CTindex - Christian Today UK Interactive Catalogue
World

CSW seeks urgent action from EU over Eritrea human rights abuses

Posted: Friday, September 19, 2008, 9:10 (BST)
Font Scale:A A A

CSW took part in a special hearing on Thursday urging the European Union to take urgent action over its policy on serious human rights violations in Eritrea.

Presentations on the dire situation of Eritrean refugees took place in the European Parliament, hosted by Portuguese MEP, Ana Gomes.

CSW, one of the co-organisers, presented an overview of the religious liberty situation in Eritrea, where over 2,000 Christians are still detained without charge or trial in centres where human rights abuses occur routinely.

CSW representative, Dr Khataza Gondwe, explained how the Eritrean Government has systematically targeted all religious groups, including Jehovah's Witnesses, Evangelicals, Orthodox and Muslims. She called on EU officials to push for access to prisons and detention centres.

Mr Kebreab Yimesgen Hailegiorgis, co-founder and former General Secretary of the Eritrean Evangelical Alliance for Africa and the Middle East, also addressed the assembly, sharing his personal experience of close friends, neighbours and colleagues being 'disappeared' by the Eritrean Government.

Mr Hailegiorgis called for independent observers to visit the country in order to examine the plight of its prisoners: "These prisoners are detained solely for their religious beliefs. None have been officially charged or brought before a recognised court of law. They are held for weeks, months, even years in police stations, open air facilities in military camps and ordinary jails.

"Some are held, either in isolation, or with others in metal shipping containers, in cramped, poorly ventilated cells, in underground cells, and even in sealed caves. Many have been subjected to torture, and some have died during or as a consequence of it, while others have been disabled."

Tina Lambert, CSW's Advocacy Director said it was a "travesty" that the situation in Eritrea had received so little attention from the international community, "and that this silence has been interpreted by the Eritrean regime as tacit support for its brutal policies".

"We urge the European Union to put respect for human rights at the top of its priorities in its relations with Eritrea and make their concerns crystal clear to the regime," she said. "The Eritrean people have already suffered for far too long."





The comments below are readers' personal opinions and are in no way intended to reflect the editorial opinion of Christian Today.

Added: Tuesday, September 23, 2008, 10:41 (BST)

PLEASE MAKE SURE NO CURRENT ERITREAN MINISTER OR GENERAL TRAVELS ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD FOR ERITREA IS LISTED AMONG THE FEW COUNTRIES THAT DOES NOT COMPLY WITH BASIC HUMAN RIGHTS.

eliasabraha, London

Google Advertisement
Externally generated - Report offensive links here
World Headline
Former Haggard counsellor: We wish he wouldn't do this

Former Haggard counsellor: We wish he wouldn't do this

A member of Ted Haggard’s now-defunct restoration team says he and the others wish the former megachurch pastor would...
Sponsored Features
Bible Educational Services is committed to telling the next generation the praiseworthy deeds of the Lord. Psalm 78: 4. To download free bible lessons or learn about Postal Bible Schools visit Enrich your love life, marriage and relationships through education and counselling. Train to become a certified marriage and family educator and change lives for good.
Google Advertisement
Externally generated - Report offensive links here