Polis özbaşınalığının tüğyan etdiyi ölkə
ABŞ Dövlet Departamentinin növbeti illik hesabatı yayıldı
6 noyabrda keçirilen parlament seçkilerinde ciddi qanun pozuntularının olduğu
senedde öz eksini tapıb
ABŞDövlet Departamenti martın 8-de dünyada insan haqlarının veziyyetine dair
enenevi illik hesabatını açıqlayıb. Bu münasibetle keçirilen brifinqde dövlet
katibi Kondoliza Rays deyib ki, ABŞ dünyada insan haqları ve demokratiyanın
genişlenmesini uzunmüddetli sabitliyin esas qarantı hesab edir. Onun sözlerine
göre, bir ölkenin öz vetendaşları ile nece davranması onun qonşulara münasibetde
de özünü nece aparacağını müeyyen edir: “İnsan haqlarının en möhkem qarantı
şeffaf hökumet tesisatlarına, qanunun aliliyine malik çiçeklenen demokratiya
sistemidir”. Hesabatın Azerba.ycan bölmesi il erzinde ölkede qeyde alınan insan
haqları pozuntularına dair faktları eks etdirir ve mezmun baxımından kifayet
qeder sertdir. Senedin mezmununu ixtisarlarla teqdim edirik.
Hesabatda deyilir ki, Azerbaycanda bütün hakimiyyet qolları prezidentin faktiki
tabeliyi altındadır . İlham Eliyev 2003-cü ilde beynelxalq standartlara cavab
vermeyen ve ciddi pozuntularla müşayiet olunan seçkilerde hakimiyyet başına
gelib. Azerbaycan hakimiyyetinin insan haqları sahesindeki fealiyyeti pis olaraq
qalıb ve il erzinde bu sahede ciddi pozuntular qeyde alınıb. Dövlet Departamenti
Azerbaycanda esasen aşağıdakı insan haqları problemlerinin olduğunu qeyd edir:
vetendaşların öz hökumetlerini dinc yolla deyişmek hüquqlarının ellerinden
alınması, insanların hebsde işgencelere meruz qalması ve döyülmesi, xüsusen
siyasi reqiblere qarşı istifade olunan özbaşına inzibati hebsler ve saxlamalar,
hebsxana şeraitinin ağır ve heyat üçün tehlükeli olması, polis sistemindeki
cezasızlıq, mehkemelere qeder yayılan korrupsiya ve KİV azadlıqlarına davamlı
müdaxileler, nümayişleri dağıtmaq üçün hedden artıq güc tetbiqi, qadınlara qarşı
sosial diskriminasiya ve onların satılması.
Polis işgencelerinin 4 qurbanı
Senedde deyilir ki, il erzinde hakimiyyet menbeleri her hansı siyasi motivli
qetl hadisesi haqda melumat vermeyibler. Ancaq insan haqları müdafieçileri xeber
veribler ki, polis bölmelerinde meruz qaldıqları işgenceler ve qeddar reftar
üzünden azı 4 nefer ölüb. Öten il aprelin 21-de Nikolay Nikolaşvili adlı mehbus
16 saylı hebsxanada ölüb. Yerli insan haqları fealları bildiribler ki, polisler
istintaq zamanı işgence veribler. Avqustun 7-de Elçin Şahmalıyev Qobustan
hebsxanasında ölüb. İnsan haqları feallarının melumatlarına göre, E.Şahmalıyeve
Qobustan hebsxanasına getirilmezden evvel Sumqayıt Polis İdaresinde işgence
verilib. Avqustun 15-de hemin hebsxanada E.Şahmalıyevin dostu Elman İbrahimov
ölüb. İnsan haqları fealları onun da işgencelere meruz qaldığını bildiribler.
Nehayet, sentyabrın 2-de 8 saylı hebsxanada Mahir Süleymanov adlı mehbus ölüb.
Onu da ölene qeder döyübler. Hakimiyyet ise bütün bu ölüm faktlarının özüneqesd
olduğunu iddia edib. Hesabatda xatırladılır ki, 2004-cü ilde Etibar Necefov,
Akif Mirzeyev, Azer Seferov ve Bedel Babayev adlı mehbusların ölümüne göre
mesuliyyet daşıyan hüquq-mühafize orqanları emekdaşları cezasız qalıb.
Senedde Hacı Memmedovun bandasının hebsi faktı da yer alıb. Bildirilir ki,
1995-ci ilden Daxili İşler Nazirliyi daxilinde fealiyyet gösteren bu banda
çoxsaylı qetller ve adam oğurluğu heyata keçirib. İl erzinde “namelum
aktyorların”"Monitor “ jurnalının redaktoru Elmar Hüseynovu da öldürdüyü
hesabatın bu bölmesinde qeyd olunub. Eyni zamanda o da qeyd olunur ki, evvelki
ilden ferqli olaraq öten il orduda çağırışçıların döyülerek öldürülmesine dair
faktlar qeyde alınmayıb.
Adam oğurluğu
Dövlet Departamenti qeyd edir ki, öten il Azerbaycanda adam oğurluğuna dair
xüsusile keskin veziyyet yaranıb. Martın evvelinde Beynelxalq Bankın
prezidentinin arvadı oğurlanıb, bir neçe gün sonra, martın 10-da MTN qadını
oğurlayan şebekeni üze çıxarıb ve belli olub ki, bu işle 10 il erzinde DİN
daxilinde fealiyyet gösteren banda meşğul olurmuş. MTN bu bandanın rehberi,
DİN-in cinayet axtarışı idaresinin zabiti Hacı Memmedovu ve destenin daha 12
üzvünü hebs edib. Daxili işler naziri bu hadiseden sonra vezifesinde qalıb ve
nazirliyin üç yüksek rütbeli memurunu, o cümleden müavini Zahid Dünyamalıyevi
işden azad edib. İl erzinde adam oğurluqları ve MTN-in emeliyyatı metbuatın
gündeminde olub.
