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Three Opposition Activists Go On Trial In Azerbaijan For AllegedAtte

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  • Three Opposition Activists Go On Trial In Azerbaijan For AllegedAtte

    THREE OPPOSITION ACTIVISTS GO ON TRIAL IN AZERBAIJAN FOR ALLEGED ATTEMPT TO SEIZE POWER

    AP Worldstream
    Apr 05, 2006

    Three Azerbaijani opposition youth activists went on trial Wednesday
    for allegedly attempting to forcefully seize power in this ex-Soviet
    republic and committing financial crimes, in a case government
    opponents dismiss as politically motivated.

    The three members of the Yeni Fikir (New Thought) youth group deny
    the charges and have gone on a hunger strike to protest the decision
    to hold court hearings behind closed doors, their lawyer Osman
    Kyazimov said.

    "They all declare that it is a political (attack) because of their
    opposition views," Kyazimov told The Associated Press. "We demand an
    open trial so that everybody can see that."

    The envoy in Azerbaijan of the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe also criticized the closed-door nature of the
    court hearings.

    "The court's ruling, which effectively makes the whole trial a state
    secret, is regrettable and does nothing to restore public trust in
    the judiciary," said Maurizio Pavesi of the OSCE, a trans-Atlantic
    security and democracy watchdog.

    "It makes it impossible for the OSCE monitors to assess the fairness
    of the proceedings and their compliance with international standards,"
    he said in a statement.

    The suspects were arrested in August and September in the run-up to
    last year's disputed parliamentary elections and have been charged
    with attempting to stage a coup, evading taxes on foreign grants and
    conducting illegal financial activity. They have also been accused of
    cooperating with Armenian special services, Azerbaijan's longtime foe.

    Human rights groups dismissed the case as politically motivated. New
    York-based Human Rights Watch has said the trial "casts an even darker
    shadow on the 2005 parliamentary elections, which were blatantly
    fraudulent."

    President Ilham Aliev's government maintained its grip on parliament
    in November's elections, which handed the ruling party a majority in
    the 125-seat legislature with the support of government-affiliated
    independent lawmakers.

    Western observers criticized the polls as flawed, but the United
    States and European countries have not endorsed opposition demands
    for new elections, fearful of upsetting stability in the oil-rich
    Caspian Sea state that neighbors Iran.
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