Monday, March 30, 2009

Eritrea leader urged to release reporter

STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Mar 29, 2009 (UPI) -- Swedish Foreign Minister Jan Eliasson says he met twice with Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki in an effort to free jailed journalist Dawit Isaak.

Eliasson said that in 2007 he talked twice to Afwerki about Isaak, who has been jailed without charges in Eritrea for seven years, the Swedish newspaper Dagens Nyheter reported Sunday.
The diplomatic efforts produced no success, with the Eritrean president allegedly dismissing Sweden's concerns out of hand, Eliasson said, adding, "(Afwerki) would rather talk about how unjust Eritrea had been treated by the wider world, including Sweden, after the end of the war against Ethiopia."

Swedish ambassador Fredrik Schiller reportedly has made more than a dozen trips to Asmara on Isaak's behalf. But Leif Obrink, the chairman of Dawit Isaak's support association, told Dagens Nyheter that diplomatic pressure isn't working.

"An increasing number of people have begun to realize that quiet diplomacy has reached an impasse and are demanding a tougher approach from the government," he said.
Isaak was arrested in 2001 when Eritrea closed the country's independent newspapers but has never been charged with a crime, advocates say.
 www.upi.com

Copyright 2009 by United Press International

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

VOM Reports Christians Jailed in Eritrea

Voice of the Martyrs' Prisoner Alert reports that at least 1,918 Eritrean citizens are imprisoned in Eritrea because of their religious beliefs. 95% of the known religious prisoners are Christians.

The article states: "jailed Protestants are routinely subjected to physical beatings and severe psychological pressure to deny their religious beliefs. Police and military authorities continue to demand the prisoners return to one of the three 'official' Christian denominations recognized by the government. But even the legally recognized denominations-the nation’s historic Orthodox, Catholic and Lutheran churches-have come under government disfavor in the past year, incurring threats and even jailing by security police officials.

Read more about why it is dangerous to be a Christian in Eritrea at http://www.prisoneralert.com/pprofiles/vp_prisoner_159_profile.html

The Eritrean orphans that were adopted by Americans and then abandoned in Africa were Christians. Read more in prior blog postings.

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