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Azerbaijan Miffed By Criticism Ahead Of European Games

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  • Azerbaijan Miffed By Criticism Ahead Of European Games

    AZERBAIJAN MIFFED BY CRITICISM AHEAD OF EUROPEAN GAMES

    EurasiaNet.org
    March 25 2015

    March 25, 2015 - 4:58am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

    Azerbaijan Civil Rights

    A daughter of jailed Azerbaijani dissidents, Dinara Yunus, is among
    the growing choir of Azerbaijan's critics who are using the upcoming
    "European Olympics" to draw attention to reported repressions in the
    Caspian-Sea country.

    "My parents dedicated 30 years of their lives to human rights. Now
    they are in different cells in different prisons because they dared
    to speak out," Yunus says in a recent YouTube video. Released by
    the UK human rights group Amnesty International, the video mixes
    her monologue with footage of the large-scale preparations in the
    Azerbaijani capital, Baku, for the European Games this June.

    "Mr. President [Ilham Aliyev], can you tell me why my mother is in
    prison after she was critical of the upcoming European games?" Yunus
    asks in the tape.

    Dinara's mother, prominent human-rights activist Leyla Yunus, is
    controversially jailed on charges that include tax evasion and spying
    for the enemy state of Armenia. International democracy-watchdogs
    scoff at these charges, and those against her husband Arif Yunus and
    many other activists, as politically motivated.

    Charging that Azerbaijan now has as much freedom of speech as can fit
    inside a prison cell, international human rights groups and emigrant
    Azerbaijani activists are banking on the June 12-28 European Games
    to put an international spotlight on what they describe as the
    government's authoritarian excesses.

    They're also stepping up the prominence of their targets -- on March
    17, several rights-organizations sent an appeal to the United Nations
    Human Rights Council for Azerbaijan to stop "the systematic punishment
    of leaders of civil society, and to immediately and unconditionally
    release all human rights defenders, journalists and activists" in
    prison and drop the charges against them.

    In response to this and other criticism, President Ilham Aliyev, who,
    as head of the national Olympics Committee, takes a lively interest
    in the Games, claimed recently that "certain foreign circles" are
    busy trying, once again, to smear Azerbaijan.

    Memories of the tongue-lashing his government received in 2012 when
    Baku hosted Eurovision apparently linger on.

    "This campaign has never stopped; only on the eve of international
    events it takes particularly ugly forms. We faced the same thing three
    years ago, in 2012, on the eve of Eurovision," Aliyev said during
    a public event last week in Baku. He called out international NGOs
    (Transparency International, in particular) for allegedly failing to
    react to abuses on their own turf, while picking on Azerbaijan.

    "In other places, people are being strangled, shot, killed and nobody
    is held accountable. Where are these non-governmental organizations
    that are accusing us? . . . Why are international institutions not
    passing resolutions?" Aliyev asked rhetorically. His answer? "[T]oday
    world politics is guided not by international law, but hypocrisy,
    double standards, discrimination, racism, islamophobia and xenophobia."

    The president, though, can take a deep breath. So far, as with
    Eurovision, the international criticism has brought no heavy cost to
    Baku. Other than to its nerves, that is.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/72691



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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