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US State Dept ’deeply disturbed’ by Azerbaijan radio raid

December 27, 2014 By administrator

WASHINGTON – Agence France-Presse

n_76163_1The State Department is “deeply disturbed” by reports that prosecutors raided Azerbaijan’s local Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty office Dec. 26, a US official said, calling the motive for the episode “unclear.”

Prosecutors in the tightly-controlled Caucasus nation searched the offices of US-funded Radio Azadliq, confiscating equipment and computers while accompanied by armed police, its director Kenan Aliyev told AFP.

The search was the latest in a string of similar raids on foreign-funded groups in recent months.

“We are deeply disturbed by reports that employees of the RFE/RL bureau in Baku have been detained in their offices and questioned while the premises were searched by police,” a senior State Department official said.

“The reasons for the questioning and search are unclear.”

Those searching the office whose telephone and Internet lines were cut, said they had a court order to shut it down and forced journalists out, Aliyev said.

The move came after a prominent investigative reporter working for Radio Azadliq, Khadija Ismayilova, was arrested in early December and placed in pre-trial detention for two months.

“We call on the responsible authorities to respect Azerbaijan’s international commitment to protecting media freedom,” the State Department official said.

“A free and independent press is critical to the wellbeing of the nation.”

Non-governmental organisation groups focused on reporter and human rights called the move the latest crackdown against a free media in Azerbaijan, where dissent is often met with a tough government response.

Headquartered in Prague and funded by the US Congress, RFE/RL broadcasts to 21 countries across Eastern Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East.

December/27/2014

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, disturbed, radio raid, us state department

Azerbaijan, RFE/RL’s Baku Bureau Raided by Prosecutor’s Office

December 26, 2014 By administrator

RFE/RL’s Baku Bureau has been raided by members of the Azerbaijani Prosecutor’s Office, who have ordered employees to leave the building and for work to be terminated.

Kenan Aliyev, the director of RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service, says at least 10 members of the Prosecutor’s Office entered the office at 10:30 a.m. local time accompanied by armed police officers.

Prosecutors said they had a court order authorizing a search of the bureau in connection with an ongoing investigation of RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service as a foreign-funded entity.

They have reportedly demanded access to a safe holding bureau documents and personnel files, and have threatened to confiscate all computers.

They have also ordered staff members to leave the premises after holding them in a room for several hours without telephone or computer access.

Only the bureau chief, two employees, and a lawyer currently remain inside with prosecutors.

Prosecutors said the bureau’s work was to be terminated, but did not specify for how long.

Azerbaijani prosecutors have staged similar raids in recent months on other so-called foreign entities, including nongovernmental organizations such as IREX, the National Democratic Institute, and Oxfam.

All three NGOs were subsequently shut down. IREX, which operates in 125 countries promoting democratic reforms, became the latest to close down operations in September after Azerbaijani authorities froze its bank assets as part of what it called a “criminal investigation.”

The RFE/RL bureau raid comes three weeks after Khadija Ismayilova, an investigative journalist and contributor to RFE/RL, was jailed in Baku on charges related to her work.

Ismayilova is currently being held on two months’ pretrial detention on criminal charges of inciting a former RFE/RL contributor to attempt suicide.

Ismayilova’s supporters have rejected the charges as politically motivated. Amnesty International has declared Ismayilova a prisoner of conscience, “detained solely for exercising her right to freedom of expression.”

On December 17, the Baku prosecutor’s office delivered a letter to RFE/RL’s Baku bureau, requesting employment and salary information about both Ismayilova and the colleague in questions.

It also requested the names of all bureau employees, including freelancers, for possible questioning in connection with the case.

Kenan Aliyev said the December 26 raid is part of an ongoing harassment campaign aimed at shutting down the bureau, which is one of the last remaining sources of independent news in the autocratic country:

“The operation of our bureau is paralyzed in Baku,” he said. “There has been a long ongoing crackdown on the media and NGO’s in Azerbaijan including the arrest of Khadija Ismayilova, the host of our show and our contributor. We view this as part of this ongoing campaign against independent media.”

