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Locking Up Free Expression: Azerbaijan Silences Critical Voices

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  • Locking Up Free Expression: Azerbaijan Silences Critical Voices

    LOCKING UP FREE EXPRESSION: AZERBAIJAN SILENCES CRITICAL VOICES

    Intimidation, violence and media clampdown - free expression in
    Azerbaijan is under siege. The country's record on free expression
    has undergone a marked deterioration in the run up to its presidential
    election.

    By Index on Censorship

    http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2013/10/azerbaijan-free-expression-clampdown/
    Friday, October 11, 2013

    Narimanov Park, Baku, 15 May 2010. Police forcibly detain a political
    activist during an unsanctioned protest. Photograph by Abbas Atilay

    This report is also available in a PDF format.

    As expected Azerbaijan's autocratic president Ilham Aliyev was elected
    to a third term on 9 Oct.

    This report addresses violations against freedom of expression on
    the eve of Azerbaijan's presidential elections. It is based on field
    research conducted between 16 and 21 September 2013 in Baku. In
    2012, international and national civil society groups denounced
    attempts by the Azerbaijani government to silence critical voices
    through fabricated charges, barring protests and blackmail. In 2013,
    the government has introduced a new set of repressive laws, curbs
    on media and arrests of journalists, political activists and human
    rights defenders.

    Laws passed in May 2013 extend existing draconian penalties
    for criminal defamation and insult to online content and public
    demonstrations. Intimidation, harassment and violence against
    journalists continue with impunity. Civil society organisations have
    raised concerns about the deterioration of the media environment and
    the number of imprisoned journalists through the intensification of
    the practice of unjustified criminal prosecution.

    It is important to note that country is due to assume the chairmanship
    of the Council of Europe's Committee of Ministers in 2014, while it
    fails to comply with its obligations under the European Convention
    on Human Rights.

    IMPUNITY

    Impunity for physical and moral attacks against journalists and
    activists continues unabated. There have been attacks on journalists
    during the period of the presidential elections. Those responsible
    for the murders of journalists Elmar Huseynov (2005) and Rafiq Tagi
    (2011) have yet to be found or tried. No suspects have been named or
    charged with the violent attack on Idrak Abbasov in 2012, weeks after
    he received an Index Award. Independent journalists receive threats
    and are subject to blackmail.

    On a daily basis, journalists, who receive physical and psychological
    threats and make reports to the authorities, are denied justice
    or protection.

    In September 2013, Index met with Ramin Deko, a journalist at Azadliq
    newspaper. In addition to regular intimidation and threats, Deko has
    been harassed financially, with prosecutions and fines obstructing
    his investigative journalism (see section on the economic squeeze
    on independent or critical media). Deko alleges he was abducted and
    beaten up on 3 and 4 April 2011 by law enforcement bodies. While he
    was illegally detained, he said he was told to stop critical articles
    and to change his workplace to a pro-government newspaper.[1] On
    4 October 2013, Deko was part of a group of journalists attacked
    by a pro-government mob while covering a sanctioned opposition
    rally the central Azerbaijan town of Sabirabad. Tural Mustafayev,
    who was also among the journalists, said that they were assaulted,
    and their equipment was damaged by the mob while police officers
    stood by and made no effort to disperse the attackers. No measure
    has yet been taken to investigate the beating and harassment of the
    attacked journalists. On the contrary, the Interior Ministry released
    a statementjustifying the action of the police and Bakunews internet
    television reporter, Ilham Rasulzadeh, was detained and taken to the
    Sabirabad police department.

    Another journalist, Yafez Akramoghlu, told Index that the range of
    "tools" to intimidate journalists has widened. [2]

    Akramoghlu is a journalist at Radio Liberty/Azadliq radiosu and
    correspondent for the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic, which he calls
    "the North Korea of Azerbaijan". Akramoghlu claims that in April 2013,
    his family received an envelope containing a CD and several photos.

    They depicted intimate pictures and a fake Facebook profile with
    fabricated Facebook chats between Akramoghlu and a woman (the same
    woman appearing in intimate positions in the photos). Shortly after
    receiving the envelope, Akramoghlu says he received a phone call
    from someone who identified himself as an employee of the Nakhchivan
    national security forces. This individual reportedly threatened to
    damage the journalist's reputation by circulating the images if he
    did not stop his investigative work. Following his refusal to give
    in to blackmail, Akramoghlu claims he received assassination threats
    directed at himself and his family.

    Investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova has also been the target
    of a smear campaign. On 7 March 2012, she received an envelope from an
    anonymous sender containing explicit photos of her and her boyfriend
    with a note warning her, "Whore, behave. Or you will be disgraced."

