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Geography |
Surface |
46,774 sq.m. 81 x smaller than the USA
(3,787,315 sq.m.) |
Inhabitants |
4.2 mill. 68 x less than in the USA
(285.3 mill.) |
Population density |
90 Inhabitants/sq.m. 1.2 x larger than
in the USA (75) |
Gross national product |
160 $ 214 x below that of the USA
(34,280 $) |
Religious affiliation |
Orthodox |
50% |
Muslim |
50% |
Human rights |
Religious liberty |
Various violations, sometimes serious, of basic religious
liberties |
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Religious Belief, Worship, Missionary Activity, Charitable
and Social
Work | |
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883 evangelical and charismatic Christians have been
detained within the last three years in Eritrea, a young one-party
East African state. |
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It should have been the happiest day of his life: 28 May 2005,
the wedding day of Benyam Gezae. 250 guests have gathered in
the festively decorated Kewa hall in Asmara. As the celebrations are
in full swing, the doors of the hall are suddenly thrust open and
armed, uniformed men march in and spread out among the guests, who
sit in stunned silence. Then the commanding voice of the police
commissioner rips through the silence: All those present are under
arrest, including the bride and groom!
The joyful
celebrations end abruptly, intimidated guests are bussed to the
police station at Asmara airport. The next day, police contact
relatives of the detained to establish whether they belong to a
registered church. The wedding couple and 70 of their guests remain
under arrest, since they are members of a forbidden church, the
‘Meserete Kristos’. |
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Pastor under arrest, singer held in metal hut |
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Haile Naizgi C. Dir. |
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In May 2002 all religious denominations, with the exception of
Islam, the Eritrean Orthodox Church, the Catholic and the Lutheran
Churches, were ordered to seek official state registration. As a
result, twelve smaller denominations, totaling about 20,000 members
were effectively made illegal, and their meetings banned. Even the
possession of a Bible became sufficient grounds for arrest. The
severity of persecution was left to the discretion of the
authorities. In the three years since this measure came into force,
883 Christians belonging to ‘illegal’ denominations are known to
have been arrested. Additionally, 16 leading Christian pastors have
been thrown into jail, among them Rev. Haile Naizgi, leader
of Eritrea’s largest Pentecostal church, Dr. Kifle
Gebremeskel, chairman of the Eritrean Evangelical Alliance, and
Rev. Tesfatsion Hagos, pastor of the Evangelical Rema church
in Asmara. Christian singer Helen Berhane is still being held
without charge in a metal hut at Mai-Serwa military camp, north of
Asmara. In order to gain their freedom, the prisoners must renounce
their evangelical faith and undertake not to attend small
evangelical gatherings. Most of them refuse. |
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Persecution in spite of official recognition |
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Church colsed Comp.
Dir. |
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In contrast, the Eritrean Orthodox Church enjoys state approval.
But even this is confined only to the official Orthodox Church.
According to Christian press service Compass Direct, members of the
Medani-Alem-Alliance revival movement within the Orthodox
Church also face arrest. Accordingly, three revivalist Orthodox
priests disappeared into detention on March 13. They are Dr.
Futsum Kuluberhand , Dr. Tekleab Mengisteab and Rev.
Gebremedhin Georgis. |
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When Orthodox Patriarch Abune Antonios protested at
government interference in church affairs, his Christmas radio
message was cancelled. Even the Catholic Church is not entirely
unmolested. On January 9, 25 members of a Catholic wedding party
were arrested and held at Police station no. 1 in Asmara. |
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Issayas Afewerki |
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Cause for Concern
In Eritrea, the
governing People’s Front for Democracy and Justice is the only
authorized party. The party - formerly a Marxist –Leninist national
liberation movement - led Eritrea to independence in 1991 after a
lengthy civil war. Issayas Afewerki has been President ever since.
There have been no free elections in Eritrea. Opposition parties are
prohibited, even though a multi-party system was foreseen in the
1997 constitution. In 2001 all independent press organs were banned
and 15 prominent journalists disappeared behind bars. Former
followers of Aferwerki are also currently in prison. Eritrea is
listed as a ‘Country of Special Concern’ in the US State
Department’s annual human rights report.
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