Earlier in December, Ramiz Mehdiyev, the chief of staff of Azeri President Ilham Aliyev, issued a 60-page statement accusing Ismayilova of displaying a “destructive attitude toward well-known members of the Azerbaijani community” and accusing RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service of working “for a foreign secret service.”

Mehdiyev has also praised the recent jailing of other Azerbaijani journalists and activists, including Leyla Yunus, the director of the of the Institute of Peace of Democracy and a vocal critic of Aliyev’s human rights record.

Yunus, 59, and her husband, Arif, have both been held in pretrial detention since July and August, respectively, on charges of treason and other crimes.

Leyla Yunus, who suffers from diabetes and kidney disease, has complained of physical abuse and denial of medical treatment while in detention. Her lawyers say she is in dangerously ill heath.

The West has criticized what is seen as a growing crackdown on government critics in energy-rich Azerbaijan.

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Tom Malinowski told RFE/RL last week that Washington has been involved in “very serious discussions” with Azerbaijani officials about the recent detentions of the Yunuses, Ismayilova, and others.

Malinowski said U.S. officials have made clear that Azerbaijan’s relationship with the United States is “jeopardized by the crackdown on civil society.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, Baku, bureau, raided, ref/rl

Attempted incursion of Azeri forces in Nagorno-Karabakh rejected last night by Armenians

December 25, 2014 By administrator

arton106432-480x401Several deaths and injuries of the Azerbaijani side

Last night at 1:30 am, the armed forces of Azerbaijan attempted a raid on two points in the area of ​​contact in Karabakh. According to the Ministry of Defence of the Republic of Nagorno Karabakh, the attackers carried nearly Armenian positions by two helicopters were used in the attempted raid on Armenian positions, weapons of various calibres and grenades. But the Armenian troops caught in time this attempt Azeri and responded to repel the enemy. According to Stepanakert, the Azeris have had in their retreat several deaths and injuries. On the side of the Armenian Army, no human loss was reported.

Krikor Amirzayan

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: attempted, Azerbaijan, Karabakh, military, raid

Al-Qaeda-affiliate Tahşiyeciler tried to expand to Germany, Azerbaijan, Russia

December 23, 2014 By administrator

200225_newsdetailA public indictment prepared in 2010 against Tahşiyeciler (Annotators), a radical religious group supportive of al-Qaeda’s global jihadist ideology, has revealed how members of the group tried to establish branches abroad, including in Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Germany, Iraq and Russia. Reported by Today Zaman

According to an indictment prepared by Public Prosecutor Kadir Altınışık and investigation case file No. 2010/439, the group, which clearly advocated violent methods and supported al-Qaeda’s extremist ideology, tried to expand its activities to Germany and Azerbaijan. The prosecutor said the investigation had identified Ali Karakale, a member of the group, and suspected that he was leading Tahşiyeciler’s branch in Germany, while Hüseyin Büyükfırat and Agil Farajov headed the organization in Azerbaijan.

In a court-authorized wiretapped conversation recorded on Dec. 6, 2009 and included in the indictment as evidence, a suspect named Süphan Akarsu talks to another suspect named Faris Mağin, saying: “The way to an open jihad is clear. Go to Chechnya and Pakistan, where a real jihad is under way. Going there is a must.” Fearing that the conversation might have been recorded, Mağin tells Akarsu not to speak up openly and then the suspects switch to Kurdish from Turkish for the rest of the conversation. The police added the translated version of the conversation to the investigation file as well. In a wiretap dated Jan. 1, 2010, Lütfü Karadağ, another suspect in the case, tells Mağin that defending democracy is tantamount to disbelief.

The prosecutor’s indictment charges Mehmet Nuri Ataç, a suspect who was involved in expanding Tahşiyeciler’s network in Bursa, with trying to organize trips for young men to go to places like Iraq and Afghanistan, which he claimed to be fertile places to wage a jihad. In a sound recording included in the indictment and numbered 750, Ataç tells a young man identified only by the initials Ç.A. to prepare himself to go to jihadist regions, a reference to Afghanistan, Chechnya, Iraq and Pakistan, saying that $1,800 would be enough to cover expenses for the trip and that a broker would make sure he reached his destination.

