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Broadcaster Shut-Down, Office Evictions Stir Free-Speech Concerns In

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  • Broadcaster Shut-Down, Office Evictions Stir Free-Speech Concerns In

    BROADCASTER SHUT-DOWN, OFFICE EVICTIONS STIR FREE-SPEECH CONCERNS IN AZERBAIJAN
    Rovshan Ismayilov

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Nov 27 2006

    An Azerbaijani state commission's November 24 decision to suspend
    broadcasts by independent television and radio station ANS, followed
    within hours by the court-ordered eviction of pro-opposition media
    outlets and an opposition party from their offices in Baku, has raised
    concerns of freedom of speech in Azerbaijan. While the government
    has not yet commented on recent developments, Western embassies and
    international organizations have strongly condemned the moves.

    The decisions bring to a head two long-standing tussles between
    the government and independent media outlets. The first, with ANS,
    Azerbaijan's first privately owned broadcaster, focused on the
    company's right to rebroadcast foreign-produced news items. [For
    details, see the Eurasia Insight archive]. The second involves a
    long-standing fight between the State Property Committee and several
    pro-opposition tenants of a building in downtown Baku, including the
    opposition Azadliq (Freedom) newspaper, the pro-opposition news agency
    Turan and the Popular Front Party of Azerbaijan, the country's largest
    opposition party, over their right to occupy a downtown building free
    of charge. [For details, see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    The ruling on ANS came first. The National Radio and Television Council
    (NRTC) decided not to prolong ANS TV and ANS CM radio's broadcast
    licenses. An NRTC press release cited "systematic violations by ANS of
    the requirements of the law on broadcasting and not paying fines" as
    the reason for the decision to suspend the company's broadcast license.

    Despite their ongoing dispute with the NRTC, ANS executives say that
    the decision was unexpected. The council did not issue an official
    warning to ANS executives that it was considering suspending the
    stations' broadcast licenses. Both ANS television and radio continued
    to broadcast until 3:20 pm on November 24, when all satellite and
    regular broadcast frequencies were cut off. The decision to stop ANS'
    broadcasting was taken two days before the company's 15th anniversary
    as Azerbaijan's first independent television and radio broadcaster.

    Several hours after the decision, law enforcement agency and Ministry
    of Communications representatives appeared at ANS offices and began
    to dismantle the company's transmitters and antennas. Access to ANS'
    satellite broadcasting equipment was also blocked, while policemen
    surrounded the company's headquarters.

    In response to the NRTC's decision, ANS argued that the failure
    of a court to rule on the broadcast suspension makes the NRTC's
    license suspension illegal. "Such actions by the NRTC cause damage to
    Azerbaijan's international image as a democratic state," a statement
    issued by the media company read. The company said that it intends
    to use "all means" to restore its broadcasts, and expressed hope
    that President Ilham Aliyev would intervene on ANS' behalf to find
    "a fair solution."

    "ANS was never involved in politics and I believe that the people
    who took this decision will change it," commented Vahid Mustafayev,
    president of the ANS Group of Companies, at a press conference on the
    evening of November 24. "We will appeal to President Ilham Aliyev and
    I hope he will be able to restore justice." A source within ANS, who
    asked to remain anonymous, told EurasiaNet that the company had turned
    down an offer from opposition parties to hold joint demonstrations
    against the license suspension.

    Other media organizations that have voiced criticism of the government
    are now under pressure, too. A few hours after ANS was silenced,
    the Azerbaijani Economic Court ordered the immediate eviction of
    all tenants from the building involved in the Azadlig newspaper's
    dispute with the State Property Committee. While representatives from
    Western embassies and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe (OSCE) looked on, more than 50 policemen, led by Baku Deputy
    Police Chief Yashar Aliyev, blocked the building until November 25,
    when trucks from the State Property Committee arrived to remove
    the organizations' property to office space on the outskirts of Baku
    designated by the State Property Committee. The building is now empty,
    sealed up and guarded by police.

    The decisions, however, are unlikely to put either dispute to rest.

    Already, the NRTC has announced plans to accept bids from other
    interested parties for ownership of ANS' television and radio broadcast
    frequencies. "Next week we [the NRTC] will announce a new contest
    for the ANS TV and ANS CM frequencies," the council's chairman,
    Nushiravan Maharramov, told the APA news agency on November 25. "Even
    if ANS applies for these frequencies again, the preference will be
    given to other candidates. The NRTC has the authority to do this."

