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  • Are Rumors Replacing News in Azerbaijan?

    EurasiaNet.org
    Jan 30 2015

    Azerbaijan: Are Rumors Replacing News in Azerbaijan?

    January 30, 2015 - 1:33pm, by Nargiz Rashid


    The media climate is growing so grim in Azerbaijan that some observers
    are reminded of an old Soviet-era adage that just about the only safe
    topic for public discussion is the weather.

    A government crackdown over the past year, carried out in the wake of
    the Euromaidan revolution that toppled the government in Ukraine, has
    muzzled independent voices and public critics of President Ilham
    Aliyev's administration in Azerbaijan.

    The crackdown is continuing unabated. Earlier in January, the
    alternative news site Mediaforum.az announced its closure. It blamed
    complicated new requirements for receiving grants; rules, it alleged,
    had prevented the site from receiving financing. The online entity
    Channel 13, which once posted some 15 video stories a day, also has
    shut down.

    "Our bank accounts were frozen and we could not receive money from our
    donors," Channel 13's former general manager, Anar Orujov, told
    EurasiaNet.org. "We had to stop working." Orujov now studies abroad.

    Other outlets have been forced to close offices in Baku and shift
    operations outside Azerbaijan.

    One of the main sources of in-depth news about Azerbaijan, the
    US-government-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFERL), now
    covers the country only out of its headquarters in Prague. In late
    December 2014, representatives of the general prosecutor's office
    raided and shut RFERL's Baku bureau. Some 40 reporters were forcibly
    detained and interrogated without the presence of a lawyer.

    Prior to the closure of RFERL's bureau, Berlin-based Meydan TV, an
    outlet known for outspoken criticism of the Aliyev administration,
    opted to close its own Baku office in an effort to shield its
    reporters from official harassment.

    The action against RFERL followed the December 5 arrest of RFERL
    investigative reporter Khadija Ismayilova on charges of inciting an
    attempted suicide. [Editor's note: Ismayilova also has worked for
    EurasiaNet.org]. Ismayilova and international media watchdogs maintain
    the arrest was politically motivated. On January 27, a court extended
    Ismayilova's pre-trial detention by two months, until April 5.

    Officials and government supporters dispute the notion that the Aliyev
    administration strives to cut off the free flow of information. Zahid
    Oruj, an unaffiliated MP who tends to support ruling Yeni Azerbaijan
    Party positions, insisted that foreign-funded media organizations such
    as RFERL do not enjoy a sufficient level of popularity among Azeri
    listeners to be a concern to the government. Oruj also claimed that
    the new restrictions on foreign financing for non-governmental
    organizations are intended promote transparency.

    Meanwhile, at a recent news conference in Berlin, President Aliyev
    declared that freedom of speech in Azerbaijan is "guaranteed 100
    percent."

    To buttress their claims, Aliyev and others point out that roughly
    three-quarters of Azerbaijan's roughly 9.42 million citizens have
    Internet access. Outside reports on Azerbaijani media, however,
    contend that while greater freedom exists in social media, residents
    outside of urban centers still have relatively limited access to the
    Internet. And prosecution for criticism of the government, even on
    social media networks, is an ever-present risk.

    Despite the inhospitable operating environment, Mehman Aliyev,
    director of the Turan news agency, a regular government critic, holds
    out hope that free speech will prevail. Azerbaijani citizens widely
    use social media to share the views of those who think independently
    from the government, he noted. A video of expatriate Azerbaijani
    blogger Habib Muntazir shouting in Berlin at President Aliyev, calling
    on the president to free political prisoners is one case in point.
    "There will be new alternatives to emerge," predicted Turan's Aliyev.
    Closing the country's "information space" will "not be possible."

    While the Internet may indeed be untamable, that's not stopping the
    government from trying to harness it, according to independent
    political analyst Zardusht Alizade. "There are lots of new websites
    that have emerged and are mostly funded by the government itself to
    fill in the information gap and manipulate public opinion," Alizade
    said. The government's goal with these websites, he claimed, is to "to
    manipulate information as was done during the Soviet era."

    Under the circumstances, Internet-borne rumors can sometimes gain the
    currency of news. This trend is particularly noticeable concerning
    developments on the frontline separating Azerbaijani and Armenian
    forces, said Aynur Elgunesh, a journalist who is now at Meydan TV
    after working for 17 years in Azerbaijani print media. Although a
    ceasefire technically governs the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, Armenian
    and Azerbaijani troops routinely engage in firefights along the
    frontline.

    "Rumors from the frontline have become, I'd say, more credible for
    readers than [reports from] news media." said Elgunesh.

    Editor's note:
    Nargiz Rashid is a pseudonym for a freelance journalist who
    specializes in covering Azerbaijan.


    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/71846

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