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Azerbaijan: Peaceful Rallies Forcibly Dispersed

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  • Azerbaijan: Peaceful Rallies Forcibly Dispersed

    AZERBAIJAN: PEACEFUL RALLIES FORCIBLY DISPERSED

    Panorama.am
    23/10/2012

    Police rounded up dozens of youth and political party activists in
    central Baku on October 20, 2012, roughing them up and forcing them
    into police cars and buses, Human Rights Watch said on Monday. Many
    were fined and released, but at least 13 were sentenced to 10 days
    of detention on misdemeanor offenses.

    "Once again, the Azerbaijani government has trampled on people's
    right to hold peaceful protests," said Giorgi Gogia, senior South
    Caucasus researcher at Human Rights Watch. "The authorities should
    immediately release the protesters and investigate any allegations
    of ill-treatment by law enforcement."

    More than 200 youth activists affiliated with opposition political
    parties and independent civil society tried to organize the rally in
    central Baku on October 20. They intended to call for parliament's
    dismissal in light of a recent scandal in which a secretly recorded
    video was published on the internet. The video appeared to show a
    member of parliament from the ruling party who has strong ties to
    the presidential administration asking for a bribe of 1 million manat
    (about US$1.3 million) from a candidate in exchange for securing his
    victory in the 2005 parliamentary vote.

    Baku municipal authorities on October 17 had denied the protest
    organizers' request for a permit to hold the October 20 gathering in
    Baku's center, offering an alternative space in the city's outskirts,
    an area not easily accessible through public transportation.

    The Azerbaijani authorities have adopted a policy to effectively ban
    all forms of peaceful protest from the center of Baku, and instead
    to force all demonstrations into designated zones on the outskirts of
    the city. Since early 2006, authorities have not authorized a single
    opposition protest in the center of Baku. On October 19, Baku police
    warned the organizers that an unsanctioned rally in the city center
    would be dispersed.

    Such a blanket ban against freedom of assembly in the central areas of
    Baku goes against Azerbaijan's international commitments to freedom
    of assembly and expression, Human Rights Watch said. As the European
    Court of Human Rights has warned, "Sweeping measures of preventive
    nature to suppress freedom of assembly and expression [...] do a
    disservice to democracy and often endanger it."

    At about 2 p.m., about an hour prior to the rally's start time, police
    amassed near the opposition Musavat party offices, where the party's
    youth activists had been gathering. Several dozen activists started
    walking toward a nearby metro station, chanting, "Free elections!",
    "Resign, phony parliament!", and "Freedom!" Without prior warning,
    uniformed police and security officials in civilian clothes started
    to grab the activists, then covered their mouths, forced them into
    nearby police buses, and drove them away.

    Meanwhile, another group of political and civic activists gathered at
    Fountain Square, a pedestrian shopping area in central Baku. Several
    witnesses told Human Rights Watch that there was a strong presence of
    uniformed and plain clothes police in the immediate area. At 3 p.m.,
    a group of protesters started chanting, "Down with the government!",
    "Phony Milli Mejlis!", referring to the parliament, and "Resign,
    Ilham Aliyev!", the president.

    Uniformed and plainclothes police immediately moved in on the
    demonstrators, forcefully restraining them, including pinning down
    their arms and roughing them up. Police shoved the protesters into
    waiting buses and drove them away. Police then locked arms to form
    a line and pushed the remaining protesters away from the square.

    Several sources of video footage of the incident, widely available
    online, also show that in the midst of the dispersal, one police
    official used a loudspeaker to announce that the demonstration was
    unsanctioned, calling on the demonstrators to disperse.

    "Although the demonstration was unsanctioned, the police should not
    have used force to disperse protesters who posed no threat," Gogia
    said. "Freedom of assembly is a fundamental democratic right, and the
    Azerbaijani authorities are obligated to tolerate peaceful protests.

    Loss of liberty should not be a sanction for peaceful protest and
    Azerbaijan authorities should immediately release the detained
    activists."

    Many of the activists were released after being transported to the
    outskirts of Baku. Others were taken to police detention. One of the
    youth activists apprehended at Fountain Square told Human Rights
    Watch that she was kept at the Sabail district police station for
    several hours in a cell with three other female activists and that,
    despite numerous requests, they were not given water. She also said
    that male activists were kept separately, with some 25 detainees
    jammed into one cell.

    Later that evening, about 50 of the protesters detained at Fountain
    Square were transferred to courts, where 13 were sentenced to
    administrative (misdemeanor) imprisonment terms ranging from 7 to 10
    days for disobeying police orders. One of the protesters told Human
    Rights Watch that the trials were perfunctory and lasted barely
    more than 10 minutes. Several detainees refused the services of a
    state-provided lawyer, and they were not allowed to retain a lawyer
    of their choosing.

    Another 28 protesters were fined up to 25 AZN (US$32) and released,
    others were released with a warning.

    "Although the activists were tried for misdemeanor offenses, they were
    entitled to due process rights," Gogia said. "Anyone facing detention
    has a right to a real trial with real defense. A trial should never
    be a rubber stamp."

    Azerbaijan is a party to a number of human rights treaties, including
    the European Convention on Human Rights, which imposes obligations on
    the government to respect the right of assembly and to refrain in all
    circumstances from engaging in prohibited ill-treatment of protesters.

    The government also has a duty to investigate and remedy violations.

    In January 2013, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
    (PACE) is scheduled to review a report by the PACE Monitoring Committee
    on Azerbaijan's compliance with its accession commitments.

    "The Azerbaijani government is trying systematically to ban peaceful
    protests in the capital's downtown area," Gogia said. "It is exactly
    this kind of systematic denial of fundamental rights that the Council
    of Europe should monitor very closely."

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