İşgenceler ve polis özbaşınalığı
Hesabatda deyilir ki, qanunlara göre işgenceler ve qeddar reftar qadağan olunsa
da, tehlükesizlik qüvvelerinin memurları il erzinde saxlanılanlara işgenceler
vermekde davam edibler. Eyni zamanda saxlanılanlardan işgence yoluyla alınan
ifadeler mehkemelerde istifade olunur. Yerli insan haqları müdafieçilerinin
melumatlarına göre, il erzinde 40-50 nefer hebsde işgencelere meruz qalıb:
“Meselen, insan haqları müdafieçileri bildiribler ki, polisler saxlanılanlardan
birini polis bölmesinde meftille stola bağlayaraq metal boru ile döyübler.
Noyabr ayında metbuat xeber verib ki, ADP fealı, keçmiş siyasi mehbus Natiq
Efendiyeve BMCMİ-de elektrik şoku verilib. Yerli QHT-lerin ve beynelxalq
müşahideçilerin tezyiqlerinden sonra Efendiyevi BMCMİ-den Bayıl hebsxanasının
tibb bölmesine köçürübler”.
Dövlet Departamenti Gence polisinin bednam zabiti Koroğlu Qasımov haqda fakta da
yer verib. Bildirilir ki, K.Qasımov oğurluqda ittiham olunan qadına hücum ederek
onun zorlayıb, daha sonra onun oğluna qarşı sadomazoxist hereketlere yol verib.
Sonradan DİN K.Qasımovu müveqqeti olaraq vezifeden kenarlaşdırıb ve onun
baresinde araşdırma başlayıb. Hemçinin hökumet “Zerkalo” qezetinin emekdaşı
Ferid Teymurxanlını döyen polis emekdaşını işden azad edib. Polis
özbaşınalıqlarının bu cür geniş seviyyede yayılmasına baxmayaraq, hesabatda eks
olunan fakta göre DİN cemi 6 polisi sistemden kenarlaşdırıb: “İl erzinde
hakimiyyet 2003-cü il prezident seçkilerinden sonra işgencelere, insanlara qarşı
qeddar reftara , döyülmelere göre mesuliyyet daşıyan DİN memurlarını
cezalandırmayıb. Eksine, hakimiyyet bu memurlardan birini, Vilayet Eyvazovu
daxili işler nazirinin müavini vezifesine ireli çekib. Hakimiyyet noyabrın 26-da
dinc nümayişçilere qarşı qeddar zorakılığa göre cavabdeh olan memurların da heç
birini cezalandırmayıb”.
Azerbaycandakı polis özbaşınalıqlarının tesvir olunduğu bölmede daha sonra
deyilir ki, qanunlar özbaşına hebsi ve saxlamanı qadağan etse de, bu qadağaya
praktiki olaraq emel edilmir. Hüquq-mühafize sistemindeki korrupsiya da esas
problem olaraq qalır. Polis tez-tez yol hereketi qaydalarının pozulmasına ve
başqa xırda pozuntulara göre yerli sakinlerden rüşvet teleb edib. Yol polisi
emekdaşlarının maaşları bir neçe defe artırılsa da , qanunların icrasına nezaret
eden başqa resmi şexslerin aşağı emekhaqqı polis korrupsiyasına öz töhfesini
verib. Hemçinin polis saxlanılanların hüquqlarına emel etmir ve onları tez-tez
vekil müdafiesinden mehrum edir. Özbaşına hebsler daha çox “polise müqavimet”
barede saxta ittiham üzre heyata keçirilir. Qanun polise şübheli şexsi yalnız 24
saat hebsde saxlamağa icaze verse de, bu qaydaya emel olunmur ve adeten bir neçe
gün bu şexsler polisde saxlanılır. Baş prokurorluğun telimatı ile hereket eden
hakimler ise heç bir edaletli araşdırma aparmadan ve şexsin hüquqlarını temin
etmeden onları hebse mehkum edirler. Xüsusen Bakıdan kenarda saxlanılanların
vekille temin edilmesi problem olaraq qalır. Hemçinin saxlanılanların aile
üzvleri ile elaqesinin kesilmesi metodundan da tez-tez istifade olunur. Bezen
siyasi motivlerle hebse alınanlar saatlarla, yaxud günlerle etraf alemle heç bir
elaqe qurmasına imkan verilmeden polis bölmesinde saxlanılır.
Hebsxanalardakı dözülmez şerait 107 adamın ölümüne sebeb olub
Dövlet Departamenti bildirir ki, Azerbaycan hebsxanalarındakı veziyyet ağır ve
heyat üçün tehlükeli olaraq qalır. Hedden çox mehbusun eyni kamerada
saxlanılması, adekvat olmayan qidalanma, berbad tibbi xidmet infeksion
xesteliklerin yayılması üçün münbit şerait yaradır. Hesabatda deyilir ki, bir
sıra mehbuslar daha çox onların yerini gizletmek ve fiziki zorakılıqları
ört-basdır etmek üçün ayrıca kameralarda saxlanılır, burada onlardan ifade almaq
üçün qida ve sudan mehrum edirler. Senedde il erzinde hebsxanalarda ağır şerait
üzünden azı 107 adamın öldüyü deyilir: “Bunlardan azı 4-ü işgence ve
özbaşınalığın qurbanı olub. Verem, hebsxanalarda mehbusların ölmesinin birinci
sebebi olaraq qalır. Hakimiyyet etiraf edib ki, il erzinde 66 mehbus sistematik
tibbi baxışın olmaması üzünden ölüb. Beynelxalq Qırmızı Xaç Cemiyyetinin
melumatına göre, Azerbaycan hebsxanalarında il erzinde 515 nefer vereme yoluxub.
Mehbusların çoxu ailelerinden gelen erzaq ve dermanlara ümid edir, onların
hebsxana memurlarına rüşvet vermesi adi haldır. Öten ilin fevralında edliyye
nazirinin müavini hebsxana sistemindeki rüşvete göre işden azad olunub”.
