Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

U.S., OSCE express concern at conviction of opposition activists in

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

  • U.S., OSCE express concern at conviction of opposition activists in

    U.S., OSCE express concern at conviction of opposition activists in Azerbaijan

    AP Worldstream;
    Jul 13, 2006

    The United States and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe expressed concern on Thursday that three Azerbaijani opposition
    youth activists convicted of attempting to forcefully seize power in
    this ex-Soviet republic had not received a fair trial.

    On Wednesday a court in the capital, Baku, sentenced Ruslan Bashirli
    to seven years in prison, Ramin Tagiyev to four years and Said Nuriyev
    to a suspended sentence of five years.

    The U.S. Embassy said in a statement it was "deeply concerned" by
    indications that their legal rights had not been respected.

    The OSCE, a trans-Atlantic democracy and security watchdog, echoed
    the criticism, saying that the trial "fell short of international
    standards in upholding rule of law."

    The three members of the Yeni Fikir, or New Thought, youth group were
    arrested in August and September in the run-up to last year's disputed
    parliamentary elections and charged with attempting to stage a coup.

    Yeni Fikir's leader Bashirli and his two deputies, Tagiyev and Nuriyev,
    were accused of cooperating with intelligence services from Armenia,
    Azerbaijan's longtime foe.

    Their lawyer Osman Kyazomov said Thursday that they planned to appeal
    to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France.

    Human rights groups and the opposition have accused the authoritarian
    government in Azerbaijan of using the case to crack down on its
    political opponents. All three denied the charges.

    President Ilham Aliev's government maintained its grip on parliament
    in November's elections, which handed the ruling party a majority in
    the 125-seat legislature with the support of government-affiliated
    independent lawmakers.

    Western observers criticized the polls as flawed, but the United
    States and European countries have not endorsed opposition demands
    for new elections, fearful of upsetting stability in the oil-rich
    Caspian Sea nation, which borders Iran.
Working...
X