AZERBAIJANI AUTHORITIES ARREST INDEPENDENT EDITOR ON DRUG CHARGES; FAMILY CRIES FOUL
hetq
10:35, June 26, 2012
New York, June 25, 2012 - Authorities in Azerbaijan must drop the
charges against journalist Hilal Mamedov and immediately release him,
the Committee to Protect Journalists said today. Mamedov is the eighth
journalist jailed in Azerbaijan, according to CPJ research.
Authorities detained Mamedov, chief editor of the independent newspaper
Talyshi Sado, last Thursday after allegedly finding about 5 grams
of heroin in his pocket, according to the Azeri-language service
of the U.S. government-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. The
circumstances of the journalist's arrest were not clear. Later
that night, police raided the journalist's home and said they found
another 30 grams of heroin, news reports said. On Friday, the Nizami
District Court in Baku, the capital, ordered Mamedov to be imprisoned
for three months in pretrial detention on drug possession charges,
the reports said.
Mamedov's family said police had planted the drugs, according to
local and international news reports. The journalist's colleagues said
he did not even smoke cigarettes and that he had been imprisoned in
retaliation for his reporting, the reports said.
Mamedov, also a human rights activist, has written on the Talysh
ethnic minority group in Azerbaijan, Emin Huseynov, the director of
the Baku-based Institute for Reporters' Freedom and Safety, told CPJ.
His articles have been published in Talyshi Sado and on regional and
Russia-based news websites, Huseynov said. Huseynov also told CPJ
that Mamedov had investigated the 2009 death in prison of Novruzali
Mamedov, Talyshi Sado's former chief editor.
"If we believed the authorities, then journalists in Azerbaijan would
appear to be among the most drug-addicted in the world," said CPJ
Deputy Director Robert Mahoney. "Any time reporters write something
critical, they run the risk of ending up behind bars on trumped-up
drug charges. The authorities must stop harassing critical journalists,
and they can begin by releasing Hilal Mamedov."
Azerbaijan is the leading jailer of journalists in the region,
according to CPJ research. This year, the government has stepped up
its retaliation against independent reporting by intimidating and
harassing journalists and imprisoning them on fabricated, politicized
charges, CPJ research shows. Earlier this month, another journalist,
Anar Bayramli, was convicted on trumped-up charges of drug possession
and sentenced to two years in prison, CPJ research shows.
hetq
10:35, June 26, 2012
New York, June 25, 2012 - Authorities in Azerbaijan must drop the
charges against journalist Hilal Mamedov and immediately release him,
the Committee to Protect Journalists said today. Mamedov is the eighth
journalist jailed in Azerbaijan, according to CPJ research.
Authorities detained Mamedov, chief editor of the independent newspaper
Talyshi Sado, last Thursday after allegedly finding about 5 grams
of heroin in his pocket, according to the Azeri-language service
of the U.S. government-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. The
circumstances of the journalist's arrest were not clear. Later
that night, police raided the journalist's home and said they found
another 30 grams of heroin, news reports said. On Friday, the Nizami
District Court in Baku, the capital, ordered Mamedov to be imprisoned
for three months in pretrial detention on drug possession charges,
the reports said.
Mamedov's family said police had planted the drugs, according to
local and international news reports. The journalist's colleagues said
he did not even smoke cigarettes and that he had been imprisoned in
retaliation for his reporting, the reports said.
Mamedov, also a human rights activist, has written on the Talysh
ethnic minority group in Azerbaijan, Emin Huseynov, the director of
the Baku-based Institute for Reporters' Freedom and Safety, told CPJ.
His articles have been published in Talyshi Sado and on regional and
Russia-based news websites, Huseynov said. Huseynov also told CPJ
that Mamedov had investigated the 2009 death in prison of Novruzali
Mamedov, Talyshi Sado's former chief editor.
"If we believed the authorities, then journalists in Azerbaijan would
appear to be among the most drug-addicted in the world," said CPJ
Deputy Director Robert Mahoney. "Any time reporters write something
critical, they run the risk of ending up behind bars on trumped-up
drug charges. The authorities must stop harassing critical journalists,
and they can begin by releasing Hilal Mamedov."
Azerbaijan is the leading jailer of journalists in the region,
according to CPJ research. This year, the government has stepped up
its retaliation against independent reporting by intimidating and
harassing journalists and imprisoning them on fabricated, politicized
charges, CPJ research shows. Earlier this month, another journalist,
Anar Bayramli, was convicted on trumped-up charges of drug possession
and sentenced to two years in prison, CPJ research shows.