    Ismayilova published the threat letter and continued her investigative
    work. On 14 March 2012, a secretly-recorded video of Ismayilova having
    sex with her boyfriend was posted on the internet. The previous day,
    a pro-government newspaper ran a long article attacking her and
    criticizing her personal life. In August 2013,11 international NGOs
    sent a joint letter to President Ilham Aliyev and Prosecutor-General
    Zakir Garalov urging them to take concrete steps to ensure that the
    repeated harassment and intimidation of Khadiya Ismayilova is properly
    investigated. This was after Ismayilova sent at least four letters
    to the prosecutor's office requesting updates on the investigation.

    According to Ismayilova, in its replies, the prosecutor's office
    has merely stated that the investigation was ongoing, without giving
    any details.

    Imprisoned journalists and activists also face intimidation and
    violence. In May 2013, one NIDA board member - Turgut Gambar - and
    two other youth activists - Abulfaz Gurbanli and Ilkin Rustemzade -
    were arrested on misdemeanour charges and had their heads were shaved
    while they served administrative detention.

    Since his arrest in June 2012, Hilal Mammadov, editor-in-chief for
    Tolisho Sedo newspaper, has reported ill-treatment and torture. On
    Friday 27 September 2013, two weeks before the presidential elections,
    Mammadov was sentenced to five years in prison on charges of treason,
    inciting ethnic hatred and drug trafficking.

    REPRESSIVE LEGISLATION

    In the run up to the presidential elections, the framework for freedom
    of expression became tighter. Recent amendments to laws have further
    restricted freedom of expression, freedom of assembly and the work
    of civil society, by increasing sanctions for public order offences,
    including organising and participating in unauthorised demonstrations.

    Minor public-order offences now carry maximum jail sentences of 60
    days, instead of 45. Adopted on 2 November 2012, new amendments to
    the law "On freedom of assembly" and to the Criminal Code saw fines
    for protesters who violate the law raised from 300 manat (USD 385)
    to 8,000 manat (USD 10,200) and introduced a prison sentence of two
    years. Criminalising the organisation and participation in peaceful
    protests has an increasingly chilling effect on freedom of expression
    in Azerbaijan.

    Amendments to legislation regulating non-governmental organisations
    (NGOs), signed into law by the president on 11 March 2013, further
    stifle civil society in Azerbaijan, with NGOs now facing additional
    registration hurdles and stricter funding requirements. The new
    law bans cash donations above USD 200, and increased fines for
    non-compliance. In addition, NGOs that do not register under the
    law are unable to open or maintain bank accounts. This legislation
    further interferes with freedom of association already undermined
    in 2009 and 2011, after the introduction of overly complicated NGO
    registration requirements. The International Center for Not-for-Profit
    Law (ICNL) identified a number of issues relating to NGO legislation
    in Azerbaijan, including the lack of transparency in the process of
    government authorities' decision-making on whether to register an NGO.

    It is feared that the arbitrary application of the law directly
    undermines freedoms of expression and association. On 19 October 2011,
    the Council of Europe Venice Commission referred to NGO regulations
    in Azerbaijan as "a breach of international standards."

    In May 2013, the Azerbaijani Parliament adopted amendments to the
    Code of Administrative Offences, resulting in the extension of the
    permitted length of administrative detention. The maximum period
    of administrative detention sanctioning offences for "violation
    of the rules of organising and conducting rallies, demonstrations,
    processions, etc." has been increased from 15 to 60 days.[3] This new
    legislation allows the arrest, for example, of people who distribute
    leaflets in the streets. On 19 September 2013, the police reportedly
    arrested and detained for a few hours 20 young people distributing
    leaflets for an authorised protest.[4]

    In addition, Azerbaijan's defamation legislation was extended on 3
    June 2013 and now also applies to internet-based content and opinions
    expressed online, including in social media (see section on internet
    censorship). The new defamation law imposes hefty fines and prison
    sentences for anyone convicted of online slander or insults. This
    constituted a severe step back for Azerbaijani government that had
    committed to decriminalise defamation in its National Action Programme
    in 2011. In August 2013, a court prosecuted a former bank employee
    who had criticised the bank on Facebook. The court found him guilty
    of libel and sentenced him to 1-year public work, also withholding 20%
    of his monthly salary (see section in internet censorship).

    MEDIA DIVERSITY, OWNERSHIP AND THE SQUEEZE ON THE OPPOSITION PRESS

    The clampdown on independent and critical media continues, while
    nearly all broadcast media remain owned by the state or controlled
    by the authorities.[5] The independent press has faced economic
    discrimination, with editors claiming the authorities regularly
    pressure advertisers not to place ads in critical papers.[6] Meanwhile,
    Azerbaijani public officials have used criminal and civil defamation
    to stifle critical journalists.