Müxalifet feallarının hebsleri, siyasi repressiyalar
Hesabatda gösterilir ki, il erzinde polisler müntezem olaraq müxalifet
feallarının mitinqlerde iştirakını önlemek üçün heç bir sebeb göstermeden onları
saxlayıb. Daha sonra mehkeme onları ictimai sabitliyi pozmaqda ittiham ederek
10-12 günlüye hebse mehkum edib. İyunun 4-de hakimiyyet şeherde mitinq ve
yürüşlerin keçirilmesi üçün yer ayrılmasına tapşırıq verse de, şeherin
merkezinde mitinq keçirmek cehdine göre onlarla adam saxlanılıb. İyul ayında
polis Tovuz, Sabirabad ve Lenkeranda mitinq keçirmek isteyen müxalifet
feallarını hebs edib. Sentyabrın 29-da ise icaze verilmeyen aksiyadan evvel
müxalifet partiyalarının 14 fealı hebs edilib. Aprelde polis müxalifetin
tanınmış fiqurlarından biri, keçmiş daxili işler naziri İsgender Hemidovu küçede
döyerek hebs edib.
İyunun 13-de MTN ve Baş Prokurorluq Müsavat Partiyasının üzvü Pireli Orucovu iki
hökumet memuruna sui-qesd cehdinde ittiham ederek hebs edibler. “Azadlıq” bloku
bu hebsi pisleyib ve müxalifete qarşı hede-qorxu kampaniyasının bir hissesi
hesab edib. Orucov ilin sonunda hele de hebsde saxlanılırdı (Qeyd edek ki,
P.Orucov 4 il azadlıqdan mehrum edilib). Aprelin 1-de hakimiyyet “Yeni Fikir”
gencler teşkilatının sedri Ruslan Beşirlini xeyanetde ve dövlet çevrilişi
cehdinde ittiham ederek hebs edib. Televiziyalarla geniş reklam olunan
videogörüntülere göre Beşirli Ermenistan ve Gürcüstan vetendaşları olduğu
deyilen iki şexsden ölkede inqilab hazırlamaq üçün pul alıb. Beynelxalq
müşahideçiler R.Beşirliye qarşı ireli sürülen delilin ciddiliyine şübhe edir ve
hesab edirler ki, bu plan müxalifeti qorxutmaq üçün hazırlanıb. Sentyabrın 12-de
“Yeni Fikir”in üzvü Seid Nuriyev de R.Beşirlinin istintaqı üzre hebs edilib.
Dövlet Departamenti “dövlet çevrilişi” ittihamı ile yüksek rütbeli hakimiyyet
memurlarının hebsine de yer verib. Bildirilir ki, hemin şexsler Resul Quliyevin
terefdarlarına maliyye yardımı göstermekde günahlandırılırlar: “Siyasi
mehbusların sayına dair möteber melumat yoxdur. Ancaq yüzlerle müxalifetçi qısa
müddet, bir ve iki hefteliye hebse alınıblar. Eyni zamanda il erzinde prezident
Eliyev bir çox siyasi mehbusu efv edib”.
Seçki saxtalaşdırılıb
Hesabatda gösterilir ki, noyabrın 6-da Azerbaycanda keçirilmiş parlament
seçkileri ATET qarşısında götürülmüş öhdeliklere ve demokratik seçki
standartlarına uyğun olmayıb. Halbuki, seçkiden önce dövlet başçısı defelerle
beyan etmişdi ki, hakimiyyet seçkilerin demokratik keçirilmesini temin edecek.
Dövlet başçısının demokratik seçkilerin keçirilmesinin zeruriliyi barede
serencamına baxmayaraq, eslinde seçkiler çoxsaylı qanun pozuntuları ile müşayiet
olunub. İcra hakimiyyeti nümayendeleri müsteqil ve müxalifetden olan
namizedlerin hüquqlarını pozaraq hökumetyönlü namizedleri destekleyib.
Senedde qeyd olunur ki, polis müxalifet mitinqlerini dağıtmaq üçün qeyri-
adekvat qüvveden istifade edib, dövlet ve özel telekanallar ise açıq-aşkar
hökumetyönlü namizedleri destekleyib. Müxalifetçi ve müsteqil namizedlerin
efirden istifade hüquqları pozulub.
Oktyabrın 23-de İlham Eliyev sesverme zamanı saxtalaşdırmanın qarşısını almaq
meqsedile barmaqlara xüsusi mürekkeb vurulması barede ferman imzalayıb. Lakin
sesverme gösterdi ki, saxtalaşdırma halları baş verib. Bele ki, seçki
komissiyaları üzvlerine ve müşahideçilere tezyiq, onların qorxudulması, qutulara
topa şeklinde bülletenlerin atılması, protokolların saxtalaşdırılması halları
baş verib. Polis açıq şekilde sesvermenin gedişine müdaxile edib, saxtalaşdırma
eleyhine çıxanları hebs edib.
Hakimiyyet bezi dairelerde sesvermenin neticelerini leğv etse de, bu, ümumi
neticeye tesir göstermeyib. Eyni zamanda hakimiyyet “Azadlıq” blokundan olan
müxalifetçilerin qalib geldiyi dairelerde neticeleri leğv edib.
(davamı var)
Yeni Müsavat qəzeti, 10 mart 2006-cı il,
Hazırladı: F.MEMMEDOV
Azerbaijan:
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2005
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
March 8, 2006
Azerbaijan is a republic of approximately 7.9 million persons with a
presidential form of government. The president dominated the executive,
legislative, and judicial branches of government. Ilham Aliyev, the son of
former president Heydar Aliyev, was elected president in October 2003 in a
ballot that did not meet international standards for a democratic election due
to numerous, serious irregularities. The November parliamentary elections showed
an improvement in some areas but still did not meet a number of international
standards. Armenian forces continued to occupy an estimated 16 percent of the
country's territory, including Nagorno-Karabakh. The government did not exercise
any control over developments in territories occupied by Armenian forces. The
civilian authorities generally maintained effective control of the security
forces. Members of the security forces committed numerous human rights abuses.
