New York, November 21, 2005— The Committee to Protect Journalists
welcomes the release of Eritrean journalist Dawit Isaac, who had been
jailed without charge since a government crackdown closed the entire independent
press in September 2001. Isaac has dual Eritrean and Swedish citizenship.
Fourteen journalists remain in Eritrea's secret jails or otherwise deprived
of their liberty, according to CPJ research.
"We are delighted that Isaac has been released after all these years of
detention without trial," said Ann Cooper, CPJ Executive Director. "But
Eritrea remains Africa's worst jailer of journalists. We will not forget
the fourteen other journalists who have been imprisoned without charge
or forced into extended military service."
Leif Öbrink, a close friend who headed a campaign to free Isaac, told
CPJ he had spoken to him by telephone. "He expressed his happiness to
be free and his thanks to all those who campaigned for him," said Öbrink.
But he said they were not able to discuss Isaac's prison conditions or
whether he had information about the other jailed journalists.
Öbrink said he believed Swedish diplomatic pressure had helped secure
Isaac's release, and that a Swedish diplomat was currently in the Eritrean
capital Asmara trying to secure Isaac's safe passage to Sweden to join
his wife, whom he had also called.
"She was so happy, so relieved," Öbrink said. "We have not seen her smile
like that for four years." Isaac has three children, who are also in Sweden.
Isaac went to Sweden in 1987 as a war refugee, the Associated Press reported,
but returned to his country in the 1990s to become co-owner and reporter
at the independent newspaper Setit. During the September 2001 crackdown,
Eritrean authorities arrested at least 10 journalists, accusing them variously
of avoiding the military draft, threatening national security, and failing
to observe licensing requirements. But CPJ research indicates that the
crackdown was motivated by political anxiety ahead of elections which
were later cancelled.
For more information on Eritrea's jailed journalists, see
CPJ's alert of September 16.

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