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  • Azerbaijan - Officials deny Alternative Service commitment

    FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway
    http://www.forum18.org/

    The right to believe, to worship and witness
    The right to change one's belief or religion
    The right to join together and express one's belief

    ========================================== ======
    Thursday 3 December 2009
    AZERBAIJAN: OFFICIALS DENY ALTERNATIVE SERVICE COMMITMENT, AS VICTIM
    CHALLENGES SENTENCE

    Sentenced in 2006 for refusing compulsory military service on grounds of
    religious faith, Jehovah's Witness Mushfiq Mammedov was sentenced again on
    exactly the same charges in October 2009 and fined, a decision he is
    challenging in Baku's Appeal Court. The judge's assistant told Forum 18
    News Service that the hearing, which began on 2 December, is due to resume
    on 9 December. Jehovah's Witnesses pointed out to Forum 18 that
    Azerbaijan's Constitution and Criminal Code do not allow criminal charges
    to be brought against someone twice for the same crime. Meanwhile, despite
    Azerbaijan's commitment to the Council of Europe to have already adopted a
    Law on Alternative Service, a senior parliamentary official has said the
    draft will not be presented to Parliament until the conflict over
    Nagorno-Karabakh is resolved. Andres Herkel, co-rapporteur of the Council
    of Europe Parliamentary Assembly, told Forum 18 that "this can't be a
    universal excuse for Azerbaijan not to fulfil its obligations and standards
    on human rights and basic freedoms".

    AZERBAIJAN: OFFICIALS DENY ALTERNATIVE SERVICE COMMITMENT, AS VICTIM
    CHALLENGES SENTENCE

    By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>

    Jehovah's Witness Mushfiq Mammedov has appealed against his criminal
    conviction handed down in October for refusing compulsory military service
    on grounds of religious faith. The initial hearing of his appeal took place
    on 2 December at Baku's Appeal Court under Judge Rahman Mirzaev and is set
    to conclude when the substance of his appeal is examined at the next
    hearing on the afternoon of 9 December, the judge's assistant told Forum 18
    News Service from Baku on 2 December. This is the second time Mammedov has
    been convicted on the same charge.

    This latest prosecution of a conscientious objector came amid renewed
    controversy over Azerbaijan's failure to comply with its Council of Europe
    commitment to introduce a civilian alternative to military service by
    January 2003.

    Debate was sparked by comments to journalists on 20 November by Safa
    Mirzoev, chief of staff of the Milli Meclis (parliament), that the draft
    Law on Alternative Service has been prepared but will not be presented to
    the Milli Mejlis until the conflict with ethnic Armenians over
    Nagorno-Karabakh is resolved. Mirzoev also claimed that the draft Law had
    been given a "positive" assessment by the Council of Europe. (Mirzoev had
    made similar remarks in December 2008.)

    Mirzoev's office repeatedly told Forum 18 in late November and early
    December that he was too busy to discuss the issue. But Mehman Gayubov of
    the Milli Meclis press office told Forum 18 on 2 December that, as an
    official of the Milli Meclis administration, Mirzoev was giving his own
    opinion. "He doesn't represent the government or deputies." Gayubov said
    that deputies had discussed the proposed Law some years ago but insisted
    that the Milli Meclis "cannot adopt" such a Law. "Society wouldn't
    understand this." He denied that introducing an alternative civilian
    service is a Council of Europe commitment.

    Forum 18 has been unable to find out whether Mirzoev's comments also
    represent the view of the government and the powerful Presidential
    Administration. Elshad Babaev of the Military Department of the
    Presidential Administration declined to comment on Mirzoev's remarks but
    confirmed to Forum 18 that Azerbaijan does have a commitment to the Council
    of Europe to introduce alternative service in law and practice and conceded
    that this has not yet happened.

    "We want to do what we promised," Babaev told Forum 18 on 26 November in
    comments he stressed were his personal view. "But you should take into
    account that Azerbaijan has very specific issues over the Nagorno-Karabakh
    issue." Told that the essential situation of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
    has remained unchanged since the 1994 ceasefire and is no different to the
    situation in 2000 when Azerbaijan agreed its commitments to the Council of
    Europe, Babaev responded: "We had hoped that the conflict would have been
    resolved before the commitment was achieved."

