Download the Report

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Download the Report Azerbaijan Beaten, Blacklisted, HUMAN and Behind Bars RIGHTS WATCH The Vanishing Space for Freedom of Expression in Azerbaijan HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH HUMAN 350 Fifth Avenue, 34 th Floor New York, NY 10118-3299 RIGHTS www.hrw.org WATCH Beaten, Blacklisted, and Behind Bars The Vanishing Space for Freedom of Expression in Azerbaijan The government of Azerbaijan is engaged in concerted efforts to limit the space for freedom of expression in the country. Senior government officials frequently pursue criminal defamation and other cases against journalists and human rights defenders criticizing the government. Dozens of journalists have been prosecuted and imprisoned or fined. Police and sometimes unidentified assailants are able to physically attack journalists and human rights defenders with impunity, deliberately interfering with their efforts to investigate human rights abuses and other issues of public interest or in retaliation for their work. Recent legislative amendments restrict journalists’ ability to use video, photo or sound recording without the explicit consent of an individual even at public events. The government also banned all broadcasting of foreign radio stations on FM frequencies beginning in 2009. State antagonism toward independent and opposition media has been a serious problem in Azerbaijan for a number of years. Many journalists and editors regularly resort to self-censorship to avoid criminal prosecutions or other repercussions for critical reporting. Dozens of journalists have fled Azerbaijan in recent years fearing for their safety. These trends are particularly alarming given the upcoming November 7, 2010 parliamentary elections in Azerbaijan, as vibrant public discourse is crucial for a free and fair vote. The government of Azerbaijan should take immediate steps to abolish criminal penalties for defamation. They should conduct prompt, thorough, and impartial investigations to end impunity for violence against journalists and human rights defenders. Azerbaijan’s international partners should use every opportunity to urge the Azerbaijani authorities to ensure respect for freedom of expression and to release imprisoned journalists. Baku, Azerbaijan: A plainclothes policeman detains an opposition activist demanding free speech. © July 3, 2010 Reuters Beaten, Blacklisted, and Behind Bars The Vanishing Space for Freedom of Expression in Azerbaijan Copyright © 2010 Human Rights Watch All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America ISBN: 1-56432-703-5 Cover design by Rafael Jimenez Human Rights Watch 350 Fifth Avenue, 34th floor New York, NY 10118-3299 USA Tel: +1 212 290 4700, Fax: +1 212 736 1300 [email protected] Poststraße 4-5 10178 Berlin, Germany Tel: +49 30 2593 06-10, Fax: +49 30 2593 0629 [email protected] Avenue des Gaulois, 7 1040 Brussels, Belgium Tel: + 32 (2) 732 2009, Fax: + 32 (2) 732 0471 [email protected] 64-66 Rue de Lausanne 1202 Geneva, Switzerland Tel: +41 22 738 0481, Fax: +41 22 738 1791 [email protected] 2-12 Pentonville Road, 2nd Floor London N1 9HF, UK Tel: +44 20 7713 1995, Fax: +44 20 7713 1800 [email protected] 27 Rue de Lisbonne 75008 Paris, France Tel: +33 (1)43 59 55 35, Fax: +33 (1) 43 59 55 22 [email protected] 1630 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., Suite 500 Washington, DC 20009 USA Tel: +1 202 612 4321, Fax: +1 202 612 4333 [email protected] Web Site Address: http://www.hrw.org October 2010 ISBN: 1-56432-703-5 Beaten, Blacklisted, and Behind Bars The Vanishing Space for Freedom of Expression in Azerbaijan I. Summary & Key Recommendations ................................................................................. 1 II. Methodology .................................................................................................................. 5 III. Background ................................................................................................................... 7 Azerbaijan’s Political Landscape .............................................................................. 7 Media in Azerbaijan ................................................................................................ 8 Broadcast Media ...................................................................................................... 9 Print Media .............................................................................................................. 10 Online Media ........................................................................................................... 11 IV. Prosecution of Journalists and Human Rights Defenders .............................................. 13 Criminal and Civil Defamation Cases against Journalists, Human Rights Defenders, and Other Government Critics ................................................................................. 13 Relevant Laws of Azerbaijan .................................................................................... 14 Cases brought by Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Internal Affairs ........................................ 