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Daily Mail: Azerbaijan - Nation, Which Tortures Its Own People

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  • Daily Mail: Azerbaijan - Nation, Which Tortures Its Own People

    DAILY MAIL: AZERBAIJAN - NATION, WHICH TORTURES ITS OWN PEOPLE

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    May 22, 2012 - 14:44 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - On March 17, while playing at an opposition
    demonstration in his home country of Azerbaijan, rap artist Jamal Ali,
    24, whose lyrics are often critical of his government was arrested
    with his bass guitarist, Natiq Kamilov. They were badly beaten by the
    police, sentenced to ten days in jail and tortured, says a report in
    Daily Mail.

    "They tortured me twice," Ali says. "In the court and police station
    they just hit me. The proper beating was in jail. They called it
    lessons. I had two courses. I remember the first one I watched the
    clock on the wall; it was two when I went in and when I got out it
    was five. Almost three hours. The second was about two hours," it
    quotes Ali as saying.

    This is a far cry from the sequins and dry ice of the Eurovision Song
    Contest. Yet Azerbaijan is hosting this year's show, Daily Mail says.

    The Aliyevs (the ruling clan) like to demonstrate their power, and
    armed police are a constant presence on the streets. For the average
    Azerbaijani, life isn't too bad: there are jobs and money in this
    oil-rich state. The problems come if you disagree. The most active
    dissidents are intimidated with threats of prison and torture, and
    family members can be fired from their jobs if they are in government
    positions (and the government can lean on private firms). For the
    past seven years, the government has banned any opposition rallies.

    However, in the run up to Eurovision, two official demonstrations
    were allowed on the outskirts of Baku. Most Azerbaijanis assume that
    after the contest rallies will be banned again, it says.

    Jamal Ali is not the only one to suffer. After being released from
    prison, his bass guitarist, Natiq Kamilov, has been press-ganged
    into the army. "It's completely illegal. He's a student. He's exempt
    from military service," says Ali. "But he was called down to the army
    office and taken away."

    He is afraid for Kamilov's life. "We have a lot of unexplained
    casualties in our army every year."

    Ali thinks Eurovision is the only reason he's still free.

    Azer Mammadov, another singer, fled to Holland with his wife and
    baby daughter last year because of government harassment. His songs,
    such as Mr Necessary, criticize the regime. His problems came to a
    head when the government cancelled his concert in March last year,
    Daily Mail reminds.

    Azerbaijan's presidential dynasty has a stranglehold on power. In
    1994, Ilham Aliyev was made vice-president of the State Oil Company
    of Azerbaijan (SOCAR). His 12-year-old son was recently reported as
    having bought $30 million of property in Dubai. And anybody who tries
    to derail this lucrative gravy train gets squashed.

    Khadija Ismailova, Azerbaijan's most distinguished investigative
    journalist, has been looking into links between the Eurovision
    construction boom and the Aliyevs.

    A few weeks ago, she made it known that she thought she'd found proof.

    Retaliation was swift. Someone - she assumes from the security services
    or with government sanction - tried to blackmail her.

    "On March 7, I was sent photographs in an envelope with a note," she
    says. "The pictures showed me engaged in sexual relations and the note
    said: "Behave or you will be defamed." I went public with that threat.

    I said I was not going to stop my investigations. I put the threat up
    on my Facebook page. I didn't put the photographs online, obviously,
    as disseminating pornography is a crime and my private life is
    nobody's business."

    A week later, a video appeared on a website that showed Ismailova
    making love with a boyfriend; the website had been created as a mirror
    image of the opposition party's website, to make it seem as though
    they were defaming Ismailova.

    But the blackmailers had underestimated their target. "It backfired,'
    says Ismailova with satisfaction. They had to back down. I received
    messages of support even before the video was out, from liberals and
    conservatives. Even the Islamic party."

    Ismailova complained to the police, but the prosecutor refused to
    take her statement. Instead, she conducted her own investigation. "I
    knew the film had been taken the previous summer and knew what angle
    it had been taken from, so we took the ceiling apart and found the
    wires in the ceiling - the bedroom, the bathroom, the living room."

    She then managed to track down the telecommunications company employee
    who had installed the cameras. He could even remember the day in
    July 2011 that he had done the job. "The government are the only
    people who have the power to force the telecommunication company to
    bug apartments," she says. "I'd just published a piece about links
    between the presidential family and companies in Panama on June 27.

    "A lot of our activity in Azerbaijan happens online," she adds. "Much
    more than in reality. Our government can control reality very well
    so we have all escaped to the virtual world."

    Jamal Ali says, "It's the only place we can be free. But if things get
    more serious the government will probably ban the internet too. They
    want to be kings and queens and we are slaves. That's why they get
    surprised when a slave sings a song."

    Daily Mail says: 125 million people will watch Engelbert Humperdinck
    at this month's Eurovision Song Contest. But will any of them be
    rooting for the host nation, which tortures its own people and has
    one of the worst human rights records in Europe?

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