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Azerbaijan Must Investigate Smear Campaign Against Radio Free Europe

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  • Azerbaijan Must Investigate Smear Campaign Against Radio Free Europe

    AZERBAIJAN MUST INVESTIGATE SMEAR CAMPAIGN AGAINST RADIO FREE EUROPE REPORTER

    Noyan Tapan
    2012-03-15

    A smear campaign against an Azeri investigative journalist must
    be investigated after an intimate video recording appeared online,
    Amnesty International said.

    Radio Free Europe reporter Khadija Ismayilova has been investigating
    claims of links between President Ilham Aliyev's family and a
    lucrative construction project in Azerbaijan's capital Baku, ahead
    of the Eurovision Song Contest which the country is hosting in May.

    She received a letter on 7 March containing pictures of her having
    sex, after unknown individuals apparently broke into her apartment
    and placed hidden cameras in her room.

    The pictures were accompanied by a note warning her that she would be
    "shamed" if she did not abandon her work. She refused and publicly
    exposed the blackmail attempt, resulting in the video's publication.

    "This is a despicable attempt to discredit a journalist in the process
    of investigating of government corruption at the highest level,"
    said John Dalhuisen, Amnesty International's Deputy Director for
    Europe and Central Asia.

    On 14 March the video was posted on a fake mirror website of
    Azerbaijan's main opposition party. Leaders of the Musavat party have
    denied any link with the site.

    "The fact that those behind this appalling campaign were able to
    place a camera inside Khadija Ismayilova's home, then attempted to
    lay the blame with an opposition party,,points very much to official
    involvement", said Dalhuisen

    "This vicious attack has been clearly been intended to do maximum
    damage to her reputation and puts her at risk of violence in
    predominantly conservative Azerbaijan."

    "The authorities must bring to justice those responsible through a
    thorough, impartial and effective investigation."

    After receiving the pictures last week, Khadija Ismayilova published
    an open letter, detailing the threats and said she was prepared for
    the consequences.

    On Tuesday, an article fiercely attacking her character appeared in
    Yeni Azerbaijan, a state-owned newspaper.

    Khadija Ismayilova has fallen foul of the Azerbaijani authorities
    several times in the past.

    According to a US embassy cable leaked by Wikileaks, in January 2009
    President Aliyev complained about her at a meeting with a senior
    US official, describing her as "a long-time opposition activist who
    considers herself an enemy of the government".

    President Aliyev reportedly asked the American ambassador to Baku to
    push for her dismissal by US-funded Radio Liberty.

    The reporter has told Amnesty International she will not give in
    to threats:

    "They thought this would destroy me, but they have destroyed
    themselves. Now the world will know how independent journalists are
    treated in Azerbaijan."


    From: Baghdasarian
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