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AZERBAIJAN
Although President Heydar Aliyev claimed to be the
"guarantor of freedom of speech and the press in Azerbaijan,"
his government continued to crack down on independent and opposition media
while suppressing public criticism. Journalists who dared to criticize
officials suffered harassment, defamation lawsuits, imprisonment, and
physical assaults. Publications faced financial pressure and closures,
as well as more indirect forms of censorship.
Meanwhile, the pan-European intergovernmental human
rights organization Council of Europe, which admitted Azerbaijan last
year, vocally criticized the country's sluggish democratization and restrictive
media policies.
In June, President Aliyev issued a decree requiring
the press to print exclusively in the Latin script by August 1, a move
intended to reduce the dominance of the Russian language in Azerbaijan.
(Josef Stalin imposed the Russian-derived Cyrillic script on Azerbaijan
in 1939. Since then, most Azeri-language newspapers in the country have
been printed in Cyrillic.)
The circulation of some newspapers and magazines
dropped after the decree because many older readers are not accustomed
to the Latin script. That reduction hurt independent publications, which
rely heavily on newsstand sales.
In August, when the independent weekly Impuls
defied the decree and continued to publish in Cyrillic, the government
pressured the paper's printer to block the issue, and the Baku prosecutor's
office issued a warning to Impuls' owner. The newspaper has since
ceased publication.
In August, Baku's Narimanov District Court closed
two independent weeklies for allegedly defaming government officials.
The court then found several editors and reporters guilty of defamation,
and jailed two of them. CPJ protested the imprisonment of Milletin
Sesi editor-in-chief Shahbaz Khuduoglu and Bakinsky Bulvar
founder Elmar Huseynov in an October 16 letter to President Aliyev. On
October 17, Aliyev signed a pardon releasing the two in honor of the 10th
anniversary of Azerbaijan's independence. The pardon did not reverse the
guilty verdicts against the journalists, however, and both Bakinsky
Bulvar and Milletin Sesi remain closed.
In November, officials accused the opposition dailies
Azadliq, Yeni Musavat, and Hurriyyet of "undermining
Azerbaijan's statehood." Subsequently, a number of printing houses
refused to print those publications.
On December 12, picketers gathered in the center
of Baku to protest state harassment of the three newspapers, according
to Azer Hasret, chairman of the Journalists' Trade Union. More than 20
journalists were injured when police violently dispersed the rally.
A domestic and internatinal uproar ensued. A few
days later, President Aliyev met with journalists and pledged government
support for independent and opposition media outlets. Aliyev subsequently
ordered the state publishing house to institute a one-year moratorium
on collecting debts owed by independent publications.
On December 27, Aliyev instructed the Cabinet of
Ministers and his executive staff to implement assistance measures for
independent and opposition media outlets. The measures include financial
subsidies, support for the development of private publishing companies,
and assurances that the state publishing house will print non-state publications.
The president also asked the prosecutor general to investigate cases of
journalists allegedly persecuted because of their work and to punish the
offenders. However, the order did not specify implementation deadlines.
Throughout the year, officials tried to close the
independent distribution company Gaya. Authorities claimed that Gaya lacked
proper documentation and that its kiosks did not meet the government's
aesthetic standards. In reality, authorities were trying to monopolize
printed press distribution. At the end of the year, the company's representatives
appealed to Baku officials to allow Gaya to distribute without further
harassment.
In January and February, authorities closed the
regional television stations DMR TV, Mingechevir TV, Khayal TV, and Gutb
TV, which had been operating unlicensed for years because the government
had repeatedly denied their applications for no reason. On February 6,
officials announced that the stations would be allowed to reopen, and
they resumed broadcasting by the end of February.
Extensive international pressure finally prompted
President Aliyev to order that broadcast licenses be awarded to regional
television stations. On December 21, accordingly, the Cabinet of Ministers
Frequencies Committee finally awarded licenses to five regional stations:
Khayal TV, Gutb TV, Aygun TV, Mingechevir TV, and Dunya TV.
In December, parliament considered a draft Law on
Mass Media that drew fierce international and domestic criticism. Articles
19, 27, and 50 would have allowed officials to close media outlets if
the courts order publications to retract stories three times in one year.