    Babaev told Forum 18 that the issue of the Alternative Service Law is
    being handled by the Presidential Administration's Department for Work with
    Law-Enforcement Agencies. However, its head Fuad Aleskerov was repeatedly
    unavailable between late November and early December. Equally unavailable
    was Shahin Aliev, head of the Department for Legislation and Legal
    Expertise.

    Azerbaijan's defiance of Council of Europe

    Article 76 of Azerbaijan's Constitution provides that "if beliefs of
    citizens come into conflict with service in the army then in some cases
    envisaged by legislation alternative service instead of regular army
    service is permitted". However, despite this Article and despite the
    country's Council of Europe commitments, no mechanism for an alternative to
    compulsory military service has been introduced. Refusal to perform
    military service in peacetime is punished under Article 321.1 of the
    Criminal Code with imprisonment of up to two years.

    Among its commitments to the Council of Europe ahead of its accession in
    January 2001 was a commitment "to adopt, within two years of accession, a
    law on alternative service in compliance with European standards and, in
    the meantime, to pardon all conscientious objectors presently serving
    prison terms or serving in disciplinary battalions, allowing them instead
    to choose (when the law on alternative service has come into force) to
    perform non-armed military service or alternative civilian service".

    Despite repeated pressure from the Council of Europe, Azerbaijan has
    failed to meet this obligation. Andres Herkel, one of the two rapporteurs
    of the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly for the monitoring of
    Azerbaijan, says he can understand concerns in Azerbaijan about an
    Alternative Service Law when the Karabakh conflict remains unresolved. "But
    this can't be a universal excuse for Azerbaijan not to fulfil its
    obligations and standards on human rights and basic freedoms," Herkel told
    Forum 18 from the Estonian capital Tallinn on 2 December. "This has been
    used many times on my visits to Azerbaijan."

    Herkel said he had not seen the text of the proposed Alternative Service
    Law or the Council of Europe assessment. But he urged Azerbaijan to work
    with the Council of Europe on adopting the Law as soon as possible "in an
    honest way of fulfilment. Co-operation with international organisations can
    only be fruitful when there is a real will to change."

    Adil Gadjiev, who handles alternative service cases at the Human Rights
    Ombudsperson's Office, recognises that adopting the Alternative Service Law
    is a Council of Europe commitment. He told Forum 18 that the Ombudsperson's
    Office wrote to the Milli Mejlis in 2008 urging it to do so as soon as
    possible.

    Eldar Zeynalov of the Human Rights Centre of Azerbaijan has repeatedly
    called on the government to meet this obligation, stressing that this
    should for all conscientious objectors, whether their objections are based
    on a religious faith or not. He pointed out to Forum 18 that the arrest of
    Mammedov for refusing military service in August 2009 came just weeks after
    the United Nations Human Rights Committee also called on Azerbaijan to
    adopt an Alternative Service Law.

    Zeynalov remains sceptical of Mirzoev's claim that the Council of Europe
    gave a positive assessment of the draft Alternative Service Law. "The
    problem is that both the draft Law and the Council of Europe's comments on
    it remain top secret," he lamented to Forum 18. "They can claim that the
    Council of Europe's experts were positive, but no-one can check this." He
    calls on the Azerbaijani government to make public both the draft Law and
    the Council of Europe's assessment.

    Mammedov's prosecution

    Mammedov was arrested by police in Baku's Sabail District in the evening
    of 19 August without a warrant, human rights defender Zeynalov told Forum
    18. A warrant was only obtained the following evening and his pre-trial
    detention was authorised by a court. Mammedov was initially denied access
    to a lawyer. He was then transferred to the Investigation Isolation prison
    at Kurdakhani north of Baku.

    At first prison officials refused to pass on food brought for Mammedov by
    his mother. But after Mammedov's family lodged a complaint to the Human
    Rights Ombudsperson Elmira Suleymanova about this and about what they
    regarded as an unlawful search of his home, Suleymanova visited him in the
    Kurdakhani prison. "The problems for him there were then over," Gadjiev of
    the Ombudsperson's Office told Forum 18 on 30 September. However, he
    declined to question Mammedov's then detention. "All is being done
    according to the court decision."

