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Note About One Photo - by Turkhan Karimov
Seven Years Ago, On This Day - by Babek Bakir
Reset There, Retreat Here – America’s Unconvincing Democracy Agenda-by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
Radio Silence - by Vugar Gojayev
What Causes Armenian Opposition to Madrid Principles? - by Murad Gassanly
What Do Madrid Principles Say On Karabakh? - by Murad Gassanly
Azerbaijan: Democracy Matters - By Gorkhmaz Asgarov
Terms of Engagement: Secretary Clinton's Visit to Azerbaijan - by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
US-Azeri Relations - Aliyev's Dangerous Game - by Murad Gassanly
Robert Gates Goes to Baku, Portent Things to Come? - Karl Rahder
Azerbaijan Belongs On Obama's List Of Violators Of Press Freedom - by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
Azeri Government Thwarts 'Remembrance Day' Rally - by Vugar Gojayev
Playing Baseball on a Chessboard - by Vahid Gazi
Will the U,S, Stand Up for Democracy In Azerbaijan? - by Ali Karimli
Armenia and Turkey: Troubled Borders With Bitter Realities - by Ramin Shafagatov
Azerbaijan's Extravagant Olive Trees - by Arifa Kazimova
Azerbaijan Remembers a Brave Journalist - by Vugar Gojayev
Khojalylized Azerbaijan - by Adil Asgarov
Bananyar Updates - by Vugar Gojayev
What is Happening in Bananyar? - by Vugar Gojayev
From Dolma and Eurovision to Da Vinci Wars - by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
Battle for Democracy Fought Through Internet - by Vugar Gojayev
Blood, Oil, and Borat in Azerbaijan - by Alexander Zaitchik
Historic Breakthrough Controversies: Will Azerbaijani Lands Be Free Soon - By Leyla Aliyeva
Contract of the Century: Myths and Realities - By Dr. Gubad Ibadoglu
Speech at the University of Richmond on Adnan and Emin - by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
Open Letter To A Judge - by Leyla Yunus
Plight of Bloggers Gains International Support - by Vugar Gojayev
Azerbaijan's Steady Descent Into Authoritarianism - by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
Matter Matters, Existence Exists - by Erkin Gadirli
F For Freedom - by Tahsin Ashurov
U.S. Leaves South Caucasus to Russia... By Doing Nothing - by Gorkhmaz Asgarov
New NGO Law Might Cripple Civic Organizations In Azerbaijan - by Vugar Gojayev
"We Had It Once..." - by Gorkhmaz Asgarov
"West Should Withdraw Support For Regime In Baku" - By Bart Wood
History Overshadows Hope On Turkey's Armenain Border - by Daren Butler
Council of Europe: Sleeping Beauty - By Andres Herkel
In Memory of Elmar Huseynov - By Vugar Gojayev
In the Name Of Holy Pipeline - by Leyla Aliyeva
When Balance Policy Blows Up In Your Face - by Gorkhmaz Asgarov

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Plight of Bloggers Gains International Support PDF Print E-mail

By Vugar Gojayev

 

US deputy assistant secretary of state Matthew Bryza has called for the resolution of the case of bloggers Emin Milli and Adnan Hajizada, who were jailed in July on hooliganism charges after they prepared a satirical video online.

Bryza’s statement, on a recent visit to Azerbaijan was followed by the announcement on 11 August that the bloggers’ complaint against the interior ministry, the office of the Attorney General and the Baku Police Department had been rejected. Milli and Hajizadeh accused the authorities of failing to honor their right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty.

Milli and Hajizadeh were sentenced to two months of pre-trial detention after the authorities accused them of hooliganism, a decision that was upheld in a closed hearing on 20 July. The trial is due to be held in September. Their lawyers are planning to take the case to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).

The government was said to be angered by the online video, which poked fun at a local news story about the decision of the Azeri government to import donkeys from Germany. In that video material, Adnan Hajizadeh was wearing a donkey suit and addressing journalists in a mock news conference. The video was produced and posted online by both Hajizadeh and Milli.
The bloggers belong to a group of youth activists in the country. Milli and Hajizadeh, who both contribute to the Ol Youth Movement, have used YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, video blogs and Internet television as part of their campaign to mobilize Azerbaijani youth in a non-violent struggle against the ruling regime.

