Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azerbaijani Media Suffers Blow

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Azerbaijani Media Suffers Blow

    AZERBAIJANI MEDIA SUFFERS BLOW

    A1+
    [05:35 pm] 07 October, 2006

    Leading editor says he is being intimidated into silence. By Elshad
    Guliev and Shahin Rzayev in Baku The founder and editor-in-chief of
    the two most popular newspapers in Azerbaijan, Einulla Fatullayev,
    says he is closing the two publications and abandoning journalism,
    after he was given a suspended jail sentence by a Baku court.

    On October 3, readers of the weekly Realny Azerbaijan and the daily
    Gundelik Azerbaijan read the last combined issue of the papers in
    which the editors bid farewell to their readers and said they were
    shutting down because of pressure from the government.

    On September 26, a district court in Baku gave Fatullayev a suspended
    two-year jail sentence and a fine of 5,000 manats (5,650 US dollars)
    and Realny Azerbaijan was fined twice that amount. Both were found
    guilty of having "insulted the honour and dignity" of the interior
    minister, Ramil Usubov. An article had alleged that Usubov must have
    known about the mysterious criminal gang, headed by Haji Mamedov,
    operating within the interior ministry for more than ten years -
    and that therefore the minister was protecting them.

    Both the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the
    Council of Europe have long demanded that the Azerbaijani authorities
    abolish articles 147 and 148 of the criminal code, which make a
    journalist criminally responsible for defamation. However, changes
    have not yet been made and journalists can still be put in prison
    for their articles.

    Azerbaijan has earned a low rating from international organisations
    for the quality and freedom of its media recently. On October 4,
    opposition journalist Sakit Zakhidov was given a three-year jail
    sentence for alleged drug possession in a case which critics say was
    politically motivated. This year another editor, Baheddin Haziev,
    was abducted and beaten up, and other journalists have complained of
    intimidation and physical violence.

    The authorities made no official comment on Fatullayev's sentence,
    letting it speak for itself.

    But it followed a sustained campaign against the editor over the past
    year. He had been fined several times, condemned in the government
    media, detained at Baku airport and was also beaten up by an unknown
    assailant in the centre of Baku.

    Last year, Elmar Husseinov, the former colleague of Fatullayev
    and editor of Monitor magazine, was murdered in mysterious
    circumstances. Fatullayev, a Monitor journalist, founded Realny
    Azerbaijan shortly afterwards.

    Immediately after the verdict, Fatullayev himself told IWPR, "Now I
    have two ways out. I can either renounce Azerbaijani citizenship and
    leave the country, because I have understood that after the murder of
    Elmar Husseinov, they have chosen the policy of terror against us. Or
    I can go to jail and be killed. Those are the alternatives for me."

    In the last few days, Fatullayev has not been contactable by
    telephone and it was reported in the newspapers that he had fled
    to the USA. However, Mamed Suleimanov, a colleague of Fatullayev,
    said that he was still in Azerbaijan and had personally helped edit
    the last edition of the newspaper, but "he is simply very tired and
    therefore decided to switch off all his telephones".

    Realny Azerbaijan had become the best-read political publication
    in Azerbaijan in a very short space of time, with a circulation of
    30,000 copies. Its daily partner had a circulation of 11,000.

    Ganimat Zakhidov, editor of the opposition newspaper Azadlyq,
    was critical of Fatullayev's decision. "These newspapers were
    high-circulation and they did not experience financial problems," he
    wrote. "They say the reason for their closure was pressure from the
    government. But if a journalist buckles under pressure and decides
    to retreat I have a bad opinion of that."

    Eldar Namazov, a former government official who is also a regular
    author in Realny Azerbaijan, said the two papers had been the "vanguard
    of the fight against human rights abuses, falsification of elections
    and other illegal actions. That is why these two papers came under
    such great pressure. I hope that the closure will only be temporary."

    Another well-known Azerbaijani commentator Arif Yunus said the demise
    of the titles was a result of a fight between two factions inside
    government.

    He said the newspapers were supported by one group, which included
    National Security Minister Eldar Makhmudov and Emergencies Minister
    Kamaladdin Heidarov - an allegation Fatullayev denied, although
    his articles never criticised them. Opposing them was a group led
    by interior minister and veteran presidential chief of staff Ramiz
    Mekhtiev.

    "I am of course against the criminal persecution of journalists
    for their articles, but I think they should not have got so deeply
    involved. Einulla Fatullayev and his newspapers had simply become
    a pawn in the intra-clan power struggles and fell victim to them,"
    said Yunus.

    Pro-government political analyst Mubariz Akhmedoglu agreed that the
    titles had been used by members of the elite to publish compromising
    allegations about their competitors.

    He said there were two possibilities, "Either one group turned out to
    be stronger than the other and demanded the closure of this channel of
    compromising allegations, or there was a truce between the two groups
    and the group that was behind the newspapers voluntarily decided to
    close them as a guarantee of the truce being observed."

    Akhmedoglu also speculated that Fatullayev might have plans to lay
    the groundwork for an Azerbaijani "coloured revolution" as in Georgia
    and Ukraine.

    "Maybe the leaders of these newspapers want to attract attention to
    themselves and soon come up with a big new project," he said. "I think
    Fatullayev may want to take on the role in the future of Georgia's
    Rustavi-2 or Ukraine's Fifth Channel [which played key roles in the
    revolutions in their respective countries]."

    Aflatun Amashov, chairman of the Press Council of Azerbaijan, said the
    news of the closures had been unexpected and he saw no reason for it,
    "By law a newspaper can only be shut down by a decision of a court
    and there was no question of this in the case of these newspapers. We
    will watch closely how events develop."

    Elshad Guliev is a freelance journalist in Baku.

    Shahin Rzayev is IWPR's Azerbaijan Country Director.

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting Caucasus Reporting Service
    No. 360 04-Oct-06
Working...
X