    Mammedov was held in detention until his trial on 16 October at Sabail
    District Court. Judge Elnur Hasanov found him guilty of violating Article
    321.1 of the Criminal Code. However, according to the court verdict seen by
    Forum 18, the judge cited unidentified "special circumstances" and, under
    Article 62 of the Criminal Code, which allows a milder alternative
    punishment under mitigating circumstances, reduced the punishment from a
    prison sentence to a fine of 700 Manats (4,865 Norwegian Kroner, 577 Euros
    or 873 US Dollars).

    Judge Hasanov then reduced the fine under Article 69.4 of the Criminal
    Code to take account of the pre-trial detention from 19 August to 16
    October. Mammedov's punishment was thus reduced to 250 Manats (1,737
    Norwegian Kroner, 206 Euros or 312 US Dollars) and he was freed in the
    courtroom. The verdict stressed that he has a criminal record. He was given
    20 days to appeal.

    Human rights defender Zeynalov told Forum 18 he believes the more lenient
    punishment than that prescribed in the Criminal Code was a "useful
    compromise" for the government. "The judge's position was very strange,
    although I welcome the decision not to imprison Mammedov." But he calls for
    Mammedov's punishment to be removed entirely.

    Earlier prosecutions

    Mammedov, who is now 26, has now been sentenced twice for refusing
    military service. He was found guilty by Baku's Sabail District Court on 21
    July 2006 under Criminal Code Article 321.1 and given a suspended sentence
    of six months. Jehovah's Witnesses told Forum 18 that he and his family
    were subsequently harassed by the Prosecutor's Office and the Police, who
    long threatened to prosecute him again (see F18News 23 July 2008
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=1162>).

    The Jehovah's Witnesses pointed out to Forum 18 that his second conviction
    on the same charge came despite the fact that Article 64 of Azerbaijan's
    Constitution and Article 8.2 of the Criminal Code do not allow criminal
    charges to be brought against someone twice for the same crime.

    Among other conscientious objector cases in recent years, Jehovah's
    Witness Samir Huseynov was sentenced to ten months' imprisonment in October
    2007 under Criminal Code Article 321.1. He was freed in May 2008 (see
    F18News 14 May 2008 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id= 1129>).

    Mammedov and Huseynov lodged a joint application (No. 14604/08) on 7 March
    2008 to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg (to whose
    jurisdiction Azerbaijan, as a Council of Europe member, is subject). No
    admissibility decision has yet been taken on the case. "The case is
    currently pending for examination and will be dealt with by the Court as
    soon as practically possible," the Court told Forum 18 on 3 December.

    However, human rights defenders have been alarmed by an October 2009 ECHR
    verdict in the case of an Armenian Jehovah's Witness conscientious
    objector, Vahan Bayatyan. In its verdict, the ECHR claimed that his
    imprisonment for refusal to perform military service on grounds of
    conscience did not constitute an unlawful interference with his right to
    freedom of thought, conscience and religion. Human rights defenders fear
    this will set a precedent for future ECHR jurisprudence on conscientious
    objection to military service (see F18News 19 November 2009
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=1377>). (END)

    For a personal commentary, by an Azeri Protestant, on how the
    international community can help establish religious freedom in Azerbaijan,
    see <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id= 482>.

    For more background information see Forum 18's Azerbaijan religious
    freedom survey at <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id= 1192>.

    More coverage of freedom of thought, conscience and belief in Azerbaijan
    is at <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?query=& religion=all&country=23>.

    A compilation of Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe
    (OSCE) freedom of religion or belief commitments can be found at
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_ id=1351>.

    A printer-friendly map of Azerbaijan is available at
    <http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpedition s/atlas/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=azerba& gt;.
    (END)

    © Forum 18 News Service. All rights reserved. ISSN 1504-2855
    You may reproduce or quote this article provided that credit is given to
    F18News http://www.forum18.org/

    Past and current Forum 18 information can be found at
    http://www.forum18.org/
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