The authorities were quick to dispel claims that the arrests were politically motivated. Unfortunately, these sorts of events are often politicized and later used against Azerbaijani statehood, said Ali Hasanov, head of the public-political department of the presidential administration. Erkin Gadirli, a well-known lawyer, believes that the activists are being punished for criticizing the government.

Supporters of the detained bloggers argue that they did not engage in politics, but tried to enlighten the Azeri youth, promote modern education and create alternative platforms for discussion. Elnura Jivazadeh, a colleague of Milli, claims that the bloggers have never supported violence.

The Azerbaijani government has effectively used similar criminal charges to strangle the dissenting voices in the past. Ganimat Zahid, chief editor of opposition daily Azadliq, was initially detained in 2007 on hooliganism charges for two months, but the indictment was replaced with four years of imprisonment in March 2008.

There has been an international outcry from human rights groups over the treatment of Milli and Hajizadeh. Amnesty International said the bloggers may have been put in jail just for peacefully exercising their right to freedom of expression and must be freed immediately and unconditionally.

In response, Azerbaijani authorities have accused the embassies of several countries of interfering in the country’s domestic affairs and transparency of the investigation.

Some activists in Baku believe the arrest of Milli and Hajizadeh will have a chilling effect on the blogosphere in Azerbaijan. Milli and Hajizadeh’s blogs were said to have an online audience of over 10,000. The detention is designed to intimidate the outspoken bloggers and those using Internet media tools for discussing politically sensitive issues, says Fuad Hasanov of Baku-based Democracy Monitor (DeMo). That could lead to self-censorship in online media.

Civil society activists and journalists often face intimidation, violent attacks and politically motivated arrests in Azerbaijan, which was ranked 150th out of 173 countries in the annual 2008 Reporters Sans Frontires (RSF) press freedom index.

Free expression campaigning organization Article 19 argues that the authorities in Azerbaijan use criminal defamation laws and other seemingly unrelated criminal charges, such as hooliganism, to intimidate journalists and silence critical views.

In a country where the authorities have firm control on both broadcast and print media, the use of the Internet has expanded in recent years as press freedom has lessened in the conventional media. All television channels remain under the tight control of the government, while the opposition newspapers with their limited circulation continue to be persecuted or face enormous financial pressure.

The authorities expanded a crackdown on independent media outlets in early 2009 by banning Radio Liberty, Voice of America and BBC radio transmission in local frequencies. These media outlets were the only ones offering a plurality of political views, dissenting voices and alternative information to the Azerbaijan public.

With opposition voices totally absent from public life, Internet communication tools such as Facebook, YouTube and Twitter are emerging as an alternative source of information in Azerbaijan.

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Vugar GOJAYEV is a freelance journalist writing on developments in the South Caucasus. He holds MA in Human Rights from the University of Essex, United Kingdom.

 

 
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Azerbaijan in International Media

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"Azeri Defense Ministry Rejects 'Laughable' Armenian Statement," RFE/RL, Aug. 27, 2010

"In One Azeri Village Carrying Water is Women's Work," by Saadat Akifgizi, RFE/RL, Aug. 27, 2010

"Armenia Warns Azerbaijan Over New UN Resolution," RFE/RL, Aug. 26, 2010

"Armenian Group Responds to Burns OpEd," by Mark Tapscott, The Washington Examiner, August 25, 2010,

"Senator Conrad Burns Supports Matthew Brayza's Nomination," The Washington Examiner, August 23, 2010

"Ex-Soviet Leaders Gather In Yerevan," RFE/RL, Aug. 20, 2010

"Deal Signed on Russian Military Base In Armenia," RFE/RL, Aug. 20, 2010

"Big Problems In Baku, And the Man to Deal With Them," by David Kramer, Foreign Policy, Aug. 17, 2010

