Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

"Hrw": Azerbaijani Authorities Created Extremely Hostile Atmosphere

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • "Hrw": Azerbaijani Authorities Created Extremely Hostile Atmosphere

    "HRW": AZERBAIJANI AUTHORITIES CREATED EXTREMELY HOSTILE ATMOSPHERE FOR POLITICAL ACTIVISTS AND INDEPENDENT JOURNALISTS

    15:02 01/02/2013 " SOCIETY

    Azerbaijan hosted the 2012 Eurovision Song Contest, casting an
    international spotlight on the government's deteriorating human rights
    record. The atmosphere for political activists and independent and
    pro-opposition journalists grew acutely hostile, the annual report of
    the Human Rights Watch reads.

    "Authorities used imprisonment as a tool for political retribution and
    forcibly dispersed a number of peaceful demonstrations,
    indiscriminately arresting activists and passersby. Restrictions on
    freedom of religion and the prosecution of unregistered religious
    groups continued. The government intensified its urban renewal
    campaign in the capital Baku, forcibly evicting thousands of families
    and illegally demolishing homes," the report says. The HRW notes that
    foreign actors failed to fully realize the potential of their
    relationships with the government to press it to honor its human
    rights obligations.

    Touching upon the freedom of speech the organization mentions that
    series of journalists have undergone to trumped-up charges in
    hooliganism and drug possession. Among the repressed journalists in
    Azerbaijan the organization gives the names of Faramaz Novruzoglu,
    Hilal Mammadov, Idrak Abbasov, Anar Bayramli and others.

    According to the report government limited freedom of assembly by
    breaking up peaceful protests, in some cases violently, and arresting
    protesters. In March, at the first sanctioned opposition protest since
    2006, police detained two popular musicians as they played at the
    peaceful gathering. Police beat and denied them access to their
    lawyer.

    "In April, police detained 20 activists distributing flyers
    encouraging people to attend an opposition rally. Courts sentenced 7
    of the activists to 10 to 15 days of detention, and fined or released
    others. In the days before and during May's Eurovision Song Contest,
    police broke up several protests in Baku's center," the document says.

    In October, as the report notes, the police rounded up dozens of
    protesters in an unsanctioned rally in central Baku, roughed them up
    and forced them into buses. Courts imprisoned 13 on misdemeanor
    charges for up to 10 days, and fined several others. The HRW also
    highlights that the parliament increased sanctions for participating
    and organizing unauthorized protests, establishing fines of up to
    1,000 AZN ($ 1,274) for participation, and 3,000 ($ 3,822) for
    organization.

    "Imprisonment on politically motivated charges is a continuing
    problem. A June 2012 report by a committee of the Parliamentary
    Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) described the cases of 89
    political prisoners in Azerbaijan. Just before the report's
    publication, nine were released under a presidential pardon," the
    report says. Another problem according to Human Rights Watch in
    Azerbaijan is torture and ill-treatment that remain with impunity. It
    says that two men died in police custody in 2012. "In the first eight
    months of 2012, the Azerbaijan Committee Against Torture, an
    independent prison monitoring group, received 136 complaints alleging
    ill-treatment in custody," the report says.

    As for illegal demolition of houses HRW notes that in 2012, hundreds
    of homeowners were affected as the authorities accelerated
    construction for the Eurovision Song Contest. "Most evictees have not
    received fair compensation based on market values of their
    properties," the report says.

    Source: Panorama.am




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X