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  • Human Rights Watch Expresses Concern With Swift Detioration Of Freed

    HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH EXPRESSES CONCERN WITH SWIFT DETIORATION OF FREEDOM OF SPEECH IN AZERBAIJAN

    Arminfo
    2007-02-26

    Holly Cartner Executive Director Europe and Central Asia division Human
    Rights Watch sent a letter to Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev. The
    letter reads:

    Dear President Aliev,

    We are writing to express our deep concern about the rapidly
    deteriorating environment for independent media in Azerbaijan. We urge
    you to take steps to end impunity for violence against journalists
    and ensure that Azerbaijan complies with its international commitments
    to freedom of expression and the press.

    Vibrant public discourse based on freedom of expression and a
    diversity of views, provided through diverse sources of information,
    is a cornerstone of any democracy. It is hard to underestimate the
    role of independent media in ensuring a free and fair vote. We are
    deeply concerned that current restrictions on freedom of the press
    and of expression, if allowed to continue, will prevent free and fair
    elections in 2008.

    We are particularly alarmed by violent attacks against members of
    the opposition press, which are often perpetrated in public and in
    broad daylight, but which rarely result in thorough investigations or
    perpetrators being held accountable. Other matters of concern include
    a dramatic increase in criminal defamation charges being brought
    against journalists by public officials, impediments to ANS TV's
    license renewal, resulting in a brief suspension of its broadcasting,
    as well as the eviction of opposition Azadligpaper from its office
    premises, and the temporary closure of Realni Azerbaijanand Gundelik
    Azerbaijan, two of Azerbajan's most read publications.

    Violent Attacks and Threats against Journalists Human Rights Watch has
    received numerous reports of threats and violent attacks by anonymous
    assailants against Azeri journalists. Many journalists interviewed
    by Human Rights Watch believe that they were attacked or threatened
    because of articles they had written that were critical of government
    officials. In most cases, journalists report that their assailants
    made reference to their reporting during the attack.

    As the above cases indicate, there is a growing environment of
    state hostility toward independent and opposition media and that
    raises serious concern about the security of independent journalists
    in Azerbaijan. What is more, there is widespread impunity for such
    attacks. We urge you to ensure that there is no government pressure on
    Azerbaijan's independent media outlets and that journalists can work
    in safety, and to task the appropriate government ministries to take
    the necessary steps to promptly investigate all reports of violence
    or threats against journalists and hold all perpetrators accountable.

    We would welcome information on the steps you take to send a clear
    signal to all government institutions that you will not tolerate
    impunity for such attacks. We would also be interested in receiving
    information about the extent to which the perpetrators have been
    identified, charged, and convicted in any of the cases documented
    in this letter, as well as details about the sentences given. As
    described above, government officials have also made use of criminal
    libel laws and other politically motivated criminal charges to punish
    journalists for criticism of government policies or officials, and
    in such cases journalists rarely obtain a fair hearing before an
    impartial tribunal. In several cases the charges have resulted in
    the permanent closure of independent media outlets. We urge you to
    announce a legal moratorium on criminal lawsuits against journalists
    and meanwhile initiate legislative amendments transferring the libel,
    defamation, and verbal insult provisions from the Criminal Code to the
    Civil Law domain. The Civil Code should also be amended to establish
    a reasonable monetary cap on damages in civil defamation suits.

    We also call on you to ensure that no additional administrative
    obstacles are created for ANS or other such broadcasters in their
    quest for a broadcast license and that all regulations related
    to broadcast licensing are applied in a manner that ensures media
    diversity in Azerbaijan.

    If government hostility toward independent and opposition media is
    allowed to continue, the 2008 elections are likely to be hampered
    by the same serious flaws that have been the hallmark of most recent
    elections in Azerbaijan, the letter read.
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