"Aliyev's Azerbajani Empire Grows...," by Ulviyye Asadzade and Khadija Ismailova, RFE/RL, Aug. 13, 2010

"Azerbaijani Plane Crew Criticized Over Evacuation Delay," RFE/RL, Aug. 12, 2010

"Julliard & Le Coz: Emissary Entanglements," Washington Times, August 11, 2010

"Georgia Needs U.S. Help," by John McCain, Washington Post, August 8, 2010

"Senate Panel Delays Nominee for U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan," by Richard Solash, RFE/RL, August 4, 2010

"Amazing Azerbaijan," by Dom Joly, Mailonline, July 25, 2010

"Russia's Empty Empire," The Economist, July 24, 2010

"Propaganda On Demand," by Corey Pein, Santa Fe Reporter, July 14, 2010

"Azerbaijan's Donkey Bloggers Are Just the Beginning," by Luke Alnutt, RFE/RL, July 8, 2010

"US Slams Azerbaijan Over Jailed Journalist," World News Australia, July 8, 2010

"Hillary Clinton Mends Fences In Central Europe and Caucasus," Washington Post, July 7, 2010

"Jailed Azerbaijani Editor Convicted On New Charges." Washington Post, July 6, 2010

"U.S. Tries to Calm Georgia's Fears," by Mary Beth Sheridan, Washington Post, July 6, 2010

"Clinton Presses Azerbaijan for Nagorno Karabakh," RFE/RL, July 5, 2010

"Clinton Visits Authoritarian Ruler in Azerbaijan," Dallas News, July 5, 2010

"Clinton Reassured Azerbaijan," Boston Globe, July 5, 2010

"Clinton Walks Tightrope On Democracy In Azerbaijan," by Mary Beth Sheridan, Washington Post, July 5, 2010

"How to Prevent Another War In South Caucasus," by Ronald Asmus, Washington Post, July 3, 2010

"Clinton On E. Europe, Caucasus Tour," by Heather Maher, RFE/RL, July 1, 2010

"How to Deal With Azerbaijan?" articles of Amanda Paul and Gorkhmaz Asgarov, GMF "On Wider Europe," June 2010

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Linked Info

"More Troubles In Baku, Local Press Reports On "Magic Tree"," by Karl Rahder, FPB, June 20, 2010

"Azerbaijan Grapples With New Media Freedom," by Karl Rahder, ISN, June 7, 2010

"A Journalism (r)evolution in Azerbaijan," by Mark Briggs, Lost Remote, May 24, 2010

"IMF: The Party Is Over For Azerbaijan," by Shahin Abbasov, Eurasianet. org, May 24, 2010

"Alienating Azerbaijan?" by Karl Rahder, International Relations and Security Network, Apr. 27, 2010

"Colors and Flowers... and Soviet Spoils," by Ben Tanosborn, April 27, 2010

"The U.S. and the Persecution of Azerbaijan's Bloggers," by Joshua Kucera, trueslant.comm Nov. 11, 2009

"Story of a Father and Son," Frontline Club, Sep 28, 2009

"Hooligans?," RSF about arrested youth activists in Azerbaijan, July 11, 2009

"I Rule Here and Blind Democrats in Europe," by Ilgar Mammadov, REAL, June 27, 2009

Azerbaijan Marks Anniversary Of Its First Republic - Frontline Club, May 29, 2009

Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely - by Farid Guliyev, ResetDoc.org, April 16, 2009

So Much For Azerbaijani Democracy - by Michael J. Totten, Commentary Magazine, Oct. 21, 2008

Azerbaijan: Election Day Proves A Snooze - by Mina Muradova, Eurasia Insight, Oct. 15, 2008

Finding Elmar's Killers. Azerbaijan Special Report - by Nina Ognianova, CPJ, Sep. 16, 2008

Azerbaijani Opposition Mulls Presidential Election Boycott - by Liz Fuller

Naxcivan: More Tales From Azerbaijan's North Korea

It's National Press Day in Azerbaijan, But There's Little Cause For Celebration

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