A journalist with dual
Eritrean-Swedish citizenship, Dawit Isaak is one of the
founders of Eritrea's first independent newspaper, Setit, and is
currently one member of a group of reformist political prisoners who have been
detained without charge or trial for the past nine years.
Eritrean by birth, Mr Isaak was
forced to flee his native country in 1987 and arrived in Sweden as a beleagured
refugee during Eritrea's bloody war for liberation. He became a Swedish citizen
in 1992 after working for years as a cleaner, and he later returned to Eritrea
when the country finally gained independence in 1996. Eager to develop the country's
independent press, Mr Isaak co-founded the country's first independent
newspaper, Setit, which would rise to national prominence as a professional
paper and gain a reputation for investigative reporting which often focused on
abuse of power by the government.
In May of 2001, a group of 15
cabinet members (prominent reformist politicians later dubbed the G-15),
published an open letter to the government demanding democratic reform, and a
thorough investigation of the events leading up to Eritrea's recurring war with
Ethiopa. The letter was published by the free press, most notably by Mr Isaak's
paper, Setit, which also went on to publish a series of similar
open letters to president Isayas Afeworki demanding sweeping democratic
reforms. The government acted in swift retaliation following the published
demands of G-15, and by September, had effectively suspended all civil liberties in
Eritrea.
On 23 September, all private press
outlets in the country were officially shut down, and 11 of the G-15
politicians were arrested, along with Dawit Isaak and 13 other newspaper owners, editors
and journalists. To date, none have been formally charged or tried, and Mr
Isaak and the other journalists and politicians imprisoned with him have
all been branded as traitors, accused of receiving financial aid from abroad,
an act of criminal treason according to Eritrean press laws. According to reports,
four of the journalists that were detained in 2001 have since died in prison.
In 2001, Sweden's then honorary
consul in Eritrea, Lis Truelsen, managed to get a glimpse of Mr Isaak through
the prison bars and exchange a few words with him. The government of Sweden and
the Swedish media community have undertaken numerous efforts to advocate for Mr
Isaak's release, without any success, as the Eritrean government has made it
clear that his status as a dual citizen of Sweden is of little
consequence. This position was reflected in public statements made in May 2009
by the country's president, and in which he announced: "To me, Sweden is
irrelevant. The Swedish government has nothing to do with us."
On 13 December 2008, it was
reported that Mr Isaak had been moved to a maximum-security prison in
Embatkala, along with 112 other political prisoners. The move was allegedly by
the explicit order of the President, and the Embatkala prison is reportedly one
of the harshest prison environments in the country. Several weeks later, on 11
January 2009, reports surfaced that Mr Isaak had been transferred to a military
hospital, and despite government assurances that he is receiving all necessary
medical treatment, the details of his actual whereabouts remain sketchy.
A controversial Swedish
interview with Eritrean president Issayas Afwerki drew the attention of human
rights watchdog organisations when he declared unceremoniously that there were
no plans to release Mr Isaak, nor to conduct a trial in which the journalist
would be formally charged. The interview, which was broadcast on 26 May 2009,
stirred international controversy when the Eritrean president dismissed the
issue of Mr Isaak's imprisonment altogether, stating without qualm: "We
will not have any trial and we will not free him. We know how to handle his
kind."