Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azerbaijani Government Intensifies Media Crackdown Through 'Criminal

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

  • Azerbaijani Government Intensifies Media Crackdown Through 'Criminal

    BBSNews, NC
    April 28 2007

    Azerbaijani Government Intensifies Media Crackdown Through 'Criminal
    Libel' Charges

    Azerbaijan: Opposition Editor Sentenced to Prison

    HRW via BBSNews - New York, April 28, 2007 -- The conviction of
    Eynulla Fatullayev, the editor of Azerbaijan's largest independent
    newspaper, for "criminal libel" and "insult," underscores
    deteriorating press freedoms in that country, Human Rights Watch said
    today.

    Map of Azerbaijan, 2005.

    Photo Credit: The University of Texas at Austin.

    For the map shown above in it's full size, see "Map of Azerbaijan,
    2005.

    More maps are available in BBSNews Maps.

    On April 20, Yasamal District Court in Baku convicted Fatullayev, the
    outspoken editor-in-chief of the independent Realni Azerbaijan and
    Gundelik Azerbaijan newspapers, for having committed "criminal libel"
    and "insult." The charges were based on an internet posting that the
    prosecution attributed to him, which blamed Azerbaijanis for a 1992
    massacre in Nagorno-Karabakh. Fatullayev denied writing the posting,
    but was sentenced to 30 months in prison.

    The same day, unknown assailants attacked one of Fatullayev's
    colleagues at Realni Azerbaijan, Uzeyir Jafarov, who sustained
    serious injuries. Fatullayev is the fifth journalist to be imprisoned
    in Azerbaijan in the last 10 months.

    "Fatullayev's prosecution was politically motivated, and he should be
    immediately released from custody," said Holly Cartner, Europe and
    Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "The steady rise of
    politically motivated defamation charges and violent attacks against
    critical journalists is clearly aimed at silencing critical voices in
    Azerbaijan."

    In its letter to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev on February 9,
    Human Rights Watch documented numerous cases of violence and criminal
    defamation charges against journalists in Azerbaijan, including
    Fatullayev. Human Rights Watch urged the president to take steps to
    end impunity for such violence, and ensure that Azerbaijan complies
    with its international obligations on freedom of expression and the
    press.

    Fatullayev's conviction comes just two weeks after the same court
    fined him 10,000 Azeri manats (about US$12,000) for the same offense
    in a civil claim brought by Tatiana Chaladze, head of the Azeri
    Center for Protection of Refugees and Displaced Persons. Chaladze
    also initiated the criminal libel and insult charges against
    Fatullayev.

    The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe has called
    for Azerbaijan to abolish the offense of criminal libel. Human Rights
    Watch echoed this call in February in its letter to President Aliev.

    Fatullayev's conviction was based on a statement attributed to him
    that was posted to the website Azeritricolor. The statement blamed
    Azerbaijanis for the 1992 massacre in the village of Khojali in
    Nagorno- Karabakh. Chaladze alleged that the statement defamed the
    village's residents.

    According to Azerbaijani official statistics, more than 600 people
    were killed on February 25, 1992, when ethnic Armenian forces stormed
    the predominantly Azeri town of Khojali. Fatullayev denies making the
    remark and maintains that it was a set-up intended to put him behind
    bars. The remark was apparently linked to an article Fatullayev had
    published in 2005, "Karabakh Diary," in which he expressed the view
    that Armenian forces maintained a civilian corridor for Azeri
    villagers to flee Khojali.

    Fatullayev wrote the 2005 article while working as an investigative
    journalist for the newspaper Monitor, where he worked until the
    murder of his close friend, Monitor editor Elmar Huseynov, in March
    2005. Huseynov's murder remains unsolved. Fatullayev's Realni
    Azerbaijan newspaper is the successor to Monitor, which closed after
    Huseynov's murder.

    Fatullayev's lawyer told Human Rights Watch that, although his
    client's conviction was partially based on statements made in the
    2005 article about the Khojali massacre, the article itself was not
    included in the evidence against him. Fatullayev plans to appeal his
    conviction.

    "As a member of the UN's Human Rights Council, Azerbaijan should be
    exemplary in its protection of fundamental human rights like freedom
    of expression," said Cartner. "Instead, the authorities have launched
    a series of politically motivated flawed trials against critical
    journalists, fueling an atmosphere of fear and hostility for the
    independent and opposition media."

    Just hours after Fatullayev's conviction on April 20, unknown
    assailants brutally beat Fatullayev's colleague, Realni Azerbaijan
    journalist Uzeyir Jafarov. Jafarov told Human Rights Watch that as he
    left the Realni Azerbaijan office around 11:45 p.m., two people
    attacked him from behind and hit him several times on the head. The
    assailants fled only after Jafarov's colleagues responded to his
    calls for help. Jafarov was hospitalized for head trauma and remains
    in the hospital. He claimed to have seen one of the assailants in the
    court room at Fatullayev's hearing earlier in the day.

    "Attacks on journalists and the lack of accountability for these
    crimes are crushing freedom of the press and expression in
    Azerbaijan," said Cartner. "If this crackdown on the media continues,
    it will be nearly impossible for Azerbaijan to hold free and fair
    presidential elections next year."

    Background

    Eynulla Fatullayev is known for his frequent criticism of Azeri
    officials and for exposing instances of government corruption.

    Pressure on Fatullayev to stop his journalism had been building for
    over a year. Fatullayev was forced to suspend publication of his
    newspapers on October 1, after his father was kidnapped. The
    kidnappers threatened to kill both Fatullayev and his father if he
    continued publishing the newspapers. The editor had to stop
    publication of the paper in exchange for his father's release.

    Fatullayev renewed publishing only two months later, but acknowledged
    that he did so at his own peril, since the kidnappers remained at
    large.

    In March, after publishing an article accusing the Azeri authorities
    of obstructing the investigation into the murder of Monitor editor
    Elmar Huseinov, Fatullayev reported death threats against him and his
    family. The Azeri authorities refused to investigate these claims or
    offer to protect Fatullayev.

    Soon after the statement attributed to Fatullayev about the Khojali
    massacre began to circulate on the internet in February, protestors
    organized several rallies in front of the Realni Azerbaijan office
    and threw eggs and stones at the office windows. Police did nothing
    to stop the protestors.

    In recent months, high-ranking state officials have initiated
    criminal defamation charges against Fatullayev. In September,
    Fatullayev was handed a two-year suspended sentence and forced to pay
    damages in a criminal libel case brought by Interior Minister Ramil
    Usubov. Usubov has brought similar charges against numerous other
    independent journalists and newspapers.

    The conviction of Fatullayev comes amid the Azerbaijani government's
    growing hostility toward independent and opposition media, which
    raises serious concerns about the future of independent media and the
    security of journalists in the country. Violence and the threat of
    violence against journalists have become frequent in Azerbaijan, and
    often such crimes are committed with impunity. A dramatic increase in
    defamation charges brought against journalists by state officials has
    further contributed to the deteriorating environment for freedom of
    expression.
Working...
X