SHARE
COPY LINK

DAWIT ISAAK

‘Set Dawit Isaak free’

After 3571 days of imprisonment without official charge or trial, a formal legal request has finally been put before the Supreme Court of Eritrea: Show us Dawit Isaak! Tell us where he is, let us see him with our own eyes, let him be examined by a doctor and let him have contact with his family. Then let him defend himself and examine if it is right that the authorities continue to imprison him, in strict isolation, without access to the outside world. That is at the heart of the request - about seventy pages long - which has now been filed with Eritrea's Supreme Court.

'Set Dawit Isaak free'

It is a writ of “Habeas Corpus”, practically unknown in Swedish law but common practise in many other legal systems. It is an old rule, the corner stone of the core civil liberties and judicial guarantees we now call “Rule of Law” and “Human Rights”.

Legal history traces the right to “Habeas Corpus” as far back as the 12th century in England. The law was first codified there in the 1600’s and it remains the central mechanism by which legal advocates and prisoners themselves can fight illegal detention and indefinite incarceration.

“Habeas corpus ad subiciendum” means “You shall present the person before a court of law” and imposes a duty to present the prisoner in the flesh, not merely to offer vague assurances about his condition. ‘Habeas Corpus’ guarantees that one essential thing; nothing more – not even a fair trial – but also nothing less.

In short, its central purpose is to prevent precisely what has happened to Dawit Isaak ten long years ago – that a person simply disappears, with no one having to account for his or her whereabouts.

Eritrean law provides that “every person shall have the right to petition the court for a writ of Habeas Corpus”. All claims raised in the current request are in fact basic prisoners’ rights that were enshrined in domestic and international law decades ago, but that Eritrea up until now has flaunted with impunity.

The Supreme Court now faces a difficult choice: It must decide whether it will turn a blind eye to the travesty President I. Afewerki has made out of the country’s legal system or if it will follow the rule of law under which Eritrea ostensibly operates, according to the country’s official interim constitution.

That very document, ratified in 1997 and recognized by a government appointed Constituent Assembly, protects prisoners against the kind of arbitrary abuses of power suffered by Dawit Isaak and thousands of other Eritreans who have been jailed since President Afewerki came into office.

Article 17 of the Eritrean Constitution guarantees detained persons the presumption of innocence as well as the right “to be brought before the court within forty-eight hours”. The same is true for Article 61 of Eritrea’s criminal code which grants detainees “prompt access to legal counsel.”

According to the official writ of “Habeas Corpus” filed on July 4, 2011 with the Eritrean High Court, the incommunicado detention of Dawit Isaak also violates a number of international laws, among them articles, 6, 7, 9 and 18 of the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights as well as Articles 7, 9,10, 14 and 19 of the International Covenant on the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Several obvious questions present themselves: Why was such a filing undertaken only now? And what are the chances that this motion will finally mark a true breakthrough in the case, one that brings clarity about Dawit Isaak’s whereabouts and, hopefully, his release?

Both questions are difficult to answer. Over the last ten years, the Swedish government has pursued a policy of quiet diplomacy in the case; a diplomacy so timid that it has yielded no measurable sign of success since 2005 when Dawit Isaak was freed from prison for three short days, only to be immediately arrested again.

The unwillingness of government officials to adjust their strategy in the face of six years of continued failure since then is damning. Inexplicably, the Swedish Foreign Office has never mounted any legal challenges of Isaak’s detention.

Just as surprising is the fact that human rights groups like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch also have not embraced juridical steps in their efforts to gain Isaak’s release.

The initiator and principal author of the ‘habeas corpus’ writ, Jesús Alcalá, who is a former chairman of Amnesty International in Sweden feels strongly that both the Swedish government and the European Union should have taken much stronger action on the legal front from the very beginning:

“Not only could they have done it, they should have done it long ago, .. shortly after Dawit was detained.”

Attorneys Percy Bratt and Prisca Orsonneau, co-signatories of the ‘Habeas Corpus’ motion, agree. As Bratt who is the Chairman of “Civil Rights Defenders” in Sweden underlines:

“To use all the legal instruments offered by the Eritrean legal system is not only appropriate but a quite obvious step in order to try to end Dawit’s unlawful dention.”

“It was vital to voice Dawit’s case to the High Court,” adds Orsonneau, a lawyer at the Paris Bar and member of “the Legal Committee of Reporters Without Borders” in France.

“Eritrean authorities continue to gag all forms of free expression and arrest journalists. A positive answer to the writ would give us hope for the future. ”

Evidence that such legal measures can be effective came just a few days ago from Djibouti, where six journalists were released from prison in response to a petition filed before the Supreme Court there.

Percy Bratt further emphasizes that the need for proper legal representation is equally important at home.

Just a few months ago, Bratt, together with Attorney Olle Asplund, formally presented the Swedish government with a careful analysis in which the two attorneys argued that both the Swedish government and the European Union (EU) have a legal obligation to avail themselves of all possible options to ensure Dawit’s safe return, including through the imposition of sanctions and other punitive measures, such as issuing travel restrictions for Eritrean diplomats or preventing special tax collections from Eritrean citizens living in Sweden.

