the camp
physician, Dr. Haile Mihtsun. If he issues a
prescription, it is posted on the cell door.
The administrator turns on the water in the
pipe over the latrine for only 20 minutes a
week. The prisoners have to wash themselves
and their clothes in that short period of
time.
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According to information obtained by Reporters
Without Borders in Asmara and abroad in 2006
and 2007, at least nine prisoners had died in
Eiraeiro including Tsigenay editor Yusuf
Mohamed Ali, believed to have died on 13 June
2006, Keste Debena deputy editor Medhane
Haile, believed to have died in February 2006
and Admas editor Said Abdulkader, believed to
have died in March 2005. Reporters Without
Borders subsequently learned that poet and
playwright Fessehaye “Joshua” Yohannes,
co-founder of the now banned weekly Setit,
died in detention on 11 January 2007. The
source interviewed this month confirmed
Fessehaye’s death in detention. He said he was
held in cell No. 18. He also said there is a
cemetery “behind the administrator’s building
where at least seven people are buried.”
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Recommendations
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The prison camp known as Eiraeiro is a
disgrace for Eritrea and Africa. The leaders
attending the three-day African Union summit
that begins on 31 January must not turn a
blind eye to the fact that the Eritrean
government acts with extraordinary cruelty
towards all those it regards as a potential
threat to its survival.
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In the light of this information, Reporters
Without Borders recommends that :
That
the governments of the African Union member
states and the leading democratic nations
summon the Eritrean ambassador in each of
their capitals to express their revulsion at
the inhuman treatment of political prisoners
and to request their release. The foreign
ministries should also demand an end to the
extortion practised by Eritrean embassies to
supplement Asmara’s finances. All Eritreans
living abroad are forced to hand over at least
2 per cent of their income to their embassy in
the country where they reside, under pain of
being forbidden to return home, own any
property in Eritrea or send packages to their
families.
The
European Union should adopt targeted
sanction against the officials responsible for
repression and prison camps. The following
persons, in particular, should at the very
least be banned from visiting EU countries :
presidential chief of staff and spokesman
Yemane Gebremeskel ; special presidential
adviser Yemane Gebreab, whose presence in
Eiraeiro and other camps has been reliably
reported ; defence minister Gen. Sebhat
Ephrem ; camp administrator Isaac “Wedi Hakim”
Araia ; local government and information
minister Naizghi Kiflu, who was responsible
for the 2001 round-ups ; acting information
minister Ali Abdu, who is in charge of
propaganda ; camp doctor Haile Mihtsun ; Col.
Michael Hans, also known as “Wedi Hans,”
commander of the 32nd division, which is in
charge of the area where Eiraeiro is located ;
Col. “Wedi Welela,” head of intelligence in
Administrative Zone No. 5 ; and former camp
administrator Maj. Gen. Gerezghiher “Wuchu”
Andemariam.
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