Mail & Guardian

No justice for Dawit Isaak, the world’s

In October, Reporters Without Borders and others filed a complaint with the office of the Swedish prosecutor for internatio­nal crimes accusing Eritrea’s president and other senior officials of a crime against humanity by holding the father of three incomm

- Reporters without Borders

The National Unit for Internatio­nal and Organised Crimes, which is attached to the Swedish prosecutor’s office, said in a decision published on 12 January that it had reasons to believe Swedish-eritrean journalist Dawit Isaak is the victim of a crime against humanity coming under Sweden’s universal jurisdicti­on. Yet it refused to open an investigat­ion on the grounds that it would be difficult to carry out in the absence of any cooperatio­n by the Eritrean authoritie­s.

“The Rule of Law and the primacy of fundamenta­l rights are at the heart of prosecutor­ial Functions,” reads a sentence from the Guidelines for Prosecutor­s on Cases of Crimes Against Journalist­s adopted by Unesco and the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Prosecutor­s last December.

It rings strange when you read the recent decision by a Swedish prosecutor, who suspects crimes against humanity against one of the longest detained journalist­s in the world. Isaak has been held in Eritrea for almost two decades without ever being tried in court. Yet the Swedish prosecutor decided not to open an investigat­ion of the crime she suspects are being committed against him. We cannot accept the decision and are now appealing to a higher prosecutor.

Isaak was imprisoned in Eritrea when the regime in Asmara decided to ban all independen­t newspapers and started rounding up journalist­s in September 2001.

Isaak and his colleagues are now the longest detained journalist­s in the world.

His case has been brought to the Swedish Prosecutio­n Authority by his brother, Esayas Isaak, Reporters Without Borders (RSF), his Swedish legal team and 12 prominent internatio­nal human rights lawyers. The Nobel Peace Prize laureate and lawyer, Shirin Ebadi, signed the complaint. Navi Pillay, the former United Nations high commission­er on human rights, Canada’s former justice minister, Irwin Cotler, and the former chair of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, Pansy Tlakula, are also behind the complaint.

But the Swedish prosecutor does not think that Isaak, a Swedish citizen since 1992, deserves an investigat­ion.

The Prosecutor­s Guidelines state: “When prosecutor­s make fair decisions, impartiall­y and with integrity to secure justice to victims and the public, they help maintain a free and democratic society.”

We believe the prosecutor’s decision is neither fair nor convincing. It does not secure justice for Isaak or the public. Nor does she help maintain a free and democratic society. In her decision she declares it would be possible to investigat­e the crime that she suspects and says it could be tried by a Swedish court. She gives two reasons to not even try.

First, that an investigat­ion would need her to go to Eritrea and that she would most likely not be given permission to do that. We agree. Eritrea is one of the world’s most repressive countries when it comes to the media. In Reporters Without Borders Press Freedom Index Eritrea is placed 178 of 180 countries in 2019.

But in our complaint, we present evidence that can be found outside of Eritrea — witnesses to Isaak’s arrest, a person who shared a cell with him and other journalist­s who have been hunted and detained by the regime.

And we point to the trove of evidence collected by the UN Human Rights Council Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in Eritrea. The evidence is held in Geneva and is available to prosecutor­s investigat­ing crimes against humanity in Eritrea.

It is no surprise that crimes against humanity may be the most complex to investigat­e. Legislatin­g about them and creating a specialise­d prosecutor­ial unit aims precisely at confrontin­g that complexity instead of avoiding it and rewarding impunity.

Second, the prosecutor contends that an investigat­ion may harm Sweden’s relations with Eritrea. She does not want to do that for fear of making it harder for Sweden’s ministry for foreign affairs to achieve Isaak’s freedom.

That is of greater value, she states, than that of pursuing justice by trying to investigat­e the most serious of internatio­nal crimes — those against humanity.

The argument is hollow. Sweden has been trying to negotiate Isaak’s release for almost two decades. It has been fruitless. Swedish diplomats have not been allowed to see him; they have never even been given proof of life, despite pleas.

In our complaint we refer to a statement by Foreign Minister Ann Linde. In parliament she described her ministry’s many efforts regarding Dawit and said: “I am forced to conclude that Eritrea in no way has listened to our concerns or acted on them.”

Neither this nor almost two decades in detention in one of the most hostile countries to journalism on Earth impresses the Swedish prosecutor. She thinks an investigat­ion would be made difficult by Eritrea and thus rewards a dictatoria­l regime by giving up without trying to battle impunity.

And she hopes for some magic to happen on the diplomatic front while acknowledg­ing that diplomatic efforts have been in vain, including in 2016 when her predecesso­r refused to open an investigat­ion for the same reason.

It is unreasonab­le and runs counter to the final conclusion in the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Prosecutor­s/unesco Guidelines for

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Prosecutor­s: “All above are part of the general commitment of prosecutor­s to protect justice, equity, the public interest and the common good.”

We are now asking for a review higher up in the prosecutio­n authority. We are doing this for the sake of protecting justice, equity, the public interest and the common good — and for the sake of the journalist, husband and father of three who risks his life in the Eritrean prison system every day.

Signatorie­s

Jesús Alcalá, Dawit Isaak’s Swedish legal team;

Susanne Berger, Raoul Wallenberg Research Initiative;

Antoine Bernard, internatio­nal lawyer, senior adviser for internatio­nal litigation, Reporters Sans Frontières (Reportrar Utan Gränser/paris); Irwin Cotler, former minister of justice and attorney general of Canada; Bernhard Docke, criminal defence lawyer, human rights lawyer and member of the Human Rights Committee of the German Federal Bar;

Shirin Ebadi, lawyer and Nobel

Peace Prize laureate 2003;

Esayas Isaak, brother of Dawit Isaak;

David Matas, Canadian human rights lawyer;

Daniel Mekonnen, Eritrean legal scholar;

Navanethem Pillay, former judge of the High Court of South Africa, former president of the Internatio­nal Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, former judge of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, and former United Nations high commission­er for human rights;

Björn Tunbäck, Dawit Isaak team leader, Reportrar Utan Gränser (Rsf/sweden);

Frans Viljoen, director for the Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria, professor of internatio­nal human rights law and editor-in-chief of the African Human Rights Law Journal, convening editor of the African Human Rights Yearbook.

Reporters Without Borders is an internatio­nal nonprofit and nongovernm­ental organisati­on, which aims to safeguard the right to freedom of informatio­n

 ?? Photo: Hampus Andersson/tt News Agency/afp ?? Inhumane: Demonstrat­ions for the release of Eritreansw­edish journalist Dawit Isaak, who has been imprisoned in Eritrea for 20 years, were held in Stockholm. He and other journalist­s were arrested in 2001, when all independen­t media was banned.
Photo: Hampus Andersson/tt News Agency/afp Inhumane: Demonstrat­ions for the release of Eritreansw­edish journalist Dawit Isaak, who has been imprisoned in Eritrea for 20 years, were held in Stockholm. He and other journalist­s were arrested in 2001, when all independen­t media was banned.

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