The government's human rights record remained poor, and it continued to commit
numerous abuses. The November 6 parliamentary elections strongly influenced the
government's human rights performance. The following human rights problems were
reported:
restricted right of citizens to peacefully change their government
torture and beating of persons in custody, leading to four deaths
arbitrary arrest and detention, particularly of political opponents
harsh and life-threatening prison conditions
police impunity
lengthy pretrial detention
pervasive corruption in the judiciary
some restrictions of privacy rights
periodic interference with media freedom
excessive use of force to disperse demonstrations
limited instances of violence and societal discrimination against women
trafficking in persons
limited workers' rights
There were some improvements in the period leading up to the November 6
parliamentary elections compared with previous elections. The president issued
two decrees instructing national and local government officials to comply with
international election standards. The government pardoned most remaining
political prisoners identified by the Council of Europe (COE) who had been
convicted in the aftermath of the flawed 2003 presidential election; the
government also vacated the sentences of seven opposition leaders, allowing them
to run in the election. Although the government registered the majority of
candidates for 125 seats in parliament, some candidates withdrew, citing
government pressures to do so.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1 Respect for the Integrity of the Person, Including Freedom from:
a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
The government or its agents did not commit any politically motivated
killings; however, human rights monitors reported four prisoners died in police
custody due to alleged abuse and mistreatment.
On April 21, Nikolay Nikolashvili died at prison colony 16. Domestic human
rights activists reported that police beat him during questioning. On August 7,
Elchin Shahmaliyev died in Gobustan prison; human rights activists reported that
police beat and tortured him at the Sumgayit police station prior to his
transfer to Gobustan prison. On August 15, Elhman Ibrahimov died at Gobustan
prison; human rights activists reported that police beat and tortured Ibrahimov,
a friend of Shahmaliyev. On September 2, Mahir Suleymanov died in prison colony
8; human rights activists reported that Suleyman was beaten to death. The
government attributed each of these deaths to suicide.
The authorities did not prosecute law enforcement officials implicated in the
2004 deaths of Etibar Najafov, Akif Mirzayev, Azer Safarov, or Badel Babayev.
On March 7, the Ministry of National Security (MNS) arrested a senior Ministry
of Internal Affairs (MIA) official, Haji Mammadov, for ordering the kidnapping
of 11 persons and killing of 3 persons since 1995 as the head of a criminal
kidnapping, murder, and extortion ring within the MIA (see section 1.b.).
During the year unknown actors killed journalist Elmar Huseynov (see section
2.a.).
In contrast to the previous year, there were no press or other reports of deaths
of army conscripts attributed to military hazing.
Despite a cease-fire in effect since 1994, minor outbreaks of fighting with
Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh occurred with increasing frequency, resulting in
deaths of 24 civilians and combatants during the year.
According to the National Agency for Mine Actions, landmines killed 2 persons
and injured 19 others during the year.
b. Disappearance
There was at least one disappearance during the year. In March the wife of the
chairman of the International Bank of Azerbaijan was kidnapped. On March 10, a
MNS investigation uncovered a kidnapping and extortion ring responsible for the
woman's kidnapping, as well as multiple killings over a 10-year period directed
from within the MIA. An MNS Special Forces unit raid rescued the women (see
section 1.a.).
The Ministry of Justice (MOJ) prosecuted one senior MIA officer, Lieutenant
Colonel Haji Mammadov, chief of the MIA criminal investigation division, who
confessed to the March kidnapping and also to the abduction of 11 persons since
1995. The MNS arrested 12 persons for their involvement in the ring, including 2
Chechen citizens. Mammadov remained in pretrial detention at year's end.
The minister of internal affairs, who remained in office, dismissed three other
senior MIA officials including the deputy minister for law enforcement, Zahid
Dunyamaliyev. The MOJ did not prosecute these officials. The media widely
reported on the March abduction, the rescue operation, and investigation.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) continued to urge the
government and Armenia to provide information on the fate of persons missing in
action since the beginning of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict; during the year the
number of those confirmed missing increased from 3,100 to 3,400. The government
estimated that approximately 4,850 citizens remained missing, allegedly held by
Armenia. During the year the ICRC assisted in the return of six citizens from
Armenia.
c. Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
The law prohibits such practices and provides for penalties of up to 10 years in
jail; however, there were credible reports that security forces beat detainees
to extract confessions while in custody. Despite defendants' claims that
testimony was obtained through torture or abuse, no cases involving such claims
were dismissed. A domestic human rights monitor reported that security forces
tortured between 40 and 50 persons while in custody. For example, a human rights
monitor reported that police tied a detainee to a chair in a police station and
beat the person with a metal pipe.
In early November the media reported that officers of the MIA Organized Crime
Unit (OCU) repeatedly gave electric shocks to opposition Azerbaijan Democratic
Party (ADP) deputy chairman and former political prisoner Natik Efendiyev while
in detention (see section 1.d.). Following widespread press, local NGO, and
international observer attention, the MIA transferred Efendiyev from the OCU to
a local prison where he received medical treatment.
On December 4, Koroglu Gasimov, the Ganja city chief police inspector, allegedly
sexually assaulted a woman and sodomized her adult son during an investigation
into allegations that the son burglarized a local business. MIA inspectors
suspended Gasimov and opened a criminal investigation into his conduct; on
December 7, the ministry dismissed Koroglu.
The government dismissed police officer Javanshir Mammadov for beating a Zerkalo
newspaper journalist, Farid Teymurxanli, at an unsanctioned opposition rally on
May 21.
According to the MIA, authorities criminally charged six police officers for
violations of human rights and civil liberties. Human rights monitors reported
that the government dismissed four other law enforcement officers for misconduct
during the year.