The articles also empowered authorities to ban media outlets that "undermine
Azerbaijan's statehood" and to annul the accreditation of journalists
who distribute "inaccurate information."
After strong objections from the Council of Europe,
the contentious sections of the law were removed, according to local press
reports. At the end of December, parliament adopted amendments to the
Law on Mass Media that excluded articles 19, 27, and 50. In part, the
amended law lifted restrictions on the sources of a media outlet's funding
and abolished current registration procedures. In addition, journalists
can only be forced to disclose their sources to protect public health,
prevent grave crimes, or exonerate persons charged with grave crimes.
Despite this small legislative victory, the government
demonstrates a visceral hatred of the press. In a December speech, President
Aliyev's brother, Jalal Aliyev, railed that the media "are enemies.
Nowhere can you find such enemies to a nation as in this nation…"
January 5
ABA TV
HARASSED, LEGAL ACTION
Acting on the orders of a Baku court, tax police conducted a 12-hour
search of the independent station ABA TV's offices to gather evidence
for a criminal case that could result in a five-year ban on the station
and a three-year jail term for its director.
The raid was the latest chapter in a financial dispute between ABA TV
and the government. In October 2000, the station was shut down for two
weeks after the Ministry of Communications claimed the station owed money
to the state.
ABA president Fariq Zulfuqarov denied charges that his company owed
billions of manats and claimed the police found no evidence of wrongdoing
in ABA TV's account books. He said that by revealing information about
an ongoing investigation to the media, the authorities had violated the
Criminal Procedural Code and slandered his company.
The investigation was ongoing at year's end. Meanwhile, ABA TV remained
closed.
January 8
DMR TV
CENSORED
Authorities closed DMR TV, the only independent source of local news
in the town of Balakan, northwest Azerbaijan, for nearly six weeks under
the pretext that the station was not properly licensed.
On the morning of January 8, police and a tax official detained DMR
TV president Mustafa Dibirov and took him to a police station. Dibirov
was forced to write a letter promising to keep his station off the air
until he received an official government license. The letter also specified
that failure to keep his promise would lead to criminal charges.
Like most regional stations in Azerbaijan, DMR TV's license applications
have been repeatedly denied. As a result, the station has been operating
without a license for 10 years.
On February 6, Azeri officials announced that DMR TV and three other
regional television stations closed in the previous month would be allowed
to reopen immediately. DMR TV resumed broadcasting on February 18.
January 25
Mingechevir TV
CENSORED
Vahid Mamedov, president of Mingechevir TV, an independent station based
in the town of Mingechevir, shut down the station after the local police
chief threatened to prosecute him for broadcasting without a license.
Major Tahir Badalov allegedly acted on orders from the State Radio Frequencies
Commission and the Ministry of Internal Affairs.
Like many other regional independent broadcasters, Mingechevir TV had
repeatedly applied for a broadcast license but was refused by authorities.
On February 6, Azeri officials announced that Mingechevir TV and three
other regional stations that had been closed in the previous month would
be allowed to reopen immediately. The station resumed broadcasting on
February 15.
February 6
Gutb TV
CENSORED
Khayal TV
CENSORED
The provincial stations Gutb TV and Khayal TV were closed for about
two weeks by a local governor, who said he was acting on orders from officials
in the capital, Baku.
Governor Mehman Ibrahimov later justified his action by claiming that
neither station was properly licensed, Internews Azerbaijan reported.
Gutb TV president Mahir Orujiev later announced that Governor Ibrahimov
had told him on February 14 that the station was being shut down because
authorities in Baku did not want more than one television station broadcasting
per region.
Like many other regional independent stations in Azerbaijan, Gutb TV
and Khayal TV had applied repeatedly for broadcast licenses. In each case,
local authorities cited a lack of available frequencies as an excuse to
reject the application, even though all the stations operate in rural
areas where they compete only with state television.
Khayal TV resumed broadcasting on February 19. Gubt TV was back on the
air by February 21.
Namik Ibrahimov, Ekho
ATTACKED
Ibrahimov, a reporter for the independent daily Ekho, was attacked
by a half-dozen police officers while covering a police raid on an unauthorized
street market in Baku.
