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US State Department: Women, children, national and sexual minorities face discrimination and violence in Azerbaijan

March 7, 2017 By administrator

On September 26, 2016, constitutional amendments were approved in Azerbaijan that, inter alia, increased the president’s term in office from five to seven years and expanded the powers of the president. The constitutional referendum was marked by widespread credible complaints of irregularities, US State Department’s Human Rights Reports for 2016 reads.

According to the report, the Azerbaijani aauthorities limited the freedoms of expression, assembly, and association through intimidation, incarceration on questionable charges, and harsh abuse of selected activists and secular and religious opposition figures. The operating space for activists and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) remained severely constrained. There was a continuing crackdown on civil society.
Government use of the judicial system to punish dissent. Authorities used different pretexts to decrease the number of defense lawyers willing and able to defend the rights of peaceful activists.

Other problems reported included physical abuse in the military; alleged torture and abuse of detainees, at times leading to death; police violence against peaceful citizens; abuse of inmates in prisons; harsh and sometimes life-threatening prison conditions; detentions without warrants; and incommunicado detention.
Interviewees “described having a gun pointed at their head, severe beatings, sometimes lasting several hours, verbal abuse and psychological pressure, practices such as standing on one’s knees for long hours, threats of physical and sexual abuse as well as threats to arrest family members.”

It is noted that during the trial of 17 of the individuals, Taleh Bagirzade and 16 other Nardaran residents charged in the case informed the court they were tortured while police interrogated them at the Ministry of Internal Affairs’ Organized Crime Department. In another prominent case, imprisoned N!DA youth movement activists Bayram Mammadov and Giyas Ibrahimov stated during their trial that police subjected them to torture while in custody. The two youths claimed that officers beat them, forced them to disrobe, and threatened to rape them with truncheons and bottles if they did not confess to charges of drug possession after closed-circuit television footage showed them painting graffiti on a statue of former president Heydar Aliyev.

Prison conditions were sometimes harsh and potentially life threatening due to overcrowding, inadequate nutrition, deficient heating and ventilation, and poor medical care. Former prisoners and family members of imprisoned activists reported that prisoners often had to pay bribes to use toilets or shower rooms or to receive food.

It is highlighted that impunity remained a problem. On May 25, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Arrests expressed concern about the conditions in the special facilities for persons with disabilities and over the ongoing prosecution of human rights defenders, journalists, and political opposition. In one of the more prominent examples of arbitrary arrest during the year, according to activists, authorities detained 185 individuals prior to, during, and after authorized rallies held on September 11, 17, and 18 in opposition to the September 26 referendum on amending the constitution.

Low wages contributed to corruption throughout the country.

Authorities often made arrests based on spurious charges such as resisting police, illegal possession of drugs or weapons, tax evasion, illegal entrepreneurship, abuse of authority, or inciting public disorder.
On March 18, the president Ilham Aliyev pardoned 148 prisoners. NGOs considered 14 to have been political prisoners. There were reports that authorities pressed some of the released prisoners to write letters seeking forgiveness for past “mistakes” as a condition of their pardon. Several prisoners, such as the chair of the opposition REAL movement, Ilgar Mammadov, reported that authorities used physical abuse, placement into isolation cells, assaults by other prisoners, and threats to family members to extract such letters.

It is emphasized in the report that the judiciary remained largely corrupt and inefficient. Courts often failed to investigate allegations of torture and inhumane treatment of detainees in police custody.

Authorities released three others in the spring: journalists Rauf Mirkadirov and Khadija Ismayilova, and defense lawyer Intigam Aliyev. Despite the release of these 17 individuals, local NGO activists estimated the number of political prisoners and detainees to range from 119 to 160.

According to the authors of the report, journalists faced intimidation and at times were beaten and imprisoned. NGOs considered at least six journalists and bloggers to be political prisoners or detainees as of year’s end. During the year authorities continued pressure on media, journalists in exile, and their relatives.

In August, activists who were arrested were secular democratic opposition figures, although authorities cited alleged ties to Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, who was accused by Turkey of having organized the failed July 15 coup attempt there, to justify some of the arrests. Activists whose arrests were based on such alleged ties included Fuad Ahmadli of the opposition Popular Front Party, and Faiq Amirov, the financial director of opposition newspaper Azadliq, who was also the assistant to Popular Front Party chair Ali Kerimli.|

On July 29, the Baku Court of Appeals revoked the license of the semi-independent privately owned ANS television station based on a lawsuit filed by the National Television and Radio Council (NTRC). The lawsuit was initiated after ANS announced its intention to air an interview with exiled Turkish religious figure Fethullah Gulen and Turkish authorities protested the planned broadcast after accusing Gulen of plotting the July 15 coup attempt in Turkey.

