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BAKU: New US Ambassador To Azerbaijan Is Urged On Facebook To Visit

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  • BAKU: New US Ambassador To Azerbaijan Is Urged On Facebook To Visit

    NEW US AMBASSADOR TO AZERBAIJAN IS URGED ON FACEBOOK TO VISIT POLITICAL PRISONERS UPON HIS ARRIVAL

    AzeriReport
    Feb 12 2015

    BAKU. February 12, 2015. The new US Ambassador to Azerbaijan, due to
    arrive there today, has asked the local public for an advice. A post
    on the US Embassy's Facebook page requested the Azerbaijani Facebook
    users to "vote on his first cultural excursion!" The Ambassador's
    own intro video, also posted on the Embassy's FB page, asked the same
    question from the Azerbaijani audience.

    The overwhelming majority of comments under the post urge the
    Ambassador to take his first visit to the Kurdakhani prison near
    the capital Baku, where many of the country's political prisoners
    are held. Because so many prominent intellectuals, civil activists,
    and well-educated youth leaders have been imprisoned in the Kurdakhani
    jail, it has been dubbed by some as "Kur De Khani University".

    The Embassy's post specifically referred to a "cultural excursion" and
    Ambassador's video named a few examples of cultural and natural sites,
    such as Yanardag, a hill with naturally gas fire burning on the top,
    the pre-historic Gobustan area, and Beshbarmag Mountains in the north.

    But they seem to have got a different kind of response from what they
    expected. The Azerbaijani public appears to have clearly spoken out
    in favor of paying attention to the rapidly deteriorating situation
    with human rights in Azerbaijan.

    Some even poked at the suggestion of seeing natural sites in the midst
    of the ongoing severe crackdown on civil society, including US radio
    station Radio Liberty and other Western-backed institutions. One
    comment said: "First you must go to Yanardag. Thats joke Of course
    first you must go Kurdekhani Prison its near to center. Because too
    many political prisoners and journalists in jail now. Good luck!".

    Some also advised to go to the Alley of Martyrs, a memorial cemetery
    for those fallen during the fight for Azerbaijan's independence
    from the Sovit Union and in Karabakh war with Armenia. Few asked to
    visit families of Azerbaijani hostages held by Armenian forces and
    see refugees from the Karabakh conflict. But the great majority of
    over 170 comments by 9 AM EST today pointed to the Kurdekhani jail
    and the urgent need to deal with the issue of political prisoners in
    the country.

    One commenter expressed hopes that "New Ambasador will not be bowing
    before the statue of Aliyev". She was referring to the infamous visit
    by Ambassador Richard Morningstar, Mr. Cekuta's predecessor. Mr.

    Morningstar stirred a controversy when at his first public appearance
    in Azerbaijan as the US Ambassador he bowed down to the giant statue
    of Heydar Aliyev - the late Azerbaijani dictator and former Soviet
    Communist Politburo boss and KGB general, who is the founder of the
    ruling regime and also is the father of the current president.

    The US Embassy in Baku has also come under criticism recently
    for failing to provide adequate help to the persecuted prominent
    Azerbaijani rights activist, Emin Huseynov, whose wife is an American
    citizen. An article in Foreign Policy (FP) magazine says the Mr.

    Huseynov tried to seek help from the US Embassy in Baku in face of an
    imminent imprisonment but was denied protection. He had to go to the
    Swiss Embassy instead, where he has received protection and has been
    hiding for the past 6 months. The FP article also cites the case of
    a US Citizen Said Nuri, a former Azerbaijani dissident, who has been
    detained during his recent visit to Azerbaijan and complained about
    the lack of adequate help from the US Embassy there.

    Whether the Ambassador will heed the loud and clear calls to visit
    the political prisoners as the first priority, whether he will
    shy away from such a visit or if he too will choose to bow down to
    the dead local dictator remains to be seen, as he is arriving to
    Azerbaijan today. But the Embassy's response to the comments on its
    post promised: "Friends, thank you so much for taking the time to
    share your suggestions in such a creative way. We hear you and will
    make sure the Ambassador does too!"

    Below are some print-screens from the Facebook page of the US Embassy
    in Baku and comments under it (Azeri Report):

    http://azerireport.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4516&Ite mid=53

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