16 Defamation Cases Brought by Other Officials .......................................................... 18 Other criminal cases brought against journalists .................................................... 21 Criminal defamation and other charges against Eynulla Fatullayev .......................... 21 Criminal prosecution and death in custody of Novruzali Mammadov ...................... 24 Fabricated hooliganism cases against journalists .................................................... 25 Freedom of Expression and Criminal Defamation in International Law ..................... 28 International Standards on Criminal Defamation .................................................... 30 Alternatives to Criminal defamation ......................................................................... 35 V. Violence against Journalists ......................................................................................... 37 Violence against Journalists and Lack of Effective Investigations............................. 37 Attack on Afgan Mukhtarli ...................................................................................... 38 Attack on journalists outside Sabail District Police Station No. 22 .......................... 39 Ill-treatment of Idrak Abassov ................................................................................. 40 Stabbing of Agil Khalil ............................................................................................. 41 Detention and ill-treatment of Emin Huseynov ........................................................ 42 Detention and ill-treatment of Seymur Haziev ......................................................... 43 Attack on Elmin Badalov ......................................................................................... 44 Chilling Effects ....................................................................................................... 45 VI. Legislative and Other Restrictions on Freedom of the Media ........................................ 48 Constitutional Amendments Restricting Freedom of Information ............................. 48 The negative effects of the amendments ................................................................ 49 Ban on Foreign Broadcasting .................................................................................. 50 The Press Council and the Black List of Newspapers ............................................... 51 The “Black List” and its impact ................................................................................ 53 VII. International Responses to Azerbaijan’s Repression of Free Expression ..................... 56 Council of Europe (CoE) .......................................................................................... 56 Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) .................................. 58 European Union (EU) ............................................................................................. 60 United States (U.S.) ............................................................................................... 62 VIII. Extended Recommendations ..................................................................................... 64 To the Azerbaijani President and Government: ........................................................ 64 To the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Prosecutor General’s Office: .......................... 65 To the Azerbaijani Parliament: ............................................................................... 66 To the Azerbaijani Judiciary: .................................................................................. 66 To the National Television and Radio Council: ........................................................ 66 To the Press Council of Azerbaijan: ......................................................................... 67 To the Governments of the United States, European Union, and other bilateral partners: .................................................................................................. 67 To the European Union: .......................................................................................... 67 To the Council of Europe: ...................................................................................... 68 To the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe: ................................. 68 To the United Nations: .......................................................................................... 69 IX. Acknowledgements ....................................................................................................
Recommended publications
  • TIGHTENING the SCREWS Azerbaijan’S Crackdown on Civil Society and Dissent WATCH