Foreign services, including Voice of America, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), and the BBC, remained prohibited from broadcasting on FM radio frequencies.

Authorities continued the criminal case against Meydan TV initiated in August 2015. The Prosecutor General’s Office investigated more than 15 individuals in the case for alleged illegal entrepreneurship, tax evasion, and abuse of power.

The majority of independent and opposition newspapers remained in a precarious financial situation.
The law imposes criminal penalties for conviction of libel and insult on the internet. On November 29, the Milli Mejlis passed new articles to the criminal code that expand those penalties. Article 148-1, stipulates fines of from 1,000 to 1,500 manat ($556 to $833), or public works from 360 to 480 hours, or corrective work up to two years or one year imprisonment for insults and slander through using fake web nicknames or Internet profiles. A second new provision, Article 323, stipulates fines from 1,000 up to 1,500 manat ($556 to $833) or imprisonment up to three years for insulting the honor and dignity of the president.

The authors of the report also cover violence and discrimination against women in Azerbaijan.
Traditional social norms and lagging economic development in rural regions restricted women’s roles in the economy, and there were reports women had difficulty exercising their legal rights due to gender discrimination.

Rape is illegal and carries a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison. During the year, the Ministry of Internal Affairs reported 31 cases of rape and 62 cases of violence of a sexual nature. The ministry stated that 54 persons had been brought to trial for these offenses.

Violence against children, who are forced to engage in prostitution, and early marriages are also widespread.
Citizens of Armenian descent reported discrimination in employment. Some groups reported sporadic incidents of discrimination, restrictions on their ability to teach in their native languages, and harassment by local authorities. These groups included Talysh in the south, Lezghi in the north, and Meskhetians and Kurds.
Societal intolerance, violence, and discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity remained a problem. A local NGO reported that there were numerous incidents of police brutality against individuals based on sexual orientation and noted that authorities did not investigate or punish those responsible. There were also reports of family-based violence against LGBTI individuals and hostile Facebook postings on personal online accounts. A local organization reported that in the first eight months of the year, one gay and two transgender persons were killed and one transvestite committed suicide. In October media reported an attack on a group of LGBTI persons in the Baku City metro.

 

Source Panorama.am

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Azerbaijan, discrimination, Minorities, U.S

Turkey ‘guilty of religious discrimination’

December 4, 2014 By administrator

By Umut Uras,

2014123124051715734_20Rights court rules Alevi minority is discriminated against as MP says their places of worship will soon be recognised. Report al jazeera

Turkey has been discriminating against its Alevi Muslim religious minority by failing to recognise their places of worship and pay the electricity bill of their premises, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has ruled.

Turkey was taken to the top human rights court in 2010 by the Republican Education and Cultural Center Foundation, an Alevi organisation also known as Cem Foundation. The group objected to the state practice of not paying the electricity bills for an Istanbul cemevi – where Alevis hold rituals – while doing so for mosques, churches and synagogues.

According to Turkish law, the electricity bills for places of worship are paid from a fund administered by the Directorate of Religious Affairs, a state institution dealing with religious issues.

Tuesday’s landmark ruling comes after the conservative Justice and Development Party (AK Party) government’s announcement of planned reforms to meet Alevis’ demands. 

However, these reforms were criticised by Alevi groups, as they did not change the main position of the government, failing to recognise cemevis (literally translated as gathering houses) as official places of worship.

“In the recent proposed reforms, the government offered Alevis funds without offering their sites official recognition. Alevis want cemevis and their faith to be recognised, so the proposal did not satisfy them,” Riza Turmen, a former ECHR judge and MP of the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), told Al Jazeera.

‘Alevism not a religion’

Ankara has long refused to offer Alevi sites official recognition. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at various times said that Alevism was not a religion and mosques were the only places of worship in the religion of Islam.

Ahmet Iyimaya, the chairman of the parliament’s justice commission and an AK Party MP, told Al Jazeera that the government would act in line with the ruling and make the necessary steps.

“Recognition of cemevis as places of worship is already on our agenda,” he said.

