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  • Azerbaijan: Arrests Bolster Media Concerns

    AZERBAIJAN: ARRESTS BOLSTER MEDIA CONCERNS
    Mina Muradova, a freelance reporter in Baku.

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Nov 13 2007

    These are not good times to be a pro-opposition editor in Azerbaijan.

    In the past two weeks, two editors at pro-opposition newspapers have
    received jail terms in criminal cases, and a third is facing possible
    prison time following his arrest on assault charges. The actions have
    set off a wave of criticism by ordinary Azerbaijanis as well as local
    and international observers.

    On November 10, opposition newspaper Azadlig (Freedom) editor-in-chief
    Ganimet Zahid was formally charged with hooliganism and inflicting
    minor bodily harm on a man who was accompanying a woman who claims
    Zahid insulted her. If convicted on both charges, Zahid could face
    a three-year minimum prison sentence.

    A local media watchdog organization, the Institute for Reporters'
    Freedom and Safety (IRFS), believes that the incident was a provocation
    designed to engineer trouble for the opposition journalist. "This
    is not the first time that Zahid, or his paper have been targeted by
    such ploys," IRFS Chairman Emin Huseynov said.

    "Azadlig newspaper journalists, including Zahid himself, have been
    the targets of physical attacks, kidnappings, bogus arrests and so on."

    In the run-up to Azerbaijan's 2005 parliamentary elections, the
    opposition editor was kidnapped, beaten and photographed nude. IRFS
    maintains that the November 7 incident is similar in its nature.

    Zahid said that he was walking to Azadlig's offices in Baku's
    Azerbaijan Publishing House when he was approached by an unknown
    young woman who began shouting at him that he had insulted and sworn
    at her. A young man with an athletic build then reportedly approached
    Zahid, and began beating the editor in retaliation for the woman's
    allegations. Zahid sustained minor injuries from the incident.

    Representatives of the Western diplomatic community in Baku have
    condemned Zahid's arrest. On November 12, US Ambassador Anne E. Derse
    noted that "in recent months" signs of an apparent "campaign . . .

    against opposition journalists" have been noted. She stressed that
    a free press is an important factor for democracy. "The campaign
    against the press may adversely affect democratic development,"
    local news agencies reported Derse as saying.

    IRFS' Huseynov believes that such incidents will only increase as
    Azerbaijan's presidential campaign gathers momentum.

    The government has so far eschewed comment on the arrest. On November
    12, however, Ali Ahmadov, the governing Yeni Azerbaijan Party's
    executive secretary, told reporters that support for "free media . .

    . does not mean that journalists can consider themselves above the
    law," the news agency Novosti-Azerbaijan reported.

    The October 30 sentencing of another journalist to an
    eight-and-a-half-year prison term by the Azerbaijani Court for
    Serious Crimes has helped fuel concerns about media rights and
    freedom of expression. Eynulla Fatullayev, the editor-in-chief of
    Realny Azerbaijan and Gundelik Azerbaijan, received the jail time
    for alleged tax evasion, inciting ethnic and religious hatred and a
    charge of terrorism. He was also fined 242,522 manats (about $285,300).

    The European Union issued a statement on November 8 that characterized
    the sentence as disproportionate. The case against Fatullayev began
    after Realny Azerbaijan published an article that alleged that
    Azerbaijani troops had been responsible in part for a massacre
    of ethnic Azeris during the war with Armenia over the breakaway
    region of Nagorno-Karabakh. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
    archive]. "Cases of this kind run counter to Azerbaijan's commitment
    to the freedoms of expression and opinion," the statement charged,
    underlining that both issues are "essential" for Azerbaijan's
    participation in the EU's European Neighborhood Policy, "as well as
    for the development of the partnership between Azerbaijan and the
    European Union."

    While Fatullayev's is the higher-profile case, another opposition
    editor has also recently been given jail time. On November 6, Ideal
    newspaper editor-in-chief Nazim Quliyev was sentenced to two-and-a-half
    years in prison on charges of defamation. He was found guilty of
    defamation and insults following a lawsuit filed by Natiq Jafarov, the
    head of the gas distribution department for Baku's Binaqadi District.

    Human rights activists, opposition politicians and pro-opposition
    journalists are trying to band together in order to combat what they
    contend is government pressure. On November 12, a working group was set
    up to advocate for Zahid's release, saying that "the opposition and
    media representatives must unify their efforts to fight for freedom
    of speech." The collective is preparing an appeal to Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev about Zahid's arrest, while two opposition
    members of parliament -- Igbal Agazade, leader of the Umid (Hope)
    Party, and Panah Huseynov, leader of the People's Party -- will
    petition the General Prosecutor's Office to set Zahid free on bail.

    The head of one pro-opposition news agency argues that parliament
    itself needs to become more pro-active on the freedom-of-speech issue,
    adding that the country could benefit from legislation that clearly
    defines the parameters of defamation. "There is a need to establish a
    group for the protection of freedom of speech since the situation with
    arrests of journalists and repression of media from the authorities
    in Azerbaijan has worsened," Turan Director Mehman Aliyev commented
    to reporters.

    In October, officials filed 50 lawsuits against newspapers and
    journalists on charges of slander, according to the Media Rights
    Institute, run by the international media support organization
    Internews. Courts imposed fines worth 250,300 manats (about $294,133)
    on media in connection with the cases, the Institute reported.

    For now, though, the government maintains that these court actions
    simply reflect the equitable application of the law, with no special
    privileges given to any group of people.

    "Freedom of speech and press is incompatible with insulting and
    libelling other people," Ali Hasanov, head of the presidential
    administration's public policy department, commented to Turan on
    November 9. "No one arrests or persecutes journalists in Azerbaijan.

    Journalists must know that no one is given a right to insult the
    dignity and honor of those other people."

    Hasanov, a close advisor to President Aliyev, has argued that
    despite appeals from the international community, "we cannot allow
    chaos." In the current situation, he added, without elaboration,
    criminal liability for defamation cannot be repealed. "The right of
    one person cannot be violated at the expense of another," he said.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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