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Human rights in Estonia

Human rights in Estonia are acknowledged[by whom?]as being generally respected by the government.[1][2][3] Nevertheless, there are concerns in some areas, such as detention conditions, excessive police use of force, and child abuse.[2] Estonia has been classified as a flawed democracy,[4] with moderate privacy[5] and human development in Europe.[6] Individuals are guaranteed on paper the basic rights under the constitution, legislative acts, and treaties relating to human rights ratified by the Estonian government.[2][3][7] As of 2023, Estonia was ranked 8th in the world by press freedoms.[8]

Several international and human rights organisations, such as Human Rights Watch,[3] the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe[9] in 1993 and the UN Human Rights Council[10] in 2008 have found little major apparent issues or patterns of systematic abuse of human rights or discrimination on ethnic grounds, while others, such as Amnesty International in 2009, have raised concerns regarding immigrants, and regarding the Russophone minority, who "suffer unemployment rates almost twice as high as among ethnic Estonians".[11]

History edit

Estonians' individual human rights and collective rights to exist as an ethnic entity, have been routinely violated for eight centuries since the Northern Crusades and Baltic German rule, followed by two centuries of Russian imperial suzerainty and ending with half a century of Soviet occupation. Estonia's first constitution of 1920 included safeguards for civil and political rights that were the standard of the day.[12] The 1925 Law on Cultural Autonomy was an innovative piece of legislation that provided for the protection of the collective rights for citizens of non-Estonian ethnicities.[12]

Estonia in the international human rights system edit

As of end of 2010, European Court of Human Rights has delivered 23 judgments in cases brought against Estonia (beginning from 2001); in 19 cases, it found at least one violation of the European Convention on Human Rights or its protocols.[13] In 2001, Estonia has extended a standing invitation to Special Procedures of UN Human Rights Council.[14]

Participation in basic human rights treaties edit

UN core treaties[15] Participation of Estonia CoE core treaties[16] Participation of Estonia
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination Accession in 1991 European Convention on Human Rights Ratified in 1996
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Accession in 1991 Protocol 1 (ECHR) Ratified in 1996
First Optional Protocol (ICCPR) Accession in 1991 Protocol 4 (ECHR) Ratified in 1996
Second Optional Protocol (ICCPR) Accession in 2004 Protocol 6 (ECHR) Ratified in 1998
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Accession in 1991 Protocol 7 (ECHR) Ratified in 1996
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women Accession in 1991 Protocol 12 (ECHR) Signed in 2000
Optional Protocol (CEDAW) Not signed Protocol 13 (ECHR) Ratified in 2004
United Nations Convention Against Torture Accession in 1991 European Social Charter Not signed
Optional Protocol (CAT) Ratified in 2006 Additional Protocol of 1988 (ESC) Not signed
Convention on the Rights of the Child Accession in 1991 Additional Protocol of 1995 (ESC) Not signed
Optional Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict (CRC) Signed in 2003 Revised European Social Charter Ratified in 2000
Optional Protocol on the sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography (CRC-OP-SC) Ratified in 2004 European Convention for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment Ratified in 1996
Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families Not signed European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages Not signed
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Signed in 2007 Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities Ratified in 1997
Optional Protocol (CRPD) Not signed Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings Ratified in 2015

Latest documents in reporting procedures edit

Experts' body State report Experts' body's document
Human Rights Committee 2018[17] 2019[18]
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights 2017 [19] 2019[20]
Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination 2019[21] 2014[22]
Committee Against Torture 2011[23] 2013[24]
Committee on the Rights of the Child . 2017[25]
Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women 2015[26] 2016[27]
European Committee on Social Rights 2020[28] 2019-2020[29]
Committee for the Prevention of Torture not foreseen 2019[30]
FCNM Advisory Committee 2019[31] 2015[32]
European Commission against Racism and Intolerance not foreseen 2015[33]
UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities 2015[34] 2021[35]

Overviews by human rights organisations edit

Amnesty International edit

According to Amnesty International, linguistic minorities face discrimination in a number of areas, especially in employment and education. Migrants were exposed to harassment by state officials and attacks by extremist groups. Criminal investigations into allegations of excessive use of force by police were dismissed. Also Estonian security police, Kaitsepolitsei, made allegations against the Legal Information Centre for Human Rights (LICHR), which it claims is widely seen as an attempt to misrepresent the organization and to undermine its work.[11]

Human Rights Watch edit

According to Human Rights Watch report, 1993, the organisation did not find systematic, serious abuses of human rights in the area of citizenship. Non-citizens in Estonia were guaranteed basic rights under the Constitution of Estonia. However, there were some problems concerning the successful integration of some who were permanent residents at the time Estonia gained independence.[3]

Freedom House edit

According to Freedom House, Estonia has wide political rights and civil liberties. Political parties are allowed to organize freely and elections have been free and fair. Public access to government information are respected and the country has a freedom of the press, although a 2007 report discussed Estonia's Kaitsepolitsei security organs as the nation's political police.[36] Also religious freedom is respected in law and in practice. Corruption is regarded as a relatively minor problem in Estonia. The judiciary is independent and generally free from government interference.[37] As of 2023, Freedom House lists Estonia as 94 out of 100 in Freedom in the World.[38]

United Nations Human Rights Council edit

The 2008 report of Special Rapporteur on racism to United Nations Human Rights Council noted the existence of political will by the Estonian State authorities to fight the expressions of racism and discrimination in Estonia.[10] According to the report, the representatives of the Russian speaking communities in Estonia saw the most important form of discrimination in Estonia is not ethnic, but rather language-based (Para. 56). The rapporteur expressed several recommendations including strengthening the Chancellor of Justice, facilitating granting citizenship to persons of undefined nationality and making language policy subject of a debate to elaborate strategies better reflecting the multilingual character of society (paras. 89-92).[10]

UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination edit

The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) examines regular reports of the member States on how the rights are being implemented under Article 9 of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination. In its 2010 concluding observations the Committee noted some positive aspects, and raised concerns and made recommendations with regard to Estonia's compliance with the convention. Concerns named in the report included: lack of protection of minorities from hate speech; racial motivation of crimes not being an aggravating circumstance; strong emphasis on Estonian language in the state Integration strategy; usage of punitive approach for promoting Estonian language; restrictions of the usage of minority language in public services; low level of minority representation in political life; persistently high number of persons with undetermined citizenship, etc.[39]

Other institutions edit

According to Cliohres, the European Network of Excellence organized by a group of 45 universities publication the alleged violations of human rights of the Russian-speaking population in Estonia has served as a pretext of trying to lock the region within the sphere of influence of Russia. Moscow's attempts to take political advantage over the issue of the Russophone minority in Estonia have been successful as Kremlin has used every international forum where the claims of the violations of human rights in Estonia have been presented.[40]

The United Nations Development Programme's forum[41] Development and Transition has discussed the situation of Estonia and Latvia in 2005.