A sound recording numbered 778 contains two conversations between Ataç and another suspect named Orhan Özer during which the two discuss al-Qaeda’s terrorist attacks in Afghanistan and how to transfer funds raised locally in Turkey to Afghanistan. Özer told Ataç that two people named Sedat and İbrahim had already been dispatched to Afghanistan to join al-Qaeda there, adding that he may very well facilitate Ataç’s trip there, too.

Police also monitored Ataç’s emails with people identified as M.S.S, Ç.A. and Mustafa during which Ataç and others wrote about linking up with Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda groups. Ataç noted in his emails that he desires to fight on behalf of al-Qaeda and become a suicide bomber. In a message dated Jan. 17, 2010, Ataç wrote to an unidentified person that he wanted to make a trip to Afghanistan via Iran, saying that it would take only 20 days to reach jihadist places in Afghanistan by bus or walking after Iran. He said he has the necessary funds for the trip but lamented that he does not have $1,000 to purchase a Kanas, the Turkish name for a Dragunov sniper rifle.

In the case file, the prosecutor also listed an anonymous complaint that was sent to the İstanbul Police Department in which the whistleblower alleged that Mehmet Doğan, the leader of Tahşiyeciler, had been raising funds for al-Qaeda and sent a delegation of people who he thought worthy to Osama bin Laden. The whistleblower also claimed that Büyükfırat had transferred TL 2 million (approximately $860,000) to the organization and helped translate Doğan’s book into Russian.

In a recorded conversation between Mustafa Kaplan, one of the leaders of the Tahşiyeciler group, and a suspect named Ünal Türkal on Aug. 28, 2009, Kaplan tells Türkal that the group sees all other religious groups in Turkey as “infidels” and approves terrorist activities in Iraq and Russia. In a search conducted during police raids on the premises of the suspects in 2010, police seized a 28-page booklet titled “Reddul-Evham 5,” a text that says Islam approves of suicide bombings and the killing of wives and children of non-believers. A handwritten 35-page document that was also seized from Kaplan’s home in İstanbul’s Bağcılar district said Islam sanctioned the killings of Muslims who were used as shields by non-believers.

The prosecutor also included video footage aired on the CNN Türk and Habertürk national networks on January 2010 and March 2010 in which Doğan can be heard calling his followers to armed jihad. Doğan also said in his videotaped sermons that the head of the Turkish government and the head of the Religious Affairs Directorate are foreigners and should be killed in an armed attack.

“I’m saying go build arms and kill [them],” he instructs followers in the video, continuing, “If the sword is not used, then this is not Islam.”

He can also be heard asking his followers to build bombs and mortars in their homes, claiming that Islam allows for such practices. Doğan said Egypt, India, Iran, Syria, Pakistan and Turkey are not governed by Shariah law and predicts that they will soon be wiped out.

In the video, Doğan says: “If an army [al-Qaeda] shows up in Afghanistan and that army calls on you [to join its ranks], you should join that war [jihad] even if you can only crawl.”

In the search of Doğan’s apartment in İstanbul’s Güngören district and a farm compound in Muratgören village in the southeastern province of Muş, police found a huge cache of literature and CDs that featured Osama bin Laden’s speeches, video footage showing how to design mortar shells in a makeshift setting and lay improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and a propaganda film for al-Qaeda.

According to the indictment, Doğan was described as a “radical who harbors pro al-Qaeda views,” further stating that he organized the group according to al-Qaeda’s global jihad ideology. In literature prepared by the group, Doğan told his followers: “We do not have enough power for an armed fight yet. We have to defer the obligatory jihad until we gain enough strength. But once we do attain enough power, we’ll show how jihad can be conducted.”

Tahşiyeciler thought they were preparing for the prophecy of the coming mehdi (messiah), which they expected would be fulfilled in 2012. When that day came, they planned to join the mehdi’s army, which they believed was being led by Osama bin Laden, who fought against the US, thereby preparing the ground for his coming. They also believed that an army would come out of Afghanistan carrying a black flag — a symbol nowadays often used by extremist organizations such as al-Qaeda, al-Shabaab and the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

Among the evidence collected by police and included in the prosecutor’s indictment are documents about an al-Qaeda leader, video footage regarding the 9/11 attacks and religious literature justifying the attacks on the World Trade Center in New York.