The ECHR judgment is good news. However, Alevis, who are an ancient part of this nation, wish their rights were given by Turkey’s democracy, rather than Europe,” Cengiz Hortoglu, the chairman of Anatolia Alevi Bektashi Federation, said.

Izzettin Dogan, the chairman of Cem Foundation, the organisation that sued Turkey, called the verdict “historic”.

An estimated 10 to 15 million people in Turkey, a country of 76 million, belong to the Alevi sect. A 2012 research report by Sabaht Akkiraz, an MP of the CHP, estimated that there were 12.5 million Alevis in Turkey.

Alevis – no relation to the Alawites of Syria – mix Islam, Sufi and Anatolian folk traditions in their practices and philosophy. However, like Alawites, they are followers of Ali, a caliph in Islamic history and a relative of Prophet Muhammad.

The Cem Foundation argued that as a result of Ankara’s non-recognition, the Yenibosna Centre, the cemevi in question, raked up unpaid bills amounting to more than 668,000 Turkish liras (close to $300,000).

In the verdict, a panel of seven judges at the Strasbourg-based court established that the Yenibosna Centre included a room for ceremonies and rituals, a basic part of the practice of  Alevism.

The ECHR also concluded that the cemevi provided funeral services and its activities were of non-profit nature.

“[The Court] noted that Turkish law reserved the exemption from payment of electricity bills to recognised places of worship and that by excluding cemevis from the benefit of that status, it introduced a difference in treatment on the ground of religion,” the ECHR said.

In the ruling, the EHCR invited Ankara to send a proposal regarding the cemevi in question.

The verdict is not final as there is an appeal process. In case of no appeal, the verdict will be final in three months.

‘Change does not happen overnight’

AK Party MP Iyimaya told Al Jazeera that since Alevis recognised cemevis as their sites of worship, it was unquestionable that the state has to recognise these places and grant them the same concessions it does to other places of worship.

“Speaking in terms of democratic practices, religious groups in a country should decide if a premise is a place of worship, not the state and laws,” he said.

“This has not happened up until today, because cultural divides in a country do not transform overnight. The codes of democracy have recently been penetrated into the society. We are trying to walk in a path that is not in conflict with the perceptions of the society,” he added

Former ECHR judge Turmen told Al Jazeera that it was the fifth decision by the ECHR on the Alevi issue and Turkey could not settle this problem without implementing them, adding that acts for show would not resolve the issue.

Turmen said: “Visiting cemevis or meeting the seniors of the faith would not do the government any benefit. Alevis want these verdicts, which are binding according to the European Convention of Human Rights, to be implemented. If the government has the will to solve this issue, these verdicts should be implemented.”

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu’s first response to the ruling was brief. “This is not a situation that will have impact on our efforts. We will move on our own path,” he said.

Davutoglu gathered Alevi representatives at his office on Tuesday only hours after the verdict was announced.

In a recent visit to Tunceli, an Alevi-majority city, he promised to stand strongly with Alevis and “personally follow” all acts of discrimination, but he fell short of promising official recognition for their faith.

Source: Al Jezeera

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Alevi Muslim, discrimination, Turkey

Anti-racism Bill: Changes in Genocide and Sexual Discrimination Issues

September 2, 2014 By administrator

by Nikoleta Kalmouki

greek-house-of-parliamentOn Tuesday morning, Greek Justice Minister Charalambos Athanasiou tabled the anti-racism bill in Parliament and announced the included amendments.

The amendments concern genocide and sexual discrimination issues. According to the bill, apart from Holocaust deniers, there will also be sanctions for the deniers of the genocides against Armenians, Pontians and Christians of Asia Minor, which have been recognised by the Greek Parliament.

Those who urge or incite actions that may lead to discrimination, hatred or violence against a person or group, based on their sexual orientation, will face imprisonment.

Both issues had caused strong reactions between New Democracy party members who had sent a letter to Prime Minister Antonis Samaras. SYRIZA MPs expressed their satisfaction with these amendments.

On Monday, Democratic Left (DIMAR) submitted its proposal to include four amendments in the anti-racism bill. These amendments concern civil partnerships, acquisition of Greek nationality, exploitation of seized bank accounts and abolishing the in flagrante procedures for debts towards the state.

The Church of Greece had also expressed its support to the bill, while it had requested that the genocides against the Greek Pontians and the Christians of Minor Asia also be included.

–

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: discrimination, Genocide, Greece, Law

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