AZERBAIJAN: BLACKMAIL VIDEO MADE PUBLIC, POSSIBLE IMMINENT RELEASE OF POLITICAL PRISONERS
Foreign Policy Blogs Network
March 15, 2012 Thursday 12:25 PM EST
It was bound to happen, although I prayed that it wouldn't. But at
least one web site in Azerbaijan has now released the blackmail video
involving well-known correspondent Khadija Ismayilova. In response,
Khadija has issued a public statement, quoted in an RFE/RL article,
saying that she will not be deterred:
"If they meant to stop me by this, I can assure you they have
been wrong. They failed to do so," she said. "I continue doing my
investigations. I will publish my investigations as soon as I finish
the story. If they meant to stop me, they have failed. If they meant
to defame me, they have failed, because I have received the full
support of my friends."
As I've said previously, Khadija is an extraordinarily courageous
journalist, and as a friend of hers, I am saddened and disturbed by
this very personal and vicious attack.
Interestingly, the RFE/RL piece alleges that the url for the site that
posted the video "falsely suggests a connection with Azerbaijan's
opposition Musavat (Equality) party," which if true would be an
attempt to smear both Khadija and Musavat.
Turan News Agency in Baku reports that the editor of Yeni Musavat, the
party newspaper, says that the site has no relation to his newspaper
or the party.
In other news, I have been told by an Azeri source close to the
opposition that President Aliyev is about to release virtually all
political prisoners who were arrested and convicted for a variety of
charges during Azerbaijan's "Arab Spring" unrest last year.
Normally I don't publish rumors, but it makes sense, and will be a
major story if it pans out. Presidential pardons are often granted
during holidays, and the Azeri "Novruz" celebrations are beginning
soon. My source says the president has already signed the release
order and believes that the reason for the urgency is the increasingly
negative commentary from the international press on Azerbaijan's
human rights situation prior to the Eurovision Song Contest, to be
held in Baku in May of this year.
We will see what develops in the next 48 hours.
Also today, Ruslan Bashirli, who was convicted in a sensational trial
in 2006 for plotting to overthrow the government, is reported to have
written a letter to President Aliyev asking for a pardon. Bashirli,
a founding member of the Yeni Fekir (New Idea) youth group, was
arrested in 2005, along with two co-defendants.
The key evidence against Bashirli was video footage that appeared to
show him bragging to associates-and so-called "Armenian agents"-in
Tbilisi that he was working with the National Democratic Institute
(NDI) to overthrow President Aliyev's government.
In Bashirli's purported letter to President Aliyev, available at
News.az, he confesses to wrong-doing and denounces his former political
allies while expressing admiration for the president's achievements:
"I have already served six years and seven months of the punishment.
Over this time I have understood my responsibility for the crime and
acknowledged my guilt. At that time I was hot-tempered and influenced
by powers that disliked you and us.
"Analyzing my past over these years, I understood my faults. Of course,
your positive activity in recent years had a big role in this.
The achievements in domestic and foreign policy are obvious. No one
can deny them."
This is major shift in worldview, and comes a mere three weeks after
a similar letter was supposedly written by Elnur Israfilov, a young
man convicted for his participation in the April demonstrations. Like
Bashirli, Israfilov was not only contrite in his letter, but blamed
others for manipulating him:
"I have been engaged in actions aimed at disturbing peace, obstructing
transport, violating the normal functioning schedule of enterprises,
offices and organizations at the instigation of my uncle Mammad
Ibrahimli. He has engaged me and simple people like me in order to
fulfill his reckless intentions."
I talked to his uncle via Skype in February, who told me that the
letter was written in a style that suggested it was dictated or
authored by someone else, and alleged that former political prisoner
and journalist Eynullah Fatullayev had convinced Israfilov to write it.
My Azeri source tells me that Bashirli's family have traveled to Baku
in anticipation of his impending release in the next day or two.
