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Activists Hope EuroVision Contest Will Improve Human Rights In Azerb

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  • Activists Hope EuroVision Contest Will Improve Human Rights In Azerb

    ACTIVISTS HOPE EUROVISION CONTEST WILL IMPROVE HUMAN RIGHTS IN AZERBAIJAN
    by Stefan Niggemeier

    Spiegel Online International
    February 8, 2012 Wednesday 2:07 PM GMT+1

    While the Azerbaijani government hopes to burnish its image
    by hosting the Eurovision Song Contest in May, civil rights
    activists are struggling to draw more attention to the country's
    human rights violations. Standing uncomfortably in the middle
    are the organizers of this supposedly "apolitical" event.;
    http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,813822,00.html

    The best view of the arena that will host the 2012 Eurovision Song
    Contest (ESC) is from the 9th floor of an apartment building at 5 Agil
    Guliyev Street. On the left is downtown Baku, the Azerbaijani capital,
    with the renovated old-city walls and glittering new skyscrapers. Next
    to it is the sweeping horizon of the Caspian Sea. National Flag Square,
    where a giant Azerbaijani flag flies atop a 162-meter (531-foot)
    flagpole, is directly in front of the building. The new arena, Baku
    Crystal Hall, is being built at the end of a peninsula on the other
    side of the square.

    Still, there is no one to enjoy the view. It's a stormy day in Baku,
    nicknamed the "City of the Winds." All the windows have been removed
    from the walls on the building's 9th floor, and debris is lying
    everywhere. Small snowdrifts have formed in the corners. Families
    lived there until recently, but now the entire floor is deserted. A
    crane is standing next to the building, ready to be put to work. The
    roof will probably be torn off soon, and then it will rain into the
    apartments of the people living on the lower floors.

    When residents walk up the stairs these days, they encounter smirking
    young people armed with saws and drills. After they leave, residents
    discover that something has changed. It might be a missing water pipe,
    a bare power cable hanging in a hallway or a demolished wall. Some
    residents suddenly find that their gas has been turned off. The
    residents say the young people work for the city.

    Indeed, it's gotten dangerous to live in this building -- but the
    dangers are intentional. The government wants the remaining residents
    to move out. In May, Baku expects thousands of visitors to attend the
    ESC, the world's largest non-sporting television even, which brings
    singers from around Europe and farther afield together to compete for
    the title. By then, a large thoroughfare and an elegant waterfront
    boulevard will lead to Crystal Hall.

    A Symbol of Official Mistreatment

    As the last building standing in this location, 5 Agil Guliyev
    Street has become a symbol. It embodies the ruthlessness with which
    the city, spurred on by an oil boom, is transforming itself into a
    grand metropolis modeled after cities in the West or, closer yet,
    Dubai. It also symbolizes the arbitrariness of a corrupt country in
    which rights often only exist on paper, as well as the ambivalent
    role that an event like the Grand Prix of pop music plays when it
    takes place under these conditions.

    The European Broadcasting Union (EBU), the organizer of the song
    contest, says that it isn't responsible for what happens to the
    apartment building. EBU officials insist that they didn't ask anyone
    to build new venues or to raze old buildings. In fact, they say, they
    have only now approved Crystal Hall, on a site that was previously
    wasteland, as the venue for the event. Besides, they add, the city
    has shown them that the redevelopment plans that require tearing down
    existing structures were made before Azerbaijan won the contest last
    May, thereby securing the right to host this year's contest.

    Sietse Bakker, a 27-year-old Dutch entrepreneur and author of a
    motivational book, is the spokesman for the European organizers.

    Though he speaks with practiced composure and distances himself from
    the controversy, he also ends up sounding like somewhat of a spokesman
    for the Azerbaijani government when he says that the people being
    forced to relocate are being fairly compensated.

    But not everyone shares this view. Granted, those who still live in the
    building say they aren't fighting to be able to stay there. But, says
    Zadir Gulamirov, a retired army captain, "We just want the compensation
    the law entitles us to." His wife, Kadiya, then adds, "For the money
    they're offering, we can't find an apartment we can live in."