James Hughes, a US sociologist from the Trinity College, claimed Latvia and Estonia are both states "captured by the titular ethnic groups", employing a "sophisticated and extensive policy regime of discrimination" against their respective Russophone populations. He names three "pillars" of discrimination: refusal of citizenship, language usage, and participation rights, and claims discrimination is constrained by the "economic dependence on Russophone labour".[42]

Nils Muiznieks, a Latvian politician, former minister for Social Integration, claimed, "Hughes provides simple conclusions about the complex realities of minority policies and inter-ethnic relations in Estonia and Latvia".[43]

Both the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) mission in Estonia and the OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities declared in 1993 that they could not find a pattern of human rights violations or abuses in Estonia.[9]

According to Human Right Report of United States Department of State, Estonia generally respects the human rights of citizens and the large ethnic Russian noncitizen community. However, there were problems with police use of force, conditions in detention and lengthy of pre-trial detention. Also there were problems in domestic violence, inequality of women's salaries, child abuse, and trafficking of women and children.[2]

According to Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, as at 2011, the evaluations given by UN Committee on economic, social and cultural rights show acute human rights issues, in particular in the field of rights of national minorities, to remain unresolved in Estonia.[44]

Issues edit

Surveys related to human rights edit

Surveys conducted between 1993 and 1997 found ethnic Russians living in the Baltic states generally did not see themselves as particularly threatened or suffering from "apartheid" or racism as the Russian government often contended; a British survey in 1993 showed that "solid majorities of ethnic Russians did not consider their situations as "dangerous, difficult or especially burdensome" and found 69% of Russian speakers disagreed with the view that non-citizens and minorities were badly treated, while a Russian survey in 1995 found only 8% of Russian speakers felt their human rights were being violated.[45]

According to a 2008 survey of 500 ethnic Russians conducted by the EU Fundamental Rights Agency, 59% of those questioned characterized ethnic discrimination as very or fairly widespread in the country. 27% claimed they had experienced discrimination based on their ethnic origin in the past 5 years, including 17% during the past 12 months (compared to 4–5% in Lithuania and Latvia.) Discrimination at workplace was characterized as widespread, with 72% of poll participants saying that a different ethnic background would be hindering to advancement. 39% said they had experienced discrimination during the past 5 years when looking for work, including 16% during the past 12 months—the highest rate in all the countries surveyed. 10% confirmed that they avoid certain places, such as shops or cafés because they believed they would receive bad treatment due to their ethnic background.[46]

However another survey result in 2008 found only 3% of ethnic Russians said they had regularly experienced hostility or unfair treatment because of their ethnicity, and 9% occasionally; 1% stated they had been regularly offended on the basis of their ethnicity while 7% occasionally. This survey found that while most of the respondents had not actually experienced any discrimination personally, they nevertheless held the belief that the level of discrimination was high.[47]

The European Centre for Minority Issues has examined Estonia's treatment of its Russophone minority. In its conclusion, the centre stated that all international organisations agree that no forms of systematic discrimination towards the Russian-speaking population can be observed and praises the efforts made thus far in amendments to laws on education, language and the status of non-citizens, there nevertheless remains the issue of the large number of such non-citizens.[48] As of September 2, 2009, 102,466, or 7.5% of Estonia's population remain non-citizens, dropping from 32% in 1992 and 12% in 2003.[49][50] In November 2005 a survey was conducted among residents with undetermined citizenship. The results show that 61% of those residents wanted Estonian citizenship, 13% Russian citizenship and 6% citizenship of another country. 17% of the respondents were not interested in acquiring any citizenship at all. It was found that the older the respondent, the more likely he or she doesn't want to have any citizenship. The survey also showed that respondents who were born in Estonia were more likely to wish to get Estonian citizenship (73%), than those not born in Estonia (less than 50%).[49]

Recent studies have shown that one of the significant factors of statelessness is the advantage of retaining an ambiguous legal status to everyday life; on one hand it is easier for immigrants without Estonian citizenship to travel back to Russia while on the other hand lack of citizenship poses no problems for living in Estonia; a survey in 2008 found that 72% of ethnic Russian respondents cite the ease of travel to Russia as one of the reasons people do not seek Estonian citizenship and 75% state that the fact of lack of citizenship does not hinder their lives is another reason[47]

Several human rights related researches are conducted every year by Estonian local human rights organizations, for example the Estonian Institute of Human Rights.

Employment edit

72% of 500 questioned ethnic Russians believed that different ethnic background is hindering to workplace advancement.[46] Russian government officials and parliamentarians echo these charges in a variety of forums. Such claims have become more frequent during times of political disagreements between Russia and these countries and waned when the disagreements have been resolved.[51][52][53][54][55]

According to the 2008 survey by TIES, a project coordinated by the University of Amsterdam, 38.9% of Russian and 25.2% of Estonian respondents think that "Russians experience hostility or unfair treatment because of their ethnicity" at work "occasionally", "regularly", or "frequently". 51.4% of Russian and 50.4% of Estonian respondents also think that Russians experience ethnic discrimination looking for work.[56] Same report says 40% of Estonians and 44% of Russians think it is "more difficult" or "much more difficult" for Russians to find a job, compared to Estonians. 10% of Estonians and 15% of Russians, on the other side, believe it is "easier", or "much easier" for Russians to find a job.[57]

