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CPJ: Azerbaijan goes to the polls amid muzzled media and blocked websites

April 7, 2018 By administrator

Azerbaijan goes to the polls

Azerbaijan goes to the polls

By Gulnoza Said/CPJ Europe and Central Asia Research Associate

Committee to Protect Journalists When it comes to silencing critics, Azerbaijani authorities have been industrious and methodical. Ahead of snap presidential elections scheduled for April 11, potential opposition candidates have been either jailed or barred from running, and the political landscape has been cleansed of virtually all formal
avenues of expressing dissent.Throwing journalists in jail, abducting them from abroad, accusing them of financial misdeeds, blocking websites, hacking social media accounts, imposing travel bans: this is not an exhaustive list of the tactics Ilham Aliyev’s government has used to try to ensure the independent media are muzzled and critical voices silenced.

 Azerbaijan ranks among the worst jailers of journalists in the world, with at least 10 behind bars on December 1, 2017, when CPJ conducted its annual prison census. But international pressure on Baku has had some impact.

Mehman Aliyev, who heads Turan, the last independent news agency in Azerbaijan, told CPJ he thinks that pressure from the US and international outcry over his arrest in August on tax evasion charges played a key role in his release.

Senator Richard Durbin introduced an amendment to the FY2018 State Department and Foreign Operations Appropriations Bill which instructed the State Department to bar Azerbaijani officials from entering the US if they were involved in Aliyev’s wrongful imprisonment.

Speaking to CPJ from Baku, Aliyev (no relation to the country’s president) said, “Senator Durbin’s amendment as well as pressure from other senators, including Marco Rubio, John McCain and Patrick Leahy, were directly responsible for my release.”

Aliyev added, “The amendment was passed on September 7. I had a court hearing the following day. When the authorities heard of the amendment, the security services told me President Aliyev had just heard about my case and was concerned.”

His early release on September 11–and that of Kanal 13 manager Aziz Orujov, who according to reports was freed on April 5 after the Supreme Court handed down a suspended sentence–are the first releases since May 2016 when prominent investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova and several others were set free after international advocacy efforts, including by CPJ.

Although Turan continues to operate, Aliyev said that its staff of 15, including seven Baku-based reporters, are too few to cover the country of nearly 10 million.

“The situation is very difficult,” Aliyev said. “We are the only ones left. They haven’t destroyed us yet because the amendment is still there.”

Many of the country’s journalists choose to live and broadcast from abroad to avoid arrest or harassment, but Azerbaijan authorities have tried to silence independent voices beyond its borders.

In May 2017, prominent investigative journalist Afgan Mukhtarli disappeared in Tbilisi, Georgia, where he was living in exile with his family. He emerged two days later in a border detention center in Azerbaijan. On January 12, a Balakan district court sentenced Mukhtarli to six years in prison on charges of illegally crossing the border, bringing contraband with him, and resisting authorities, according to CPJ research. Reports in early April said the journalist’s health is deteriorating. Mukhtarli’s appeal against the sentence has been postponed repeatedly in a move that some activists said they believe is to ensure the hearing is not held until after the election.

Previously a safe haven for many of Azerbaijan’s opposition members and independent journalists, neighboring Georgia had started to feel dangerous as rumors spread about Georgian law enforcement allegedly collaborating with their Azerbaijani counterparts in Mukhtarli’s case. Officials in Tbilisi said they would investigate the journalist’s case, but as of early April no further updates have been made public. Mukhtarli’s wife, Leyla Mustafayeva, also a freelance journalist, said in an interview with the Rory Peck Trust in February that “press freedom in our country steps backwards and further backwards each year.” Fearing for her safety, Mustafayeva said she had to seek refuge in Germany.

“No place feels safe anymore,” said Fikret Huseynli, head of the Amsterdam bureau of opposition-leaning online television channel Turan TV (a separate organization from the Turan news agency). Huseynli, who has lived in the Netherlands since 2008 and has citizenship there, covers the activities of the Azerbaijani opposition in exile and suspected corruption in the Azerbaijani government. He has also been critical of the president.