When Ibrahimov started taking pictures of the raid, the officers kicked
him and beat him with their police batons, damaging his camera in the
process. Ibrahimov was taken to a police car and then released soon afterwards
on the orders of a senior police officer.
March 3
Idrak Abbasov, Impuls
ATTACKED
Police attacked and beat Abbasov, a reporter with the newspaper Impuls,
when he attempted to photograph them closing down a newspaper kiosk owned
by Gaya, the company that distributes the publication. He was detained
at a police station for several hours, and then released.
The police also assaulted Gaya's deputy director, who, along with other
employees, was trying to stop them from closing the kiosk.
April 21
Heydar Oguz, Hurriyyet
IMPRISONED, ATTACKED
Jasur Mammedov, Hurriyyet
IMPRISONED, ATTACKED
Suleyman Mammedli, Hurriyyet
ATTACKED
Police attacked and arrested Oguz and Mammedov, reporters with the thrice-weekly
Baku newspaper Hurriyyet, while the journalists were covering an
illegal protest rally by the opposition Democratic Party of Azerbaijan.
Meanwhile, the deputy chief of the Baku Senior Police Department assaulted
Mammedli, the newspaper's editor-in-chief, according to local sources.
A group of police officers attacked and beat Oguz and Mammedov before
they had a chance to show their press credentials. The reporters were
then taken to a police station, where Oguz was sentenced to seven days
in prison and Mammedov was sentenced to 12 days. Both were released on
April 28.
May 12
Idrak Abbasov, Impuls
ATTACKED
Suleyman Mammedli, Hurriyyet
ATTACKED
Seymur Verdizade, Bu Gun
ATTACKED
Aybeniz Velikhanli, Milletin Sesi
ATTACKED
Parvin Sadai, Milletin Sesi
ATTACKED
Rahim Qadimov, 525-ci Qezet
ATTACKED
Rasim Mustafaoglu, Hurriyyet
ATTACKED
Seven journalists were beaten by uniformed police and individuals in
civilian clothing while covering an opposition Democratic Party of Azerbaijan
(DPA) rally in the capital, Baku.
A DPA report on the incident alleged that the plainclothes attackers
were members of the police, the national security service, and a private
security firm called Amay.
Abbasov, a reporter with the newspaper Impuls, was assaulted
when he tried to photograph the police beating women DPA members. His
camera was confiscated and broken. Later that day, the journalist was
hospitalized with head injuries.
Mammedli, editor-in-chief of the newspaper Hurriyyet; Verdizade,
a reporter with the newspaper Bu Gun; Velikhanli and Sadai, reporters
with the newspaper Milletin Sesi; Qadimov, a reporter with the
newspaper 525-ci Qezet; and Mustafaoglu, editor of the newspaper
Hurriyyet, were also assaulted during the demonstration.
According to CPJ sources in Baku, police detained Mammedli after attacking
him. Verdizade and Sadai's tape recorders were confiscated, as was Mustafaoglus'
press card.
July 15
Yaqub Abbasov, Ulus
IMPRISONED, LEGAL ACTION
Surkhay Qojayev, Ulus
IMPRISONED, LEGAL ACTION
Abbasov and Qojayev, founder and deputy editor, respectively, of the
independent newspaper Ulus, were detained and charged with hooliganism,
according to local reports.
The charges came after former Ulus contributor Aybeniz Ilqar
filed a complaint claiming that Abbasov, Qojayev, and and a member of
the opposition Democratic Party, with which the paper is allied, physically
assaulted her when she came to the Ulus offices on July 5 to have
Abbasov stamp her work documents, local sources reported.
The journalists claim they were framed in order to suppress their independent
publication, which often criticized the government, and because of their
affiliation with the Democratic Party.
On July 15, the Sabayil District Court ordered the two journalists jailed
for three months pending trial. However, they were detained until December
6, when the Sabayil District Court in Baku found them guilty but ordered
them released. Abbasov was given a suspended prison term of 14 months,
while Qojayev was given a suspended sentence of one year.
July 17
ABA Television
HARASSED, CENSORED
The independent Baku station ABA Television closed its doors, apparently
under government pressure. Tax Ministry officials then confiscated some
of the station's equipment.