    Most of the nine national TV channels are either directly owned by
    the state or controlled by the authorities. The regulatory authority,
    Azerbaijan's National Television and Radio Council - also charged
    with delivering broadcast licenses - is fully funded from the state
    budget and the president directly appoints all of its nine members.

    Journalists Index spoke to believe audiences are inundated with state
    propaganda, even through channels that offer no direct coverage of
    current events or political news.

    Critical newspapers are barred from press distribution networks,
    which are controlled by state officials. Over 70 % of the distribution
    has fallen under government control and 42% of the population has no
    access to press kiosks with, on average, one retail stand for 11,250
    inhabitants. Journalists and editors interviewed by Index expressed
    concerns over the election code that makes no provisions for balanced
    coverage of candidates and political parties in news and current
    affairs programs, including for public newspapers and broadcasters.

    The first interim report of the OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation Mission
    reported that there were some concerns over the shortening of the
    official campaign period, which limits opposition candidates' access
    to media and gives the incumbent president a disproportional advantage.

    Along with the state's control over the main media channels, the
    Azerbaijani regime keeps suppressing dissent or critical voices through
    defamation legal actions. According to Rashid Hajili from the Media
    Rights Institute, in the first six months of 2013, 36 defamation
    suits were brought against media outlets or journalists, four of
    which were criminal defamation suits. While courts have rejected all
    four criminal defamation suits, they have ordered media outlets and
    journalists to pay hefty fines in civil defamation cases. For example
    in June 2012, a court ordered Azadliq newspaper to pay 30,000 manat
    (USD 36,000) to the head of the Baku Metro Service, for an article
    published on 8 April 2012 about an increase in metro fares. In May
    2012, a court fined Ramin Deko, investigative journalist at Azadliq,
    3,000 manat (USD 3,800) for allegedly defaming Novruzali Aslanov,
    a pro-government member of parliament. Ramin Deko says: "Because of
    the fines, investigative journalism is at risk. There is an allergy
    to free expression in this country. In April 2011, I was abducted and
    beaten up, but defamation fines are equally chilling. It is another
    intimidation tactic and it interferes with my personal life."[7]

    INTERNET CENSORSHIP

    Several activists have been arrested for their protest activities
    on social networks. In public statements, high-ranking officials
    aggressively attack social media, calling it a "harmful phenomenon."

    Fazail Agamaly, an Azerbaijani MP, publicly called for access to social
    networking websites in Azerbaijan to be blocked during a speech in the
    country's parliament, calling Facebook and social networks "a threat
    to Azerbaijan's statehood." The "war declared by the regime on social
    media" became more serious after street protests - organised by young
    people through Facebook - on 10 March 2013. On 16 March, president
    Ilham Aliyev allocated 5 million Azerbaijani manats (about USD 6.7
    million) to fund activities of pro-government youth organisations on
    social networks. At the same time, seven members of the NIDA movement
    - a youth movement calling for more democracy in Azerbaijan - were
    arrested on charges of drug possession and inciting hatred. In May,
    the parliament adopted repressive legislation to extend criminal
    defamation laws to online content.

    Rashid Hajili from the Media Rights Institute said: "Internet is
    growing and offers opportunities as well as challenges. The first
    steps toward prosecution for criminal defamation on Facebook last
    August [2013] are concerning."[8] In August, Astara District Court
    convicted Mikail Talibov for sharing critical information on Facebook.

    Previously, Talibov worked at AccessBank, a bank with headquarters
    in Baku. Following his dismissal, he created a Facebook page where
    he harshly criticized the bank's activity. The bank considered the
    Facebook page libelous and demanded the court to bring Talibov to
    justice for libel. The court considered the former bank employee
    guilty and charged him to 1-year public work, also withholding 20%
    of his monthly salary. The court also ruled Talibov to refute his
    criticism on Facebook. Many Azerbaijani civil organisations have
    condemned this ruling, with the Media Rights Institute calling it a
    "harsh punishment for expressions on internet forums".

    Defamation laws and monitoring of social media content are particularly
    chilling free expression online in Azerbaijan. Turgut Gambar, youth
    activist and member of NIDA, told Index that an increased number
    of young people refrain from expressing their opinion online due to
    the monitoring of social media and punishment of those who criticize
    the regime.[9] However, Gambar counts on the internet to empower the
    youth and complement traditional action for the democratisation of the
    country. "In March [2013], NIDA was able to mobilize and attract people
    who usually are not politicised thanks to social media", says Gambar,
    "Internet is complementary to other forms of action such as graffiti,
    songs, or distribution of stickers". The seven NIDA members arrested
    in March and April 2013 were particularly active on social media and
    known for their criticism of the authorities. The repression offree
    speech online is seen as an attempt to suppress activism on the last
    remaining haven for independent expression.

