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Azerbaijan 'Silencing Critics' By Detaining Activists

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  • Azerbaijan 'Silencing Critics' By Detaining Activists

    AZERBAIJAN 'SILENCING CRITICS' BY DETAINING ACTIVISTS

    17 February 2015 Last updated at 11:55 GMT

    By Rayhan Demytrie BBC News, South Caucasus

    The Swiss embassy in Baku has been sheltering Emin Huseynov on
    humanitarian grounds

    He appeared at the Swiss embassy in Azerbaijan's capital, Baku,
    in full disguise: his dark hair dyed blond to look more European.

    It worked. He managed to walk pass the Azeri police that guard the
    embassy and was admitted onto foreign soil.

    For over six months, the whereabouts of Emin Huseynov, a prominent
    human rights campaigner, were unknown, until the Swiss broadcaster
    SRF broke the news last week that the country's embassy in Baku had
    been sheltering him since August 2014.

    The Swiss foreign ministry has confirmed that an Azeri national has
    been allowed to stay at the embassy on humanitarian grounds and in
    a statement said that Switzerland was negotiating with the Azeri
    authorities to resolve the issue "in the interest of the individual".

    Mr Huseynov, the founder of the Institute for Reporters' Freedom
    and Safety (IRFS), a non-governmental organisation monitoring rights
    violations against journalists, is accused by the Azeri government
    of tax evasion and abuse of power.

    Emin Huseynov went into hiding six months ago

    Similar charges have been brought against a number of other civil
    society activists - charges that rights groups describe as "bogus".

    Like most pro-democracy NGOs, Mr Huseynov's IRFS was under surveillance
    by the Azeri security services.

    Branded 'traitors'

    Activists like Mr Huseynov and others currently in detention - such
    as Rasul Jafarov, human rights lawyer Intigam Aliyev, Leyla and Arif
    Yunus, and Anar Mammadli - have for years openly criticised their
    government, raising awareness of human rights abuses in the oil and
    gas-rich country.

    Activists Arif Yunusov, Leyla Yunus, Intigam Aliyev and Rasul Jafarov
    have been held since mid-2013

    They have earned recognition for their work from the international
    community. But Azeri officials, such as President Ilham Aliyev's
    chief adviser Ramiz Mehdiyev, have branded them "traitors".

    The most recent victim of the government's campaign to silence its
    critics is the investigative reporter Khadija Ismaylova, known for her
    corruption investigations into the financial schemes of Azerbaijan's
    president and his family.

    In December 2014, she was charged with inciting a man to commit
    suicide. Last week, she was additionally charged with embezzlement,
    tax evasion and abuse of power.

    Her colleagues, whom I met in December in Baku, described her detention
    as an attempt to silence her.

    "By arresting Khadija, the government is sending a message to
    journalists and to the public in general that those who fight for
    truth and free speech, those who fight for their rights, will be
    arrested." said Kamran Mahmudov, who briefly stood in for Ms Ismaylova
    on her popular radio talk-show on US-funded Radio Liberty.

    Radio Liberty journalist Khadija Ismaylova has been held since December

    A few weeks after this interview, the authorities raided the offices
    of Radio Liberty and took the station off air.

    Still in his pyjamas, Kamran Mahmudov was dragged out of his home by
    the police and taken for questioning.

    The closure of one of the few remaining independent voices in Azeri
    media was criticised by the US State Department, the EU and several
    human rights organisations.

    According to the New-York based Committee to Protect Journalists,
    Azerbaijan is the leading jailer of journalists in Europe and
    Central Asia.

    However, the government insists that all the charges against
    journalists and civil society activists are legitimate.

    Azerbaijan chaired the Council of Europe last year, a decision that
    angered the country's critics

    "No one is prosecuted in Azerbaijan based on his or her professional
    activities or political beliefs," said Hikmat Hajiyev, a spokesman
    for Azerbaijan's foreign affairs ministry.

    "Khadija Ismaylovas has been engaged in journalistic activities for
    more than 10 years and could write different stories. Now there is a
    real criminal case based on the criminal code of Azerbaijan," he added.

    "It is so unfortunate that the human rights issue is being politicised,
    and certain groups and circles under the pretext of human rights are
    trying to interfere in the internal affairs of Azerbaijan."

    Bright minds behind bars

    President Aliyev pardoned 87 prisoners shortly before the new year,
    among them two journalists and two members of a pro-democracy youth
    movement.

    But most of the activists, journalists and lawyers detained remain
    behind bars. They face long prison terms if found guilty of their
    charges.

    Intigam Aliyev's family visit him at Kurdakhany prison, where he has
    been held for several months

    Human rights lawyer Intigam Aliyev, who has taken several hundred
    cases - ranging from violating rights to freedom of speech and the
    right to a fair trial - to the European Court of Human Rights, is
    now on trial himself, with his hearing set to resume on February 17.

    The Kurdakhany detention facility on the outskirts of Baku, where he
    is being held, has been dubbed "the university" because most of the
    bright minds deemed a threat to the state are being held there.

    Shortly after visiting him in December, his son, Necmin, wanted to
    deliver a message from his father to the outside world.

    "In today's Azerbaijan defending human rights is a crime," he said.

    "He and his friends are paying the price for doing just that."

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-30888135



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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