In the wiretaps, Doğan was recorded warning militants in the group about surveillance, saying that they should watch what they say over the phone because the National Intelligence Organization (MİT) was monitoring their phone calls. Doğan’s suspicions were accurate as the daily Millet revealed last week that Turkey’s intelligence agency told the police about Tahşiyeciler’s activities in 2008.

According to the article, MİT issued a circular to police departments in 12 provinces that detailed the dangerous activities of Tahşiyeciler. The letter, marked as confidential and including the still-pending case file against Tahşiyeciler, was dated Dec. 3, 2008. The circular described the group as having some 5,000 members and identified Doğan, also known as Molla Muhammed, as the group leader who was exploiting religion.

MİT sent further intelligence about the group on Feb. 17 and March 30, 2009 to the police. The Counterterrorism Unit of the İstanbul Police Department forwarded the case file, with all the collected information about the group, to the prosecutor’s office. The prosecutor then ordered a judicial investigation into Tahşiyeciler that led to raids on safe houses used by the group on Jan. 22, 2010.

Three hand grenades were found in safe houses used by Tahşiyeciler in İstanbul’s Bahçelievler district that could be traced back to manufacturing plants in Turkey, Germany and Russia. During forensic examination, the serial numbers were found to be intact but the batch number of the shipment was filed off, making it difficult to determine the shipment’s destination. Electronic parts, cables and switches were also found, along with 673 rifle bullets and 28 handgun bullets during raids. In the houses used by the suspects in Niğde province, police discovered unlicensed handguns and rifles, in addition to ammunition.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Al Qaeda, annotators, Azerbaijan, Germany, Russia, Tahşiyeciler, Turkey

Azerbaijan passengers in 2 planes that landed in Armenia

December 23, 2014 By administrator

emegency planeYEREVAN. – Due to adverse weather conditions, two Ukraine International Airlines passenger planes, which were en route from the Ukrainian capital city Kyiv to the Georgian capital city Tbilisi, had to temporarily land in Zvartnots International Airport of Armenia’s capital city Yerevan, and there were Azerbaijani citizens on board these aircrafts.

The Press Secretary of the Armenian government-affiliated General Department of Civil Aviation (GDCA), Ruben Grdzelyan, told the aforesaid to Armenian News-NEWS.am.

In his words, the first plane landed on Sunday night and stayed at the airport for six hours while the second aircraft landed on Monday at the same time and stayed at Zvartnots for five hours.

“There were 24 Azerbaijanis on board the first day’s flight, and 13 Azerbaijanis on the second day. According to the procedure, the aircraft passengers disembarked the plane—except for four [Azerbaijani passengers]—, [and] remained in the buffer zone until the weather conditions improved.

“While at the airport, the passengers of these flights were provided food, [and] assisted in exchanging foreign currency.

“At the end, all passengers, including the Azerbaijanis, thanked the airport workers and left for Tbilisi with satisfaction,” Grdzelyan stressed.

Reflecting on the aforesaid four Azerbaijani passengers who had refused to get off from Monday’s flight that had temporarily landed in Yerevan, the GDCA spokesperson noted that, as a result, the plane crew likewise had to remain on board the plane and, in addition, the aircraft was heated for them.

And as for the fact that one of the Azerbaijani passengers had told the Azerbaijani media that the Armenian airport personnel wanted to pick up and stamp their passports while they were waiting at Zvartnots, Grdzelyan refuted this information noting that there was no need for this, since the passengers had remained in the buffer zone.

“According to the procedure, [however,] the passports were checked solely when going on board the plane to make sure that they are the passengers of that plane,” he added.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: airline, Armenia, Azerbaijan, passengers

Scandal on anti-Semitism that is financed by Azerbaijani authorities in Europe is gaining momentum

December 20, 2014 By administrator

In recent months, the international media reported that the Azerbaijani officials in France have been involved in financing of anti-Semitism, and have created a European information and Human Rights Centre (EIHRC) especially for this purpose. A scandal broke out on this occasion. “The European Center for Journalists” (ECFJ) in its turn held a journalistic investigation on this topic, published on the official website titled “Is Azerbaijan preparing another Holocaust in Europe?”