    HUMAN RIGHTS TIGHTENING THE SCREWS Azerbaijan’s Crackdown on Civil Society and Dissent WATCH Tightening the Screws Azerbaijan’s Crackdown on Civil Society and Dissent Copyright © 2013 Human Rights Watch All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America ISBN: 978-1-62313-0473 Cover design by Rafael Jimenez Human Rights Watch is dedicated to protecting the human rights of people around the world. We stand with victims and activists to prevent discrimination, to uphold political freedom, to protect people from inhumane conduct in wartime, and to bring offenders to justice. We investigate and expose human rights violations and hold abusers accountable. We challenge governments and those who hold power to end abusive practices and respect international human rights law. We enlist the public and the international community to support the cause of human rights for all. Human Rights Watch is an international organization with staff in more than 40 countries, and offices in Amsterdam, Beirut, Berlin, Brussels, Chicago, Geneva, Goma, Johannesburg, London, Los Angeles, Moscow, Nairobi, New York, Paris, San Francisco, Tokyo, Toronto, Tunis, Washington DC, and Zurich. For more information, please visit our website: http://www.hrw.org SEPTEMBER 2013 978-1-62313-0473 Tightening the Screws Azerbaijan’s Crackdown on Civil Society and Dissent Summary ........................................................................................................................... 1 Arrest and Imprisonment .........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • İlahə Hacıyevanın Elmi Məqalələrinin Siyahısı Publications Presentations Projects Conferences Seminars Honours and Awar
    İlahə Hacıyevanın elmi məqalələrinin siyahısı Publications 1) “Jalil Mammadguluzadeh’s Prosaic Language”, AUL, Scientific News, 2008, Presentations N: 3 Projects 2) Article: “Manifestation Forms of Association in Ramiz Rovshan poems”, Conferences “Philological Issues”, “Science Education”, Baku-2012, page 312 Seminars 3) “Love poems written under the influence of Nizami in the 19th century”, AUL, “ 18th Republic Scientific Conference Materials of PhD Students and Honours and awards Young Researchers”, 2nd cover, Baku 2013, page 48 Memberships 4) “The Comparison of Nizami’s “Khosrov and Shirin” couplet with Nakam’s References “Farhad and Shirin” couplet, “Philological Issues”, “Science and education”, Citations Baku-2013, page 386 Courses 5) “Usage form and methods of “Khamsa” tradition in Ismayil Bay Nakam’s Certifications work”, “Second international scientific conference of Young researchers”, Caucasus University, April 18-19, Baku-2014, page 250 6) “One of the poets following Nizami’s tradition Mirza Huseyn Bay Chaker’s life and work in the 19th century Azerbaijan Literature”, AUL, “Scientific News”, Baku-2014, page 19 7) “Сходства и разхождение от нормы в произведение “Лейли и Меджнун М.Г.Чакера и Н.Генджеви”, “Збірник наукових праць” Гілея: науковий вісник”, (ISSN) - 2076-1554, 27.08.2014 8) “The compliance with Nizami’s “Khamsa” topics in Fadai’s “Bakhtyyarname”, International scientific conference material named “Eatern Folk Literature: tradition and modernity”, Baku-Science 2014. 9) “Similarities and differences between Nizami and Mirza Huseyn Bay Chaker’s Leyli and Majnun couplets”, “Risale” collection of articles, November 19, 2014 10) “Social and political motives of independence period in Bakhtiyar Vahabzadeh poesy”, “Science-Education” Baku-2014, N 6 11) “Adherence to traditions and deviation from standard norms in Hagiri Tabrizi’s “Leyla and Majnun” of Hagiri Tabrizi’s “Leyla and Majnun” poem”, Turkish Studies International Periodical for the Languages, Literature and History of Turkish or Turkic Volume 10/12 Summer 2015, p.
    [Show full text]
  • Attachement 2 Inter-Ethnic Conflicts in Kazakhstan
    ATTACHEMENT 2 INTER-ETHNIC CONFLICTS IN KAZAKHSTAN BETWEEN 2006 AND 2007 Events in Aktau On August 20, 2006 Aktau City witnessed riots. Printed mass media reported that originally an unauthorized but peaceful rally of workers was taking place at the central square of the city Yntymak. The workers of Mangistau MunayGas OJSC were demanding salary increase. According to City Akimat (local authority), around 10 or 15 people were participating in the rally. Next day information leaked to the press that there were more than 200 people gathered at the square by night. According to city authorities small groups from the rally moved to courtyards of resident buildings and tried to organize pogroms. Other sources speak about clashes with police and number of arrested vary between 17 and 25 persons. Participants of the rally were joined by the youth who started violent clashes with the police. Opposition mass media reported that at that moment some people in crowed began screaming racial offenses against the Caucasians who live in the area and then began to smash cafeterias and shops owned by Lezgins, Chechens and Azerbaijanis. Mangyshlak peninsula which hosts port city of Aktau has already several times been a field of interethnic conflicts. The most notorious one is a massacre in New Ozen (currently Zhanaozen) of summer 1989 when indigenous people had bloody fights with Lezgins and Chechens. From time to time local conflicts between indigenous people, i.e. Kazakhs, and representatives of the Caucasian diasporas take place in villages of Mangyshlak peninsula. As a rule conflicts arise out of incidents of a criminal nature.
