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  • Azeri Journalist Beaten Unconscious

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    IWPR Caucasus Reporting #750
    Aug 30 2014


    Azeri Journalist Beaten Unconscious

    Police in Nakhichevan shrug shoulders as calls for accountability mount.
    By Afgan Mukhtarli - Caucasus



    An assault in which an Azerbaijani journalist and NGO activist was
    badly beaten is being seen as the latest in a series of attempts to
    silence government critics.

    Ilgar Nasibov's wife Malahat blames the local authorities in
    Nakhichevan, an exclave region separated from the rest of Azerbaijan
    by Armenian territory. She believes they were annoyed by his work on a
    controversial case involving a death in custody.

    On August 21, Nasibov was attacked by several people inside the
    Resource Centre for NGO Development and Democracy which he heads.

    `He was called from home to go the office in the evening,' Malahat
    Nasibova told RFE/RL radio's Azerbaijani service. `They said some
    petitioners had come. They attacked him suddenly in the office and
    inflicted numerous injuries.'

    Nasibov was found unconscious, with his jaw, cheekbone and nose
    broken. He had suffered concussion and had been stabbed with scissors
    several times, requiring stitches when he was taken to hospital.

    Malahat Nasibova links the attack to her husband's work on the case of
    Turaj Zeynalov, a man who died while being held by the security
    service on an allegation of spying for neighbouring Iran. Nasibov had
    helped Zeynalov's family, who believe he was murdered, bring a
    complaint at the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in Strasbourg.

    `After the communications phase [between court and state] of the Turaj
    Zeynalov case began at the ECHR, the authorities began being even more
    aggressive towards us,' Malahat said. `About a month-and-a-half ago,
    Ilgar was knocked down by a car. He was only slightly injured so we
    didn't publicise it. In our view, the latest attack on Ilgar was
    pre-planned¦ and designed to kill him.'

    International watchdogs have urged the Azerbaijani government to find
    and punish the perpetrators.

    `I call on the authorities to conduct a swift and thorough
    investigation of this brutal attack on Nasibov and bring those
    responsible to justice,' OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media
    Dunja MijatoviÄ? said in a statement. `This criminal act has an
    enormous chilling effect on free expression and free media and it
    could inspire future crimes against members of the media.'

    The secretary-general of Reporters Without Borders, Christophe
    Deloire, said that if it turned out that the authorities were behind
    the attack, `an unacceptable threshold will have been crossed in their
    attempts to silence the last critical voices in Azerbaijan'.

    For their part, the authorities are either ignoring or dismissing the issue.

    Neither the regional government nor the security service in
    Nakhichevan has commented on allegations of official involvement.

    The regional interior ministry branch did put out a statement saying
    its police had investigated the case and offering a completely
    different account.

    It quoted a witness statement from a man called Farid Askarov, who
    told police that on the night in question, he met up for a few drinks
    with Nasibov, an `old friend' . One thing led to another, and they had
    a fight.

    Malahat Nasibova disputes that her husband was friendly with Askarov,
    and points out that there were not one but several attackers present,
    who ransacked and smashed the office as well as carrying out the
    assault.

    Mehman Aliev, the head of Turan, an independent news agency for which
    both Ilgar and Malahat Nasibov have written, sees the attack as part
    of a wider pattern of repression.

    `The arrests of Emil Mammadov in Salyan, Hasan Huseynli in Ganja,
    rights defenders Leyla and Arif Yunusov, Rasul Jafarov, Intiqam
    Aliyev, journalist Rauf Mirqadirov and others, plus the enforced
    closure of NGOs is all part of Azerbaijan government policy,' he said
    `It's just that in Nakhichevan, the process is rougher.' (Azerbaijan
    Tidies Away Human Rights Critics is IWPR's most recent round-up of the
    wave of detentions.)

    A leading media watchdog in Azerbaijan, the Institute for Reporters'
    Freedom and Safety, asked why the Council of Europe (CoE) was doing
    nothing about the situation.

    `This attack is a wake-up call to all those who value freedom of
    expression, in particular the Council of Europe,' it said in a
    statement.

    Azerbaijan is a member of the council, which calls itself Europe's
    `leading human rights organisation'. At the moment, it also holds the
    six-month rotating chair of the CoE's Committee of Ministers.

    The group accused the CoE of continuing to `turn a blind eye to a
    brutal human rights crackdown coinciding with Azerbaijan's
    chairmanship', and failing to condemn the government `for a series of
    outrageous crimes against human rights'

    Afgan Mukhtarli is a reporter for www.civil-forum.az.

    http://iwpr.net/report-news/azeri-journalist-beaten-unconscious

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