A 2005 study by European Network Against Racism found that 17.1% of ethnic non-Estonians claimed that they had experienced limitations to their rights or degrading treatment in the workplace during the last 3 years because of their ethnic origin.[58]

Amnesty had noted in a 2006 report that members of the Russian-speaking minority in Estonia enjoy very limited linguistic and minority rights, and often find themselves de facto excluded from the labour market and educational system.[59] The discriminating policies of Estonia have led to "disproportionately high levels of unemployment among the Russian-speaking linguistic minority. This in turn has further contributed to social exclusion and vulnerability to other human rights abuses. In consequence, many from this group are effectively impeded from the full enjoyment of their economic, social and cultural rights (ESC rights)."[59]

Charles Kroncke and Kenneth Smith in a 1999 article published in the journal Economics of Transition argue that while there was no ethnicity based discrimination in 1989, the situation in 1994 was completely different. According to the article, there is substantial evidence of discrimination against ethnic Russians in the 1994 Estonian labour market. The evidence examined in the article also suggested that Estonian language ability does not significantly affect wages. Kroncke and Smith also point out the surprising fact, that Estonian-born ethnic Russians appear to fare worse than immigrant ethnic Russians.[60] A later study by Kristian Leping and Ott Toomet published in 2008 in the Journal of Comparative Economics reports that a lack of fluency in the Estonian language and segregated social networks and school system, rather than ethnicity, as the prime reason for the apparent wage gap between Estonian and non-Estonian speakers.[61]

Education edit

Since restoration of independence in 1991, Estonia has been funding Russian-language elementary, comprehensive and high schools alongside Estonian-language schools, with future reform planned since the late 1990s but repeatedly delayed. The reform plan was commenced in 2007.

According to schedule, 60% of all subjects of grades 10, 11 and 12 are to be taught in Estonian by 2011 in all state-funded schools. All state-funded schools already teach Estonian literature in Estonian since the 2007/2008 academic year. The government has been reserved authority to grant waivers and extensions to some state-funded schools on a case-by-case basis.[62]

In the 2007/2008 academic year, 49 Russian schools (79%) were teaching Music in Estonian, 30 Russian schools (48%) were teaching Social Studies in Estonian and 17 Russian schools (27%) taught both transition subjects in Estonian.[63]

Amnesty International has recommended that the authorities provide more support for teachers and adequate resources for students who will be required to replace Russian with Estonian as their language of teaching and instruction; replacing Russian with Estonian as their learning language to successfully manage this transition.[59]

According to the 2008 survey by TIES, 50% of ethnic Russian respondents think that the statement, "As a result of [2007 school] reform the quality of education for Russian youth will worsen" is "exactly true" or "moderately true". Report also notes that "a significantly larger share of Estonians complete higher education, while Russians more often only finish secondary education. At the same time, there were no significant differences between Estonians and Russians school success in terms of drop-out rates from basic and secondary school."[64]

Ethnicity and crime edit

UN Committee Against Torture in its 2008 report on Estonia notes that "approximately 33 per cent of the prison population is composed of stateless persons, while they represent approximately 8 per cent of the overall population". The Committee calls this representation "disproportionate", and urges Estonia to take additional steps to protect rights of non-citizens and stateless residents.[65] In 2008, about 78% of non-citizens were ethnic Russians; less than 3% ethnic Estonians. As of 2006, approximately 60% of the ethnic Russian population were non-citizens, 40 percent were stateless.[66][67]

Treatment of Roma edit

The Council of Europe stated in 2006 that "the Roma community in Estonia is disproportionately affected by unemployment and discrimination in the field of education."[68] The European Commission had previously conducted close monitoring of Estonia in 2000 and concluded that there was no evidence that these minorities are subject to discrimination.[69]

Bronze Night incident edit

A number of organisations have commented on the events surrounding the Bronze Night incident. There was a concern expressed about possible human right violations perpetrated by both demonstrators and police. During the April 2007 riots in Tallinn, some police allegedly used excessive force against demonstrators. Eight criminal cases opened against officers, where charges were dropped in six, and two were pending at year’s end.[37] The International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH)–a coalition of 155 human rights groups– urged the Estonian authorities to investigate all acts of human rights violations during the night. The organisation called upon the Estonian authorities to "put an end to any practice of discrimination against the Russian-speaking minority, which constitutes about 30% of the Estonian population, and to conform in any circumstances with the provisions of the International Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Racial Discrimination." FIDH and LHRC also condemned acts of vandalism perpetrated by demonstrators in Tallinn, as well as the blockade of the Estonian embassy in Moscow.[70]

Trafficking in persons edit

According to the CIA World Factbook, "Estonia is a source, transit, and destination country for women subjected to forced prostitution, and for men and women subjected to conditions of forced labor". Estonia also "does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking, being the only country of the EU without a specific trafficking law.[71]

Exploitation of children edit

Independent Special Rapporteur Najat Maalla M'jid of the United Nations has said that Estonia has taken clear steps to protect children from exploitation, although the human rights expert has commented that "young people remain at risk and continued vigilance from authorities is needed."[72]

Sexual orientation edit

Homosexual sex, which was illegal in the Soviet Union, was legalised in Estonia in 1992. The age of consent is 16 years[73] and was equalized for both homosexual and heterosexual sex in 2001.[74] Homosexuals are not banned from military service and there are no laws discriminating homosexuals.

