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Appeal court confirms 30-month jail term for detained newspaper ed.

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  • Appeal court confirms 30-month jail term for detained newspaper ed.

    Reporters without borders (press release), France
    June 8 2007


    Appeal court confirms 30-month jail term for detained newspaper
    editor

    Reporters Without Borders voiced alarm today at an appeal court's
    decision on 6 June to uphold a two-and-a-half-year prison sentence
    for Eynulla Fatullayev, founder and editor of the daily newspapers
    Realny Azerbaijan and Gundelik Azerbaijan, for defaming and insulting
    Azerbaijanis under article 147.2 of the criminal code. He has been
    held ever since the sentence was passed on 20 April.

    `This decision confirms an exceptionally disproportionate sentence,'
    the press freedom organisation said. `At the same time, Fatullayev
    has been notified of new, terrorism-related charges against him,
    without being given any details of these charges. The two newspapers
    he edited have been closed illegally and his conditions of detention
    are cause for concern about his health and safety.'

    Reporters Without Borders added: `We support Fatullayev's appeal to
    the authorities to guarantee his safety and provide him with
    acceptable conditions of detention.'

    Fatullayev has reported that guards threatened him and pointed a gun
    at his head when he was transferred on 29 May from Bail prison to the
    national security ministry detention centre. Since the transfer, he
    has been given hardly any food and water and has been forced to sleep
    on his bed's metal frame, with no mattress or blanket. He has written
    several letters to national security minister Eldar Mahmudov to
    demand normal conditions of detention, without getting a reply.

    Fatullayev was convicted over online posts attributed to him that
    said the Azerbaijani armed forces shared responsibility with their
    Armenian counterparts for the deaths of hundreds of civilians during
    an attack by Armenian troops in 1992 on the village of Khojali in the
    disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

    A respected journalist, Fatullayev used to work for the Monitor,
    whose editor, Elmar Huseynov, was murdered in March 2005. With a
    daily print run of 30,000 copies, Realny Azerbaijan is well-known for
    criticising the government.

    Serious fighting broke out between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the
    Nagorno-Karabakh region in 1992. A cease-fire has been in effect
    since 1994 but no peace accord has ever been reached.
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