During the year the government did not punish MIA officials for the beating,
torture, and verbal abuse of persons detained in the aftermath of the 2003
presidential election, nor was any action expected. The government promoted one
of the senior officers allegedly involved in the 2003 abuses, Viliyat Eyvazov,
to deputy minister of internal affairs. The government also did not hold
accountable any officials responsible for the excessive use of force at the
November 26 peaceful demonstration (see section 2.b.).
Prison and Detention Center Conditions
Prison conditions remained harsh and life threatening despite prison
infrastructure improvements in recent years.
Overcrowding, inadequate nutrition, and poor medical care combined to make the
spread of infectious diseases a serious problem. Despite recent improvements to
prison infrastructure, prisons, generally Soviet-era facilities, did not meet
international standards. In maximum-security facilities, authorities limited
physical exercise for prisoners as well as visits by attorneys and family
members. Some pretrial detainees were reportedly held in "separation cells,"
often located in basements, to conceal evidence of physical abuse and where food
and sleep reportedly were denied to elicit confessions.
Harsh prison conditions resulted in 107 deaths during the year. Credible reports
indicated that at least four of these deaths were the result of torture or abuse
(see section 1.a.).Tuberculosis (TB) remained the primary cause of death in
prisons; the government reported that 66 inmates died of it during the year.The
ICRC reported the government treated 515 prisoners for TB during the year; due
to the absence of systematic medical screening, such treatment often started
after prisoners were seriously ill. Many relied on families for medicine and
food, who often paid bribes to prison officials to gain access to imprisoned
relatives.
In July the government dismissed the head of the medical unit of prison colony 2
after a prisoner complained about his conduct.
On February 1, the government dismissed the deputy minister of justice for
prisons on allegations of accepting bribes for awarding prison renovation
contracts. After the deputy minister's dismissal, the MOJ disbanded the joint
government-human rights community prison-monitoring group. A reconstituted
monitoring group was established in August; however, it did not meet before
year's end.
The government permitted prison visits by international and local humanitarian
and human rights groups. The ICRC also had unobstructed access to prisoners of
war and to civilians held in connection with the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.
Foreign observers were allowed to enter maximum-security prisons and to meet
with alleged political prisoners. On August 16, the government authorized a
select group of local human rights activists to visit MIA-run police stations
and MIA pretrial detention facilities in addition to prisons.
d. Arbitrary Arrest or Detention
Although the law prohibits arbitrary arrest and detention, the government
generally did not observe these prohibitions in practice, and impunity remained
a problem.
Role of the Police and Security Apparatus
The MIA and MNS are responsible for internal security and report directly to the
president. The MIA oversees local police forces and maintains internal civil
defense troops. The MNS has a separate internal security force.
Law enforcement corruption was a problem. Police often levied spurious, informal
fines for traffic and other minor violations and extracted protection money from
local residents. In 2004 and again during the year, traffic police officers
received a substantial pay raise to counter corruption; nevertheless, the low
wages of other law enforcement officials continued to contribute to police
corruption. The MIA reported that during the year it opened 189 investigations
into internal police corruption and prosecuted 142 of these.
Police officers acted with impunity, and in most cases the government took
little or no action. During the year, however, the government reported that it
took disciplinary action against 84 police officers for wrongful arrest or
misconduct in connection with police detentions. Of these, the government
reported that it dismissed 12 officers from government employment, dismissed an
additional 10 officers from the MIA police forces, demoted 1 officer, and
criminally charged 6 officers for violating human rights and civil liberties.
An international foundation continued its training program in human rights
theory, standards, and practices for 160 security officers attached to the
Special State Protective Service (SSPS), a government agency responsible for
protecting the Baku‑Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline. The officers who participated in
the training were recruited from the SSPS, the state border guard, the army, and
police.
In May the MOJ granted approval for foreign governments to train law enforcement
officials to meet international standards. The first training program took place
in May. In June an international organization conducted community policing and
crowd control training for 250 MIA police officers.
Arrest and Detention
The law states that persons who are detained, arrested, or accused of a crime
should be advised immediately of their rights and reason for arrest and accorded
due process of law; however, the government did not respect these provisions in
practice. Arbitrary arrest, often on spurious charges of resisting the police,
remained a common problem throughout the year.
The law allows police to detain and question individuals for 24 hours without a
warrant; in practice police detained individuals for several days, sometimes
weeks, without a warrant. In other instances, the prosecutor general issued ex
post facto warrants. Judges, acting at the instruction of the prosecutor
general's office or of other executive branch officials, sentenced detainees to
jail within hours of their arrest without access to a lawyer or a fair trial
(see section 1.c.).
The law provides for access to a lawyer from the time of detention; in reality,
access to lawyers was poor, particularly outside of Baku. Although guaranteed by
law, in practice indigent detainees did not have access to lawyers. Authorities
often restricted family member visits and withheld information about detainees;
frequently, days passed before families could obtain any information about
detained relatives. Individuals were sometimes permitted to "vouch" for
detainees, enabling their conditional release during pretrial investigation;
however, there was no formal, functioning bail system. At times politically
sensitive suspects were held incommunicado for several hours and sometimes days
while in police custody.
On several occasions MIA police officers preemptively detained members of the
political opposition to prevent their participation in planned but unsanctioned
political rallies, on grounds that the individuals were suspected of planning to
incite civil unrest. Within hours of the detentions, judges sentenced the
individuals to jail for periods of 10 to 12 days on those grounds. On June 4,
the government first granted permission for political rallies to be held in the
capital at locations removed from the city center. Between then and November 6,
election day, the government detained and sentenced 50 persons for attempting to
participate in rallies in the city center for which it had denied authorization.
In July police detained several opposition party members who planned to hold
rallies in Tovuz, Sabirabad, and Lenkoran. On September 29, police arrested 14
opposition party members prior to an unsanctioned rally; authorities convicted
and sentenced the individuals from 7 to 10 days' imprisonment.
In April police arrested prominent opposition figure and former internal affairs
minister Iskender Hamidov, beating him on the street while taking him into
custody. Authorities released Hamidov the same day.
On June 13, the MNS and prosecutor general announced the arrest of Musavat party
member Pirali Orujev for allegedly conspiring to kill two progovernment figures.