For several months, ABA had been the subject of intense scrutiny by
tax officials. Shamil Safiyev, the head of the station's finance department,
has been in jail since his May 22 arrest on charges of tax evasion and
the intentional use of false documents.
ABA president Fariq Zulfuqarov announced the station's closure in a
videotaped message sent to his employees on July 16 from the United States,
where he had been living for more than two months.
In a July 18 interview published in the Baku newspaper Ekho,
Zulfuqarov said he closed the station to protest the Tax Ministry's investigation,
which he viewed as a government-orchestrated attempt to take control of
ABA.
At approximately 1:00 a.m. on the night of July 16-17, Tax Ministry
officials seized two trucks containing ABA Television equipment. The equipment,
which ABA staff members were apparently moving out of the station in an
attempt to save it from confiscation, was said to be worth 1.5 billion
manats (US$320,000).
Sources in Baku told CPJ that the Tax Ministry will hold the equipment
until officials finish investigating alleged financial improprieties at
the station. At year's end, the station remained closed, and the investigation
was ongoing.
CPJ send a letter of inquiry about this case to President Heydar Aliyev
on August 27.
August 7
Milletin Sesi
LEGAL ACTION, CENSORED
The Narimanov District Court in Baku ordered the independent weekly
Milletin Sesi to cease publication after finding the paper guilty
of defaming Nadir Nasibov, the former chairman of the State Property Committee,
and his deputy, Barat Nuriyev.
The defamation charge came in reprisal for an article in the July 22-28
edition of Milletin Sesi titled, "Who Testified Against Heydar
Aliyev?" The article accused Nasibov and Nuriyev of financial misconduct
in a privatization deal, the Turan news agency reported.
These allegations had already appeared in numerous international publications,
including Forbes, The New York Times, and the Russian magazine
Kommersant-Dengi, the Moscow-based Center for Journalism in Extreme
Situations (CJES) reported. According to Azerbaijan's Law on Mass Media,
media outlets are not responsible for information republished from other
media sources.
The court ignored 126 pages of articles that were submitted to support
Milletin Sesi's allegations against Nasibov and Nuriyev. Milletin
Sesi editor Shahbaz Khuduoglu told CJES that he planned to appeal
the ruling, to the Supreme Court if necessary. He added that Milletin
Sesi would continue publishing until all legal recourses have been
exhausted.
The paper ceased publication soon after September 17, when the District
Court ruled for the plaintiff in a separate case of alleged defamation
against President Heydar Aliyev's chief of staff (see September 17 case).
On October 22, the former editors of Milletin Sesi released a
statement noting that the Court of Appeals had upheld the earlier conviction.
August 9
Impuls
CENSORED
Azerbaijani authorities blocked distribution of the August 9 edition
of the newspaper Impuls because it was printed in Cyrillic script.
A June presidential decree required local publications to print exclusively
in the Latin script (by August 1, 2001).
The government ordered the paper's printing house to block the issue,
and officials summoned Impuls' owner, Khan Husseyn Aliyev, to the
Baku prosecutor's office and gave him an official warning for violating
the regulation. The newspaper subsequently ceased publication.
The decree was intended to reduce the dominance of the Russian language
in Azerbaijan. Josef Stalin imposed the Russian Cyrillic script, which
is derived from Russian, on Azerbaijan in 1939. Since then, most Azeri-language
newspapers in the country have been printed in Cyrillic.
August 15
Etimad
LEGAL ACTION, CENSORED
The Yasamalsky District Court in the capital, Baku, shut down the newspaper
Etimad for allegedly insulting Azerbaijan's senior Muslim cleric,
Sheikh-ul-Islam Allakhshukur Pashazade.
The charge came in response to an article titled, "Isa Gambar and
the Two Armenians," which appeared in the July 28-August 3 edition
of Etimad. The article contained critical comments about Pashazade,
according to local and international press sources.
In an August 13 television address, President Heydar Aliyev condemned
the article and called for sanctions against the newspaper.