Estonia transposed an EU directive into its own laws banning discrimination based on sexual orientation in employment from May 1, 2004. A survey carried out in September 2002 found that there was a high level of discrimination against gay, lesbian and bisexual people in Estonia.[75]

Same-sex marriage has been legal in Estonia since 1 January 2024.[76]

External views edit

Journalists edit

According to veteran German author, journalist and Russia-correspondent Gabriele Krone-Schmalz, there is deep disapproval of everything Russian in Estonia. She contends that the alleged level of discrimination regarding ethnic Russians in Estonia would have posed a barrier to acceptance into the EU; however, Western media gave the matter very little attention.[77] However the European Commission conducted close monitoring of these countries compliance with the Acquis communautaire in regard to minority rights prior to accession to the EU, the Commission claimed that there is no evidence that these minorities are subject to discrimination.[69]

In an interview with the Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad, Hans Glaubitz, a former ambassador of the Netherlands to Estonia, mentioned that he resigned due to the homophobia and racism once they could not "cope with gay hatred and racism on the Estonian streets."[78]

International rankings edit

  1. ^ a b c d a score of 1 is most free and 100 least free
  2. ^ out of 100

See also edit

References edit

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  21. ^ 12th and 13th report on ICERD
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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Intergovernmental organizations
    • Human rights in Estonia on OHCHR portal
    • Documents on Estonia by the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights
    • Documents on Estonia by the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance
  • International NGOs
    • Human Rights Watch documents on Estonia
    • Amnesty International
      • Estonia // Human rights in Europe. Review of 2019 p. 26
      • AI country-specific reports: Estonia: The right to freedom of peaceful assembly must be protected (2006), Linguistic minorities in Estonia: Discrimination must end (2007)
  • Governmental organizations
    • Chancellor of Justice
  • Local NGOs
    • Legal Information Centre for Human Rights
    • Estonian Institute of Human Rights
    • Estonian Human Rights Centre