    [Show full text]
  • The Caucasus Globalization
    Volume 6 Issue 2 2012 1 THE CAUCASUS & GLOBALIZATION INSTITUTE OF STRATEGIC STUDIES OF THE CAUCASUS THE CAUCASUS & GLOBALIZATION Journal of Social, Political and Economic Studies Conflicts in the Caucasus: History, Present, and Prospects for Resolution Special Issue Volume 6 Issue 2 2012 CA&CC Press® SWEDEN 2 Volume 6 Issue 2 2012 FOUNDEDTHE CAUCASUS AND& GLOBALIZATION PUBLISHED BY INSTITUTE OF STRATEGIC STUDIES OF THE CAUCASUS Registration number: M-770 Ministry of Justice of Azerbaijan Republic PUBLISHING HOUSE CA&CC Press® Sweden Registration number: 556699-5964 Registration number of the journal: 1218 Editorial Council Eldar Chairman of the Editorial Council (Baku) ISMAILOV Tel/fax: (994 12) 497 12 22 E-mail: [email protected] Kenan Executive Secretary (Baku) ALLAHVERDIEV Tel: (994 – 12) 596 11 73 E-mail: [email protected] Azer represents the journal in Russia (Moscow) SAFAROV Tel: (7 495) 937 77 27 E-mail: [email protected] Nodar represents the journal in Georgia (Tbilisi) KHADURI Tel: (995 32) 99 59 67 E-mail: [email protected] Ayca represents the journal in Turkey (Ankara) ERGUN Tel: (+90 312) 210 59 96 E-mail: [email protected] Editorial Board Nazim Editor-in-Chief (Azerbaijan) MUZAFFARLI Tel: (994 – 12) 510 32 52 E-mail: [email protected] (IMANOV) Vladimer Deputy Editor-in-Chief (Georgia) PAPAVA Tel: (995 – 32) 24 35 55 E-mail: [email protected] Akif Deputy Editor-in-Chief (Azerbaijan) ABDULLAEV Tel: (994 – 12) 596 11 73 E-mail: [email protected] Volume 6 IssueMembers 2 2012 of Editorial Board: 3 THE CAUCASUS & GLOBALIZATION Zaza D.Sc.
    [Show full text]
  • Predators 2021 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 PREDATORS 2021 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Azerbaijan 167/180* Eritrea 180/180* Isaias AFWERKI Ilham Aliyev Born 2 February 1946 Born 24 December 1961 > President of the Republic of Eritrea > President of the Republic of Azerbaijan since 19 May 1993 since 2003 > Predator since 18 September 2001, the day he suddenly eliminated > Predator since taking office, but especially since 2014 his political rivals, closed all privately-owned media and jailed outspoken PREDATORY METHOD: Subservient judicial system journalists Azerbaijan’s subservient judicial system convicts journalists on absurd, spurious PREDATORY METHOD: Paranoid totalitarianism charges that are sometimes very serious, while the security services never The least attempt to question or challenge the regime is regarded as a threat to rush to investigate physical attacks on journalists and sometimes protect their “national security.” There are no more privately-owned media, only state media assailants, even when they have committed appalling crimes. Under President with Stalinist editorial policies. Journalists are regarded as enemies. Some have Aliyev, news sites can be legally blocked if they pose a “danger to the state died in prison, others have been imprisoned for the past 20 years in the most or society.” Censorship was stepped up during the war with neighbouring appalling conditions, without access to their family or a lawyer. According to Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh and the government routinely refuses to give the information RSF has been getting for the past two decades, journalists accreditation to foreign journalists.
