New York, February 24, 2009--A journalist who went to interview the minister of the Ministry of National Security (MNB) in Azerbaijan's Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic on February 20 was blindfolded and interrogated for hours, according to local news reports. The Committee to Project Journalists called today for an immediate investigation into the incident by the central Azerbaijani government.
Security service agents intimidated and harassed Idrak
Abbasov, a reporter with the independent newspaper Zerkalo and a researcher with the Baku-based Institute for
Reporters' Freedom and Safety (IRFS), while he was in Nakhchivan to study
regional press freedom conditions. Agents blindfolded him, took his identity
papers, camera, video camera, reporter's notebook, and cell phone, and
interrogated him for two hours about the reasons for his trip, according to local
news reports and CPJ sources. An unidentified officer demanded that Abbasov reveal
the names of his colleagues in the region, cursed at him, and accused him of
spying for
Before he was released, a security officer urged the
journalist to leave the region immediately and deleted all the pictures from
his camera, he said. His documents and equipment were returned. As a result of his
treatment, Abbasov was hospitalized with stress-induced heart problems on Saturday in
"We condemn the Nakhchivan state security services for
luring a journalist to their headquarters with the promise of an interview only
to blindfold and interrogate him," CPJ Europe and Central Asia Program
Coordinator
Abbasov told CPJ that the MNB had responded to his organization's request for a meeting and invited him to come to its offices on February 20 at noon. When Abbasov showed up--along with an IRFS colleague--MNB officers called him in alone. "Since our earlier meetings with different government officials in Nakhchivan were held in a friendly manner, I thought there's no reason to be afraid of going to the MNB alone," Abbasov told CPJ. "It appears I was mistaken."

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