    AZERBAIJAN AND THE COUNCIL OF EUROPE

    In the run up to the elections, on 26 January 2013, the Parliamentary
    Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) failed to pass a resolution
    on political prisoners. The inaction of PACE has made Azerbaijan
    confident and since that failure at the PACE, Azerbaijan has felt
    emboldened to arrest more journalists and activists. On 1 October 2013,
    the Baku-based Human Rights Club released a new list of political
    prisoners counting 142 persons currently in detention or imprisoned
    for politically motivated reasons. The Human Rights Club notes that
    the number of politically motivated detentions and imprisonments has
    increased sharply since the defeat on 26 January 2013 of the key PACE
    resolution on "The follow-up to the issue of political prisoners
    in Azerbaijan." At the time of the vote, there were 60 cases of
    alleged political prisoners included in then-rapporteur Christoph
    Strasser's list.

    It is of concern that the PACE has failed to hold Azerbaijan
    accountable for its Council of Europe obligations. According to
    interviewees, the resolution's defeat has tarnished the Council of
    Europe's credibility in Azerbaijan as an institution supposed to
    protect, promote and ensure human rights.

    The government of Azerbaijan works particularly hard to influence
    opinion at the PACE, or to paralyse its action.[10] Christoph Strasser,
    a German PACE delegate who was the Special Rapporteur tasked with
    examining the situation of political prisoners in Azerbaijan, has
    been refused a visa to conduct a fact-finding mission to Azerbaijan.

    This refusal has angered German parliamentarians to the extent that the
    Bundestag's Committee on Human Rights and Humanitarian Aid drafted a
    resolution demanding Strasser be granted a visa. Such is the influence
    of the government of Azerbaijan in Germany that the draft resolution
    was leaked to the country's ambassador.

    Azerbaijan pursues its lobbying at the Council of Europe (COE) and
    at national government level to persuade parliamentarians that the
    lack of a free media or its political prisoners are not worthy of
    special attention - or can be justified in the context of the ongoing
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. This distortion of the truth makes the
    work of human rights defenders all the more difficult, especially as
    space to express critical views in Azerbaijan has been gradually and
    progressively curtailed since Azerbaijan joined the COE in 2001. While
    Azerbaijan is preparing to assume the Chairmanship of the COE, it is
    of paramount importance for the Council of Europe to take tougher line
    against Azerbaijan's crackdown on fundamental rights and freedoms.[11]

    "In eight moths, Azerbaijan will run Europe's official human rights
    organisation. The Council of Europe must take care about who speaks
    on its behalf. We are not saying that the council should prevent
    Azerbaijan from taking the chair, but it should take a tougher line
    vis-a-vis implementation of human rights commitments. If member states
    are allowed to get away with blatant violations and fail to comply
    with the Council of Europe rules and treaties, human rights become
    a dead letter", says Emin Huseynov, Chair and CEO of the Institute
    for Reporters' Freedom and Safety (IRFS).[12]

    Recommendations

    In the run-up to the 2013 presidential elections in Azerbaijan,
    the situation for freedom of expression has deteriorated. Index on
    Censorship makes the following recommendations:

    - Ensure the immediate release of all persons imprisoned for
    exercising their right to freedom of expression

    - Promptly investigate and prosecute all cases of violence, threats
    of violence, and blackmail against journalists, political activists
    and human rights defenders

    - Respect and protect the right to freedom of expression offline
    and online, including by ceasing the practice of targeting social
    media users involved in organising protests

    - Promote the development of public service broadcasting that is
    independent of government interests and acts in the public interest,
    with particular attention paid to the regions outside of Baku

    - Cease the practice of pressuring and interfering with the work
    of NGOs, human rights defenders and lawyers

    - Reform the law to protect the freedom of association

    This report was originally published on 10 Oct 2013 at
    indexoncensorship.org

    [1] Index on Censorship interview, Baku, 18 September 2013

    [2] Index on Censorship interview, Baku, 18 September 2013

    [3] Article 298.11 and 298.22 of the Administrative Offences Code

    [4] Index on Censorship interview with a young political activist,
    Baku, 20 September 2013

    [5] State control and the media in Running scared. Azerbaijan's
    Silenced Voices, International Partnership Group for Azerbaijan
    report, 2012

    [6] Index on Censorship interview with Rahim Ajiyev, acting
    editor-in-chief of Azadliq newspaper, Baku, 18 September 2013

    [7] Index on Censorship interview, Baku, 18 September 2013

    [8] Index on Censorship interview, Baku, 19 September 2013

    [9] Index on Censorship interview, Baku, 20 September 2013

    [10] Azerbaijan's image problem, in Running Scared. Azerbaijan's
    Silenced Voices, International Partnership Group for Azerbaijan
    report, 2012

    [11] Azerbaijan will assume the chairmanship of the COE's Committee
    of Ministers from July 2014

    [12] Index on Censorship interview, Baku, 18 September 2013

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