human, rights, estonia, acknowledged, whom, being, generally, respected, government, nevertheless, there, concerns, some, areas, such, detention, conditions, excessive, police, force, child, abuse, estonia, been, classified, flawed, democracy, with, moderate, . Human rights in Estonia are acknowledged by whom as being generally respected by the government 1 2 3 Nevertheless there are concerns in some areas such as detention conditions excessive police use of force and child abuse 2 Estonia has been classified as a flawed democracy 4 with moderate privacy 5 and human development in Europe 6 Individuals are guaranteed on paper the basic rights under the constitution legislative acts and treaties relating to human rights ratified by the Estonian government 2 3 7 As of 2023 Estonia was ranked 8th in the world by press freedoms 8 Several international and human rights organisations such as Human Rights Watch 3 the Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe 9 in 1993 and the UN Human Rights Council 10 in 2008 have found little major apparent issues or patterns of systematic abuse of human rights or discrimination on ethnic grounds while others such as Amnesty International in 2009 have raised concerns regarding immigrants and regarding the Russophone minority who suffer unemployment rates almost twice as high as among ethnic Estonians 11 Contents 1 History 2 Estonia in the international human rights system 2 1 Participation in basic human rights treaties 2 2 Latest documents in reporting procedures 3 Overviews by human rights organisations 3 1 Amnesty International 3 2 Human Rights Watch 3 3 Freedom House 3 4 United Nations Human Rights Council 3 5 UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination 3 6 Other institutions 4 Issues 4 1 Surveys related to human rights 4 1 1 Employment 4 1 2 Education 4 1 3 Ethnicity and crime 4 2 Treatment of Roma 4 3 Bronze Night incident 4 4 Trafficking in persons 4 5 Exploitation of children 4 6 Sexual orientation 5 External views 5 1 Journalists 6 International rankings 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editEstonians individual human rights and collective rights to exist as an ethnic entity have been routinely violated for eight centuries since the Northern Crusades and Baltic German rule followed by two centuries of Russian imperial suzerainty and ending with half a century of Soviet occupation Estonia s first constitution of 1920 included safeguards for civil and political rights that were the standard of the day 12 The 1925 Law on Cultural Autonomy was an innovative piece of legislation that provided for the protection of the collective rights for citizens of non Estonian ethnicities 12 Estonia in the international human rights system editAs of end of 2010 European Court of Human Rights has delivered 23 judgments in cases brought against Estonia beginning from 2001 in 19 cases it found at least one violation of the European Convention on Human Rights or its protocols 13 In 2001 Estonia has extended a standing invitation to Special Procedures of UN Human Rights Council 14 Participation in basic human rights treaties edit UN core treaties 15 Participation of Estonia CoE core treaties 16 Participation of EstoniaConvention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination Accession in 1991 European Convention on Human Rights Ratified in 1996International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Accession in 1991 Protocol 1 ECHR Ratified in 1996First Optional Protocol ICCPR Accession in 1991 Protocol 4 ECHR Ratified in 1996Second Optional Protocol ICCPR Accession in 2004 Protocol 6 ECHR Ratified in 1998International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights Accession in 1991 Protocol 7 ECHR Ratified in 1996Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women Accession in 1991 Protocol 12 ECHR Signed in 2000Optional Protocol CEDAW Not signed Protocol 13 ECHR Ratified in 2004United Nations Convention Against Torture Accession in 1991 European Social Charter Not signedOptional Protocol CAT Ratified in 2006 Additional Protocol of 1988 ESC Not signedConvention on the Rights of the Child Accession in 1991 Additional Protocol of 1995 ESC Not signedOptional Protocol on the Involvement of Children in Armed Conflict CRC Signed in 2003 Revised European Social Charter Ratified in 2000Optional Protocol on the sale of children child prostitution and child pornography CRC OP SC Ratified in 2004 European Convention for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment Ratified in 1996Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families Not signed European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages Not signedConvention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Signed in 2007 Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities Ratified in 1997Optional Protocol CRPD Not signed Convention on Action against Trafficking in Human Beings Ratified in 2015Latest documents in reporting procedures edit Experts body State report Experts body s documentHuman Rights Committee 2018 17 2019 18 Committee on Economic Social and Cultural Rights 2017 19 2019 20 Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination 2019 21 2014 22 Committee Against Torture 2011 23 2013 24 Committee on the Rights of the Child 2017 25 Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women 2015 26 2016 27 European Committee on Social Rights 2020 28 2019 2020 29 Committee for the Prevention of Torture not foreseen 2019 30 FCNM Advisory Committee 2019 31 2015 32 European Commission against Racism and Intolerance not foreseen 2015 33 UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities 2015 34 2021 35 Overviews by human rights organisations editAmnesty International edit According to Amnesty International linguistic minorities face discrimination in a number of areas especially in employment and education Migrants were exposed to harassment by state officials and attacks by extremist groups Criminal investigations into allegations of excessive use of force by police were dismissed Also Estonian security police Kaitsepolitsei made allegations against the Legal Information Centre for Human Rights LICHR which it claims is widely seen as an attempt to misrepresent the organization and to undermine its work 11 Human Rights Watch edit According to Human Rights Watch report 1993 the organisation did not find systematic serious abuses of human rights in the area of citizenship Non citizens in Estonia were guaranteed basic rights under the Constitution of Estonia However there were some problems concerning the successful integration of some who were permanent residents at the time Estonia gained independence 3 Freedom House edit According to Freedom House Estonia has wide political rights and civil liberties Political parties are allowed to organize freely and elections have been free and fair Public access to government information are respected and the country has a freedom of the press although a 2007 report discussed Estonia s Kaitsepolitsei security organs as the nation s political police 36 Also religious freedom is respected in law and in practice Corruption is regarded as a relatively minor problem in Estonia The judiciary is independent and generally free from government interference 37 As of 2023 Freedom House lists Estonia as 94 out of 100 in Freedom in the World 38 United Nations Human Rights Council edit The 2008 report of Special Rapporteur on racism to United Nations Human Rights Council noted the existence of political will by the Estonian State authorities to fight the expressions of racism and discrimination in Estonia 10 According to the report the representatives of the Russian speaking communities in Estonia saw the most important form of discrimination in Estonia is not ethnic but rather language based Para 56 The rapporteur expressed several recommendations including strengthening the Chancellor of Justice facilitating granting citizenship to persons of undefined nationality and making language policy subject of a debate to elaborate strategies better reflecting the multilingual character of society paras 89 92 10 UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination edit The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination CERD examines regular reports of the member States on how the rights are being implemented under Article 9 of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination In its 2010 concluding observations the Committee noted some positive aspects and raised concerns and made recommendations with regard to Estonia s compliance with the convention Concerns named in the report included lack of protection of minorities from hate speech racial motivation of crimes not being an aggravating circumstance strong emphasis on Estonian language in the