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CPJ Urges Azerbaijan To End Persecution Of Imprisoned Editor

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  • CPJ Urges Azerbaijan To End Persecution Of Imprisoned Editor

    CPJ URGES AZERBAIJAN TO END PERSECUTION OF IMPRISONED EDITOR

    CPJ Press Freedom Online, NY
    June 8 2007

    New York, June 7, 2007-The Committee to Protect Journalists is calling
    on Azerbaijani authorities to release an editor imprisoned on libel
    charges who says he has been denied food and water, and has received
    death threats.

    Eynulla Fatullayev, editor of the independent Russian-language
    weekly Realny Azerbaijan and the weekly Azeri-language daily Gundalik
    Azarbaycan, told presiding judge Hamid Hamidov that he has been kept
    in inhumane conditions since his transfer to the National Security
    Prison from the Bailov Prison in Baku on May 29.

    "For nine days, I have been hungry and thirsty," Fatullayev was
    quoted as saying by the Institute for Reporter Freedom and Safety,
    a local press freedom group. The journalist has been forced to sleep
    on an iron bed without a mattress and has received multiple death
    threats from unknown persons, according to the Moscow-based news
    agency Regnum and local press reports.

    The judge upheld his libel conviction in the court session Wednesday.

    CPJ called on Azerbaijani authorities to investigate the threats and
    release Fatullayev from prison.

    "The Azerbaijani government jailed Eynulla Fatullayev on a spurious
    libel charge, then filed a vague terrorist charge against him,
    and harassed and intimidated his staff to the point they could
    no longer work. Now they have forced him to suffer while in their
    custody," said Joel Simon, CPJ's executive director. "We call on
    the Azerbaijani authorities to end their relentless persecution of
    a critical journalist and release Eynulla immediately."

    National Security Ministry spokesperson Arif Babayev dismissed the
    journalist's statements, calling them a "subjective opinion," the
    news Web site Lenta reported. "Former ministers have served time in
    our cells and they didn't complain," Lenta quoted Babayev as saying.

    In April, Fatullayev was sentenced to 30 months in prison on charges of
    libeling and insulting Azerbaijanis by saying in an Internet posting
    that Azerbaijanis were responsible for the 1992 massacre of residents
    of Khodjali, a town in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh
    claimed by both Armenia and Azerbaijan. In a March interview with CPJ,
    Fatullayev said he never made the Khodjali statement, which was later
    posted on other Web sites.

    Authorities filed an additional charge of terrorism against Fatullayev
    on May 22. Government officials claim the journalist, a persistent
    government critic, assisted Armenian Special Forces, but they have not
    elaborated on the charge, according to CPJ sources and local press
    reports. The new charges came only days after fire officials sealed
    the papers' offices, claiming the building housing the publications
    violated fire safety regulations.

    CPJ is a New York-based, independent, nonprofit organization that
    works to safeguard press freedom worldwide. For more information,
    visit www.cpj.org.

    http://www.cpj.org/news/2007/europe/ azer07jun07na.html
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