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Eurovision Organizer Probes Azeri Witch Hunt

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  • Eurovision Organizer Probes Azeri Witch Hunt

    EUROVISION ORGANIZER PROBES AZERI WITCH HUNT

    Asbarez
    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/08/19/eu rovision-organizer-probes-azeri-witch-hunt/
    Aug 19th, 2009

    YEREVAN/BAKU (Combined Sources)-The organizer of the Eurovision song
    contest said on Wednesday that it is investigating reports that
    security bodies in Azerbaijan have tracked down and interrogated
    local residents who voted for Armenia during this year's competition,
    reported Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

    Security forces in Azerbaijan have launched a campaign against dozens
    of citizens for voting for the wrong entry in this year's Eurovision
    Song Contest, during which 43 Azeris voted for the Armenian duo Inga
    and Anush and their song "Jan-Jan" in the finale of one of Europe's
    most popular television shows held in Moscow on May 16.

    "They said it was a matter of national security," one of them, Rovshan
    Nasirli, told RFE/RL's Azerbaijani service last week. "They were
    trying to put psychological pressure on me, saying things like, 'You
    have no sense of ethnic pride. How come you voted for Armenia?' They
    made me write out an explanation, and then they let me go."

    The European Broadcasting Union (EBU), an association of European
    television companies that organizes the annual contest, appears to have
    been alarmed by the extraordinary development. The EBU's executive
    supervisor, Svante Stockselius, told the Azerbaijani APA news agency
    on Wednesday that it launched an inquiry last week, reported RFE/RL.

    "Our technical partners will also take part in the inquiry,"
    Stockselius was quoted as saying. "The inquiry will also enable local
    broadcasters to bring clarity to the matter."

    Under the EBU's existing rules, Eurovision winners are decided by a
    jury of music industry specialists formed in each of the participating
    nations and millions of TV viewers voting by phone or by SMS. They
    are free to vote for any country other than their own.

    Some 1,065 Armenians voted for Azerbaijan's "Always" entry that
    featured a Swedish-Iranian singer and finished third in the
    competition. Armenia's Inga and Anush came in tenth.

    According to the BBC, Azeri authorities confirmed that Nasirli and
    other people were questioned over their Eurovision votes but denied
    intimidating or putting pressure on them.

    "If Azerbaijani parliament members can go to Armenia, then what's wrong
    with voting for the Armenian song in the contest?" asked Nasirli. "I
    told them, 'If you don't want people to vote for Armenia, then why
    are you in the same contest with them?'"

    Chief Azeri presidential foreign policy advisor Novruz Mammadov,
    in an interview with the APA news agency, blamed Azeri officials'
    inexperience "given that Azerbaijan is a fairly young republic,"
    as well as the opposition in his country on the state of affairs.

    He also went on to blame Armenia for what he called "fueling the
    matter to score dividends with Western countrie."

    The case has also set off alarm bells in Azerbaijan's rights
    community. Activist Avaz Hasanov called the move "unbelievable" and
    warned that Azerbaijan, which has already seen a steady clampdown
    on civil rights under President Ilham Aliyev, is moving toward a
    police state.

    "Limiting people's choices in such an obvious manner won't do any good
    for the country," Hasanov told RFE/RL's Azerbaijani service. "If all
    SMS and phone conversations are being screened, then this country
    is nothing more than a police state, with people being watched all
    the time."
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