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Citing Ethnicity, Azerbaijan Bars Photojournalist

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  • Citing Ethnicity, Azerbaijan Bars Photojournalist

    CITING ETHNICITY, AZERBAIJAN BARS PHOTOJOURNALIST

    CPJ Press Freedom Online
    http://www.cpj.org/2011/07/citing-ethnicity-azerbaijan-bars-photojournalist.php
    July 7 2011

    New York, July 7, 2011--Diana Markosian, a freelance photographer for
    Bloomberg Markets magazine was denied entry to Azerbaijan last week
    by authorities who cited her ethnicity as a reason, international
    news reports said.

    On June 27, border guards at the Heydar Aliyev International Airport
    in Baku detained Markosian on arrival from the Latvian capital, Riga,
    then expelled her back to Riga the next day, according to press reports
    and CPJ interviews. Markosian told CPJ that the border guards took
    her passport, saying that she had an Armenian last name and that they
    "needed to clarify something." Then they put her in the airport's
    transit zone where she spent 16 hours until the U.S. Embassy in Baku
    helped her to buy a ticket for the next return flight to Riga.

    Markosian holds both U.S. and Russian citizenship, she told CPJ.

    A government spokesman told the Baku-based news agency APA that
    Markosian was deported because authorities would be unable to provide
    her with "security" since she is an ethnic Armenian.

    Markosian told CPJ that before her travel to Baku she and the
    newsroom told the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry about her visit, and
    were assured there would not be any complications. APA quoted Foreign
    Ministry spokesman Elkhan Polukhov as saying the government had sent
    a letter to Bloomberg management saying that Azerbaijan is at war
    with Armenia and because of this "there will be problems to provide
    security for Armenian Diana Markosian." Authorities asked Bloomberg
    to send another photographer instead of Markosian, Polukhov told APA.

    There have been no reports of other ethnic Armenians being denied
    entry to Azerbaijan.

    Ty Trippet, a spokesman for Bloomberg LP, told CPJ that the company
    had not put out any statements on the case.

    "It is deeply disturbing that Azerbaijani authorities would cite the
    ethnic background of a foreign reporter as a reason for barring her
    entry to the country," said CPJ Deputy Director Robert Mahoney. "Diana
    Markosian should be allowed to work in Azerbaijan as freely as any
    other journalist."

    Azerbaijan and Armenia are engaged in peace talks over Azerbaijan's
    breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh, populated by mostly by ethnic
    Armenians. A violent conflict over the territory erupted in 1988.

    Although the ceasefire was declared in 1994, the conflict has not
    ended and violent incidents continue to take place on the border.




    From: A. Papazian
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