state Integration strategy usage of punitive approach for promoting Estonian language restrictions of the usage of minority language in public services low level of minority representation in political life persistently high number of persons with undetermined citizenship etc 39 Other institutions edit According to Cliohres the European Network of Excellence organized by a group of 45 universities publication the alleged violations of human rights of the Russian speaking population in Estonia has served as a pretext of trying to lock the region within the sphere of influence of Russia Moscow s attempts to take political advantage over the issue of the Russophone minority in Estonia have been successful as Kremlin has used every international forum where the claims of the violations of human rights in Estonia have been presented 40 The United Nations Development Programme s forum 41 Development and Transition has discussed the situation of Estonia and Latvia in 2005 James Hughes a US sociologist from the Trinity College claimed Latvia and Estonia are both states captured by the titular ethnic groups employing a sophisticated and extensive policy regime of discrimination against their respective Russophone populations He names three pillars of discrimination refusal of citizenship language usage and participation rights and claims discrimination is constrained by the economic dependence on Russophone labour 42 Nils Muiznieks a Latvian politician former minister for Social Integration claimed Hughes provides simple conclusions about the complex realities of minority policies and inter ethnic relations in Estonia and Latvia 43 Both the Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe OSCE mission in Estonia and the OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities declared in 1993 that they could not find a pattern of human rights violations or abuses in Estonia 9 According to Human Right Report of United States Department of State Estonia generally respects the human rights of citizens and the large ethnic Russian noncitizen community However there were problems with police use of force conditions in detention and lengthy of pre trial detention Also there were problems in domestic violence inequality of women s salaries child abuse and trafficking of women and children 2 According to Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs as at 2011 the evaluations given by UN Committee on economic social and cultural rights show acute human rights issues in particular in the field of rights of national minorities to remain unresolved in Estonia 44 Issues editSurveys related to human rights edit Surveys conducted between 1993 and 1997 found ethnic Russians living in the Baltic states generally did not see themselves as particularly threatened or suffering from apartheid or racism as the Russian government often contended a British survey in 1993 showed that solid majorities of ethnic Russians did not consider their situations as dangerous difficult or especially burdensome and found 69 of Russian speakers disagreed with the view that non citizens and minorities were badly treated while a Russian survey in 1995 found only 8 of Russian speakers felt their human rights were being violated 45 According to a 2008 survey of 500 ethnic Russians conducted by the EU Fundamental Rights Agency 59 of those questioned characterized ethnic discrimination as very or fairly widespread in the country 27 claimed they had experienced discrimination based on their ethnic origin in the past 5 years including 17 during the past 12 months compared to 4 5 in Lithuania and Latvia Discrimination at workplace was characterized as widespread with 72 of poll participants saying that a different ethnic background would be hindering to advancement 39 said they had experienced discrimination during the past 5 years when looking for work including 16 during the past 12 months the highest rate in all the countries surveyed 10 confirmed that they avoid certain places such as shops or cafes because they believed they would receive bad treatment due to their ethnic background 46 However another survey result in 2008 found only 3 of ethnic Russians said they had regularly experienced hostility or unfair treatment because of their ethnicity and 9 occasionally 1 stated they had been regularly offended on the basis of their ethnicity while 7 occasionally This survey found that while most of the respondents had not actually experienced any discrimination personally they nevertheless held the belief that the level of discrimination was high 47 The European Centre for Minority Issues has examined Estonia s treatment of its Russophone minority In its conclusion the centre stated that all international organisations agree that no forms of systematic discrimination towards the Russian speaking population can be observed and praises the efforts made thus far in amendments to laws on education language and the status of non citizens there nevertheless remains the issue of the large number of such non citizens 48 As of September 2 2009 102 466 or 7 5 of Estonia s population remain non citizens dropping from 32 in 1992 and 12 in 2003 49 50 In November 2005 a survey was conducted among residents with undetermined citizenship The results show that 61 of those residents wanted Estonian citizenship 13 Russian citizenship and 6 citizenship of another country 17 of the respondents were not interested in acquiring any citizenship at all It was found that the older the respondent the more likely he or she doesn t want to have any citizenship The survey also showed that respondents who were born in Estonia were more likely to wish to get Estonian citizenship 73 than those not born in Estonia less than 50 49 Recent studies have shown that one of the significant factors of statelessness is the advantage of retaining an ambiguous legal status to everyday life on one hand it is easier for immigrants without Estonian citizenship to travel back to Russia while on the other hand lack of citizenship poses no problems for living in Estonia a survey in 2008 found that 72 of ethnic Russian respondents cite the ease of travel to Russia as one of the reasons people do not seek Estonian citizenship and 75 state that the fact of lack of citizenship does not hinder their lives is another reason 47 Several human rights related researches are conducted every year by Estonian local human rights organizations for example the Estonian Institute of Human Rights Employment edit 72 of 500 questioned ethnic Russians believed that different ethnic background is hindering to workplace advancement 46 Russian government officials and parliamentarians echo these charges in a variety of forums Such claims have become more frequent during times of political disagreements between Russia and these countries and waned when the disagreements have been resolved 51 52 53 54 55 According to the 2008 survey by TIES a project coordinated by the University of Amsterdam 38 9 of Russian and 25 2 of Estonian respondents think that Russians experience hostility or unfair treatment because of their ethnicity at work occasionally regularly or frequently 51 4 of Russian and 50 4 of Estonian respondents also think that Russians experience ethnic discrimination looking for work 56 Same report says 40 of Estonians and 44 of Russians think it is more difficult or much more difficult for Russians to find a job compared to Estonians 10 of Estonians and 15 of Russians on the other side believe it is easier or much easier for Russians to find a job 57 A 2005 study by European Network Against Racism found that 17 1 of ethnic non Estonians claimed that they had experienced limitations to their rights or degrading treatment in the workplace during the last 3 years because of their ethnic origin 58 Amnesty had noted in a 2006 report that members of the Russian speaking minority in Estonia enjoy very limited linguistic and minority rights and often find themselves de facto excluded from the labour market and educational system 59 The discriminating policies of Estonia have led to disproportionately high levels of unemployment among the Russian speaking linguistic minority This in turn has further contributed to social exclusion and vulnerability to other human rights abuses In consequence many from this group are effectively impeded from the full enjoyment of their economic social and cultural rights ESC rights 59 Charles Kroncke and Kenneth Smith in a 1999 article published in the journal Economics of Transition argue that while there was no ethnicity based discrimination in 1989 the situation in 1994 was completely different According to the article there is substantial evidence of discrimination against ethnic Russians in the 1994 Estonian labour market The evidence examined in the article also suggested that