The opposition Azadliq bloc denounced the arrest, commenting that it was part of
a government campaign to harass and slander the opposition. Orujev remained in
pretrial detention at year's end.
On August 1, the government arrested Yeni Fikir opposition youth leader Ruslan
Bashirli on charges of treason. In a widely broadcast videotape, Bashirli was
shown taking money from and conspiring with Armenian and Georgian citizens to
foment revolution in the country. Bashirli remained in special detention
awaiting a hearing at year's end. International observers doubted the
credibility of the evidence against Bashirli and suspected a case of entrapment
to intimidate and embarrass the opposition.
On September 12, police detained Yeni Fikir opposition youth activist Said
Nuriyev on charges of conspiring to overthrow the government, in connection with
the investigation of Bashirli. Nuriyev's case was suspended because of a
pre-existing medical condition, but he remained confined at a city hospital
until after the November election. At year's end Nuriyev was no longer detained
but continued to face criminal charges in connection with the alleged conspiracy
to overthrow the government.
On September 14, the prosecutor general summoned Yeni Fikir opposition youth
activist Ramin Tagiyev and arrested him on charges on threatening state
security. Within days a judge convicted Tagiyev and sentenced him to prison for
three months (until after the November parliamentary election) while his
pretrial investigation continued.
On October 17, security forces arrested approximately 300 opposition party
activists, including up to 20 parliamentary candidates, in connection with the
anticipated return to Baku of exiled opposition leader Rasul Guliyev.
On October 19, the MNS arrested Presidential Aide Akif Muradverdiyev, Minister
of Health Ali Insanov, Minister of Economic Development Farhad Aliyev, former
finance minister Fikrat Yusifov, and business leaders Fikrat Sadigov and Rafiq
Aliyev for allegedly fomenting a coup d'etat in connection with the failed
October 17 return to the country of exiled opposition ADP leader Rasul Guliyev.
On October 31, the prosecutor general charged Natik Efendiyev, an ADP deputy
chairman already in MIA custody, with aiding and abetting the coup plot. On
November 2, government agents arrested prominent academic and Guliyev friend
Eldar Salayev for allegedly planning to carry out the coup.
On November 1, several progovernment television channels aired videotaped
footage of MNS detainees Yusifov, Insanov, Muradverdiyev, and Sadigov testifying
to their role in the plot to overthrow the government. Yusifov, a former finance
minister whose testimony dominated the broadcast, described himself as the
financial middleman in exiled opposition leader Rasul Guliyev's network of
support within the government and business community. Yusifov confessed that
Aliyev, Insanov, Sadigov, and others gave him money, which he turned over to
Salayev who was tasked with financing the opposition's activities. On November
16, the MNS released Salayev from detention on account of his age and poor
health, although the charges against him stood. The other alleged coup
conspirators remained in MNS and MIA custody at year's end. In total 11 persons
were arrested in connection with plotting the coup. In November authorities
released Fikrat Sadiqov, former head of a state-owned chemical company, on the
condition he notify police before traveling outside of Baku.
The police arrested and detained members of certain religious groups--generally
evangelical Christian denominations (see section 2.c.).
There were no reliable estimates of the number of political detainees. However,
several hundred opposition party members were detained for short periods of
between one day and two weeks during the pre-election campaign period.
Lengthy pretrial detention of between three and six months—and sometimes
longer--was a serious problem. The prosecutor general routinely extended the
permitted, initial three-month pretrial detention period in successive
increments of months until the government completed an investigation.
Amnesty
During the year President Aliyev pardoned 215 prisoners, including 87
persons local human rights activists considered political prisoners. The pardon
included all seven opposition political leaders arrested and imprisoned in the
aftermath of the 2003 presidential election. Subsequently, on June 30 and July
5, the courts vacated the convictions of the seven opposition leaders, which
enabled them to run for parliament in the November elections.
During the summer, the president pardoned and released Azerbaijan Democratic
Party's Secretary Taliyat Aliyev, who was detained in August 2004.
e. Denial of Fair Public Trial
Although the law provides for an independent judiciary, in practice judges did
not function independently of the executive branch. The judiciary was corrupt
and inefficient.
The executive branch exerts a strong influence over the judiciary. The president
appoints supreme and constitutional court judges (subject to parliamentary
confirmation) and lower court judges (without parliamentary confirmation).
Judges' salaries steadily increased over several years; nevertheless, there
continued to be credible allegations that judges routinely accepted bribes.
There were also credible reports that judges and prosecutors took instruction
from the presidential administration and the MOJ, particularly in cases
international observers were interested in.
Courts of general jurisdiction may hear criminal, civil, and juvenile cases.
District courts try the majority of cases. The supreme court may not act as the
court of first instance. One judge presides over district court level trials,
while a three-judge panel hears cases at the court of appeals, the court of
grave crimes, and the supreme court. The constitution provides all citizens with
the right to appeal to the constitutional court. Citizens also have the right to
appeal to the European Court of Human Rights, which they exercised frequently.
On October 3, the MOJ for the first time granted approval to an international
NGO to train judges on compliance with election law. The first training took
place on October 16.
Trial Procedures
The law provides for public trials except in cases involving state, commercial,
or professional secrets or matters involving confidential, personal, or family
matters. The law provides for the presumption of innocence in criminal cases,
the right to review evidence, a defendant's rights to confront witnesses and
present evidence at trial, a court-approved attorney for indigent defendants,
and appeal for both defendants and prosecutors--provisions not generally
respected in practice. Plans to begin jury trials were not implemented.Foreign
and domestic observers usually were allowed to attend trials. Although the
constitution prescribes equal status for prosecutors and defense attorneys, in
practice prosecutors' privileges and rights outweighed those of the defense.
