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Network
of Eritreans for Constitutional
Governance
(NECG)

Egypt
Grants UN Access To Asylum Seekers From Eritrea
15 June 2008, CAIRO (Reuters) - The Egyptian government
has agreed to grant the United Nations access to refugees from
Eritrea seeking political asylum in Egypt for the first time since
February, the U.N. refugee agency said on Sunday.
But the agreement coincided with large-scale
deportations of Eritrean migrants by the Egyptian authorities and it
was not clear whether the United Nations will have time to save many
of them from forcible repatriation.
Abeer Etefa, a spokeswoman for the regional office of
the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), said senior UNHCR
staff were leaving later on Sunday to visit detention camps in Aswan
in southern Egypt and Hurghada on the Red Sea coast.
"We were told by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
that our staff is welcome to visit those detention centres," she
said. UNHCR last had access to the camps on February 27, she added.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Hossam Zaki said in a
statement that the ministry would welcome meetings between UNHCR
officials and the Eritreans to determine their status and rule on the
applications for political asylum which some of them have made.
UNHCR has the names of some 1,600 Eritreans held by the
Egyptian authorities for entering the country illegally, mostly with
plans to move on to other countries, especially Israel.
The rights organisation Amnesty International says many
of them could be at serious risk of torture if they go home.
Amnesty said last week 500 had already been flown to
Eritrea. Another plane carrying 200 of them left on Saturday night, a
rights activist added, quoting Egyptian officials.
Activists say the returns appeared to be the largest
mass deportations of asylum seekers from Egypt in decades.
The Egyptian spokesman dismissed criticism of his
government's treatment of the Eritreans, saying Egypt fulfilled all
its international obligations towards refugees.
Under international humanitarian law, governments should
not repatriate refugees who have a well-grounded fear of persecution
if they go home.
Eritreans arriving in recent months include Pentecostal
Christians fleeing religious persecution and others trying to avoid
military conscription, activists say.
UNHCR said some Eritreans appeared to have been drawn to
Egypt in hope of reaching Israel, but also cited a deteriorating
human rights situation in Eritrea. Activists say others had spent
time in neighbouring Sudan but no longer felt safe there.
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