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Azerbaijan: Verdict against youth activists raises int'l concern

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  • Azerbaijan: Verdict against youth activists raises int'l concern

    AZERBAIJAN: VERDICT AGAINST YOUTH ACTIVISTS RAISES INTERNATIONAL CONCERN
    By Shahin Abbasov and Khadija Ismailova 7/17/06

    EurasiaNet, NY
    July 17 2006

    International organizations and foreign governments are criticizing a
    recent Azerbaijani court verdict, in which leaders of the Yeni Fikir
    (New Idea) youth organization were found guilty of plotting a coup
    and sentenced to as many as seven-years in prison.

    A Baku court found Ruslan Bashirli, the former head of Yeni Fikir,
    and his deputies, Ramin Tagiyev and Said Nuri, guilty of trying to
    overthrow President Ilham Aliyev's administration under the terms of
    article 278 of the Criminal Code of Azerbaijan. The sentences were
    handed down July 12 during an unscheduled court sitting not attended
    by defense lawyers, media representatives or the families of the
    accused. Bashirli received the lengthiest prison term - seven years.

    Tagiyev was given a four-year sentence and Nuri received a suspended
    sentence of five years.

    During the trial, the prosecution accused the Norwegian Embassy, the
    National Democratic Institute, a US non-governmental organization
    (NGO), and former US presidential advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski of
    instructing Yeni Fikir members on subversive political tactics.

    Nelson C. Ledsky, NDI's regional director for Eurasia, characterized
    the accusation as "false," adding that the NGO had "no involvement"
    with Bashirli.

    The youth activists were arrested during the run-up to Azerbaijan's
    November 2005 parliamentary elections. [For background see the Eurasia
    Insight archive]. Opposition parties portrayed the cases against
    the youth activists as a government attempt to silence criticism
    and to prevent possible mass protests. Youth groups in Georgia and
    Ukraine played key roles in organizing demonstrations in 2003 and 2004
    respectively that forced the incumbent governments in both states from
    power. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Yeni Fikir
    is loosely associated with the Popular Front Party of Azerbaijan,
    one of the country's largest opposition parties.

    Bashirli was arrested last August 3 after a video was handed over
    to prosecutors that depicted the youth activist taking $ 2,000 "for
    the development of democracy" from a person later identified by the
    prosecutor's office as an alleged agent of the Armenian security
    services. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. A fellow
    Yeni Fikir member, who traveled with Bashirli to Tbilisi where the
    meeting occurred, served as prosecutors' chief source for the alleged
    connection with the Armenia.

    In comments to EurasiaNet, Osman Kazimov, the Yeni Fikir group's
    defense lawyer, argued that prosecutors never proved their case,
    and that the government staged the trial to discredit the Azerbaijani
    opposition by linking them with the Armenian special services.

    On July 13, the Baku mission of the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) issued a statement that expressed
    "concern" over the conduct of the trial. "Notwithstanding the
    extreme severity of [the] sentences which were handed down with
    inadequate notice and in the absence of [the] defendants' advocates,
    the process leading to their arraignment and the proceedings at trial
    fell short of international standards in upholding the rule of law,"
    the statement read.

    The OSCE mission called on the government "to take urgent and
    appropriate steps to fully ensure the rights of the individual during
    proceedings that are conducted in accordance with the rule of law."

    The British and US embassies echoed those concerns. In a July 13
    statement, the US embassy noted that "indicators existed that the
    defendants' rights to equal protection before the law, presumption of
    innocence and an impartial hearing were not respected." The British
    embassy stressed the importance of ensuring that any appeal is
    conducted according to due process, and noted that it would continue
    to follow the Yeni Fikir case "closely."

    Prosecutors insist that the trial was conducted in accordance with
    international and national laws, noting that the accused were given
    defense lawyers and that, while initial sittings of the court were
    closed for "national security concerns," later sessions had been
    open. "Bashirli and his deputies have been convicted because their
    crimes have been proved. If they do not agree with the court's
    decision, they can use their right to appeal to a higher court,"
    said Vugar Aliyev, spokesperson for the Azerbaijan Chief Prosecutor's
    Office.

    Those close to the defendants, however, believe there is virtually
    no chance that the verdicts against the trio can be reversed on appeal.

    "The court sentenced him now, but the government did it from the very
    beginning," said Bashirli's fiancee, who asked only to be identified
    by her first name, Vusala. Reporters from state television and the
    pro-government Leader TV encouraged Vusala to announce that she had
    ended her relationship with Bashirli, she claimed. She continues to
    defend Bashirli, however, asserting that the youth activist "loves
    Azerbaijan and would never betray the motherland."

    Bashirli's mother, who has not seen her son since his arrest, also
    defended her son. "They tortured him, and did not even provide him with
    medical treatment unless international organizations protested his bad
    treatment. They beat him to get testimony against [opposition leader]
    Ali Kerimli and his Popular Front Party. Ruslan refused to do so,"
    Zemfira Bashirli said. "This is not a country to live in. Ruslan wanted
    to improve things in the country and fell victim to his struggle."

    Representatives of the Popular Front Party, which has continued
    to support Yeni Fikir, argue that the trial was intended to scare
    Azerbaijani youth out of becoming politically active. Ramin Hasanov,
    head of the ruling Yeni Azerbaijan Party's youth organization, denied
    that the trial was politically motivated. In a July 12 interview with
    the Voice of America, Hasanov maintained that "the court just gave
    its assessment of the crime."

    Editor's Note: Khadija Ismayilova is an analyst based in Washington.

    Shain Abbasov is a freelance journalist based in Baku.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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