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents
    I. Introduction This master‟s thesis represents study of female newspaper and magazine editors in Azerbaijan based on Western and Soviet definitions of journalism with explanation of local national features of this profession. The idea of conducting such research came right after completion of the 2008 research where we examined male editors-in-chief, deputy managing editors and department editors. Those journalism practitioners represented three age generations of Azerbaijani journalism: the old-school Soviet practitioners drilled to adhere party discipline; the war and crisis generation that experienced crash course in capitalism and learned to survive by all means and the youngest generation that came after economical stabilization of Azerbaijan after the year 2000. However, the 2008 inquiry left an aftertaste of incompleteness since the research did not involve even a single female editor. The reason of course was, that women (with one exception1) editors were not represented in that research since none of them were employed in the largest nationwide newspapers that were part of the research sample. Having in mind argumentation of Linda Steiner (Steiner, 1997) on masculine bias inside of journalistic community the 2008 research levitated reasonable questions: are there no female editors in Azerbaijan and if they really exist what is their position in the typological frame derived from the research of Azerbaijani male editors. Logically, the 2012 research had to take a similar approach to the inquiry, resulting in almost identical conceptualization and question apparatus, with the gender aspect being the key modification to the scheme. Despite the attention that the gender problematic received starting the 1990s, surprisingly there were only two attempts to explore female segment of mass media in Azerbaijan.
    [Show full text]
  • Armenophobia in Azerbaijan
    Հարգելի՛ ընթերցող, Արցախի Երիտասարդ Գիտնականների և Մասնագետների Միավորման (ԱԵԳՄՄ) նախագիծ հանդիսացող Արցախի Էլեկտրոնային Գրադարանի կայքում տեղադրվում են Արցախի վերաբերյալ գիտավերլուծական, ճանաչողական և գեղարվեստական նյութեր` հայերեն, ռուսերեն և անգլերեն լեզուներով: Նյութերը կարող եք ներբեռնել ԱՆՎՃԱՐ: Էլեկտրոնային գրադարանի նյութերն այլ կայքերում տեղադրելու համար պետք է ստանալ ԱԵԳՄՄ-ի թույլտվությունը և նշել անհրաժեշտ տվյալները: Շնորհակալություն ենք հայտնում բոլոր հեղինակներին և հրատարակիչներին` աշխատանքների էլեկտրոնային տարբերակները կայքում տեղադրելու թույլտվության համար: Уважаемый читатель! На сайте Электронной библиотеки Арцаха, являющейся проектом Объединения Молодых Учёных и Специалистов Арцаха (ОМУСA), размещаются научно-аналитические, познавательные и художественные материалы об Арцахе на армянском, русском и английском языках. Материалы можете скачать БЕСПЛАТНО. Для того, чтобы размещать любой материал Электронной библиотеки на другом сайте, вы должны сначала получить разрешение ОМУСА и указать необходимые данные. Мы благодарим всех авторов и издателей за разрешение размещать электронные версии своих работ на этом сайте. Dear reader, The Union of Young Scientists and Specialists of Artsakh (UYSSA) presents its project - Artsakh E-Library website, where you can find and download for FREE scientific and research, cognitive and literary materials on Artsakh in Armenian, Russian and English languages. If re-using any material from our site you have first to get the UYSSA approval and specify the required data. We thank all the authors
    [Show full text]
  • What It Means and What’
    Cracking Down on Creative Voices: Turkey’s Silencing of Writers, Intellectuals, and Artists Five Years After the Failed Coup Thank you for joining us for Cracking Down on Creative Voices: Turkey’s Silencing of Writers, Intellectuals, and Artists Five Years After the Failed Coup Since the attempted coup d’état in 2016, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has elevated his attacks on Turkey’s civil society to unprecedented levels, becoming one of the world’s foremost persecutors of freedom of expression. In the five years since the attempted coup, dozens of writers, activists, artists, and intellectuals have been targeted, prosecuted, and jailed; 29 publishing houses have been closed; over 135,000 books have been banned from Turkish public libraries; and more than 5,800 academics have been dismissed from their posts for expressing dissent. PEN America’s 2020 Freedom to Write Index found that Turkey was the world’s third highest imprisoner of writers and public intellectuals, with at least 25 cases of detention or imprisonment. This repressive climate has left writers and other members of Turkey’s cultural sector feeling embattled and targeted, unsure of what they can say or write without falling into their government’s crosshairs. PEN America, the Project on Middle East Democracy (POMED), and members of Turkey’s cultural, artistic, and literary communities discussed these trends and made recommendations on how policymakers might respond to Erdoğan’s campaign of repression. The discussion highlighted PEN America’s report on freedom of expression in Turkey, which features interviews from members of Turkey’s literary, cultural, and human rights communities to better understand how this society- wide crackdown has affected freedom of expression within the country.