Huseynli told CPJ that his perception of safety beyond Azerbaijan’s borders changed after he visited Ukraine in October 2017 to explore opportunities for opening a Turan TV bureau in Kiev. Huseynli was about to board a plane when Ukrainian border service detained him “while Azeri-speaking men were watching,” he said. He was released on bail on October 27 but Ukraine’s prosecutor general’s office confiscated his passport. Then, on March 5–two hours after Huseynli spoke with CPJ–unknown men attacked the journalist in the Kiev apartment he was renting.

On April 2, a judge ruled against extraditing the journalist and said he should be allowed to move freely. However, earlier that day a Kiev prosecutor took Huseynli’s passport from a court secretary and has refused to hand it back, according to reports. Huseynli is due to appear before a Kiev court again on April 12–one day after Azerbaijan’s election.

The Azerbaijani government also tried to file a criminal defamation complaintagainst two French journalists after one of them called Azerbaijan a “dictatorship” in a broadcast. A French court rejected the defamation complaint in November, according to reports.

Critical journalists who remain active inside the country face daily restrictions. Since her release from prison nearly two years ago, Ismayilova has had her bank accounts frozen and her electricity and internet connections cut when she tries to participate in international conferences or accept prizes via Skype, according to media reports and her social media posts. Ismayilova’s appeals to lift her travel ban were denied, and authorities prevented her from traveling to Turkey to see her mother before she died in early March.

When contacted by CPJ for comment about conditions for the press Mushfig Aleskerli, deputy chairman of Azerbaijan’s Press Council, asked for questions to be sent via email, but as of April 5 the self-regulatory media authority known for its pro-government stance, had not responded to the emailed questions.

The government sometimes offers a “carrot” approach to the press, including a program the president launched in 2013 to give free apartments to journalists. The program has been criticized by observers and journalists as an attempt to buy loyalty.

Aliyev from the Turan news agency, told CPJ he has been approached to nominate reporters for free apartments but repeatedly refuses to do so. He said being given an apartment is the equivalent to being handed a bribe and goes against professional ethics. Aliyev added that there are no economic incentives for new independent media outlets to spring up in Azerbaijan.

“The authorities created an environment in which no media outlet can survive without government subsidies. If there is any media start-up that hopes to float without government funding, solely on advertising, it will either die out on its own or the government will strangle it,” he said.

With the election just a few days away, Alex Raufoglu, a Washington, D.C.-based Azerbaijani journalist who contributes to Turan, told CPJ more pressure should be put on Baku.

“The international community should not only continue putting strong pressure on Aliyev’s regime but step it up ahead of the elections, because once re-elected for another seven-year term–and I see no obstacles to that – Aliyev will listen to his foreign partners even less,” Raufoglu said.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, POLLS

Ukraine prosecutors urged to return Azerbaijani journalist’s passport

April 5, 2018 By administrator

Azerbaijan Journalist Fikret Huseynli

Azerbaijan Journalist Fikret Huseynli

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has called on Ukrainian authorities to “immediately” return the Dutch passport of a journalist who fled his homeland of Azerbaijan a decade ago, and stop any extradition procedures against him.

In a statement on April 4, the New York-based media watchdog urged Kyiv’s regional prosecutor’s office to comply with a court’s ruling that Fikret Huseynli be allowed to move freely.

“Ukraine must not succumb to the demands of Azerbaijan’s authoritarian regime, which is notorious for persecuting critics both at home and abroad,” CPJ Europe and Central Asia Program Coordinator Nina Ognianova said, according to RFE/RL.

On April 2, a Kyiv district court judge ruled that the journalist should not be extradited to Azerbaijan or have his movements restricted.

 Earlier, Kyiv prosecutor Serhiy Ostapets took Huseynli’s passport from a court secretary and left the courtroom without waiting to hear the court decision, according to the Ukrainian Helsinki Human Rights Union.

Huseynli, a correspondent for the independent Azerbaijani online television channel Turan, fled to the Netherlands in early 2008 after he was stabbed, beaten, and left for dead by unknown assailants in Baku in 2006. He was later granted political asylum by the Dutch government and obtained Dutch citizenship.

