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Azerbaijan: Fifteen Journalists Seek Asylum In Protest Against Press

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  • Azerbaijan: Fifteen Journalists Seek Asylum In Protest Against Press

    AZERBAIJAN: FIFTEEN JOURNALISTS SEEK ASYLUM IN PROTEST AGAINST PRESS CLOSURES

    Reporters Sans Frontieres press release, Paris
    29 May 07

    Text of press release by Paris-based organization Reporters Sans
    Frontieres (RSF) on 29 May

    Reporters Without Borders today condemned constant government
    harassment of the opposition media, which has led 14 journalists
    working for two dailies, the Azerbaijani-language Gundelik Azerbaijan
    and the Russian-language Realny Azerbaijan, to seek political asylum
    in the past four days after their newspapers were closed last week.

    The editor of the newspaper Nota Bene has also requested asylum
    because he fears for his safety.

    "First the offices of Gundelik Azerbaijan and Realny Azerbaijan were
    shut down for alleged fire safety violations then, on 26 May, the
    owner of their premises suddenly rescinded their lease and they had
    to vacate immediately," Reporters Without Borders said. "They would
    have us believe this is just a coincidence. These are the methods of
    an authoritarian regime."

    The press freedom organization added: "If President Ilham Aliyev
    wants to protect the press, he should help these two dailies find
    new premises. The 41 employees and contributors to these newspapers
    are now without any source of income, some of them feel threatened
    and the country's press is all the poorer."

    The 14 Gundelik Azerbaijan and Realny Azerbaijan journalists submitted
    their political asylum requests to the US, German, British and
    Norwegian embassies and the office of the Organization for Security
    and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). They include Gundelik Azerbaijan
    editor Uzeir Jafarov, who said they were seeking asylum because of
    persecution, and because arrests and attacks made it impossible for
    them to work as journalists.

    Jafarov was attacked and beaten on 20 April after given evidence at
    the trial of Eynulla Fatullaev, the founder of Gundelik Azerbaijan
    and Realny Azerbaijan, who received a 30-month prison sentence the
    same day for "defaming" and "insulting" Azerbaijanis in an article
    about Armenia.

    The satirical website www.tinsohbeti.com, whose editor Habib Muntezir
    is based in Germany, has meanwhile been inaccessible again since 21
    May because of a hacker attack on the Site5 server that hosts it.

    Muntezir is convinced the attack was deliberately targeted. It is
    not the first time that the site has been attacked.
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