    [Show full text]
  • CAUCASUS ANALYTICAL DIGEST No. 114, March 2020 2
    No. 114 March 2020 Abkhazia South Ossetia caucasus Adjara analytical digest Nagorno- Karabakh www.laender-analysen.de/cad www.css.ethz.ch/en/publications/cad.html FORMAL AND INFORMAL POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS Special Editors: Farid Guliyev and Lusine Badalyan (Justus Liebig University Giessen) ■■Introduction by the Special Editors The Interplay of Formal and Informal Institutions in the South Caucasus 2 ■■Post-Velvet Transformations in Armenia: Fighting an Oligarchic Regime 3 By Nona Shahnazarian (Institute for Archaeology and Ethnography at the Armenian National Academy of Sciences, Yerevan) ■■Formal-Informal Relations in Azerbaijan 7 By Farid Guliyev (Justus Liebig University Giessen) ■■From a Presidential to a Parliamentary Government in Georgia 11 By Levan Kakhishvili (Bamberg Graduate School of Social Sciences, Germany) Research Centre Center Center for Eastern European German Association for for East European Studies for Security Studies CRRC-Georgia East European Studies Studies University of Bremen ETH Zurich University of Zurich CAUCASUS ANALYTICAL DIGEST No. 114, March 2020 2 Introduction by the Special Editors The Interplay of Formal and Informal Institutions in the South Caucasus Over the past decade, the three republics of the South Caucasus made changes to their constitutions. Georgia shifted from presidentialism to a dual executive system in 2012 and then, in 2017, amended its constitution to transform into a European-style parliamentary democracy. In Armenia, faced with the presidential term limit, the former President Sargsyan initiated constitutional reforms in 2013, which in 2015 resulted in Armenia’s moving from a semipresidential system to a parliamentary system. While this allowed the incumbent party to gain the majority of seats in the April 2017 parliamentary election and enabled Sargsyan to continue as a prime minister, the shift eventually backfired, spilling into a mass protest, the ousting of Sargsyan from office, and the victory of Nikol Pashinyan’s bloc in a snap parliamentary election in December 2018.
    [Show full text]
  • Media in a Chokehold
    REPORT Azerbaijan’s broadcast media assessment Media in a Chokehold Institute for Reporters' Freedom and Safety March 2013 Azerbaijan Broadcasting Media Assessment Report- March, 2013 Institute for Reporters’ Freedom and Safety 2 Azerbaijan Broadcasting Media Assessment Report – March, 2013 Acronyms ANS TV Azerbaijan News Service TV ATV Azad Azerbaycan TV (Free Azerbaijan Television) AzTV Azerbaijani Television BBC British Broadcasting Corporation DDT Digital Terrestrial Television EBU European Broadcasting Union EPRA European Platform of Regulatory Authorities IFEX International Freedom of Expression Exchange IRFS Institute for Reporters’ Freedom and Safety ITR Ictimai Radio (Public Radio) ITV Ictimai Television (Public Television) NGO Non-governmental organization NTRC National Television and Radio Council OSCE Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe PSB Public Service Broadcasting RFE/RL Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty RTPA Radio and Television Production Association UGC User Generated Content 3 Institute for Reporters’ Freedom and Safety Azerbaijan Broadcasting Media Assessment Report- March, 2013 Contents 1 Acknowledgments.................................. 5 2 Recommendations.................................. 7 Executive Summary . .............................. 17 Introduction . ............................ 20 Chapter One: Broadcasting and Media Policy . 23 Chapter Two: The National TV and Radio Council . 28 Chapter Three: Public Service Broadcasting . ....... 32 Conclusion. ............................. 37 Institute for Reporters’ Freedom and Safety 4 Azerbaijan Broadcasting Media Assessment Report – March, 2013 Acknowledgments This report is a publication of the Institute for Reporters’ Freedom and Safety (IRFS), an independent, non-profit organization dedicated to promoting freedom of expression in Azerbaijan. The report is part of a larger initiative, implemented by IRFS and supported by the OSCE Office in Baku--Change in the air: Advancing the debate on broadcast pluralism and diversity in Azerbaijan.
