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No Country For Human Rights: Azerbaijan's Increasingly Intolerant Re

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  • No Country For Human Rights: Azerbaijan's Increasingly Intolerant Re

    NO COUNTRY FOR HUMAN RIGHTS: AZERBAIJAN'S INCREASINGLY INTOLERANT REGIME - THE NEW YORK TIMES

    17:54 * 22.10.14

    By Gunay Ismayilova and Samir Kazimli

    As human rights defenders, we must report that our own situation in
    Azerbaijan has been deteriorating fast.

    Two years ago, human rights groups across Europe worried that
    holding theEurovision Song Contest in our country would only prop up
    Azerbaijan's increasingly intolerant regime. Now their fears have been
    confirmed. Just in the past year, we have seen a cascading series of
    arrests of human rights defenders on trumped-up charges.

    So imagine our dismay on hearing about Europe's latest approach to
    our country: The Council of Europe itself is holding a conference
    this Saturday and Sunday in Baku, on how to implement the European
    Convention on Human Rights. Those attending reportedly will include
    Judge Dean Spielmann, the president of the European Court of Human
    Rights, the very institution that is supposed to be the bulwark of
    our cause in Europe.

    It would be humorous were it not so tragic.

    There is only one reason for the choice of venue: It's Azerbaijan's
    turn, according to its place in the alphabet, to hold the chairmanship
    of the Council of Europe's Committee of Ministers. By all other
    measures, the decision makes no sense at all.

    Many leaders of the already limited number of independent
    nongovernmental organizations here are now in prison, most of them
    on sham charges of "illegal entrepreneurship," abuse of power, state
    treason and tax evasion.

    Our European visitors probably won't get to see the 58-year-old human
    rights defender (and founding director of the Peace and Democracy
    Institute in Baku) Leyla Yunus. She was arrested on July 30 on charges
    of treason and other counts her lawyers say are fraudulent. Or her
    husband, Arif Yunus, 59, who was arrested six days later. On Sept. 23,
    according to the lawyers, Ms. Yunus was beaten by a guard at the
    Kurdakhany detention center, where she is being held.

    The Europeans probably won't visit Intigam Aliyev, either; he is a
    lawyer and human rights defender who was detained and charged on Aug.

    8. There are serious concerns about the health of both Ms. Yunus and
    Mr. Aliyev, and indications that neither is receiving the medical
    attention they require.

    Nor will the Europeans meet Rasul Jafarov, a young pro-democracy
    activist arrested on Aug. 2. He was about to kick off a "Sports for
    Rights" campaign protesting plans to hold the first-ever European
    Games in Baku in 2015, an event that has support from the international
    corporations BP, P&G, Tissot and others.

    Journalists have also been systematically targeted. Last month,
    a criminal case was opened against the investigative journalist
    and corruption fighter Khadija Ismayilova (no relationship to the
    co-author of this article), after she spoke in Strasbourg, France,
    at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. She is now
    at risk of joining almost a dozen other journalists and bloggers who
    are already in prison.

    Then there is Anar Mammadli, the recipient of the Council of Europe's
    Vaclav Havel Human Rights Prize. Sadly, our friend, who was honored
    just last month for his work on monitoring elections and other
    democratic rights, is currently serving a five-and-a-half-year prison
    sentence, handed down in May.

    All in all, Azerbaijan seems a particularly strange place to discuss
    the business of how better to implement human rights.

    A string of recent European Court judgments has taken Azerbaijan
    to task for a long list of serious rights abuses, including police
    torture and brutality, detention of political opponents, imprisonment
    of journalists, interference in elections and refusal to register
    legitimate civil society groups.

    Rather than uphold the principles of the European Convention on
    Human Rights, Azerbaijan has continued to use the law as a political
    club to silence critics. As in many countries whose economies run
    on oil revenues, Azerbaijan's corrupt ruling elite has no interest
    in implementing the rule of law, which would lead to its inevitable
    fall from power.

    In our view, it is a travesty that the Council of Europe is sponsoring
    a conference about human rights in Azerbaijan. The event will only
    be used cynically by the state-controlled media to add legitimacy to
    the current government, which tramples the rights that the Council
    of Europe seeks to defend.

    And still, the diplomats and European judges are planning to come.

    Gunay Ismayilova works with the Institute for Reporters' Freedom and
    Safety, and Samir Kazimli with the Election Monitoring and Democracy
    Studies Center.

    http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/10/22/azer-regime/

    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/23/opinion/azerbaijans-increasingly-intolerant-regime.html



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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