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Azerbaijan: Amnesty International Report 2007

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  • Azerbaijan: Amnesty International Report 2007

    Amnesty International Report 2007

    REPUBLIC OF AZERBAIJAN


    Head of state: Ilham Aliyev
    Head of government: Artur Rasizade
    Death penalty: abolitionist for all crimes
    International Criminal Court: not ratified
    Rights to freedoms of expression and assembly were restricted. Police
    routinely used force to disperse demonstrations. Opposition
    journalists were attacked, imprisoned or fined on criminal defamation
    or dubious drugs-related charges. Opposition politicians were denied
    rights to due process and reportedly in some cases medical care and
    access to legal counsel of their own choosing.
    A journalist was extradited to Turkey despite being at risk of torture
    or other ill-treatment. People internally displaced by the conflict in
    Nagorny Karabakh in 1991-94 had restricted opportunities to exercise
    their economic and social rights.

    Freedom of expression under attack
    Rights to freedoms of expression and assembly were routinely restricted.
    Police dispersed authorized and unauthorized meetings, reportedly with
    excessive force on occasion.

    ¢ Two serious assaults on opposition journalists Fikret Hüseynli and
    Baxaddin Xaziyev, attacked in March and May respectively by unidentified
    assailants, were unsolved at the end of 2006.

    ¢ Two further assaults by unidentified men took place in late
    December. Ali Orucov, press secretary of the opposition Azerbaijan
    National Independence Party, suffered bruising and a fractured
    finger. Nicat Hüseynov, a journalist with the Azadl¹q
    newspaper, was hospitalized with head and internal injuries and a stab
    wound after being attacked in the street in broad daylight.

    ¢ No progress was made in investigating the murder in 2005 of
    newspaper editor Elmar Hüseynov, widely believed to have been
    killed because of his criticism of political corruption.

    ¢ Criminal defamation proceedings were brought against several
    individuals and newspapers. They resulted in the imprisonment of two
    journalists, who were pardoned and released in October, and a number
    of suspended sentences and heavy fines, in one case leading to the
    closure of independent newspaper Realny Azerbaydzhan.

    ¢ Well-known satirist and government critic Sakit Zahidov of the
    Azadl¹q newspaper was arrested on charges of drug-dealing in
    June. He claimed drugs had been forcibly planted on him after he was
    abducted and then arrested by plain clothes policemen. After no
    evidence of drug-dealing was presented at his trial, the charge was
    reduced to use of illegal drugs. However, a urine test at the time of
    arrest reportedly showed no evidence of drug usage, and doctors called
    as witnesses admitted that their diagnosis of Sakit Zahidov as a drug
    addict was based on 30 minutes' visual observation only. He was
    sentenced to three years' imprisonment. His appeal was rejected in
    December; reportedly no new evidence or witnesses were presented at
    the hearing.

    ¢ On 24 November the Azadl¹q and Bizim Yol newspapers, the
    Institute for Reporter Freedom and Safety (a media freedom
    non-governmental organization with close links to Azadl¹q), the
    independent journalists' association Yeni Nesil and the Turan news
    agency were forcibly removed by police from their premises in Baku
    following a legal ruling they claimed was unfounded and politically
    motivated. Also on 24 November the National Radio and Television
    Council decided not to extend the broadcasting licence of the ANS
    television company, widely regarded as the most independent in the
    country. The cessation of ANS broadcasting further ended the
    retransmissions on ANS frequencies of international radio stations
    such as the BBC, Radio Liberty and the Voice of America. Following
    international and national appeals, on 12 December ANS was reinstated
    temporarily pending completion of a tender for its frequencies
    scheduled for January 2007.

    Unfair trial concerns
    ¢ Three leaders of the Yeni Fikir youth movement arrested in 2005
    on charges of plotting a coup d'état were imprisoned in July
    after an unfair trial. At the trial, only witnesses for the
    prosecution gave evidence and no jury was appointed, in contravention
    of Azerbaijani law. Allegations of torture in the case of one of the
    accused, Ruslan Baôirli, were not investigated, and medical
    care was reportedly denied to another, Said Nuri.

    ¢ Opposition party activist Qadir Müsayev was imprisoned in
    May for seven years following conviction on charges of drug
    dealing. Reports suggested the charges were fabricated because of his
    refusal to sign fraudulent election result protocols when serving as a
    polling station official.

    ¢ Former Minister for Economic Development Farhad Aliyev and his
    brother Rafiq (no relation to President Aliyev), arrested in October
    2005 on charges of plotting to violently overthrow the government,
    were allegedly denied due process in pre-trial detention. According to
    reports, their right to legal counsel of their choosing was
    consistently denied from the time of their arrest, and Farhad Aliyev
    was not allowed access to appropriate medical care. No hearings have
    been heard in the brothers' case, and no trial date set. Their
    property has been expropriated and family members allegedly
    intimidated.

    Risk of torture
    On 13 October, Kurdish journalist Elif Pelit was extradited to Turkey,
    where she was detained on charges of membership of the Kurdish
    Workers' Party (PKK). In 1999 she had been granted asylum, and
    subsequently citizenship, in Germany. She was first arrested in
    Azerbaijan on 4 November 2004, for crossing the border illegally from
    Iraq while on assignment for Mesopotamia, a Kurdish news agency linked
    to the PKK. Fined and released in March 2005, she was immediately
    rearrested under Turkey's extradition order, and her extradition was
    confirmed by the Supreme Court in October 2005.

    Restricted rights for the displaced
    People internally displaced by the conflict in Nagorny Karabakh
    continued to have their freedom of movement restricted by a cumbersome
    internal registration process linking eligibility for employment and
    social services to a fixed place of residence. Although there was
    progress in moving the displaced out of temporary shelters and
    providing housing, many new purpose-built settlements were located in
    remote and economically depressed areas. People re-housed in these
    settlements faced a lack of jobs and access to basic services such as
    education and health care.

    AI country reports/visits
    Reports
    ¢ Europe and Central Asia: Summary of Amnesty International's
    concerns in the region, January-June 2006 (AI Index: EUR 01/017/2006)

    ¢ Commonwealth of Independent States: Positive trend on the
    abolition of the death penalty but more needs to be done (AI Index:
    EUR 04/003/2006)

    Visits
    AI delegates visited Azerbaijan in April and July.
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