Estonian language ability does not significantly affect wages Kroncke and Smith also point out the surprising fact that Estonian born ethnic Russians appear to fare worse than immigrant ethnic Russians 60 A later study by Kristian Leping and Ott Toomet published in 2008 in the Journal of Comparative Economics reports that a lack of fluency in the Estonian language and segregated social networks and school system rather than ethnicity as the prime reason for the apparent wage gap between Estonian and non Estonian speakers 61 Education edit Since restoration of independence in 1991 Estonia has been funding Russian language elementary comprehensive and high schools alongside Estonian language schools with future reform planned since the late 1990s but repeatedly delayed The reform plan was commenced in 2007 According to schedule 60 of all subjects of grades 10 11 and 12 are to be taught in Estonian by 2011 in all state funded schools All state funded schools already teach Estonian literature in Estonian since the 2007 2008 academic year The government has been reserved authority to grant waivers and extensions to some state funded schools on a case by case basis 62 In the 2007 2008 academic year 49 Russian schools 79 were teaching Music in Estonian 30 Russian schools 48 were teaching Social Studies in Estonian and 17 Russian schools 27 taught both transition subjects in Estonian 63 Amnesty International has recommended that the authorities provide more support for teachers and adequate resources for students who will be required to replace Russian with Estonian as their language of teaching and instruction replacing Russian with Estonian as their learning language to successfully manage this transition 59 According to the 2008 survey by TIES 50 of ethnic Russian respondents think that the statement As a result of 2007 school reform the quality of education for Russian youth will worsen is exactly true or moderately true Report also notes that a significantly larger share of Estonians complete higher education while Russians more often only finish secondary education At the same time there were no significant differences between Estonians and Russians school success in terms of drop out rates from basic and secondary school 64 Ethnicity and crime edit UN Committee Against Torture in its 2008 report on Estonia notes that approximately 33 per cent of the prison population is composed of stateless persons while they represent approximately 8 per cent of the overall population The Committee calls this representation disproportionate and urges Estonia to take additional steps to protect rights of non citizens and stateless residents 65 In 2008 about 78 of non citizens were ethnic Russians less than 3 ethnic Estonians As of 2006 approximately 60 of the ethnic Russian population were non citizens 40 percent were stateless 66 67 Treatment of Roma edit The Council of Europe stated in 2006 that the Roma community in Estonia is disproportionately affected by unemployment and discrimination in the field of education 68 The European Commission had previously conducted close monitoring of Estonia in 2000 and concluded that there was no evidence that these minorities are subject to discrimination 69 Bronze Night incident edit Main article Bronze Night Human rights issues concerning arrests and use of force by the police A number of organisations have commented on the events surrounding the Bronze Night incident There was a concern expressed about possible human right violations perpetrated by both demonstrators and police During the April 2007 riots in Tallinn some police allegedly used excessive force against demonstrators Eight criminal cases opened against officers where charges were dropped in six and two were pending at year s end 37 The International Federation of Human Rights FIDH a coalition of 155 human rights groups urged the Estonian authorities to investigate all acts of human rights violations during the night The organisation called upon the Estonian authorities to put an end to any practice of discrimination against the Russian speaking minority which constitutes about 30 of the Estonian population and to conform in any circumstances with the provisions of the International Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Racial Discrimination FIDH and LHRC also condemned acts of vandalism perpetrated by demonstrators in Tallinn as well as the blockade of the Estonian embassy in Moscow 70 Trafficking in persons edit Main article Human trafficking in Estonia According to the CIA World Factbook Estonia is a source transit and destination country for women subjected to forced prostitution and for men and women subjected to conditions of forced labor Estonia also does not fully comply with the minimum standards for the elimination of trafficking being the only country of the EU without a specific trafficking law 71 Exploitation of children edit Independent Special Rapporteur Najat Maalla M jid of the United Nations has said that Estonia has taken clear steps to protect children from exploitation although the human rights expert has commented that young people remain at risk and continued vigilance from authorities is needed 72 Sexual orientation edit Main articles LGBT rights in Estonia and Same sex marriage in Estonia Homosexual sex which was illegal in the Soviet Union was legalised in Estonia in 1992 The age of consent is 16 years 73 and was equalized for both homosexual and heterosexual sex in 2001 74 Homosexuals are not banned from military service and there are no laws discriminating homosexuals Estonia transposed an EU directive into its own laws banning discrimination based on sexual orientation in employment from May 1 2004 A survey carried out in September 2002 found that there was a high level of discrimination against gay lesbian and bisexual people in Estonia 75 Same sex marriage has been legal in Estonia since 1 January 2024 76 External views editJournalists edit According to veteran German author journalist and Russia correspondent Gabriele Krone Schmalz there is deep disapproval of everything Russian in Estonia She contends that the alleged level of discrimination regarding ethnic Russians in Estonia would have posed a barrier to acceptance into the EU however Western media gave the matter very little attention 77 However the European Commission conducted close monitoring of these countries compliance with the Acquis communautaire in regard to minority rights prior to accession to the EU the Commission claimed that there is no evidence that these minorities are subject to discrimination 69 In an interview with the Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad Hans Glaubitz a former ambassador of the Netherlands to Estonia mentioned that he resigned due to the homophobia and racism once they could not cope with gay hatred and racism on the Estonian streets 78 International rankings editDemocracy Index 2008 37 out of 167 4 Worldwide Press Freedom Index 2023 8 out of 173 8 Internet freedom score 13 2009 79 a 10 2011 80 a 10 2012 81 a 9 2013 82 a and 94 2023 38 b Worldwide Privacy Index 2007 13 out of 37 5 Worldwide Quality of life Index 2005 68 out of 111 83 Human Development Index 2010 34 out of 169 84 Freedom in the World 2008 Political rights score 1 and Civil liberties score 1 1 being most free 7 least free 7 37 Global Corruption Report 2007 24 out of 163 85 a b c d a score of 1 is most free and 100 least free out of 100See also editEstonian nationality law History of Russians in Estonia Internet censorship and surveillance in EstoniaReferences edit Polity IV Country Report 2010 Estonia PDF Vienna Center for Systemic Peace 2010 a b c d 2008 Human Rights Report Estonia United States Department of State 2009 02 25 Archived from the original on 2009 02 26 Retrieved 2009 06 05 a b c d Integrating Estonia s Non Citizen Minority Human rights watch 1993 Retrieved 2009 06 05 a b The Economist Intelligence Unit s Index of Democracy 2008 PDF Economist 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 03 24 Retrieved 2009 06 05 a b The 2007 International Privacy Ranking Privacy International 2007 Retrieved 2009 06 05 Statistics of the Human Development Report United Nations Development Programme 2008 Retrieved 2009 06 05 a b Country Report 2008 Edition Freedom House 2008 Archived from the original on 2011 02 01 Retrieved 2009 06 06 a b Estonia RSF rsf org 2023 12 01 Retrieved 2023 12 15 a b Max van der Stoel 1993 04 23 CSCE Communication No 124 PDF OSCE named CSCE before 1995 pp p 3 Archived from the original PDF on 2004 05 15 Retrieved 2007 07 25 a b c Distr GENERAL A HRC 7 19 Add 2 17 March 2008 Original ENGLISH HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL Seventh session Agenda item 9 RACISM RACIAL DISCRIMINATION XENOPHOBIA AND RELATED FORMS OF INTOLERANCE FOLLOW UP TO AND IMPLEMENTATION