In October 2017, Ukrainian authorities stopped Huseynli from boarding a flight to Germany at Boryspil International Airport, seizing his documents under an Interpol red notice requested by the Azerbaijani government. It accused him of “crossing a border illegally” and “fraud.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Fikret Huseynli, Journalist

Who do pre-school kids in Artsakh and Azerbaijan consider foes? Video

March 17, 2018 By administrator

pre-school kids in Artsakh and Azerbaijan

pre-school kids in Artsakh and Azerbaijan

In early March, a video landed online depicting a lesson in one of Baku’s preschool educational centers during which children were taught to hate Armenians. The video was posted on the official Facebook page of the educational institution.

In the video, the teacher asks the children who the enemies of Azerbaijan are, and the kids pronounce “the Armenians” in unison. The teacher than asks why the Armenians are enemies, and the children say because “they killed all our soldiers”.

In response to the footage, the Ombudsman of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) decided to visit the kindergartens of the country and find out who the Karabakh children consider their enemies.

In Artsakh, children gave different answers: the Spiderman, the dragon, “Masha, because it torments the bear”, while some kids said they have no enemies.

At the end of the two-minute video, the children appealed to a boy named Yunis from the Baku kindergarten, who called the Armenians the enemies of Azerbaijan.

“Yunis, you are not my enemy,” they said.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Artsakh, Azerbaijan, pre-school kids

Azerbaijan key impediment to Armenia-Turkey normalization – Thomas de Waal

March 17, 2018 By administrator

Thomas de Waal

Thomas de Waal

Thomas de Waal, a British journalist and writer specializing in Eastern Europe and the Caucasus (Carnegie Endowment), considers Azerbaijan the biggest challenge to the  normalization of the Armenia-Turkey relations. In a recent interview with Tert.am, the analyst expressed a strong belief that the two countries would have longed reached an accord and opened border if not the Azerbaijani factor. “If it hadn’t been for Azerbaijan, I think that the [Zurich] Protocols – and the entire the process – would have worked. And the Armenian-Turkish border would be open now.

“Today Azerbaijan located very effectively in Ankara. Since the influence of Azerbaijan is growing in Turkey – SOCAR is a very powerful economic player – President [Ilham] Aliyev expresses solidarity with President [Recep Tayyip] Erdogan; during the coup, he very strongly supported [the Turkish leader].

So the relations have got really stronger between Azerbaijan and Turkey, which means that it’s [the Armenia-Turkey process] got very difficult now,” he said.Asked to comment on Armenia’s decision to annul the protocols only ten years after their signing, the expert said he is somewhat uncertain about President Serzh Sargsyan’s move. “I am not sure I understand why this was done. I think that it was possible to leave these protocols on the shelf for a better day. So I don’t think it was a constructive step. Having said that, I guess we have to wait for a moment when this whole process can begin again in a new geopolitical environment”

Addressing the Armenian leader’s earlier statement that the country would be willing to embark on a normalization process with a revised document, the analyst said he thinks that the everything would be easier if the two processes (Armenia-Turkey and Armenia-Azerbaijan) were separate. “But I see that they are closely linked as it’s very difficult to solve one without the other.”

Mr de Waal agreed that the international community lost its interest in the protocols after the signing in October 2009. “We certainly know that the international community likes a success story, so when the protocols were signed, everyone who was there – [US Secretary of State] Hillary Clinton, [High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy] Javier Solana and [Russian Foreign Minister Sergey] Lavrov – [were actively engaged in the process]. As it begins to fail, the international community unfortunately loses its interest,” he added.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Thomas de Waal, Turkey

Statement on 30th anniv. of Sumgait massacre circulates in OSCE

March 7, 2018 By administrator

Sumgait massacre

Sumgait massacre

A statement by the Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh) National Assembly on the 30th anniversary of the massacre of the Armenian population of the town of Sumgait was disseminated as an official document in the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) on March 2.

The move was achieved through the efforts of the Karabakh (Artsakh) foreign ministry.

The tragic event, which commenced on the eve of February 28th, 1988, resulted in the death of 200 Armenian men, women, and children and is considered to be the start of the Karabakh War.