    The international community responded immediately to the NRTC's
    decision. Ambassador Maurizio Pavesi, head of the OSCE's mission
    in Baku, said in a statement that he was "perplexed as to why the
    decision, which was issued in the absence of any definitive reasoning,
    should come into force immediately." The independent television and
    radio company "has always been considered by international observers
    as the most objective in the country," he added.

    The United States embassy, calling for reconsideration of the decision,
    termed the closure of ANS a "serious blow to . . . freedom of the
    media" that has placed "Azerbaijan's commitments on democratic
    development and freedom of speech under . . . question." The German
    Embassy, speaking on behalf of the European Union, described the EU as
    "very concerned," noting that it is "actively seeking an explanation
    from the [Azerbaijani] government."

    Azerbaijani media and analysts have reacted more strongly, with some
    arguing that the decision to shut down ANS and evict the Azadliq
    building occupants was made at the highest levels of the government.

    "I am shocked by this news. I have no words to explain what is
    going on in this country," commented Elchin Shikhlinsky, chairman
    of Azerbaijan's Journalists Union and editor-in-chief of the
    Russian-language daily Zerkalo (Mirror), about the ANS decision. "I
    did not hear a competent and reasoned explanation for this action. I
    have more and more pessimism about the future of freedom of speech
    in Azerbaijan."

    One observer of the Azadlig building eviction process, which did not
    involve the use of force, commented that intervention by a United
    States Embassy official was required before police would allow the
    pro-opposition Turan news agency to remove their property from the
    State Property Committee-designated office space on the outskirts of
    Baku to downtown offices already rented by Turan.

    "We expected the court's decision and had already rented another
    office in downtown. So, we were going to move our property there. But
    the police did not allow it," said Turan reporter Farid Gahramanov.

    "They did not allow us to move it until the US embassy representative
    called the police. Only after that we were able to rent new trucks
    and return our staff back downtown."

    Both ANS and parties involved in the Azadlig building dispute have
    said that they plan to fight the decisions. A hunger strike conducted
    by protestors at the Azadlig building since November 9 resulted in
    the hospitalisation of Azadlig Editor Ganimat Zahidov on November 24.

    Government officials have not issued statements on either decision
    as yet. Speaking with a group of editors from the independent and
    opposition press (Zerkalo, Echo, Yeni Musavat, Baki Khabar, Novoe
    Vremya, Gun Seher, Azadlig and Turan news agency) on November 24 before
    the ANS license suspension, US Ambassador Anne E. Derse stated that
    she had discussed freedom of the press issues with President Aliyev
    on November 23, and had urged a dialogue between the government and
    independent media to resolve existing differences.

    While editors at the meeting reportedly expressed interest in the idea,
    the government has not responded.

    Meanwhile, in the absence of official explanations for the November
    24 decisions, observers are struggling to explain the authorities'
    hasty actions.

    Some conjecture that the measures taken against ANS and the Azadlig
    building occupants may be designed to strengthen the government's
    position for taking a potentially unpopular position during the
    expected November 28 meeting between Azerbaijani President Ilham
    Aliyev and Armenian President Robert Kocharian on the sidelines of a
    Commonwealth of Independent States summit in Minsk. The two leaders
    have agreed to discuss proposals for a resolution to their dispute
    over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh. [For background see
    the Eurasia Insight archive]

    "Maybe they [the government] are getting ready to sign any agreement
    with Armenia on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution," suggested
    journalists' union chief Elchin Shikhlinsky. "And we know that ANS,
    which was the most popular television in the country, always was
    strongly against any defeatist peace with Armenia."

    Ilgar Mammadov, a Baku-based political analyst, shares this point of
    view. "There is no logical justification for these actions [of the
    authorities]. The only explanation is an upcoming possible breakthrough
    on the Karabakh peace process," he said.

    Another analyst, Eldar Namazov, a former opposition movement leader and
    former advisor to the late President Heidar Aliyev, holds a different
    view, however. "I do not expect the signing of any peace agreement
    between Azerbaijan and Armenia," he said. "What happened with ANS and
    the Azadlig building is just the reinforcement of authoritarianism
    in Azerbaijan."

    Instead of Karabakh, Namazov points to a recently floated proposal
    that the constitution be amended to extend the president's term
    from five to seven years. [For background, see the Eurasia Insight
    archive]. "And the November 24 events are another attempt by the
    ruling elite to secure power for a longer period."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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