Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

UN Rights Committee Said Set To Censure Azerbaijan

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

  • UN Rights Committee Said Set To Censure Azerbaijan

    UN RIGHTS COMMITTEE SAID SET TO CENSURE AZERBAIJAN
    By Robert Evans

    Reuters
    July 22 2009
    UK

    GENEVA, July 22 (Reuters) - United Nations experts are set to censure
    energy-rich Azerbaijan over its human rights record after suggesting
    it was in denial over violations of global rights pacts, officials
    and diplomats said on Wednesday.

    They said the critique, which could be harsh, was likely to be
    formulated in recommendations to the government in Baku on what it
    should do to clean up its act. It would be issued on July 31 by the
    U.N.'s watchdog Human Rights Committee.

    "After comments made by committee members this week, it is clear
    they are going to be tough over attacks on independent journalists,
    on freedom of expression and on state control of judges," said one
    official, who asked not to be named.

    The 18-member committee, a body made up of independent academics and
    lawyers from developed and developing countries, met on Monday and
    Tuesday to quiz an Azeri government team on what was happening in
    the former Soviet republic.

    An official U.N. report on the session said the committee questioned
    the team on killings and arrests of journalists and suicides of others
    in police custody, on bans on opposition rallies, on violence against
    women and attacks on homosexuals.

    Khalaf Khalafov, Azerbaijan's deputy foreign minister, told the
    committee that journalists were only arrested for violating the law
    and that any interference with the media or freedom of expression
    was illegal, according to the report.

    One committee expert told Khalafov, the account said, that his country
    "appeared to be in a state of denial" on police violence, and officials
    present said the scepticism was clearly shared by other members of
    the body.

    Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) with offices in Baku, including
    the chairman of an Azeri group on protection of journalists, told
    reporters after the session that the country appeared sliding back
    to Soviet-era practices.

    And during the committee discussions, Khalafov argued that the traces
    of the Soviet "totalitarian past" when, he said, the Azeri judiciary
    had been subject to "the dictatorship of the proletariat," would not
    disappear overnight.

    The committee session was held as a top-level delegation from the
    European Union, with which Azerbaijan is seeking to boost economic
    relations especially in the energy sector, was expressing alarm in
    Baku about rights.

    Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, who headed the EU team, told
    reporters there on Monday that he had expressed concern to President
    Ilham Aliyev over the arrest of two opposition bloggers who were
    accused of hooliganism.

    At the same time, ambassadors of the 27 EU member states voiced
    disquiet "about the condition of human rights and freedoms" in the
    country where Aliyev and his late father have held power almost
    uninterrupted for nearly three decades.

    But at a Geneva news conference, NGOs said they feared the EU was
    unlikely to go beyond words in its criticism of Azerbaijan, a key
    supplier of oil and gas from Caspian Sea fields offering an alternative
    to energy from Russia.

    "In our experience, the countries most likely to take a strong stance
    are the United States and (non-EU member) Norway -- they have their
    own oil," said Florian Irminger of the Geneva-based Human Rights
    House Foundation. (Editing by Jonathan Lynn)
Working...
X