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Journalists' Rights Worsen In Azerbaijan: NGO

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  • Journalists' Rights Worsen In Azerbaijan: NGO

    JOURNALISTS' RIGHTS WORSEN IN AZERBAIJAN: NGO

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 27, 2007 Friday 10:43 AM GMT

    Press freedom is deteriorating in Azerbaijan with five journalists
    jailed in the past 10 months, Human Rights Watch warned, citing a
    new case of an editor jailed for libel and "insult."

    "The steady rise of politically motivated defamation charges and
    violent attacks against critical journalists is clearly aimed at
    silencing critical voices in Azerbaijan," said Holly Cartner, the
    group's director for Europe and Central Asia, in a statement Thursday.

    A court in Baku on April 20 jailed Eynulla Fatullayev, editor of the
    independent newspapers Realni Azerbaijan and Gundelik Azerbaijan,
    for "criminal libel" and "insult," the New York-based group (HRW) said.

    Fatullayev denied the charges, which were based on an Internet
    posting in which he was alleged to have blamed Azerbaijanis for a
    1992 massacre in a village in Nagorno-Karabakh, a region disputed by
    Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    The two countries fought a war over the territory in the early 1990s
    that claimed an estimated 35,000 lives and caused about a million
    people on both sides to flee their homes.

    The person bringing the charges "alleged that the statement defamed
    the village's residents."

    "Fatullayev's prosecution was politically motivated, and he should be
    immediately released from custody," Cartner said. The journalist is
    known for his criticism of Azeri officials and for exposing government
    corruption.

    According to official Azerbaijani statistics, more than 600 people
    were killed in February 1992 when ethnic Armenian forces stormed the
    predominantly Azeri village of Khojali.

    Fatullayev is the fifth journalist to be imprisoned in Azerbaijan in
    the last 10 months, HRW said. Unknown assailants also attacked and
    seriously injured one of his colleagues.

    A fellow editor and friend was murdered in March 2005, and kidnappers
    last year seized his father and threatened to kill him and Fatullayev
    if he continued publishing newspapers.

    High-ranking officials have also brought defamation charges against
    him and other independent journalists.

    "If this crackdown on the media continues, it will be nearly impossible
    for Azerbaijan to hold free and fair presidential elections next year,"
    Cartner said.

    The European Union's special representative to Armenia, Azerbaijan
    and Georgia, Peter Semneby, said this week in Baku: "The provisions
    on libel should be removed from Azerbaijan's criminal code to help
    solve the problem of pressure being put on journalists."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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