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Azerbaijan: Website MIA After Linking Putin to Gazprom Funny Biz.

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  • Azerbaijan: Website MIA After Linking Putin to Gazprom Funny Biz.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/art icles/eav022509a.shtml

    Wednesday, February 25, 2009

    EurasiaNet
    CIVIL SOCIETY

    AZERBAIJAN: WEBSITE REMAINS MISSING IN ACTION AFTER LINKING RUSSIA'S
    PUTIN TO GAZPROM FUNNY BUSINESS

    Mina Muradova 2/25/09


    The mysterious closure of Azerbaijan's Day.az web news portal has
    ignited a new controversy about press freedom in the energy-rich
    Caucasus state. Some observers believe the website's shutdown is
    related to the posting of an article containing allegations that
    Russia's paramount leader, Vladimir Putin, has "economic interests" in
    the state-controlled energy giant Gazprom. Officials in Baku deny
    taking action to muzzle Day.az.

    Launched in 2003, the Russian-language Day.az, and its
    English-language version Today.az, provided a broad range of news,
    often including interviews with political insiders on sensitive
    topics. The site, which claimed a daily audience of about 25,000
    users, belonged to parliamentarian Anar Mammadkhanov, a member of the
    governing Yeni Azerbaijan Party. The web portal enjoyed a reputation
    inside Azerbaijan for offering viewpoints that did not always adhere
    to the official line of President Ilham Aliyev's administration.

    A message posted on the site on February 18 announced that Day.az had
    "closed for technical reasons and would resume operating on February
    25."

    But by mid-afternoon on February 25 the portal had not resumed
    operations. In a February 24 interview with the APA news agency,
    editor-in-chief Elnur Baimov stated that the website had been sold,
    but declined to give details. In a later interview with the opposition
    newspaper Yeni Musavat, former Day.az owner Mammadkhanov confirmed the
    sale of the site and added that a public statement would be
    forthcoming.

    Day.az employees who started to return to work on February 24 told
    EurasiaNet that they had been told nothing about the portal's sale, or
    the site's future.

    Meanwhile, other Azerbaijani journalists and one watchdog group find
    Day.az's silence significant.

    Mehman Aliyev, director of the pro-opposition Turan news agency,
    believes that the unanswered phone calls to the portal's offices and
    the lack of clear explanations for the site's shutdown show that the
    Day.az managers "were really scared."

    "The situation again shows that the authorities have instruments for
    putting strong influence on the mass media here, ranging from pressure
    to threats to close their operations," said Mehman Aliyev.

    Azerbaijan in recent months has been wracked by freedom-of-information
    controversies over the cancellation of FM broadcasts from Radio Free
    Europe/Radio Liberty, Voice of America and the British Broadcasting
    Corporation. The switch-off followed months of growing concern among
    international organizations about limitations on independent media
    outlets in the country. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive]. http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/art icles/eav011609d.shtml

    Government officials have so far limited their comments about the
    closure. In a February 19 interview with ANS TV, Ali Hasanov, the
    influential chief of the presidential administration's Political and
    Public Affairs Department, denied that the authorities had pressured
    Day.az to close. "I have no information about reasons for the closure
    of this website. Anyhow, its owners know them better," Hasanov said in
    reference to reasons for the shutdown. "How can the Azerbaijani
    government close an Internet site?"

    One Day.az employee, speaking on condition of anonymity, told
    EurasiaNet that most editorial employees believe that that the
    portal's shutdown is related to an interview with Russian dissident
    oligarch Boris Berezovsky that was posted on February 16. Although the
    Azerbaijani government's relations with Moscow have lately soured,
    many Azerbaijanis believe that Baku remains wary of inciting the
    Kremlin's anger. Berezovksy, a Russian oligarch who now lives in
    exile, sits high atop the Kremlin's "enemies list."

    In the interview, Berezovsky claimed that Russian Prime Minister
    Vladimir Putin has financial interests in Gazprom's recent gas dispute
    with Ukraine, and repeated the now-familiar charge that Russia had
    delivered arms to Armenia to scuttle a resolution of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive]. http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/art icles/eav012709d.shtml
    "That Vladimir Putin has economic interests in Gazprom, I can tell you
    with 100 percent certainty," said Berezovsky, who was an instrumental
    figure in Putin's rise to power.

    In his comments, Hasanov said nothing to squash the spreading
    assumption that the Berezovksy interview was connected to the
    shutdown. "We are a friendly state with Russia and cannot be
    indifferent to information related to its heads of state and
    government," he said. "But I do not think that any site can be closed
    because of such information."

    The Institute for Reporters' Freedom and Safety states that Day.az has
    not approached them about any problems related to alleged government
    pressure to sell the site or to change content. "They [site
    representatives] have said there's no pressure on them," said Emin
    Huseynov, the organization's chairman.

    Former owner Mammadkhanov has denied that the Berezovsky interview had
    any link to the site's shutdown. Other experts suggest that Day.az was
    simply too independent a news outlet for the government's taste, and
    so officials simply forced it to close.

    What the future holds for Day.az remains uncertain. Turan's Aliyev
    argues that the portal could become "more pro-governmental, less
    balanced and less objective."

    The Institute for Reporters' Freedom and Safety's Huseynov, however,
    says that he does not expect the portal's information to change.
    "Day.az was . . . always controllable due to the fact that its owner
    was member of the ruling party. They just handed over the website from
    one person to another one inside the government," he speculated.

    In his February 21 interview with Yeni Musavat, former owner
    Mammadkhanov rejected the notion that Day.az was under the
    government's thumb. "Some people considered that we support royal rule
    [a reference to President Aliyev]. Now the same people say that we are
    allegedly opposition. We have never excluded anybody and have always
    spoken freely."

    Editor's Note: Mina Muradova is a freelance reporter in Baku.
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