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Azerbaijan Clamps Down On Karabakh Visitors

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  • Azerbaijan Clamps Down On Karabakh Visitors

    AZERBAIJAN CLAMPS DOWN ON KARABAKH VISITORS

    Asia Times, Hong Kong
    Aug 16 2013

    By Magerram Zeynalov

    Azerbaijan has placed hundreds of foreign nationals on a blacklist
    because they have visited Nagorny Karabakh.

    The list of 335 people banned from entering Azerbaijan includes
    journalists, politicians, and Spanish opera singer Montserrat Caballe.

    The soprano's trip to Karabakh in early June caused a minor diplomatic
    row between Baku and Madrid.

    It is easy to cross from Armenia to Karabakh, which has been under
    a separate Armenian-run administration since a war with

    Azerbaijani forces ended in 1994 with a truce but no lasting
    settlement. Azerbaijan insists that since Karabakh remains its
    sovereign, albeit occupied territory, travellers should go through the
    same visa and entry procedures that apply to the rest of the country.

    The blacklist includes parliamentarians from Britain, Canada,
    France, Russia, Argentina and Uruguay, eight members of the European
    Parliament, as well as journalists, photographers and others.

    Elman Abdullayev, spokesman for the foreign ministry in Baku, said
    those on the list were not welcome in Azerbaijan, but added that
    their exclusion was not necessarily permanent.

    "Any individual who has visited the occupied territory without our
    permission can apply to the relevant agencies in Azerbaijan to be
    removed from the blacklist," he said. "The majority of those listed
    were fooled into entering the occupied territory. The Armenians gave
    them the false impression that they were just visiting the territory
    of Armenia."

    Abdullayev said many others escaped the ban by seeking Baku's
    permission before entering Karabakh.

    "In most of those cases, we responded in the affirmative, and hence we
    have not included these individuals on the blacklist," he said. "For
    example, we heard from American journalists, representatives of
    the International Crisis Group, and a host of other international
    non-government organizations before they entered occupied Azerbaijani
    territory."

    Margarita Akhvlediani, a journalist who heads the Go Media group in
    Georgia, said she was stunned to find herself barred from entering
    Azerbaijan.

    "I have worked as a journalist and editor across the whole of the
    Caucasus for more than 20 years, and I regularly travel to all the
    various regions, because journalistic work requires one to be there
    in person, otherwise one might miss significant trends and view,
    particularly in remote areas," she said.

    Akhvlediani confirmed that she visited Karabakh in June 2011, but
    disputed the legal basis for blacklisting her.

    "Azerbaijan still has a rule that you only need to get approval for
    a visit to Karabakh if you need a visa to enter Azerbaijan, [but]
    Georgian nationals don't need a visa," she explained. "Azerbaijan is
    now planning to change the law ... and it's possible new requirements
    will be put in place. But it would seem that punishment comes first,
    while legislation will be passed only later."

    Zarina Sanakoeva is a journalist from South Ossetia, a territory
    which broke away from Georgian control at around the same time Nagorny
    Karabakh declared independence. She too has been barred from Azerbaijan
    for visiting Karabakh.

    "Leaving aside the fact that it's an ill-conceived move, and unjust in
    purely human terms, I think it's doubtful that there's any political
    benefit to be gained from it," she said.

    Eldar Zeynalov, director of the Human Rights Centre of Azerbaijan,
    conceded that the government was within its rights to ban people
    who interfered in the Karabakh dispute, but questioned what it would
    achieve by barring entry to journalists, charity workers and artists.

    Zeynalov said the list itself had "a very unfinished look to it",
    with photographs next to some names but not others, and the section
    giving specific reasons for each individual's travel ban frequently
    left blank.

    "All this suggests the document was prepared in a hurry, primarily
    for internal consumption," he said.

    Zeynalov also noted that the list had been published only in
    Azerbaijani. Although the language uses the Latin alphabet, foreign
    names are transliterated. That means that, for example, Montserrat
    Caballe appears on the list as "Monserrat Kaballye", French member
    of parliament Francois Rochebloine is called "Fransua Rosbluan",
    and Caroline Cox of Britain's House of Lords becomes "Baranessa
    Karolayn Koks".

    As Zeynalov pointed out, "That means many people who type their names
    into search engines won't find themselves listed as persona non grata."

    Magerram Zeynalov is a freelance journalist in Azerbaijan.

    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/CEN-01-160813.html




    From: A. Papazian
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