BBC News, 9
May 2013
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Stories
Thousands of political prisoners are being held by Eritrea in "unimaginably atrocious conditions", says Amnesty International, and not one has ever been charged with any crime.
The rights
group says at least 10,000 people have been jailed for political reasons since
President Isaias Afewerki came to power 20 years ago.
It says
torture is widespread in a network of detention centres.
Eritrea has
so far not responded to Amnesty's new report.
Some of
those imprisoned are journalists or critics of the government, Amnesty says.
Others have practised an unregistered religion, or tried to flee the country or
avoid conscription into the army.
In most
cases, prisoners' families are not informed of their whereabouts, and often
never hear from their relative again.
"The
government has systematically used arbitrary arrest and detention without
charge to crush all opposition, to silence all dissent, and to punish anyone who
refuses to comply with the repressive restrictions it places on people's
lives," said Claire Beston, Amnesty's Eritrea researcher.
"Twenty
years on from the euphoric celebrations of independence, Eritrea is one of the
most repressive, secretive and inaccessible countries in the world."
Helicopter
position
The
facilities used as detention centres include underground cells or shipping
containers, Amnesty says.
The group
says some prisoners are left for days in what is known as the helicopter
position - lying face down with their hands and feet bound together.
It says it
has received many reports of deaths in detention resulting from torture, the
bad conditions or suicide.
A former
detainee held in a detention centre in Barentu told Amnesty:
"The
room was about 2.5m by 3m [8 by 10 feet] and we were 33 people. It is very,
very hot. The door is closed, the ceiling is low, about 2m. The temperature was
about 50C.
"A
boy, about 17 years old, was about to die. We were not permitted to speak, but
we banged the door. They [the guards] told us they would kill all of us if we
did not stop shouting. We couldn't do anything to help him."
Amnesty is
calling for all prisoners to be either immediately charged with a recognisable
crime or released.
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