"In connection with this article, we have received hundreds of
letters.... In all these letters, people express their outrage at such
an incident and ask me, the president of Azerbaijan, to punish the newspaper
that insulted Azerbaijan's religious leader, Sheikh ul-Islam. I agree
with all these thoughts," the president declared. Etimad subsequently
ceased publishing.
September 4
Elmar Huseynov, Bakinsky Bulvar
IMPRISONED
Irada Huseynova, Bakinsky Bulvar
LEGAL ACTION
Bella Zakirova, Bakinsky Bulvar
LEGAL ACTION
Huseynov, founder of the independent Russian-language weekly Bakinsky
Bulvar; Huseynova, a reporter for the paper; and Zakirova, the editor-in-chief,
were found guilty of defamation and fined 80 million manats (US$17,400)
by Baku's Nizaminsky District Court.
Baku mayor Hajibala Abutalibov sued Bakinsky Bulvar for defamation
and sought to close the paper after it published an article by Irada Huseynova
criticizing the mayor for demolishing commercial kiosks, a move that left
many unemployed.
According to CPJ sources, the court ordered Bakinsky Bulvar to
issue a written apology to the mayor, but shut it down before it could
publish such a statement. On September 6, the court forbade publishing
houses and distributors from printing and circulating copies of Bakinsky
Bulvar.
Following the paper's closure, the court launched criminal prosecutions
against Huseynov, Huseynova, and Zakirova. All three were charged with
defaming the mayor, an offense punishable by one to three years in prison
On September 20, Huseynova requested political asylum in Germany after
attending a conference in Warsaw, according to local press reports. She
was still abroad at year's end.
On September 21, both Huseynov and Zakirova were found guilty of criminal
defamation. The court sentenced Huseynov to six months in prison and gave
Zakirova a six-month suspended sentence. CPJ protested these actions in
an October 16 letter to President Heydar Aliyev.
On October 17, Aliyev signed a pardon authorizing Huseynov's release
in honor of the 10th anniversary of Azerbaijan's independence. The pardon
came in response to numerous appeals received by his office, according
to Leyla Yunus, chairperson of an Azerbaijani organization called the
Committee to Protect IMPRISONED Journalists and Freedom of Expression.
The pardon did not reverse the guilty verdict against Huseynov, and
Bakinsky Bulvar remained closed at year's end, according to local
CPJ sources.
The Azerbaijani news agency Turan reported that on November 13, the
Court of Appeals upheld the convictions of Huseynov and Zakirova.
September 17
Shahbaz Khuduoglu, Milletin Sesi
IMPRISONED, LEGAL ACTION
Gulnaz Qamberli, Milletin Sesi
LEGAL ACTION
Eynulla Fetullayev, Milletin Sesi
LEGAL ACTION
Milletin Sesi
LEGAL ACTION
Ramiz Mehdiyev, President Heydar Aliyev's chief of staff, filed defamation
charges against three journalists from the independent weekly Milletin
Sesi.
The group included editor-in-chief Khuduoglu, correspondent Qamberli,
and deputy editor Fetullayev.
The charges arose from an article in the paper that criticized Mehdiyev
and other officials for restricting public access to a popular resort
area where they were vacationing with unidentified women.
Local and international sources reported that during the trial, the
court denied Khuduoglu access to a defense attorney. On September 17,
Khuduoglu was sentenced to six months in prison, while Qamberli received
a three-month suspended sentence.
Fetullayev's trial began on January 8, 2002, the Azerbaijani news agency
Turan reported. On January 11, Fetullayev was summoned to the Narimanov
Court, where Judge Babayev informed him that Ramiz Mehdiyev had officially
withdrawn his lawsuit against the deputy editor, Turan news agency reported.
At another September 17 hearing, the Narimanov Court ordered Milletin
Sesi to cease publication, according to local reports. Soon after,
the paper ceased publication.
CPJ protested these actions in an October 16 letter to President Aliyev.
On October 17, Aliyev signed a pardon authorizing Khuduoglu's release
in honor of the 10th anniversary of Azerbaijan's independence. The pardon
came in response to numerous appeals received by his office, according
to Leyla Yunus, chairperson of a local organization called the Committee
to Protect IMPRISONED Journalists and Freedom of Expression.
