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  • Youth activists in Azerbaijan say they are being targeted by govm't

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Sept 20 2005

    YOUTH ACTIVISTS IN AZERBAIJAN SAY THEY ARE BEING TARGETED BY
    GOVERNMENT
    Khadija Ismayilova 9/20/05


    As Azerbaijan's November 6 parliamentary elections draw closer,
    opposition and youth organization representatives say they are
    feeling increased pressure from the government. Their concerns have
    been stoked by the recent arrests of youth activists, one of them a
    Ukrainian citizen.

    On September 12, Yeni Fikir Deputy chairperson Said Nuri was detained
    for 48 hours on suspicion of conspiring to stage a coup against the
    Azerbaijani government. While attending a training session in Poland
    that was sponsored by the National Democratic Institute, Nuri
    allegedly received instruction on organizing anti-government protests
    with the aim of overthrowing the established order, Azerbaijani
    officials contend. Nuri had assumed responsibility for running Yeni
    Fikir, a youth group loosely aligned with the opposition Popular
    Front Party of Azerbaijan, shortly after the August arrest of Ruslan
    Bashirli, the group's leader. Bashirli was charged with conspiring
    with Armenian special services to foment unrest in Azerbaijan. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. The same day as Nuri's
    detention, Ramin Tagiyev, another Yeni Fikir deputy chairperson, was
    sentenced to a three-month prison term for his role in a supposed
    coup plot.

    The US State Department has sharply criticized Nuri's arrest. In a
    September 15 interview broadcast by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty's
    Azeri Service, Terry Davidson, a US State Department official,
    expressed concern that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's
    administration was trying to squelch legitimate domestic political
    opposition. "The US government is concerned [by] the arrest of youth
    leaders in Azerbaijan as well as the campaign against the Popular
    Front Party," Davidson said. `We urge the Azeri government to provide
    basic civil liberties in preparation for the parliamentary elections,
    including freedom of assembly, equal access to the media and not
    being a subject of pressure."

    In an interview with EurasiaNet, Popular Front Party Chairman Ali
    Kerimli stated that the arrests were motivated by the authorities'
    fear of Yeni Fikir's increasing popularity and the related need to
    reduce youth activism in Azerbaijan. "They [authorities] think that
    the only way to make these young people stop the struggle is to
    isolate them," Kerimli said "However, the opposition's rallies
    demonstrate that, more and more, orange-clad youth have joined the
    nationwide struggle against dictatorship." [For additional
    information see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The Popular Front Party has responded to Nuri's arrest with a blood
    donation campaign for individuals suffering from thalassemia, a
    series of genetic blood disorders from which the Yeni Fikir activist
    suffers. Soon after his arrest, Nuri was taken to the Musa Nagiyev
    Emergency Hospital in serious condition. Nuri's family, friends and
    lawyer have not been allowed to see the detainee since his
    hospitalization. A statement released by doctors two days after
    Nuri's arrest said that the youth activist's condition had
    stabilized. The state prosecutor's office has since reportedly
    stalled its investigation out of consideration for Nuri's health.

    Nonetheless, the scandals surrounding Yeni Fikir show no sign of
    abating. On September 15, organization members reportedly discovered
    three hand grenades and a cartridge of TNT in the group's main office
    in Baku. Media reported that the police officer called to the scene
    to investigate refused to remove the explosives. The building also
    houses the offices of the opposition newspaper Azadliq and the
    Popular Front. Azadliq Editor Ganimat Zahidov, reportedly accompanied
    by foreign and local journalists, eventually took a bag with the
    explosives to the local police station. Zahidov claimed that the
    explosives were deliberately planted by authorities to provide
    justification for another Yeni Fikir arrest, and to search the
    organization's headquarters. Zahidov has since ordered all
    individuals entering the building to be checked. Police pledged to
    conduct a thorough investigation of the incident, but have not issued
    any updates.

    Some human rights activists believe that the arrests of Yeni Fikir
    members are designed to reduce the potential for a election-related
    protest in Baku akin to those that occurred in Georgia and Ukraine in
    2003 and 2004 respectively. Those protests resulted in regime-change
    in Tbilisi and Kyiv. [For additional information see the Eurasia
    Insight archive]. Georgian and Ukrainian youth groups played key
    roles in organizing those demonstrations. [For background see the
    Eurasia Insight archive]. "The former leaderships of Georgia and
    Ukraine never took such tough action against youth leaders," said
    Saida Gojamanli, director of the Bureau of Human Rights and Law
    Observance.

    The arrest of a representative of the Ukrainian youth group Pora in
    Baku has helped fuel speculation that the government plans to
    discourage such organizations from playing any role in Azerbaijan's
    parliamentary elections. Azerbaijani authorities detained Sergei
    Yevtushenko -- an advisor to the Ukrainian foreign minister, and a
    Pora leader - at Baku airport on September 15. Two days later, he was
    forcibly returned to Ukraine. Yevtushenko had traveled to Azerbaijan
    at the invitation of the opposition election bloc Azadliq to attend a
    conference on democratization in Azerbaijan and Belarus.

    No official reason was given for Yevtushenko's detention. The
    Ukrainian consul was allowed to meet with Yevtushenko only after the
    Ukrainian Foreign Ministry lodged a formal diplomatic protest. In a
    September 16 interview with Trend news agency, the country's
    ambassador to Baku, Igor Kizima stated that Azerbaijani officials had
    violated international agreements by making the Ukrainian consul wait
    five hours before seeing Yevtushenko. Ukrainian officials also
    accused Azerbaijan of violating bilateral agreements that provide for
    a no-visa entry to Azerbaijan for Ukrainian citizens.


    Editor's Note: Khadija Ismayilova is a freelance journalist based in
    Baku.
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