Azeris planned and orchestrated the brutal massacres which targeted Armenians solely for their heritage following their peaceful protest calling for historic Armenian lands to be liberated.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Sumgait Massacre

Muslim Azerbaijan Dictator infiltrated First Unitarian Universalist Church of San Diego, as launching pad for disinformation against Christian Armenian of Karabakh

March 6, 2018 By administrator

February 23, 2018 – A Fabricated documentary film on the Khojaly  titled “Running from the Darkness” was screened at the First Unitarian Universalist Church of San Diego – the second largest city in the U.S. State of California – on February 21, 2018. The screening was jointly held by Azerbaijan’s Los Angeles Consulate General and San Diego-Baku Friendship Association.

The Entire Armenian people in the United States must mobilize and start an investigation on Rev. Ian Riddel of the First Unitarian Universalist Church of San Diego, Rabbi of the Temple Emanu-El Benjamin Fried, facilitating their church for Azerbaijan propaganda Against Armenian nation.

The Azerbaijani petrodollars have successfully turn Christians and Jews against the Armenian nation, Armenian must not allow this happen.

Here is the miss information

At the San Diego screening on February 21, 2018, Rev. Ian Riddel of the First Unitarian Universalist Church of San Diego, Rabbi of the Temple Emanu-El Benjamin Fried, Director of the Islamic Center of San Diego Imam Taha Hassane, Executive Director of the San Diego-Baku Friendship Association Martin Kruming, as well as American journalist and author of the book titled “Murder in the Mountains: War Crime in Khojaly and the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict” Raoul Lowery Contreras stressed the importance of this unique multi-faith commemorative event. Speakers noted that against the odds of many tragedies it had to endure in the early years of its independence, Azerbaijan has been able to preserve and strengthen its identity and model of interfaith tolerance and multiculturalism.

http://www.azconsulatela.org/News-and-Media/News-Archive/itemid/1416/Film-on-the-Khojaly-Genocide-was-screened-in-California

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Rev. Ian Riddel

Armenia blocks arms deal between Belarus and Azerbaijan

February 11, 2018 By administrator

Armenia has successfully blocked a major arms sale from Belarus to Azerbaijan, Belarusian and Armenian sources reported.

Azerbaijan has long been examining Polonez missiles manufactured in Belarus to counter Armenia’s acquisition in 2016 of Russian Iskander missiles. When Azerbaijan’s Minister of Defense Zakir Hasanov visited Minsk in October, the Ministry of Defense published photos of him in front of a Polonez. The Azerbaijani media reported that the transaction was almost complete. “Azerbaijan responds to Armenia with Lukashenko rockets”, headlined a Haqqin.az newspaper.

But now, a Belarusian military analyst, Aleksander Alesin, said that Armenia had succeeded in blocking this deal. “We wanted to sell Polonezos to Azerbaijan,” he told Russian newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda. “But Armenia, our partner in the CSTO, was against it,” he said, referring to the Collective Security Treaty Organization, the military alliance led by Russia. “The deal did not work, and probably the first [export] customer for the Polonez will be Kazakhstan,” said Alesin.

Sputnik Armenia reported that a source at the Armenian Ministry of Defense confirmed this information. “Our source pointed out that Armenia, at the highest level, stressed that the agreements that threatened the balance of power in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone were unacceptable,” said Sputnik. Since 1994, Armenian forces have been controlling the Karabakh territory and the seven surrounding districts of Azerbaijan, which Baku has pledged to take back, by force if necessary.

“In its words [from the source], Yerevan has turned a blind eye to the fact that Belarus has in recent years delivered a large quantity of weapons and military equipment, modernized combat aircraft and aircrafts. 25 and Su-27, but now Armenia has decided not to be quiet, “says Sputnik.

According to data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Belarus has also supplied Azerbaijan with T-72M1 tanks and various artillery pieces over the last ten years.

An Armenian analyst quoted by Sputnik said the deal could have collapsed for reasons unrelated to anything in Yerevan. “It is possible that the agreement was actually canceled,” said analyst Karen Vrtanesyan. “On the other hand, it is possible that this was never planned, since all the noise concerning the Polonez came from the Azerbaijani side. Even the Belarussian press relied on Azerbaijani sources for their statements. “

And it’s not as if Belarus had completely eliminated Azerbaijan. Elsewhere in the interview in Komsomolskaya Pravda, Alesin describes Azerbaijan as “one of the greatest partners of Belarus”. We sell them air defense systems, especially modernized Buk-MB air defense systems. In October, there was shooting [in Azerbaijan], Azerbaijanis were satisfied and there are prospects for increased cooperation. He added that Belarus will soon start selling “non-lethal weapons” to Armenia.

