Region/Country Dropdown Lists

Estonia

Europe and Central Asia: Summary of Amnesty International’s ...
1 December 2007

This bulletin contains information about Amnesty International’s main concerns in Europe and Central Asia between January and June 2007. Not every country in the ...

Report       EUR 01/010/2007

Estonia | Amnesty International
23 May 2007

Region      

Estonia: Language police gets more powers to harass
27 February 2007

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. PRESS RELEASE. AI Index: EUR 51/001/2007 (Public). News Service No: 040. 27 February 2007. Estonia: Language police ...

Press Release       EUR 51/001/2007

Estonia: Linguistic minorities in Estonia: Discrimination must end
7 December 2006

Estonia has a sizeable Russian-speaking linguistic minority which constitutes approximately a third of the population. Persons belonging to this minority enjoy ...

Report       EUR 51/002/2006

Estonia: Every third person a potential victim of discrimination
7 December 2006

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. PRESS RELEASE. AI Index: EUR 51/005/2006 (Public). News Service No: 314. 7 December 2006. Embargo Date: 7 December 200609:00GMT. ...

Press Release       EUR 51/005/2006

Estonia: The right to freedom of peaceful assembly must be ...
15 August 2006

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. Public Statement. AI Index: EUR 51/001/2006 (Public). News Service No: 214. 15 August 2006. Estonia: The right ...

Press Release       EUR 51/001/2006

Taken from the Amnesty International Report 2007

Head of state: Toomas Hendrik Ilves (replaced Arnold Rüütel in October)
Head of government: Andrus Ansip
Death penalty: abolitionist for all crimes
International Criminal Court: ratified

Mass statelessness and discrimination against ethnic minorities continued to be of serious concern. The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination expressed concern about Estonia's anti-discrimination laws and its current definition of what constitutes a minority. Police failed to provide adequate protection for participants in a Gay Pride march in Tallinn.

Statelessness

Around 130,000 people living in Estonia remained without citizenship and as a result faced discriminatory practices, particularly in the fields of educational, labour and cultural rights. For example, stateless residents were not allowed to work in certain parts of the public sector, and had only limited rights in terms of movement outside the country.

Stateless residents generally held either temporary or permanent residence permits. In April, Estonia introduced the category of long-term resident which, among other things, reduced restrictions on the right to live and work in other European Union member states. All permanent residents automatically qualify as long-term residents. However, in June 2007 a new language requirement was set to be introduced whereby long-term residency would only be granted to those who had achieved the required level in Estonian.

Minority rights

Discriminatory practices, including barriers to employment, continued towards the country's linguistic minority, affecting some 430,000 people, approximately 30 per cent of the population.

In August, the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination adopted its Concluding Observations on Estonia. The Committee recommended that the definition of what constitutes a minority set out in the Law on Cultural Autonomy of National Minorities should be amended to include non-citizens, including stateless people with long-term residence. The Committee further recommended that Estonia enact anti-discrimination legislation in accordance with the UN Convention against Racism. The Committee also suggested that Estonia consider providing free Estonian language courses to all those applying for citizenship.

Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights

In August, participants in a Gay Pride march in Tallinn were attacked by more than a dozen counter-demonstrators. More than 10 participants in the march were injured and one person was hospitalized with head injuries. The counter-demonstrators, who reportedly defined themselves as Estonian nationalists, physically and verbally attacked marchers, spat on them and threw stones and eggs. Law enforcement officials failed to intervene to prevent the attacks by the counter-demonstrators; the authorities had not provided sufficient resources to police the march adequately.

International treaties

Estonia ratified the Optional Protocol to the UN Convention against Torture.

AI country reports/visits

Reports

Estonia: The right to freedom of peaceful assembly must be protected (AI Index: EUR 51/001/2006)

Linguistic minorities in Estonia: Discrimination must end (AI Index: EUR 51/002/2006)

Visits

AI delegates visited Estonia in March and August.