As noted in the article, the head of the social and political issues of the Presidential Administration of Azerbaijan Ali Hasanov was supervising the activities of EIHRC from Baku. Initially this organization in Strasbourg was led by Harry Murey, a German lawyer, specialist in international law, who revealed interesting facts in an interview with ECFJ.

According to him, Eynulla Fatullayev, a member of the Union of Journalists of Azerbaijan, suggested them to organize a European informative-Human Rights Center, reporting that Azay Guliyev, the head of the Council of State Support to NGOs under the administration of Azerbaijani President had allocate a grant in the amount of approximately EUR 100 000 to the center.
Fatullayev also stated that president Ilham Aliyev is informed, and Hasanov will add money from other resources, including different articles from Azerbaijani budget. He also noted that one part of the money will be transferred by the system of Western Union, through close ties of Aliyev clan in AtaBank, and he will bring the rest in cash himself to avoid taxes.

“My colleagues and I refused to take part in the organization of anti-Semitic demonstrations and write anti-Israeli reports, and the Azerbaijani side in avenge decided not to pay our salaries, provided by the contract,” Murey said, adding that the Azerbaijani side is putting pressure on the French authorities, in order to hinder the judicial and law enforcement authorities for carrying out any investigations in EIHRC, however they have already sent the extensive materials on the activities of the presidential clan of Azerbaijan to Europol and the security services of some countries.

Murey believes that Fatullaev is playing a double game: he stores documents and materials, compromising not only the top leaders of Azerbaijan but also the Aliyev clan. “Apart of the financial and accounting documents explaining the origin of the fabulous wealth of the Azerbaijani elite, there are also papers in the data bank which present the foreign activities of Azerbaijani MNS. If these documents appear in the wrong, non-friendly to official Baku hands, it can lead to very real “political earthquake” in Azerbaijan and to a collapse of government,” claims the German lawyer.

As stated in the article of the US Congress, Steve Stockman has recently condemned Armenia for anti-Semitism and xenophobia, but the lawyer is confident that S. Stockman cannot be called an experienced politician in the truest sense of the word. “Nothing to say about his reputation. Such statements have purely populist nature and do not reflect the disposition of the Republican Party,” said Murey.

He also notes that the attempts of the official Baku to incite the American establishment on Armenia will hardly be able to save Azerbaijan from non-incredible political and economic sanctions. Although Republicans traditionally hold pro-Azerbaijani disposition, the recent events in Baku – namely anti-American campaign against the former US Ambassador to Azerbaijan Morningstar – a wholesale closure of the offices in Azerbaijan, international, including American organizations, as well as demonstrative arrests of a number of prominent human rights defenders and journalist of “Radio Liberty” – leaves no doubt that in the discussion on political and economic sanctions against Azerbaijan do not rise specific differences between Democrats and Republicans.

The author of the article adds that the Azerbaijani officials have already intervened into the case, in particular, the Permanent Mission of the country to the UN. Trying to save the reputation of the Azerbaijani authorities on international scandal on November 21, Farid Jebrailov, the first secretary of representation published his article in the publication of “Reporter”, where, instead of giving specific answers to questions of the American and European press about the financing of anti-Semitism in Europe, Jebrailov only reported that “Azerbaijan respects Israel and there are three synagogues in Baku.”

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anti-Semitism, Azerbaijan, EIHRC

CPJ: Azerbaijan and Turkey among top 10 worst jailers of journalists in world

December 17, 2014 By administrator

Azerbaijan-Turkey-journalistThe international organisation “Committee to Protect Journalists” (CPJ) compiled a list of journalists imprisoned for their work. Azerbaijan and Turkey are among the top 10 worst jailers of journalists in the world in 2014. The statement is posted on the official website of the organization.

“In Azerbaijan, authorities were jailing nine journalists, up one from the previous year. Amid a crackdown on traditional media, some activists took to social networking sites in an attempt to give the public an alternative to state media. CPJ’s list does not include at least four activists imprisoned in Azerbaijan this year for creating and managing Facebook groups on which they and others posted a mix of commentary and news articles about human rights abuses and allegations of widespread corruption,” the statement reads,” the statement notes.