The battle between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Belarus is analogous to a bigger battle between the two enemies of the Caucasus and Russia. Russia has sold billions of dollars worth of arms to Azerbaijan, while adhering to a mutual defense pact with Armenia, and supplying weapons to Yerevan at cost.

Despite the apparent success of stopping the sale of Polonez, Armenia can still consider Belarus an unreliable partner. While Russia supplies arms to both sides, it does so in a way that keeps the process “under control,” said MPP Mihran Hakobyan of the ruling Republican party at Tert.am. “Belarus is not the kind of country to sell arms to Azerbaijan and later keep control of the whole process.”

Joshua Kucera

Eurasianet.org

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Azerbaijan, blocks

Artsakh Ombudsman: Azeri Infiltration attempt a response to Armenian President’s call for calmness

January 25, 2018 By administrator

The thwarted infiltration attempt undertaken by the Azerbaijani forces in the direction of Kuropatkino settlement in Artsakh’s Martuni region was a unique response to Armenian President’s call to the Azerbaijani MP to calm down, Artsakh Ombudsman Ruben Melikyan said in a Facebook post.

“They will not calm down as long as universal Armenophobia is dominating in Azerbaijan,” Melikyan said.

“We’ll have to be on the alert for a long time. We definitely have to be committed to the respect for human rights. I think this is one of the guarantees of our truthfulness and justness,” the Ombudsman said.

The comments come in the wake of a fresh infiltration attempt by the Azeri special forces in the southeastern direction of the line of contact between the armed forces of Artsakh and Azerbaijan.

At a Q&A session following his speech at PACE winter session, President Serzh Sargsyan asked Azerbaijani delegate Samid Seyidov to calm down and stop distorting his words

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Artsakh, Artsakh Ombudsman, Azerbaijan

Russia risking its ties with Armenia amid new military supplies to Azerbaijan – Styopa Safaryan

January 22, 2018 By administrator

Russia’s attitude to Armenia is just unacceptable as it continues supplying weapons to Azerbaijan in what is seen to further damage the bilateral relations. Kremlin should acknowledge the criticism over its policy will grow in Armenia over the time, Styopa Safaryan, founder of the Armenian Institute of International and Security Affairs (AIISA) told Panorama.am in an interview, commenting on a new batch of Russian military equipment delivered to Azerbaijan.

“It was especially right after the April war, when not only relations between Russia and Armenia were strained but the Russian military-technical cooperation with Azerbaijan was put on hold. It was no coincidence, Russian Deputy PM Dmitry Rogozin visited Baku weeks ago. The resumption of the military supplies was undoubtedly in the agenda of bilateral talks. I consider this extremely dangerous,” Safaryan said.

“Russia seems seeking a goal to lose all possible friends, at least it has chosen the route to that end. Armenia is one of the few countries that has always maintained solidarity with Russia in the foreign affairs – often to the detriment of own interest,” Safaryan added.

The political analyst recalled Armenia’s acknowledgment of Crimea as part of Russia, that endangered relations with Ukraine, saying: “We made that decision considering Russia’s role in our foreign policy and allied relations. In contrast, Russia’s actions appear unthankful.”

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Russia

Azerbaijan gets new supply of military equipment from Russia

January 20, 2018 By administrator

Azerbaijan has received a large batch of new military equipment and ammunition from Russia, Xinhua News Agency reports, citing the country’s Defense Ministry.

Russia has organized the delivery of modern military equipment in accordance with the intergovernmental deal between the two countries, the Ministry said.

The ammunition and other military equipment have been delivered to the port in Baku and will soon be transferred to the military units stationed on the front-line zone, read the official statement.

The Russia-made military equipment is said to have excellent fire capabilities and high terrain crossing ability in mountainous conditions.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Russian, weapons

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