The pardon did not reverse the guilty verdict against Khuduoglu. On
October 22, the former editors of Milletin Sesi released a statement
noting that the Court of Appeals had upheld the earlier conviction.
November 15
Shahbaz Khuduoglu, Milletin Sesi
ATTACKED, HARASSED
Elmar Huseynov, Bakinsky Bulvar
ATTACKED, HARASSED
Khuduoglu, editor-in-chief of the banned independent weekly Milletin
Sesi, and Huseynov, founder of the banned independent weekly Bakinsky
Bulvar, were arrested and detained when they and their staff attempted
to stage a protest in front of the monument to the founder of the first
Azerbaijani newspaper, according to local press reports. The two journalists
were released later that day with a warning, CPJ sources said.
December 6
Shahnaz Metlebqizi, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Metlebqizi, a correspondent with the Baku-based independent dailyYeni
Musavat, was attacked outside her home by an unknown assailant, according
to local press reports.
As the journalist approached her house, the attacker grabbed a fresh
edition of Yeni Musavat out of Metlebqizi's hand and cut it into
small bits with a knife. He then hit the journalist repeatedly over the
head and threatened to harm other journalists at the newspaper.
The police launched a criminal investigation into the attack, but no
progress had been made by year's end, the chairman of the local Journalists'
Trade Union told CPJ.
December 12
Rauf Arifoglu, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED, HARASSED
Azer Hasret, Chairman of the Journalists' Trade Union
ATTACKED, HARASSED
Elman Maliyev, Express
ATTACKED, HARASSED
Ramiz Najafli, Azadliq
ATTACKED, HARASSED
Ali Rza, Azadliq
ATTACKED
Idrak Abbasov, Impuls
ATTACKED
Khatire Askerova, Hurriyyet
ATTACKED
Jesaret Aliyev, Hurriyyet
ATTACKED
Elchin Yusifoglu, Hurriyyet
ATTACKED
Vasif Mammedoglu, Hurriyyet
ATTACKED
Salim Mammedov, Ulus
ATTACKED
Namiq Mayilov, Turan Information Agency
ATTACKED
Salim Azizoglu, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Konul Shamilqizi, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Tale Seyfeddinoglu, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Shahin Jeferli, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Elshad Pashasoy, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Shahnaz Metlebqizi, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Suheyle Yasharqizi, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Mubariz Jeferli, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Mahir Rufatoglu, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Ilhame Namiqqizi, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Javid Jabbaroglu, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Rena Jamaqizi, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Anar Natiqoglu, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
Sebine Avazqizi, Yeni Musavat
ATTACKED
More than 20 journalists were injured when police violently dispersed
a rally in front of President Heydar Aliyev's ruling New Azerbaijan Party
(NAP) headquarters.
Fifty picketers and 100 supporters had gathered to protest recent NAP
calls to destroy the independent, opposition dailies Yeni Musavat,
Azadliq, and Hurriyyet, according to Azer Hasret, chairman
of the Journalists' Trade Union. Police also took protesters' signs and
ripped them apart.
The Baku mayor's office had refused the organizers' petition to hold
a demonstration.
Following the NAP statements, several printing houses refused to print
the three publications, according to local sources. Hasret told CPJ that
all three newspapers filed lawsuits against the New Azerbaijan Party in
response.
Najafli, a correspondent with the independent daily Azadliq,
was badly injured by the police and taken to the hospital, where he was
diagnosed with a severe concussion. At year's end he was recovering at
home but remained unable to work, according to CPJ sources.
Meanwhile, Arifoglu, editor of the independent daily Yeni Musavat;
Maliyev, correspondent with the daily Express; and Hasret were
arrested. Baku's chief of police Nagiyev personally beat up Hasret and
Maliyev in the back seat of a police vehicle while two police officers
restrained them, the newspaper 525ci Qezet reported.
The arrested journalists were released half an hour later after parliamentarian
Aqbal Agazade, a member of the Civic Unity Party, intervened on their
behalf, Hasret told CPJ.
Following the violent events of December 12, the entire staff of Azadliq
asked U.S. Ambassador Ross Wilson to grant them political asylum in the
United States, according to the Azerbaijani news agency Turan. Their application
was pending at year's end.
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