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Human Rights Abuses Spark Demands To Boycott Eurovision In Azerbaija

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  • Human Rights Abuses Spark Demands To Boycott Eurovision In Azerbaija

    HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES SPARK DEMANDS TO BOYCOTT EUROVISION IN AZERBAIJAN

    ARMENPRESS
    APRIL 4, 2012
    BAKU

    BAKU, 4 APRIL, ARMENPRESS: Calls are growing for an international
    boycott of this year's Eurovision song contest in Azerbaijan over
    concerns about the country's poor human rights record and its clampdown
    on dissidents, reports Armenpress.

    Khadija Ismayil, one of the country's few remaining investigative
    journalists, revealed last week that she had been the target of a
    blackmail attempt. Ismayil, who has been working on stories exposing
    dubious business deals in the oil-rich republic with connections to the
    ruling elite, has been called an "enemy of the state" by Azerbaijan's
    president, Ilham Aliyev.

    "On 7 March I received a letter to my home address with threats and
    blackmail," she said.

    "It includes some photos of an intimate nature and a threat. It
    says that if I don't stop working I will be hugely embarrassed. This
    threat is not a surprise; I've been doing investigative journalism
    for a long time.

    "My investigation included the secret business of President Aliyev's
    family and documented the facts of corruption on the highest level,
    disclosed the offshore businesses of members of the ruling family."

    Amnesty's latest report on the country reveals concerns about a ban
    on opposition rallies and meetings, and the detention of journalists.

    Human Rights Watch last month criticised forcible evictions of people
    from their homes, sometimes without warning or in the middle of the
    night, to make way for "city beautification" ahead of Eurovision,
    which will be staged late in May.

    There have been calls in the European parliament and from human rights
    activists and Azerbaijani bloggers for a boycott of the contest.

    Neighbouring Armenia has already withdrawn from Eurovision because
    of its worsening relations with Baku, Iceland's broadcasters are
    considering pulling out, and there have been boycott calls from
    campaigners in Holland, France and Ireland.

    John Dalhuisen, deputy director of Amnesty International's Europe and
    Central Asia programme, said: "Azerbaijan cannot credibly present
    itself as a rights-respecting democracy so long as it continues to
    beat up and imprison peaceful protesters.

    "The regime must realise that hosting glitzy events such as Eurovision
    won't mask the extent of the country's human rights violations. They
    need drastically to change their attitude to peaceful protest."

    Azerbaijan, which won the right to host Eurovision after winning the
    contest in 2011, has given the organisers, the European Broadcasting
    Union, a guarantee that foreign delegates will be secure and free
    from any censorship during their stay.


    From: Baghdasarian
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