    [Show full text]
  • Azerbaijan's Deteriorating Media Environment
    Free Expression Under Attack: Azerbaijan’s Deteriorating Media Environment Report of the International Freedom of Expression Mission to Azerbaijan 7-9 September 2010 October 2010 ARTICLE 19 Free Word Centre 60 Farringdon Road London EC1R 3GA United Kingdom Tel: +44 20 7324 2500 Fax: +44 20 7490 0566 E-mail: [email protected] © ARTICLE 19, London, 2010 ISBN 978-1-906586-21-8 This work is provided under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non- Commercial- ShareAlike 2.5 licence. You are free to copy, distribute and display this work and to make derivative works, provided you: 1) give credit to ARTICLE 19; 2) do not use this work for commercial purposes; 3) distribute any works derived from this publication under a licence identical to this one. To access the full legal text of this licence, please visit: http://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/legalcode This report is published thanks to generous support from Open Society Institute - Assistance Foundation/Azerbaijan, which also provided support for the coordination of the mission. List of endorsing organizations This report was written and endorsed by (in alphabetical order): ARTICLE 19: Global Campaign for Free Expression Free Word Centre 60 Farringdon Road London EC1R United Kingdom Contact: Rebecca Vincent Azerbaijan Advocacy Assistant E-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 (0) 207324 2500 www.article19.org Freedom House 1301 Connecticut Avenue NW Floor 6 Washington D.C. 20036 USA Contact: Courtney C. Radsch Senior Program Officer E-mail: [email protected] Tel: +1 202 296
    [Show full text]
  • Azerbaijan | Freedom House
    Azerbaijan | Freedom House http://freedomhouse.org/report/nations-transit/2014/azerbaijan About Us DONATE Blog Mobile App Contact Us Mexico Website (in Spanish) REGIONS ISSUES Reports Programs Initiatives News Experts Events Subscribe Donate NATIONS IN TRANSIT - View another year - ShareShareShareShareShareMore 7 Azerbaijan Azerbaijan Nations in Transit 2014 DRAFT REPORT 2014 SCORES PDF version Capital: Baku 6.68 Population: 9.3 million REGIME CLASSIFICATION GNI/capita, PPP: US$9,410 Consolidated Source: The data above are drawn from The World Bank, Authoritarian World Development Indicators 2014. Regime 6.75 7.00 6.50 6.75 6.50 6.50 6.75 NOTE: The ratings reflect the consensus of Freedom House, its academic advisers, and the author(s) of this report. The opinions expressed in this report are those of the author(s). The ratings are based on a scale of 1 to 7, with 1 representing the highest level of democratic progress and 7 the lowest. The Democracy Score is an average of ratings for the categories tracked in a given year. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: 1 of 23 6/25/2014 11:26 AM Azerbaijan | Freedom House http://freedomhouse.org/report/nations-transit/2014/azerbaijan Azerbaijan is ruled by an authoritarian regime characterized by intolerance for dissent and disregard for civil liberties and political rights. When President Heydar Aliyev came to power in 1993, he secured a ceasefire in Azerbaijan’s war with Armenia and established relative domestic stability, but he also instituted a Soviet-style, vertical power system, based on patronage and the suppression of political dissent. Ilham Aliyev succeeded his father in 2003, continuing and intensifying the most repressive aspects of his father’s rule.
    [Show full text]