Pro-government ANS TV has been playing up the Bashirli story today,
perhaps suggesting that they know that a pardon will be granted.
From: A. Papazian
Foreign Policy Blogs Network
March 15, 2012 Thursday 12:25 PM EST
It was bound to happen, although I prayed that it wouldn't. But at
least one web site in Azerbaijan has now released the blackmail video
involving well-known correspondent Khadija Ismayilova. In response,
Khadija has issued a public statement, quoted in an RFE/RL article,
saying that she will not be deterred:
"If they meant to stop me by this, I can assure you they have
been wrong. They failed to do so," she said. "I continue doing my
investigations. I will publish my investigations as soon as I finish
the story. If they meant to stop me, they have failed. If they meant
to defame me, they have failed, because I have received the full
support of my friends."
As I've said previously, Khadija is an extraordinarily courageous
journalist, and as a friend of hers, I am saddened and disturbed by
this very personal and vicious attack.
Interestingly, the RFE/RL piece alleges that the url for the site that
posted the video "falsely suggests a connection with Azerbaijan's
opposition Musavat (Equality) party," which if true would be an
attempt to smear both Khadija and Musavat.
Turan News Agency in Baku reports that the editor of Yeni Musavat, the
party newspaper, says that the site has no relation to his newspaper
or the party.
In other news, I have been told by an Azeri source close to the
opposition that President Aliyev is about to release virtually all
political prisoners who were arrested and convicted for a variety of
charges during Azerbaijan's "Arab Spring" unrest last year.
Normally I don't publish rumors, but it makes sense, and will be a
major story if it pans out. Presidential pardons are often granted
during holidays, and the Azeri "Novruz" celebrations are beginning
soon. My source says the president has already signed the release
order and believes that the reason for the urgency is the increasingly
negative commentary from the international press on Azerbaijan's
human rights situation prior to the Eurovision Song Contest, to be
held in Baku in May of this year.
We will see what develops in the next 48 hours.
Also today, Ruslan Bashirli, who was convicted in a sensational trial
in 2006 for plotting to overthrow the government, is reported to have
written a letter to President Aliyev asking for a pardon. Bashirli,
a founding member of the Yeni Fekir (New Idea) youth group, was
arrested in 2005, along with two co-defendants.
The key evidence against Bashirli was video footage that appeared to
show him bragging to associates-and so-called "Armenian agents"-in
Tbilisi that he was working with the National Democratic Institute
(NDI) to overthrow President Aliyev's government.
In Bashirli's purported letter to President Aliyev, available at
News.az, he confesses to wrong-doing and denounces his former political
allies while expressing admiration for the president's achievements:
"I have already served six years and seven months of the punishment.
Over this time I have understood my responsibility for the crime and
acknowledged my guilt. At that time I was hot-tempered and influenced
by powers that disliked you and us.
"Analyzing my past over these years, I understood my faults. Of course,
your positive activity in recent years had a big role in this.
The achievements in domestic and foreign policy are obvious. No one
can deny them."
This is major shift in worldview, and comes a mere three weeks after
a similar letter was supposedly written by Elnur Israfilov, a young
man convicted for his participation in the April demonstrations. Like
Bashirli, Israfilov was not only contrite in his letter, but blamed
others for manipulating him:
"I have been engaged in actions aimed at disturbing peace, obstructing
transport, violating the normal functioning schedule of enterprises,
offices and organizations at the instigation of my uncle Mammad
Ibrahimli. He has engaged me and simple people like me in order to
fulfill his reckless intentions."
I talked to his uncle via Skype in February, who told me that the
letter was written in a style that suggested it was dictated or
authored by someone else, and alleged that former political prisoner
and journalist Eynullah Fatullayev had convinced Israfilov to write it.
My Azeri source tells me that Bashirli's family have traveled to Baku
in anticipation of his impending release in the next day or two.
Pro-government ANS TV has been playing up the Bashirli story today,
perhaps suggesting that they know that a pardon will be granted.
From: A. Papazian