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Long jail term for newspaper editor confirms Azerbaijan poor ranking

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  • Long jail term for newspaper editor confirms Azerbaijan poor ranking

    Reporters without borders (press release), France
    Oct 31 2007


    Long jail term for newspaper editor confirms Azerbaijan's poor
    ranking in world press freedom index

    Reporters Without Borders condemns the sentence of eight and a half
    years in prison and fine of 200,000 manats (230,000 dollars) imposed
    yesterday on newspaper editor Eynulla Fatullayev because of an
    article about Azerbaijan's support for US military operations in the
    region. He was found guilty of `terrorism threat' (article 214.1 of
    the criminal code), tax evasion (article 213.2.2) and inciting racial
    hatred (article 283.2.2).

    `Fatullayev's conviction is simply outrageous as there was absolutely
    no evidence for these charges,' the press freedom organisation said.
    `This prosecution and an earlier one were politically motivated and
    mark a dangerous development for press freedom in Azerbaijan. We call
    on President Aliev to display clemency and have him released. Our
    hopes are also pinned on the European Court of Human Rights. It
    should tell the Azerbaijani authorities that this travesty of justice
    fools no one.'

    Reporters Without Borders added: `The article for which Fatullayev
    was convicted was just a foreign policy analysis. The authorities
    used it to punish a journalist who, in their view, was overly
    critical. This verdict comes amid a steady increase in harassment of
    the independent press, which is why Azerbaijan was ranked 139th out
    of 169 countries in our latest world press freedom index.'

    Fatullayev, who edits two of the country's most important dailies,
    Realny Azerbaijan and Gundelik Azerbaijan, was tried by a serious
    crimes court in Baku headed by judge Mehdi Asadov, who ordered the
    seizure of the newspapers' 23 computers as well as imposing the jail
    term and fine.

    The trial, which began on 10 October, focused on an article headlined
    `The Alievs prepare for war,' which appeared in the Russian-language
    Realny Azerbaijan in May. Fatullayev argued in this article that
    Azerbaijan would be exposed to reprisals if the United States
    attacked Iran and he cited possible Azerbaijani targets. The charge
    of inciting racial hatred was based on the fact that he also warned
    that this policy could revive ethnic tension within Azerbaijan.

    After the verdict was read out, Fatullayev ironically thanked the
    court for its `overly mild' sentence. He also referred to Elmar
    Husseynov, the editor of the independent weekly Monitor, who was
    gunned down in March 2005. In an article in March of this year,
    Fatullayev accused the authorities of obstructing the investigation
    into his murder. He received death threats following the article.

    This is the second time Fatullayev has been tried and convicted this
    year. In April, he was found guilty of libelling the army in an
    article accusing the Azerbaijani armed forces of sharing
    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.

    His two newspapers, Realny Azerbaijan and Gundelik Azerbaijan, have
    been closed since May, when much of their material was confiscated on
    the grounds of a violation of fire prevention regulations.

    It was in May, after Reporters Without Borders added President Aliev
    to its list of press freedom predators, that the authorities
    announced that they would no longer cooperate with the organisation.
    Azerbaijan fell four places (to 139th position) in the 2007 world
    press freedom index. Seven journalists are currently in prison in
    Azerbaijan.


    http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?i d_article=24213
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