Excellencies,
Ahead of the UN Human Rights Council’s 62nd session (15 June-10 July 2026), we, the undersigned non-governmental organisations, write to urge your delegation to support the development and adoption of a strong resolution that extends the mandate of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Eritrea.
Beyond spelling out and condemning the ongoing grave human rights violations committed by Eritrean authorities in a context of widespread impunity, this year’s resolution, which will be considered ten years after the Commission of Inquiry (COI) on Human Rights in Eritrea presented its final report to the Council, should among others request the Special Rapporteur to stock-take on options and processes available to address past and ongoing violations and ensure accountability and justice.
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The Human Rights Council’s 62nd regular session will open in a context of increasing regional tensions, in particular between Eritrea and Ethiopia, while Eritrea’s human rights situation remains of utmost concern. In addition to the grave violations outlined in previous civil society letters, which continue with impunity, the country’s domestic situation has severe and far-reaching effects on the Eritrean diaspora, who often face extraterritorial attacks (which the Special Rapporteur has identified as acts of “transnational repression”) aimed at maintaining control, silencing peaceful dissent, and discouraging criticism of the authorities.
One year after the adoption of resolution 59/1, which extended the Special Rapporteur’s mandate, Eritrea’s human rights situation has not fundamentally changed. In late 2025, Eritrea released over a dozen detainees who had been in detention for over 18 years, including in solitary confinement. Yet, thousands of prisoners remain in arbitrary detention. In fact, this year will mark 25 years since the arrest of “G11” reformists—eleven government officials who called for democratic reforms and have been held incommunicado since September 2001. Over 10,000 people are estimated to be in arbitrary detention in Eritrea, including politicians, journalists, priests and students. The recent release of 13 long-term detainees, many of whom were held in conditions amounting to torture, does not address the systemic nature of violations.
To date, the Eritrean authorities have refused to implement decisions, concluding observations and calls by the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR), including to release detainees. Eritrean authorities also failed to use the country’s membership in the Human Rights Council (2019-2024) to improve the domestic human rights situation or to engage in a serious dialogue with the international community. As the Council is turning 20, Eritrea remains among the very few States that have never received any official visit by a special procedure mandate-holder.
In June 2016, the COI on Eritrea released its final report, in which it found that it had “reasonable grounds to believe” that crimes against humanity have been committed in the country since 1991 and that “Eritrean officials have committed and continue to commit the crimes of enslavement, imprisonment, enforced disappearance, torture, other inhumane acts, persecution, rape, and murder.” It added that crimes against humanity have been committed “in a widespread and systematic manner in Eritrean detention facilities, military training camps and other locations across the country” as part of “a campaign to instil fear in, deter opposition from and ultimately to control the Eritrean civilian population.” No adequate follow-up has been mandated by the Council to date. Despite the COI’s work and reports by successive Special Rapporteurs and the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) on ongoing violations, no Eritrean official has been held accountable for these crimes.
Eritrea remains ranked 180th (out of 180 countries) in Reporters Without Borders’ World Press Index and is currently rated as “Closed” in the CIVICUS Civic Space Monitor, with a score of 4/100—the worst in Africa.
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At the Council’s 59th session, in June 2025, the Eritrean Government did not only oppose the annual resolution aiming to extend the Special Rapporteur’s mandate. In an unprecedented move, it tried to capitalise on the UN’s financial crisis and the backdrop of attacks on multilateralism to present its own draft resolution aimed at ending international scrutiny of Eritrea. Entitled “Discontinuation of the Mandate of the Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights in Eritrea,” L.1/Rev.1, if it had been adopted, could have created a precedent used by other States to discontinue Council mechanisms such as special procedure mandates and independent investigations. It was roundly defeated by a recorded vote (four votes in favour, 25 against, with 18 abstentions) and, after the rejection of a last-minute oral amendment presented by Sudan, resolution 59/1 was adopted by a broad margin (23 votes in favour, four against, with 20 abstentions). Rewarding the Eritrean Government’s use of these tactics to undermine scrutiny should not be an option as it will only weaken the Council institutionally and abandon victims of human rights violations in the country. Rather, the Eritrean Government’s actions and tactics strengthen the case for more substantive resolutions on Eritrea, going beyond technical rollovers (mandate extensions). They are a clear sign of the positive impact that the Special Rapporteur’s work has had, including documenting violations and keeping a spotlight on the country. Continued scrutiny from the international community is essential.
In a context in which Eritrea refuses to meaningfully cooperate with the Council and its mechanisms, and considering that the cause of serious violations in the country is political in nature, rather than merely due to a lack of capacity or resources, the provision of technical assistance and capacity-building would at this time be neither efficient nor adequate to address the country’s challenges.
Instead, it is critical for the Human Rights Council to produce a substantive assessment of Eritrea’s human rights situation. In addition to all the violations outlined in pre-2019 resolutions, COI and Special Rapporteur reports, and successive civil society letters, the upcoming Council resolution should address, among others:
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Eritrea’s human rights situation requires urgent attention and an adequate level of public reporting and debates—meaning more than once a year. At its 62nd session, the Council should adopt a resolution that:
and
We thank you for your attention to these pressing issues and stand ready to provide your delegation with further information.
Sincerely,
Ralph Bunche Institute for International Studies
The Graduate Center, CUNY
365 Fifth Avenue, Suite 5203
New York, NY 10016-4309, USA