The law limits representation in criminal cases to members of a state-controlled
collegium of lawyers (bar association), thereby restricting the public's access
to legal representation of choice. In June the parliament approved an amendment
to the law on advocates that was expected to reform the legal profession and
establish a more independent bar association by allowing all licensed lawyers to
join the collegium automatically. Some provisions in the amended law left open
the possibility that the collegium could refuse a fully qualified lawyer for
failing to meet other, unspecified requirements. The collegium admitted 9 of 231
licensed lawyers entitled to automatic admission to the association.
The constitution prohibits the use of illegally obtained evidence; however,
despite defendants' claims that testimony was obtained through torture or abuse,
no cases based on claims of abuse were dismissed, and there was no independent
forensic investigator to determine the occurrence of abuse (see section
1.c.).Investigations often focused on obtaining confessions rather than
gathering physical evidence against suspects. Serious crimes brought before the
courts were likely to end in conviction, as judges generally required only a
minimal level of proof and collaborated closely with prosecutors. In the rare
instance when a judge determined the evidence presented was not sufficient to
convict a defendant, judges could and did return cases to the prosecutor for
additional investigation, in effect giving the prosecution a "second chance" for
a conviction.
In the period preceding the November parliamentary elections, judges often
sentenced to jail opposition members arrested for participating in unauthorized
political rallies within hours of their detention, and without a fair trial.
The country also has a military court system with civilian judges. The military
court retains first jurisdiction over any case in which "crimes against the
state" are adjudicated.
Political Prisoners
Local NGOs maintained that the government continued to hold political prisoners,
although estimates of the number varied. NGO activists maintained that the
government held approximately 45 political prisoners. At year's end three
political prisoners arrested in connection with the 2003 presidential election
and listed in the COE's Experts Report remained incarcerated: Elchin
Amiraslanov, Safa Poladov, and Arif Kazimov.
On March 17, the president pardoned the seven opposition leaders arrested in
2003 postelection violence (see section 1.d.).
The government permitted unrestricted access to political prisoners by
international humanitarian organizations.
f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
The law prohibits arbitrary invasions of privacy and monitoring of
correspondence and other private communications; in practice the government
restricted privacy rights.
The constitution allows for searches of residences only with a court order or in
cases specifically provided by law; however, authorities often conducted
searches without warrants. It was widely believed that the MNS and MIA monitored
telephone and Internet communications, particularly those of foreigners and
prominent political and business figures.
Police continued to intimidate and harass family members of suspected criminals
and increased harassment of opposition political party members and their
families.
On June 3, authorities detained Almaz Guliyeva, relative of exiled opposition
leader Rasul Guliyev, at the airport on charges of carrying a gun. Guliyeva, a
British citizen, collapsed when airport police showed her the supposed weapon.
Authorities took Guliyeva to the hospital and released her after she recovered
three weeks later; she departed the country immediately thereafter.
International observers doubted the credibility of the evidence in the case.
On October 17, the government arrested Etibar Guliyev, Rasul Guliyev's nephew. A
court eventually sentenced Guliyev to three months in prison for assaulting the
police with a weapon in connection with Rasul Guliyev's planned return to the
country. Authorities did not charge Guliyev with this specific crime at the time
of his arrest, and prosecutors obtained a court conviction only after detaining
him on unrelated charges for several days.
Section 2 Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The law provides for freedom of speech and of the press and specifically
prohibits press censorship; the government often did not respect these rights in
practice.
In July the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
representative on freedom of the media visited the country and issued a report
assessing the high degree of pluralism in the print media and the reduction in
the number of libel and defamation suits against journalists positively, while
commenting negatively on the continued acts of violence against journalists. On
September 1, police officers beat opposition youth activist Vugar Mehdtiyev for
distributing political pamphlets in a city park. Following an investigation the
MIA alleged that the victim's injuries were self-inflicted, a result of running
into a tree. The government did not prosecute or punish any police officers in
the case.
A large number of opposition and independent media outlets operated during the
year. The print media enjoyed more freedom than the broadcast media and
expressed a wide variety of views on government policies. However, most
broadcast media adhered to a progovernment line in their news coverage.
There were over 40 active independent newspapers and magazines and 23 television
and 12 radio stations. There also were 10 national state newspapers and 80
newspapers funded by city or district level officials. In contrast to
progovernment newspapers, the distribution of many opposition newspapers was
limited to the capital, and their circulation was low.
During the year many opposition and government-run newspapers reduced
circulation, and several, including prominent opposition newspaper Yeni Musavat,
reduced frequency. Moderate independent newspapers Echo and Zerkalo, however,
maintained their circulation.
Some private television channels broadcast the views of both government and
opposition officials, but their programs were not available in all parts of the
country. Space TV and ANS TV, popular channels regarded as independent, provided
balanced news coverage, especially of the parliamentary elections.
On August 29, the government launched independent, public television channel
ITV, which broadcast television debates between parliamentary candidates and
provided candidates with free airtime consistent with the requirements of the
election code. However, the OSCE preliminary election assessment reported that
government-funded ITV devoted 79 percent of its prime time news coverage to
almost exclusively positive or neutral coverage of the president, the
administration, government, and ruling party.
There were no restrictions on satellite broadcasts by foreign stations.
The government intimidated and harassed the media, primarily through defamation
suits, prohibitively high court fines for libel, and measures that hampered
printing and distribution of independent newspapers and magazines. However, in
contrast to 2004, the number of defamation suits threatening the financial
viability of the print media declined significantly during the year because of
the mediation of local and international NGOs.
Harassment and violence against individual journalists continued. The Media
Council, an independent NGO, reported that 40 journalists faced physical attack
or harassment during the 6-month period preceding the November parliamentary
election.
On February 1, Akrep Hasanov, a journalist from The Monitor newsmagazine, was
reportedly abducted by military officials, detained for five hours, and forced
to sign a statement of apology in response to an article he wrote about abuse
and mismanagement of the Goranboy military unit. The case drew wide media
coverage.
On February 25, two employees of an opposition party newspaper were allegedly
kidnapped, stripped, and photographed naked with prostitutes. Photographs of the
incident were broadcast repeatedly on state television channels in an effort to
humiliate the newspaper.