CPJ’s list is a snapshot of those incarcerated on December 1, 2014. It does not include the many journalists imprisoned and released throughout the year. The Committee to Protect Journalists identified 220 journalists in jail around the world in 2014, an increase of nine from 2013. China takes the first place in the list with 44 journalists, and the second place belongs to neighboring Iran with 30 journalist held in prisons. Twenty percent, or 45, of the journalists imprisoned globally were being held with no charge disclosed.

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, cpj, imprisoned, Journalist, Turkey

Washington, in addition to sanctions against government of Azerbaijan, calls for boycotting European games in Baku

December 16, 2014 By administrator

AliyevAt the forum “Can US sanctions help the Azerbaijani dissidents?”, organized on December 13 in Washington by the organization of “American Azerbaijanis for Democracy (AZAD), for the first time was toughly raised the issue on sanctions against Azerbaijani officials that were involved in human rights violation and freedoms in Azerbaijan. Commenting on the results of the forum for the Azerbaijani service of the “Voice of America» (VOA) the organizers and participants summarized the causes and steps for operating the sanctions, the Azerbaijani news agency “Turan” reports.

As it is noted in the article, the chairman of AZAD Elmar Shakhtakhtinski said the forum sends a message to Azerbaijani authorities that the violation of fundamental human rights and freedoms as well such an attitude towards their people will receive a corresponding response. “We wanted to make it clear that the policy of official Baku is leading not to a rapprochement with the West but rather with authoritarian regimes,” said Shakhtakhtinski.

David Kramer, the former head of the human rights organization “Freedom House”, present director of the Human Rights and Democracy at the institute of McCain told the VOA, that the last massive pressure on the opposition, the arrest of journalist Khadija Ismayilova has caused serious concern in the United States, and therefore in February, after the holidays, at a congressional hearing the human rights topic in Azerbaijan will be important.

“I’m in favor of targeted sanctions, such as non-issuance of visas and freezing of bank accounts of those involved in human rights abuses. These steps are intended to release political prisoners and to stop the persecution of opponents,” Kramer said.
As stated in the article, Kramer also voiced another way to show pressure on the Azerbaijani authorities – a call for a boycott of the first European Olympic Games in Baku in 2015. “We must make sure that these games do not become a grand event for Aliyev with participation of European leaders,” he said.

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, sanctions, Washington

Neighbors in Turmoil: Armenia viewed as ‘island of stability’ amid rising Islamic terrorism in region

December 15, 2014 By administrator

By Naira Hayrumyan
ArmeniaNow correspondent

Iraqi_insurgents_with_gunsAuthorities in Armenia’s neighboring countries, Turkey and Azerbaijan, are conducting arrests of persons suspected of directly or indirectly preparing coups and planning to overthrow of the government. Western governments, meanwhile, accuse Baku and Ankara of violating democratic norms and not respecting democratic values.

Several dozen well-known journalists and police officers were arrested in Turkey on December 14. Among those arrested are also editor-in-chief of the Turkish Zaman newspaper Ekrem Dumanli and head of the Samanyolu Hidayet Karaca. According to a written statement of the chief prosecutor of Istanbul Hadi Salihoglu, the arrested people are accused of “creating a terrorist organization, fraud and defamation.” The government accuses Samanyolu of collaboration with the preacher Fetullah Gulen, who is in opposition to the ruling Justice and Development Party.

Earlier a wave of arrests took place in Azerbaijan – among those who appeared behind the bars were human rights activists and bloggers who have worked with Western foundations. Baku openly accused US non-governmental organizations of attempting to stimulate unrest in Azerbaijan and overthrow the government.

The world press more and more often quotes experts as saying that the West is using “methods of deterrence” towards Turkey and Azerbaijan. These methods became especially noticeable after these two countries refused to cooperate fully with the coalition against the Islamic State and strengthened their ties with Russia. Now is not the time for business with Russia, said State Department spokesman Jen Psaki. And Turkey and Azerbaijan are trying to have lucrative oil and gas projects with Russia, which is under Western sanctions at present over the crisis in Ukraine.

