Amnesty International Report 2020/21: The State of the World’s Human Rights

Page 156

from national service after they had served 18 months. Conscripts earned ERN800 (approximately US$53) a month which was not enough to cover basic needs. The government used them to work on infrastructure projects such as irrigation, roads and agriculture. Working conditions could be degrading and inhumane, and in some cases amounted to torture. At the Mai Serwa Asmara Flowers detention facility, which in reality is a forced labour camp, Jehovah’s Witnesses and other detainees were forced to work on the nearby flower farms.

FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT The right to leave the country remained severely restricted and people were prevented from travelling abroad without government permission.

REFUGEES AND ASYLUM-SEEKERS Thousands of Eritreans continued to flee the country, primarily to avoid indefinite national service, and sought asylum in other countries. According to UNHCR, the UN refugee agency, 9,463 asylum-seekers from Eritrea crossed the border into Ethiopia during the first quarter of the year. After April, there was a marked reduction in the number of new arrivals in Ethiopia, due to COVID-19 restrictions on the movement of people. Eritrean refugees and asylum-seekers continued to face serious human rights abuses as they made their way to Europe, including in transit countries, particularly Libya, where many were subjected to detention, abduction, sexual abuse, and torture and other ill-treatment. 1. Eritrea: Detainees in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions defenceless against COVID-19 (Press release, 21 May)

156

ESTONIA Republic of Estonia Head of state: Kersti Kaljulaid Head of government: Jüri Ratas The number of stateless individuals remained high; ethnic minorities continued to face discrimination. Legislative developments to improve LGBTI rights slowed. A government minister attempted to limit funding to NGOs working on equality and gender issues.

BACKGROUND In March, the government invoked Article 15 of the European Convention on Human Rights, enabling partial restriction of several freedoms, including freedom of assembly, for the two-month emergency period in connection with the COVID-19 pandemic. In May, amendments to the Aliens Act gave police and border guards the right to annul the visa or visa-free period of all nonEstonian nationals if they had lost employment, including as a result of COVID-19. Five of the 15 ministerial posts in government continued to be held by the Conservative People’s Party of Estonia (EKRE) who spoke out against immigration and LGBTI rights.

DISCRIMINATION In January, Parliament amended the Citizenship Act, easing children’s access to citizenship in cases where at least one of their parents was effectively stateless and the other a citizen of another country. Consequently, 1,500 minors were granted citizenship. However, some 71,000 people, approximately 5.3% of the population, remained stateless. The European Commission noted that Estonia’s citizenship policy “continued to be conservative”. Non-Estonian speaking minorities, albeit with residency rights, continued to face discrimination in a range of areas, including employment, housing, education and health

Amnesty International Report 2020/21


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Articles inside

Slovakia

2min
page 319

Slovenia

5min
pages 320-321

Singapore

2min
page 318

Serbia

10min
pages 314-317

Senegal

2min
page 313

Rwanda

16min
pages 307-312

Portugal

2min
page 296

Qatar

8min
pages 298-300

Romania

15min
pages 301-306

Puerto Rico

2min
page 297

Poland

8min
pages 293-295

Philippines

5min
pages 291-292

Pakistan

8min
pages 279-281

Peru

5min
pages 289-290

Paraguay

5min
pages 287-288

Palestine (State of

13min
pages 282-286

Oman

5min
pages 277-278

Norway

2min
page 276

North Macedonia

2min
page 275

North Korea

5min
pages 273-274

Nigeria

14min
pages 268-272

New Zealand

2min
page 263

Niger

5min
pages 266-267

Nepal

5min
pages 260-261

Myanmar

8min
pages 257-259

Nicaragua

5min
pages 264-265

Netherlands

2min
page 262

Mozambique

5min
pages 255-256

Morocco/Western Sahara

10min
pages 251-254

Montenegro

2min
page 250

Mongolia

2min
page 249

Moldova

5min
pages 247-248

Mexico

11min
pages 243-246

Mali

5min
pages 239-240

Malta

5min
pages 241-242

Malaysia

5min
pages 237-238

Madagascar

7min
pages 233-235

Libya

11min
pages 228-231

Malawi

2min
page 236

Lesotho

5min
pages 226-227

Lithuania

2min
page 232

Lebanon

8min
pages 223-225

Latvia

2min
page 222

Kyrgyzstan

5min
pages 220-221

Kosovo

2min
page 217

Kuwait

5min
pages 218-219

Kazakhstan

5min
pages 212-213

Japan

5min
pages 207-208

Jordan

8min
pages 209-211

Kenya

8min
pages 214-216

Italy

8min
pages 204-206

Palestinian Territories

10min
pages 200-203

Ireland

2min
page 199

Iraq

11min
pages 195-198

Indonesia

11min
pages 186-189

Hungary

5min
pages 180-181

India

11min
pages 182-185

Honduras

5min
pages 178-179

Iran

13min
pages 190-194

Guinea

5min
pages 176-177

Greece

5min
pages 172-173

Guatemala

5min
pages 174-175

France

8min
pages 163-165

Germany

5min
pages 168-169

Ghana

5min
pages 170-171

Georgia

5min
pages 166-167

Finland

2min
page 162

Fiji

2min
page 161

Ethiopia

8min
pages 158-160

Eswatini

2min
page 157

Eritrea

2min
page 155

Estonia

2min
page 156

Equatorial Guinea

5min
pages 153-154

El Salvador

5min
pages 151-152

Egypt

13min
pages 146-150

Ecuador

2min
page 145

Dominican Republic

5min
pages 143-144

Denmark

2min
page 142

Côte d'Ivoire

5min
pages 131-132

Cyprus

5min
pages 136-137

Cuba

5min
pages 134-135

Croatia

2min
page 133

Colombia

16min
pages 125-130

Congo

11min
pages 138-141

Chile

5min
pages 117-118

China

17min
pages 119-124

Canada

13min
pages 110-114

Chad

5min
pages 115-116

Cameroon

5min
pages 108-109

Cambodia

5min
pages 106-107

Burundi

8min
pages 103-105

Burkina Faso

5min
pages 101-102

Brazil

14min
pages 94-98

Bulgaria

5min
pages 99-100

Bosnia and Herzegovina

5min
pages 91-92

Botswana

2min
page 93

Bolivia

5min
pages 89-90

Benin

5min
pages 87-88

Belarus

10min
pages 82-85

Belgium

2min
page 86

Austria

2min
page 73

Bangladesh

8min
pages 79-81

Bahrain

8min
pages 76-78

Azerbaijan

5min
pages 74-75

Australia

2min
page 72

Angola

8min
pages 65-67

Armenia

5min
pages 70-71

Argentina

5min
pages 68-69

regional overview

21min
pages 49-57

Albania

2min
page 61

Algeria

8min
pages 62-64

Afghanistan

8min
pages 58-60

overview

20min
pages 41-48
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