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  • Azerbaijan's Parliament Throws Veil Of Secrecy Over Business Sector

    AZERBAIJAN'S PARLIAMENT THROWS VEIL OF SECRECY OVER BUSINESS SECTOR

    tert.am
    14.06.12

    Re-published from EurasiaNet

    Recent legislative efforts in Azerbaijan to protect the privacy of
    President Ilham Aliyev and his family are coming at the expense of
    investors, both foreign and domestic.

    The Azerbaijani parliament voted June 12 to restrict public access
    to information about the registration, ownership structure and
    shareholders of Azerbaijani corporations. In addition, legislators
    granted President Aliyev and his wife, First Lady Mehriban Aliyeva,
    lifetime immunity from criminal prosecution.

    The immunity provision for the Aliyevs was not unexpected: the proposal
    had been under consideration for a year. But the corporate secrecy
    amendment was added to parliament's agenda only after the conclusion
    of the May 22-26 Eurovision Song Contest.

    The pop-music festival, which brought unprecedented international
    attention to Azerbaijan, was preceded by a series of articles by RFE/RL
    investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova, who highlighted alleged
    conflicts of interest involving mining rights granted to a gold-mining
    companyowned by President Aliyev's two daughters, Leyla and Arzu, and
    Eurovision construction workby a company linked to the two Aliyevas
    and First Lady Mehriban Aliyeva, the head of Eurovision's organizing
    committee. [Editor's Note: Islamyilova also contributes to EurasiaNet].

    By law, officials' relatives may own businesses, but members of
    parliament - the First Lady sits in the legislature for the ruling
    Yeni Azerbaijan Party - cannot.

    In public statements, government officials have asserted that such
    investigative coverage violated the presidential family's right
    to privacy. The articles followed earlier pieces that examined the
    Aliyeva daughters' investments intelecommunications, airport operations
    and banking.

    Under the terms of the secrecy amendment, obtaining information about
    such investments now could prove more difficult. The government will
    release information about the registrations of for-profit companies
    only upon request by a court, law-enforcement agency or Central Bank
    monitors investigating suspected money-laundering or the financing
    of terrorist groups.

    Journalists and the general public would be denied such information if
    its distribution "contradicts the national interests of Azerbaijan in
    political, economic and monetary policy, the defense of public order,
    the health and moral values of the people and harms the commercial
    and other interests of individuals."

    In addition, corporate records will be provided only if the petitioner
    has the consent of those individuals named in the data.

    Information about registered Azerbaijani companies' ownership and
    shareholders previously had been publicly available on the Ministry
    of Taxes' website. The ministry was required to provide registry
    details to citizens within a week of receipt of a written request.

    All but four of the 103 members of parliament present voted in favor
    of the restrictions. Another two MPs did not vote; First Lady Aliyeva
    was not present.

    President Aliyev is expected to sign the secrecy and immunity
    amendments into law this week.

    Government officials have not commented on the amendments, but one
    senior Yeni Azerbaijani Party MP who backed the new restrictions
    claimed the measure does not limit Azerbaijanis' right to information.

    In June 6 comments to the Azeri-language service of Radio Free
    Europe/Radio Liberty, Ali Huseynly, chair of the parliament's Committee
    on Legal Policy and State Building, claimed that the amendment
    "clarifies the frameworks for the right to receive information." The
    lack of such "frameworks" often leads to "violations," Huseynly added.

    Parliamentarian Fazail Agamaly, a member of the pro-government Ana
    Vatan (Motherland) Party, asserted that "[j]ournalists should be
    satisfied with the information about a company provided by its owner."

    "Otherwise, the release of some information could create financial
    problems for businesses," Agamaly reasoned.

    Civil society and media-rights watchdogs counter that the secrecy
    amendment, indeed, is designed to prevent problems - namely, for
    Aliyev's friends and family members.

    Lawyer Intigam Aliyev [no relation to the presidential family],
    director of the Legal Education Society, a Baku non-governmental
    organization that monitors legislation implementation, asserted
    the amendment is "a response of corrupt authorities to a number of
    articles in local and foreign media about the large business assets
    of the ruling family in Azerbaijan and oligarchs."

    Opposition MP Igbal Aghazade, a member of the Umid (Hope) Party, who
    voted against the amendment, said the measure only "serves the idea
    of keeping information about the commercial interests of a group of
    high-ranking government officials a secret."

    Restricting the availability of company data from the public can
    harm the country's ability to fight corruption, noted Media Rights
    Institute Director Rashid Hajily. In 2011, Azerbaijan ranked 143rd out
    of 183 countries in a corruption index compiled by the international
    watchdog group Transparency International.

    "Citizens will be deprived of public [oversight] over officials'
    links with businesses," Hajily said. "It creates a strong foundation
    for the proliferation of conflicts of interest."

    Meanwhile, activists who tried to highlight Azerbaijan's spotty
    civil-rights record during the Eurovision contest say that they will
    fight back against the "business secrets" amendment. "We will campaign
    both locally and internationally, will demand in public debates
    the annulment of this legislation, will raise the issue at related
    international conferences and in interviews with foreign media,"
    pledged Rasul Jafarov, head of the Human Rights Club, a Baku-based
    non-governmental organization.




    From: A. Papazian
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