UN expert urges 'bold action' to address raft of human rights abuses in Eritrea The Special Rapporteur noted that Eritrea has no constitution and lacks fundamental institutions that underpin a society based on the rule of law WASHINGTON D.C., United States of America, June 16, 2017/APO/ -- Actions against severe human rights abuses meted out to Eritrean citizens must not be delayed, a United Nations rights expert has warned in a new report to the Human Rights Council. “I regret to report that, as of now, the Government has made no effort to end ongoing human rights violations, which the Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in Eritrea described as amounting to crimes against humanity,” said Sheila B. Keetharuth, Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Eritrea. She stressed that citizens continue to suffer arbitrary arrest, incommunicado detention, enforced disappearances, and a national service system that amounts to enslavement. “The time for Eritrea to take bold action for human rights protection is long overdue, and the Government has not delivered on any of its promises,” underscored the expert while urging the authorities “to rise above the rhetoric it has used over the last five years when addressing the [Council].” Ms. Keetharuth emphasized that the Government of Eritrea must “put its obligations under human rights treaties into effect,” said. The Special Rapporteur continued that while Eritrea has increased its interaction with some human rights bodies, nothing has substantially changed on the ground. In her report, she has suggested a list of areas with the intention to assist the Human Rights Council in developing specific and time-bound benchmarks to assess substantive change. “Such specific, time-bound targets would help Member States assess Eritrea's progress. I hope that, as of next year, we will be able to celebrate the first steps of tangible improvements that will make a change in people's life in Eritrea,” she said. The Special Rapporteur noted that Eritrea has no constitution and lacks fundamental institutions that underpin a society based on the rule of law. It does not have an independent judiciary, democratically elected parliament or legislative assembly, opposition parties, an independent media or civil society organizations, other than government-affiliated organizations.