    The residents have copied documents that they say testify to their
    rights. They explain how the size of their apartments were incorrectly
    calculated. With anger and sometimes tears in their eyes, they
    describe their petitions, letters and complaints -- and the refusal
    of law-enforcement and court officials to do anything at all.

    Of course, forced evictions under dubious circumstances are not a
    phenomenon that has only arrived in Baku with the ESC. But the event
    has further intensified the time pressure and the mistreatment of
    residents, says Rachel Denber, the deputy director of the Europe
    and Central Asia Division of Human Rights Watch. "The EBU should be
    public about concerns about abuses relating to the evictions and get
    assurances from the Azerbaijani authorities that they will halt all
    further expropriations, evictions and demolitions in the vicinity
    until they can be carried out in a fair and transparent manner
    and are consistent with Azerbaijani national law and Azerbaijan's
    international commitments."

    Jorg Grabosch, the head of Brainpool, the German company that will
    produce the giant television show for the Azerbaijanis, has nothing
    but praise for the speed at which the arena is being built. "The loss
    of the buildings isn't a tragedy," he says, suggesting that the gray
    apartment towers didn't look pretty anyway.

    Eroding Freedoms

    Winning the right to host the event was important to Azerbaijan. With
    the support of Mehridan Aliyeva, the wife of President Ilham Aliyev,
    the country took a professional approach to producing songs that
    would appeal to European audiences. For the authoritarian regime --
    which opposition members describe as a "mafia" -- it is a coup that
    makes an impression on the Azerbaijani people and boosts national
    pride in a country that only regained its independence 20 years ago,
    after seven decades as a Soviet republic.

    In describing the image Azerbaijan wants to project to the world,
    Mikhail Jabbarov, a former member of the government and current adviser
    to the pro-government television station Ictimai, which will broadcast
    this year's song contest, calls it "a modern, secular country that
    is proud of its roots."

    Of course, whether this assessment holds true depends in large part on
    whether one defines modernity as not only involving Western-style urban
    development and consumption, but also the rights of free expression
    and free assembly.

    The Paris-based organization Reporters Without Borders ranks
    Azerbaijan in 162nd place out of the 179 countries on its Press
    Freedom Index. Activists and independent journalists are subject to
    repression. Broadcasters, such as the BBC and Radio Liberty, were
    forced to give up their radio frequencies three years ago. Likewise,
    the government responded harshly to protests in the spring of 2011. In
    fact, according to Human Rights Watch, despite the country's efforts
    to burnish its international image, the human rights situation has
    deteriorated over the last year.

    Suppression of Activist and Journalists

    Leyla Yunus is an institution in the country. She has been fighting
    for civil rights in Azerbaijan since the days of the Soviet Union.

    "Things are getting worse and worse," she says matter-of-factly.

    "There is no respect for the law and no respect for morality." Yunus
    is a petite, determined woman, but her eyes seem moist and glassy. She
    has been fighting depression, she says, since the authorities tore
    down her office last year. She wasn't there when it happened, but
    everything was destroyed -- especially the fighting spirit of her
    and others. "After that," she says, "many people said: 'What can we
    expect from her if she can't even protect her own offices?'"

    Local civil rights activists say the government derives its power by
    employing intimidation and fear tactics. This is one of the reasons
    why Emin Huseynov, of the Institute for Reporters' Freedom and Safety
    (IRFS), is reluctant to view the recent releases of a number of
    jailed journalists as an indication that the government is taking
    their rights more seriously.

    Huseynov says many journalists have learned their lesson and are
    now practicing self-censorship. "There is an opposition newspaper
    that is allowed to call the president a dictator," he says. "But
    that doesn't pose a threat to the government. It would be dangerous,
    however, if journalists started investigating his family's fraudulent
    business dealings."