Baku welcomes rapprochement between Turkey and Russia, believing that this will have an impact on Armenia, which may be forced to make concessions over the Nagorno-Karabakh issue. Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Khalaf Khalafov said that given that Russia is a mediator in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement, and Turkey is a neighbor of Armenia, improvement of relations between the two countries could have a positive impact on the resolution of the conflict. “And we are waiting for it,” he said.

In their turn, Western media, through experts, warn Russia, Turkey and Azerbaijan about the threat of Islamization, which would threaten stability in these countries.

“By eliminating moderate voices in society, Azerbaijan’s leaders set the stage for anti-Western environment that will serve as a breeding ground for radical Islamists, who pose a grave security threat to both the region and the West,” foreignpolicy.com writes.

“The [December 4] coordinated terrorist assault on the Chechen capital of Grozny – which left at least 20 dead and scores more injured – should refocus global attention on a problem that Russia itself increasingly is confronting: a resilient wave of radical Islam,” writes Foreign Affairs.

Al-Jazeera also says that Russia could become the next “target” for Islamists. The same predictions are also made for Turkey, a country aspiring to become a member of the European Union.

Head of EU diplomacy Federica Mogherini and EU European Neighborhood Policy and Enlargement Commissioner Johannes Hahn issued a joint statement condemning the detention of journalists in Turkey on Sunday. They expressed their concern over this fact ahead of Tuesday’s discussions of EU expansion that will also include the issue of Turkey.

The fall in international oil prices has indeed shattered the power of President Ilham Aliyev in Azerbaijan and the successes of the anti-Islamic coalition in Syria and Iraq, the US cooperation with Iran and the Kurds scare the regime in Turkey, which expects the shift of the terrorist wave and destabilization to Turkey. Christian Armenia in this situation, despite the threats, is considered an island of stability.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, turmoil

US diplomats and analysts are calling for sanctions against the government of Azerbaijan

December 13, 2014 By administrator

aliyev-sanctionUS analysts and activists who are watching the situation in Azerbaijan, urged the administration of the US President to impose sanctions against the government of Azerbaijan on the background of flagrant violations of human rights in the country.

According to the Azerbaijani news agency “Turan”, these calls were made on Friday at the debate in Washington organized by the community of “American Azerbaijanis” (“AZAD”).

As noted in the article, the debates have been timed with the death of Heydar Aliyev, on December 12. Richard Kozlarich, former US ambassador to Baku, said that nothing has changed to better in the relations between the US and Azerbaijan after the power passed to his son, Ilham Aliyev. On the contrary, after many years of support for civil society in the country, the US NGOs are regarded in Baku as a threat.

As evidence, he cited the article of the head of the presidential administration of Azerbaijan Ramiz Mehdiyev. ” Mehdiyev accuses us of creating a “fifth column” in Azerbaijan, which wants to overthrow the power, he calls the NGOs that work with the United States,” traitors of Azerbaijan”, Kozlarich noted.

He further drew the attention to the direct attacks of the government officials of Azerbaijan towards the President Obama. In response, he suggested the official Washington to warn the US citizens that, visiting Azerbaijan, they may be subject to surveillance, covert shooting and all sorts of troubles can happen to them.

“If the diplomatic pressure on Aliyev’s government does not work, then it’s time to consider the sanctions, which will show the government that the continuing human rights violations will have consequences,” stated Kozlarich.

According to “Turan”, in his speech, David Kramer, the former president of the “Freedom House”, and at present the director of the McCain Institute, noted that Azerbaijan violates not only the principles of West but the universal principles as a hole, adding that it is difficult to be in good relations with a regime that is becoming increasingly corrupt and increasingly authoritarian.

“Currently there are more than 100 political prisoners in the country of, twice more than in Russia and Belarus, against which we have imposed sanctions. Therefore, the pressure for their release, is necessary,” he said.

As stated in the article, Kramer also called on all the European political leaders to boycott the first European Games in Baku, in 2015. “Deprivation of Aliyev from standing next to the central stadium of the political leaders of the West will be a serious blow to his image,” said Kramer.

The agency writes that according to the speakers, the head of “AZAD” Elmar Shakhtakhtinski and his deputy Gorkhmaz Askerov, the time for sanctions had come long before.

Source: Panorama.am

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Azerbaijan, sanctions, US

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