Great Britain has put a stop to this form of blackmail which involves threats against family members back home in Eritrea. This is one of many steps the British government enacted after the Eritrean government imprisoned four British citizens in December 2010. The men were released just last month.

Longtime activists like Björn Tunbäck, Member of the Board of “Reporters Without Borders” in Sweden, feel that time is quickly running out:

“Considering the time Dawit has spent in illegal custody, the fact that some of his imprisoned colleagues have already died, we must not wait … We fear for him.”

After living through so many years without any news about Dawit, his brother considers the ‘Habeas Corpus’ writ an option of last resort, especially since Dawit has suffered for years from diabetes which requires urgent medical care.

“After ten years we cannot rely only on behind-the-scenes diplomacy,” says Esayas Isaak. “It´s important to test all possible actions that might be the key to freeing Dawit.”

A decision by the Eritrean Supreme Court is expected shortly and the best case scenario would be that the judges immediately order Isaak’s release. Alcalá hopes that at the very least “the court decides that the Eritrean authorities will present Dawit Isaak and that they will provide him with an attorney.”

The Swedish government should do everything in its power to support the “Habeas Corpus” request, including issuing a public demand for Dawit Isaak’s immediate release.

If the Eritrean judges somehow reject the motion, it is time for Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, together with his European and African counterparts, to take decisive action.

They must make it unmistakably clear to President Afewerki that the brutal mistreatment of a European citizen and the general disregard for the most fundamental human rights principles guaranteed in Eritrea’s constitution will not be tolerated.

Arne Ruth is a publicist and former culture editor at Swedish newspapers Dagens Nyheter and Expressen.

Susanne Berger is a US-based German historian heavily involved in research into the life of Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat who helped prevent the arrests of thousands of Hungarian Jews during the Second World War.

Dawit Isaak (b. 1964) is an Eritrean-born author and journalist who was arrested in Eritrea on September 23, 2001, as part of a crackdown on the independent media in the country.

Since then he has been held in custody without formal charge or trial. In October 2005, Eritrean authorities briefly released Mr. Isaak for three days, only to immediately detain him again.

Since then, he has not been allowed contact with the outside world nor has he had access to any legal representation. Mr. Isaak had fled Eritrea in 1987 and settled in Sweden where he obtained Swedish citizenship. After Eritrea gained independence in May 1993, Mr. Isaak returned to work for “Setit”, one of country’s first independent newspapers.

In 2000, Mr Isaak as well as his wife and three children left Eritrea, as the political conditions deteriorated once again.

He returned alone in 2001 to continue his work as a journalist, advocating in particular the easing of restrictions on the press.

He is the author of a novel, a play and numerous articles which were translated for the first time last year from Tigrinya into Swedish and which were published under the titles “Hope – The Tale of Moses” and “Manna’s Love and Other Texts”, through a joint initiative of eleven major Swedish publishing houses.

This text was originally published in Swedish in daily Expressen.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

ERITREA

Swedish rights group reports Eritrea to police for ‘torture and kidnapping’

Sweden's chapter of Reporters Without Borders has filed a complaint accusing Eritrea's regime of human rights abuses over the imprisonment of Swedish-Eritrean journalist Dawit Isaak in 2001.

Swedish rights group reports Eritrea to police for 'torture and kidnapping'
A sign from a September 2011 demonstration for Dawit Isaak's release
The complaint was directed at Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki and seven other high ranking political leaders, including Foreign Minister Osman Saleh Mohammed.
   
Handed over to Swedish police by RSF and Isaak's brother, the complaint accused them of “crimes against humanity, enforced disappearance, torture and kidnapping”.
   
It was also signed by human rights advocates like Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi and former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay.
   
On September 23, 2001, Isaak was arrested shortly after the Eritrean newspaper he founded, Setit, published articles demanding political reforms.   
 
According to RSF, he and his colleagues detained at the same time are now the journalists who have been imprisoned the longest in the world.
 
 
READ ALSO: 
 
Isaak had fled to Sweden in 1987 during Eritrea's struggle against Ethiopia which eventually led to independence in 1993. He returned in 2001 to help shape the media landscape.
   
RSF ranks Eritrea as the world's third most repressive country when it comes to press freedom, behind North Korea and Turkmenistan.
   
Similar complaints have been filed before, including in 2014 when a new law took effect in Sweden enabling the prosecution for such crimes even if committed elsewhere in the world.
   
The prosecutor-general at the time concluded that while there were grounds to suspect a crime and open an investigation, doing so “would diminish the possibility that Dawit Isaak would be freed.”
   
Bjorn Tunback, coordinator for RSF Sweden's work on the Dawit Isaak case, said they hoped this time would be different after Foreign Minister Ann Linde last year said that despite repeated calls for Isaak's release “no clear changes are yet to be noted in Eritrea.”
   
Tunback said the minister's statements indicated that diplomatic channels had been exhausted.
   
“Diplomacy has its course, but when that doesn't lead anywhere, there is also the legal route,” Tunback told AFP.
   
“The law is there to protect individuals… and that is what we're testing now.”
SHOW COMMENTS