    For the government, Huseynov adds, the ESC is an "expensive toy
    it's using to improve its image." However, civil rights activists
    are not calling for a boycott. Instead, they are trying a strategy
    that embraces the event -- in part to avoid triggering a negative
    response from the population, which is looking forward to the
    spectacle. Their "Sing for Democracy" campaign aims to take advantage
    of the international attention surrounding the event so as to draw
    the attention of the outside world to the abysmal realities behind
    the attractive facade.

    A Supposed Smear Campaign

    In January, Markus Loning, the German government's human rights
    commissioner, wrote letters to the participants in the German
    pre-selection show and to the jury headed by prominent entertainer
    Stefan Raab, asking them to publicly campaign for human rights in
    Azerbaijan. "If Stefan Raab did this, it would make an impact and
    reach completely different people," Loning says. "There is now a
    political window of opportunity that we have to take advantage of."

    Thomas Schreiber, the entertainment coordinator for the German public
    broadcaster ARD and, as such, something akin to Germany's manager
    for ESC-related events, takes a more dismissive view of Loning's
    activities. "The human rights commissioner is trying to use the ESC
    to draw attention to himself," he says.

    Still, Loning has at least managed to capture the attention of the
    pro-government press in Azerbaijan. A few weeks back, the Azeraijani
    newspaper SES called him a "drunk," characterized him as a puppet of
    the country's archenemy, Armenia, and accused him of having an affair
    with Leyla Yunus.

    The next day, the ESC's Azerbaijani and international organizers gave
    a memorable press conference at the Baku Business Center. When some
    journalists openly asked questions about the rights of gays, lesbians
    and political prisoners, some local journalists reacted with outrage
    and hurled accusations at those asking the questions. One woman even
    asked the EBU representatives what they intended to do about what
    she called "black PR," the smear campaign that organizations like
    the BBC are allegedly waging against Azerbaijan.

    Standing at the podium, Jon Ola Sand, the Norwegian ESC Executive
    Supervisor, noted almost patronizingly: "Every comment and every
    question is welcome here because that's the role of the free press."

    A Difficult Balancing Act

    Indeed, the EBU is trying to perform a balancing act. It stresses that
    the song contest is an "apolitical" event, and it categorically refuses
    to openly criticize the regime. In a press release, it refers to its
    "values" and how it fundamentally stands up for freedom of expression,
    while at the same time noting that the song contest -- formerly known
    as the Eurovision Grand Prix -- was also held in Spain in 1969 under
    the dictatorship of Francisco Franco.

    The logic is simple: Organizers believe the ESC is a positive event
    that has a positive impact. "We're the good ones," Sand says, and he
    seems incredulous when confronted with the charge that, in a country
    like Azerbaijan, the ESC could not only be part of the solution,
    but also part of the problem.

    ARD entertainment coordinator Schreiber also believes in the event's
    positive impact. He invokes the famous words of "change through
    rapprochement" that West German politician Egon Bahr used in the 1970s
    to describe the new openness toward the East German regime at the
    time. "Of course Azerbaijan doesn't just want to stage a good show,
    but also to improve the country's image," Schreiber says. "But the
    attention of journalists can't be controlled. They won't just report
    on the ESC, but also on matters involving criticism."

    In fact, the EBU has received guarantees from the Azerbaijani
    government that it will allow unrestricted reporting -- for Eurovision
    guests. But what ordinary Azerbaijanis will get from having such
    freedoms in events surrounding the ESC is a different matter.

    Schreiber believes that once people are exposed to freedoms such as
    open press conferences, they won't be quite as willing to relinquish
    them once the event is over.

    Still, civil rights activist Huseynov can also imagine that the
    government could become "quite furious" about the criticism and
    "seek revenge" after the ESC leaves Baku. Though he fears that the
    government will not change, he hopes that society will learn to fight
    despotism more effectively.

    Whatever happens, during the ESC, there will probably be a flowerbed
    where the building at 5 Agil Guliyev Street now stands. Later on,
    perhaps another hotel could be built at the site. The views would
    be fantastic.

    Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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