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Aliyev Is Showing Signs Of A Frantic Despotism-The Washington Post

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  • Aliyev Is Showing Signs Of A Frantic Despotism-The Washington Post

    ALIYEV IS SHOWING SIGNS OF A FRANTIC DESPOTISM-THE WASHINGTON POST

    17:45, 2 March, 2015

    YEREVAN, 2 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. The President of Azerbaijan, Ilham
    Aliyev, is showing signs of a frantic despotism. Journalists, bloggers,
    lawyers, human rights activists and others who speak out for individual
    liberty are arbitrarily being swept up in a wave of arrests and
    detentions, as "Armenpress" reports, citing The Washington Post.

    Mr. Aliyev, suffering a decline in the oil revenue that has propped
    up his regime for years, seems to be striking out at anyone who
    opposes him.

    One of Mr. Aliyev's favorite tools for silencing people is pretrial
    detention. Azeri law states that it is to be used only in limited
    cases, and Azerbaijan's criminal procedure code put this power in
    the hands of the courts, not prosecutors, more than a decade ago. In
    practice, though, the courts have become servants of the prosecution.

    The European Court for Human Rights noted in a case last year that
    Azeri courts have frequently endorsed prosecution requests for
    detention automatically.

    Leyla Yunus, a prominent human rights activist, has been in pretrial
    detention since July 30 on arbitrary and trumped-up charges of treason
    and tax evasion. She is suffering from a liver condition and diabetes.

    On Feb. 18, an appeals court dismissed her appeal and gave her another
    five months in pretrial detention, at the end of which she will
    have been behind bars for nearly a year without trial. Her husband,
    Arif Yunus, a historian who suffers from cardiovascular disease,
    was detained on Aug. 5. His appeal was dismissed Feb. 23, and he,
    too, was given another five months in pretrial detention.

    Meanwhile, the campaign against critical journalists continues. The
    investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova, who described her
    situation in a letter from prison that ran as a recent Post op-ed,
    remains behind bars in pretrial detention. A closed-door trial was
    held Feb. 23, three days after her letter appeared, and she was
    found guilty of criminal libel and fined. The libel charge stemmed
    from accusations made in 2014 by a man who claimed she defamed him
    on Facebook, which she denied. In the twisted, Orwellian nature of
    the Azeri justice system, she was first arrested in December on a
    charge of inciting a former colleague to attempt suicide and since has
    been slapped with new charges, including embezzlement, tax evasion,
    illegal entrepreneurship and abuse of power.

    Mr. Aliyev seems particularly uncomfortable with the work of the
    Azerbaijani service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, to which Ms.

    Ismayilova had contributed. On the same day as her snap trial, a
    former chief of the service's Baku bureau was stopped at the airport,
    prevented from boarding a plane and told he was under a travel ban at
    the request of the prosecutor's office. More than 26 journalists and
    staff of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty have been interrogated by
    Azeri authorities since a Dec. 26 raid on the Baku bureau. The news
    organization is funded by the United States through the Broadcasting
    Board of Governors.

    In a recent magazine advertisement, Mr. Aliyev said he wanted to make
    Azerbaijan "one of the most developed and competitive countries in
    the world." It certainly won't become that if he continues to rule
    like a despot.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/letter-from-an-azerbaijani-prison/2015/02/17/2a2d6cb0-b3d3-11e4-886b-c22184f27c35_story.html
    http://armenpress.am/eng/news/796105/aliyev-is-showing-signs-of-a-frantic-despotism-the-washington-post.html




    From: A. Papazian
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