Human Rights Activist, Meron
Estefanos speaking at the Trust Women Conference in London,
December 1 2016.
The rule of former independence
fighter Isaias Afwerki is accused of using enforced conscription,
enslavement, imprisonment, rape and torture
Meron left Eritrea for Sweden at
the age of 14, but she stayed closely connected to her country of
birth in the hope of one day returning there and making a
difference.
The desperate voice of a
22-year-old Eritrean mother kidnapped in the Sinai desert will
haunt Meron Estefanos forever.
"Both her parents had died
fighting for Eritrea to gain its independence. This mum and her
infant were both tortured for two years. She was mainly worried
about what would happen to the child if anything were to happen to
her," said Meron, who runs a radio hotline from her home in Sweden
for Eritrean refugees.
"I was not able to save her and
she died at the hands of her captors. That is something I could not
get over to this day."
Meron left Eritrea for Sweden at
the age of 14, but she stayed closely connected to her country of
birth in the hope of one day returning there and making a
difference.
That dream became closer than
ever when she moved back home in 2002. But she was dismayed by what
she found.
Women's rights and gender
equality,we highlights issues affecting women,
girls and transgender people.
"You could see it in people's
eyes that life was hard, but they would not want to speak out for
fear of getting in trouble," Meron told the Thomson Reuters
Foundation.
Eritreans, under the rule of
former independence fighter Isaias Afwerki, struggled to afford
even basic necessities in the country's collapsing
economy.
His administration is accused by
an inquiry commission appointed by the U.N. Human Rights Council of
using enforced conscription, enslavement, imprisonment, rape and
torture to instil fear.
Meron Estefanos (Sounds of Torture) Complete
Interview
This
is the full length interview with human slavery advocate, Meron
Estefanos and Our Voice show host, Kim Peake.
Meron Estefanos works tirelessly to free those caught in this
horrific reality and compel the world to action through her online
radio show in Sweden and a documentary entitled Sound of Torture,
directed by Keren Shayo
In a bid to escape the climate
of fear, thousands of Eritreans each year put themselves at the
mercy of people smugglers to make the treacherous journey across
the Sinai to Israel and Mediterranean Sea to Europe. Last year
alone, nearly 50,000 Eritreans applied for asylum in
Europe.
Meron returned to Sweden
determined to speak out - using a radio phone-in show to reach
Eritreans, especially those on the move and at risk of kidnapping
and drowning. She even helps to raise funds of pay off smugglers'
ransoms.
She is a presenter on Radio
Erena - a Paris-based Tigrinya-language station which broadcast
globally and, most importantly, into Eritrea via satellite and over
the internet.
"There are days when I receive
up to 50 phone calls a day from inside the country with callers
reporting a family member missing," said Meron ahead of a
discussion on the migration crisis at Trust Women, an annual human
trafficking and women's rights conference organised by the Thomson
Reuters Foundation.
HOTLINE
It was through her show that
Meron received a devastating call in 2010. An Eritrean migrant -
one of 425 Eritreans packed into a listing boat on the
Mediterranean Sea, called her using a people smuggler's satellite
phone, pleading for help.
Since then, Meron's phone number
has become a hotline for Eritrean migrants crossing the
Mediterranean or victims of kidnapping held for ransom in the Sinai
Peninsula.
In 2013, Amnesty International
said it was "greatly concerned for the safety and security of
refugees and asylum-seekers held captive in the Sinai Peninsula in
Egypt."
Many of them are Eritreans, held
for ransom by Bedouin smugglers, and tortured and murdered if
demands go unpaid.
Calls from the Sinai have been
particularly harrowing, said Meron, who heads the Eritrean
Initiative on Refugee Rights - a movement working with
international refugee agencies and rights groups to draw attention
to the plight of Eritrean refugees.
She has heard victims screaming
in the background while someone was on the phone talking to
her.
"The calls came in any time of
the day or night and nothing prepares you for it. You could hear
genuine fear and hopelessness in their voices," Meron
said.
"Some were so exhausted from the
torture that they said death could not come soon enough," she
said.
At times, Meron was able to
negotiate the release of the captives by raising the funds to pay
off ransoms. Those who could not pay were murdered by the
smugglers.
Meron featured in an
award-winning documentary film, "The Sound of Torture" in 2013
which highlights her work in helping refugees kidnapped to the
Sinai Desert en route to Israel.
She campaigns for a change of
government in her home country in the hope it can stem the flow of
refugees out of Eritrea.
"Right now, dictatorship is the
root cause of thousands fleeing the country. I believe that an end
to dictatorship should also mean an end to these horrible stories
and people can go back home," Meron said.
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