OF THE DURBAN DECLARATION AND PROGRAMME OF ACTION Report of the Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism racial discrimination xenophobia and related intolerance Doudou Diene Addendum MISSION TO ESTONIA PDF Documents on Estonia United Nations Human Rights Council 2008 02 20 Archived from the original PDF on March 30 2014 Retrieved 2009 06 07 a b Amnesty International Report 2009 Amnesty International 2009 Archived from the original on 2009 06 10 Retrieved 2009 06 05 a b Toivo Miljan Historical dictionary of Estonia Scarecrow Press 2004 p253 Estonia Press country profile European Court of Human Rights Press Unit 2011 Countries having extended a standing invitation to Special Procedures Archived 2011 09 03 at the Wayback Machine UN human rights treaties CoE human rights treaties Estonia s 4th report on ICCPR HRC Concluding observations Estonia s third report on ICESCR CESCR concluding observations on the third report by Estonia 12th and 13th report on ICERD CERD Concluding observations Fifth report on CAT CAT concluding observations CRC concluding observations 5th 6th report on CEDAW concluding Comments Estonia s 17th report on Articles 1 9 10 15 18 20 24 and 25 ESC R 2020 ECSR Conclusions 2019 on the report by Estonia on Articles 7 8 16 17 19 27 and 31 ESC R 2020 CPT report on the 2017 visit Fifth report on FCNM Fourth Opinion on Estonia by the FCNM Advisory Committee ECRI report on Estonia fifth monitoring cycle WHO MiNDbank Estonia Initial State Party report to the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities 2015 extranet who int Retrieved 2022 10 25 UN Treaty Body Database 5 May 2021 CRPD C EST CO 1 Estonia 2007 Freedom House Inc 2007 Retrieved 9 June 2009 a b c Map of Freedom 2008 Freedom House 2008 Retrieved 2009 06 06 a b Estonia Freedom in the World 2023 Country Report Freedom House Retrieved 2023 12 15 Concluding observations of the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination Estonia PDF UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination 23 September 2010 Retrieved 2011 02 10 Isaacs Ann Katherine 2007 Immigration and emigration in historical perspective Edizioni Plus p 183 ISBN 978 88 8492 498 8 Retrieved 2009 09 17 About us Archived from the original on 2009 09 03 Retrieved 2009 08 04 Development and Transition Discrimination against the Russophone Minority in Estonia and Latvia Development and Transition Rejoinder to James Hughes Archived from the original on 2011 10 01 Retrieved 2009 06 05 O rekomendaciyah Komiteta OON po ekonomicheskim socialnym i kulturnym pravam v svyazi s rassmotreniem pravozashitnoj situacii v Estonii MID Rossii 08 12 2011 in Russian Mark A Cichock 2007 Interdependence and manipulation in the Russian Baltic relationship 1993 97 Journal of Baltic Studies 30 2 89 116 doi 10 1080 01629779900000011 a b European Union Minorities and Discrimination Survey PDF European Union Fundamental Rights Agency 2009 12 09 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 01 04 Retrieved 2010 01 03 a b Nimmerfeldt Gerli 2011 Vetik Raivo ed The Russian Second Generation in Tallinn and Kohtla Jarve The TIES Study in Estonia Jelena Helemae Amsterdam University Press p 218 ISBN 978 90 8964 250 9 van Elsuwege Peter Russian speaking minorities in Estonia and Latvia problems of integration at the threshold of the European Union PDF European Centre for Minority Issues Archived from the original PDF on 2007 09 27 a b Estonia Today Citizenship Fact Sheet September 2009 PDF 2009 09 02 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 09 02 Retrieved 2009 09 22 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Government to develop activities to decrease the number of non citizens Archived from the original on 2009 09 01 Retrieved 2009 06 06 Russia and the Baltic States Not a Case of Flawed History Postimees 25 July 2007 Nasi suvelaagrit ehib Hitleri vuntsidega Paeti kujutav plakat Archived 2009 09 21 at the Wayback Machine Law Assembly The policy of discrimination of the national minorities in Latvia and Estonia Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Postimees July 30 2007 Venemaa suudistas Eestit taas natsismi toetamises Archived 2009 09 19 at the Wayback Machine Russia and the Baltic States Not a Case of Flawed History by Mikhail Demurin a long time diplomat of USSR and later Russian Federation printed in Russia in Global Affairs Estonian country report by TIES page 91 Estonian country report by TIES page 56 Responding to Racism in Estonia PDF European Network Against Racism Retrieved 2009 06 05 a b c Document Estonia Linguistic minorities in Estonia Discrimination must end Amnesty International 2006 Retrieved 2009 06 01 Kroncke Charles Smith Kenneth 1999 The wage effects of ethnicity in Estonia Economics of Transition 7 1 179 199 doi 10 1111 1468 0351 00009 Leping Kristian Toomet Ott 2008 Emerging ethnic wage gap Estonia during political and economic transition Journal of Comparative Economics 36 4 599 619 doi 10 1016 j jce 2008 08 002 Andrej Krasnoglazov Katok ne ostanovit EAEA Russian language in Estonian education Archived from the original on 2010 03 08 Retrieved 2009 06 09 Estonian country report by TIES page 43 Conclusions and recommendations of the Committee against Torture Estonia UN Committee Against Torture dead link Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Estonia 2002 Archived from the original on 2007 11 15 Retrieved 2011 12 21 MAR Data Assessment for Russians in Estonia Cidcm umd edu Archived from the original on 2012 06 22 Retrieved 2012 08 13 Council of Europe Reports on racism in Estonia Lithuania Romania and Spain a b Agenda 2000 For a stronger and wider Union Vol I The Challenge of Enlargement Part II COM 97 2000 final p45 Estonia must investigate human rights violations committed during riots in Tallinn International Federation for Human Rights 2007 05 09 Retrieved 2009 06 02 CIA The World Factbook Cia gov Retrieved 2012 08 13 Estonia working hard to reduce child exploitation UN human rights expert finds UN News Service 24 October 2008 UN News Centre Retrieved 10 May 2009 ERR ERR 2022 05 18 Estonia approves law raising age of sexual consent to 16 ERR Retrieved 2023 12 15 Estonia repeals Discriminatory Age of Consent for Homosexual Contacts Archived 2004 05 05 at the Wayback Machine Sexual Orientation Discrimination in Lithuania Latvia and Estonia PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2009 05 30 Retrieved 2009 06 09 Same sex marriage now legal in Estonia Eesti Rahvusringhaaling 2024 01 01 Retrieved 2024 02 23 Krone Schmalz Gabriele 2008 Zweierlei Mass Was passiert in Russland in German 4 ed Munchen F A Herbig pp 45 48 ISBN 978 3 7766 2525 7 Gay Dutch Ambassador Leaves Estonia Archived 2009 04 23 at the Wayback Machine 6 July 2007 NIS News Bulletin Retrieved 1 June 2009 Estonia Freedom on the Net 2009 Freedom House 2009 Retrieved 14 February 2014 Estonia Freedom on the Net 2011 Freedom House 2011 Retrieved 14 February 2014 Estonia Freedom on the Net 2012 Freedom House 2012 Retrieved 14 February 2014 Estonia Archived 2019 03 12 at the Wayback Machine Freedom on the Net 2013 Freedom House 2013 Retrieved 14 February 2014 Worldwide Quality of Life 2005 PDF The Economist www economist com 2005 Retrieved 2009 06 05 2010 Human development Report PDF United Nations Development Programme January 2010 pp 148 151 Retrieved 4 November 2010 Global Corruption Report 2007 Transparency International 2007 Retrieved 2009 06 06 Further reading editEuropean Commission against Racism and Intolerance ECRI Report on Estonia Fourth monitoring cycle 2010 03 02 Poleshchuk Vadim ed 2009 Chance to Survive Minority Rights in Estonia and Latvia PDF Aleksei Semjonov Estonia Moscow Paris Institute of Democracy and Cooperation Foundation for Historical Outlook and Legal Information Centre for Human Rights ISBN 978 9949 18 818 5 Archived from the original PDF on 13 March 2011 Retrieved 18 April 2010 External links editIntergovernmental organizations Human rights in Estonia on OHCHR portal Documents on Estonia by the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights Documents on Estonia by the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance International NGOs Human Rights Watch documents on Estonia Amnesty International Estonia Human rights in Europe Review of 2019 p 26 AI country specific reports Estonia The right to freedom of peaceful assembly must be protected 2006 Linguistic minorities in Estonia Discrimination must end 2007 Governmental organizations Chancellor of Justice Local NGOs Legal Information Centre for Human Rights Estonian Institute of Human Rights Estonian Human Rights Centre Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Human rights in Estonia amp oldid 1213401631, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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