Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

HRW: Azerbaijan: Stop Harassing Rights Defender

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • HRW: Azerbaijan: Stop Harassing Rights Defender

    Human Rights Watch
    May 2 2014


    Azerbaijan: Stop Harassing Rights Defender

    Hollande, Council of Europe Leadership Should Speak Out

    Berlin) - Azerbaijani authorities are harassing and engaging in
    oppressive tactics against a prominent human rights defender. The
    Azerbaijani government should end the harassment against rights
    defender Leyla Yunus and her husband, Arif.

    Azerbaijan's international partners, in particular fellow members of
    the Council of Europe, should make clear that continued harassment of
    human rights defenders, and the Yunuses in particular, will affect
    their relationships with Azerbaijan's government.

    "Leyla and Arif Yunus are among many people the Azerbaijani
    authorities find 'inconvenient,'" said Rachel Denber, deputy Europe
    and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "No government should
    be allowed to get away with targeting human rights defenders while
    it's seeking to boost its international prestige."

    On April 28, 2014, Baku airport police prevented the couple from
    leaving the country, confiscated their passports, and subjected them
    to a 24-hour ordeal that led to Arif Yunus's hospitalization. The
    prosecutor's office subsequently designated them as witnesses in a
    treason investigation against Azerbaijani journalist and civic
    activist Rauf Mirgadirov, who was deported from Turkey on April 19 and
    then arrested in Baku.

    The authorities should immediately return the Yunuses' passports and
    stop the arbitrary interference with their freedom of movement and
    right to leave their country, Human Rights Watch said. There is no
    provision in Azerbaijani law to bar people who are designated
    witnesses in a criminal investigation from leaving the country.

    President Francois Hollande of France is scheduled to visit Azerbaijan
    on May 11 and 12, and it is expected that Leyla Yunus may meet with
    him when he is in Baku. In 2013 the French ambassador for human rights
    awarded Yunus France's Legion of Honor award (Ordre National de la
    Légion d'honneur) - the highest French decoration - for her courage
    and promotion of human rights. Hollandeshould insist on seeing the
    Yunuses while in Baku and make clear that their freedom, and
    Mirgadirov's, is of great importance to him, and to French-Azerbaijani
    relations.

    On May 15, Azerbaijan will take over the rotating chairmanship of the
    Council of Europe, Europe's foremost human rights body. The body's
    secretary-general, Thorbjorn Jagland, should express urgent concern
    about harassment of the Yunuses and the treatment of Mirgadirov, as
    well as the wider crackdown on civic activists and journalists under
    way for the past year in Azerbaijan, which has intensified in recent
    months.

    "The harassment against the Yunuses is only the latest example of the
    Azerbaijani government's efforts to muzzle critics," Denber said. "The
    Council of Europe's top leadership should step in immediately and say
    that this conduct is utterly inappropriate for a government that is
    about to take over the organization's chairmanship."

    Leyla Yunus is the director of the Institute for Peace and Democracy,
    a human rights group formed in 1995 that has focused on combating
    politically motivated prosecutions, corruption, violence against
    women, and unlawful house evictions. It has also been involved in
    projects aimed at improving people-to-people dialogue between people
    in Azerbaijan and Armenia, against the background of the unresolved
    conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, a primarily ethnic Armenian-populated
    autonomous enclave in Azerbaijan.

    In the April 28 incident, airport police at about 11 p.m. stopped the
    Yunuses from boarding a plane, searched their belongings, and
    confiscated a laptop computer and documents. Yunus told Human Rights
    Watch that the National Security Ministry and officials from the
    prosecutor general's office questioned the couple at the airport,
    refusing to allow their lawyer access to them.

    At about 3 a.m., law enforcement agents accompanied the couple to
    their apartment and attempted to search it. Because the officials
    refused to show Leyla Yunus a search warrant, she refused to allow
    them to enter. During the exchange at the apartment, Arif Yunus, who
    had been hospitalized the week before with high blood pressure and a
    heart condition, fell ill and was rushed to the hospital again. He is
    in intensive care.

    The next morning, after a sleepless night, Leyla Yunus was questioned
    for hours at the prosecutor general's office, this time in the
    presence of her lawyer. At about 4 p.m., she was released without
    charge. That evening police, producing a warrant, searched her home
    and her office, confiscating, among other things, books by Arif Yunus,
    a book in Armenian, a photocopy of Mirgadirov's ID, and computers.

    Yunus's lawyer told Human Rights Watch that all of the prosecutor's
    questions related to their work on building dialogue with Armenians
    and her relationship with Mirgadirov, who is facing charges of spying
    for Armenia in connection with trips he made to Armenia, Georgia, and
    Turkey in 2008 and 2009.

    Mirgadirov had been involved in "second track diplomacy" between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. He participated in
    meetings organized by nongovernmental organizations in Armenia aimed
    at improving people-to-people dialogue between the conflicting sides.
    The Institute for Peace and Democracy co-organized some of those
    programs.

    In an April 29 news article, the press service for the prosecutor
    general's office said that the Yunuses were witnesses to a criminal
    investigation and alleged that they had previously ignored an attempt
    to be served with an interrogation summons and follow-up phone calls
    asking them to appear for questioning.

    Yunus's lawyer told Human Rights Watch that on April 24 an official
    came to the Yunuses' home to deliver a summons to appear for
    interrogation in several hours, which Leyla Yunus refused, saying she
    had not received adequate notice. Another person close to the case
    told Human Rights Watch that this incident had resulted in Arif
    Yunus's earlier hospitalization with hypertension.

    Azerbaijan has a long history of using bogus charges to imprison its
    critics, including on treason charges, Human Rights Watch said.

    In August 2011, violating a court injunction, the Baku authorities
    demolished without warning a building owned by Leyla Yunus as part of
    a government land clearance to make way for a park and business area.
    The building housed the Institute for Peace and Democracy and two
    other human rights groups. Yunus had repeatedly criticized the
    government's redevelopment plans for the area.

    "The ordeal the authorities subjected the Yunuses to bears all the
    marks of a government getting ready to pounce on two people it has
    long had in its crosshairs," Denber said. "The government needs to
    back off and both President Hollande and the Council of Europe need to
    make that clear."

    http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/05/01/azerbaijan-stop-harassing-rights-defender

Working...
X