On March 2, unknown assailants killed the widely respected founder and editor of
The Monitor, Elmar Huseynov, in front of his Baku apartment. The government
characterized the killing as a terrorist act meant to destabilize the regime and
launched an investigation into the case. The investigation revealed that the
assailants disabled telephone and electricity lines into the apartment building
prior to the killing. Some human rights activists described the killing as a
warning to those critical of the regime, a suggestion that government officials
vehemently rejected. In July press reports stated that the government's
investigation identified two Georgian citizens, Tahir Khubanov and Teymuraz
Aliyev, as suspects. At year's end the investigation continued, and no arrests
had been made. The Monitor ceased publication in April, and in May Huseynov's
former colleagues started a new publication, Realniy Azerbaijan.
During the year police officers beat three local journalists from independent
and opposition newspapers covering unauthorized political rallies in the
capital, despite being clearly identifiable as members of the press. On May 21,
riot police severely beat journalist Farid Teymurxanli from independent
newspaper Zerkalo, and in separate incidents on October 9, police beat a local
journalist from Boz Gurd newspaper and beat unconscious a local journalist from
Ayna newspaper. Police detained and released 24 journalists in connection with
their coverage of unauthorized political rallies. On November 26, police beat 10
journalists at a government-authorized Azadliq bloc political rally, which
authorities violently dispersed.
In December 2004 police beat Alim Kazimli, a photojournalist for the opposition
Yeni Musavat newspaper, because he complained to the authorities about the
inefficient processing of passport applications at the passport office. Kazimli
recovered from his injuries but died six months later, reportedly from a heart
condition. However, opposition newspapers attributed his death to conditions
arising from the police beating.
By year's end the government did not announce the arrest of any police officers
or the results of an investigation into election-related police clashes with
journalists and opposition activists in 2003. No developments were expected.
The government did not charge anyone in the investigation of the July 2004
attack on Eynulla Fatulliyev, a staff writer for The Monitor. No developments
were expected in the investigation.
In April a leading independent electronic media group, ANS TV and Radio,
launched independent, monthly newsmagazine Hesabat, which published
controversial and politically sensitive articles. While President Aliyev
publicly defended the company's right to publish this information, the firm
continued to face harassment from other quarters of the government. In April
ruling party members of parliament denounced ANS and publicly threatened the
company's president. One member of parliament sued Hesabat's editor in chief for
libel after the newsmagazine named the parliamentarian one of the country's
richest persons. The court case was ongoing at year's end.
The government periodically used state-run television to denounce and harass
political parties and leaders who criticized the government. State-operated AzTV
rebroadcast footage of opposition youth activist Ruslan Bashirli allegedly
conspiring with Georgian and Armenian citizens to foment revolution in the
country. Progovernment news agencies described Bashirli's organization, Yeni
Fikir, as a part of Ali Kerimli's Popular Front Party (PFP) and attacked Kerimli
and his party in daily news broadcasts. The coverage incited several violent
protests outside of the PFP's offices. On August 11, in Baku, a group of 30
youths vandalized the PFP's headquarters, throwing stones through the windows.
On August 10, a group of youths attacked PFP's headquarters in Lenkoran.
The government's licensing authority harassed independent private channel ANS
TV.Based on a restrictive interpretation of the licensing law, the National
Television and Radio Council (NTRC) revoked ANS' radio license for its
affiliatein the city of Sheki six weeks before the parliamentary election. In
the ensuing dispute, the NTRC chairman publicly threatened, but did not revoke,
ANS' nationwide television broadcast license.
There was no transparent or independent licensing mechanism for broadcast
media--the NTRC was responsible for issuing licenses and monitoring broadcasts,
but it was inefficient and did not function independently of the government. In
addition the MOJ must register corporations such as a TV network operating
company in order for it to have legal existence. During the year the NTRC
granted a license only for the establishment of the state's first public
television channel. The NTRC interpreted the licensing law in a manner that
prevented some independent news organizations from entering local media markets.
In September the MOJ initially rejected the registration application of a
regional television network consisting of local stations on the grounds that the
network was sponsored by an international media development NGO. The network
revised its incorporation documents to remove the international NGO from the
title, and the MOJ registered the new entity.
Most newspapers and magazines were printed in government publishing houses or on
private printing presses owned by individuals close to the government. The
majority of independent and opposition newspapers remained in a precarious
financial position; they continued to have problems paying wages, taxes, and
periodic court fines.
The government prohibited state libraries from subscribing to opposition
newspapers. The government also continued to prohibit state businesses from
buying advertising in opposition newspapers and pressured private business to do
the same.
As a result of legal provisions favoring candidates from large political parties
over independents, candidates from the ruling party and the largest opposition
blocs--Azadliq, New Politics (YeS), and the Liberal Party--dominated the free
airtime during the parliamentary campaign period, to the exclusion of the
majority of candidates who ran as independents. Over the course of the campaign
period opposition politicians consistently had free, unrestricted access to
state television airtime and paid, unrestricted access to private television
time, although news coverage was heavily skewed in favor of the ruling New
Azerbaijan Party.
In violation of the free media access requirements of the election code, the
government restricted the opposition's access to a state television channel
during the 72-hour-period following the attempted October 17 return of exiled
opposition leader Rasul Guliyev.
It was widely believed that the government blocked the satellite broadcasts of
Azadliq TV, which was reportedly affiliated with the political opposition,
shortly after the channel's August launch.
Libel is a criminal offense; the law allows for large fines and up to three
years' imprisonment. Although the number of libel suits against journalists
continued to decline during the year, some officials continued to use libel
suits to prevent the publication of embarrassing or incriminating information.
According to the OSCE, the criminal conviction rate for libel was historically
low, but civil cases often crippled news organizations financially.
The president spoke out against libel suits briefly following Elmar Huseynov's
murder.
In October the Baku city mayor sued the editor in chief of Realniy Azerbaijan
Eynulla Fatulliyev for libel in a case that was ongoing at year's end.
Fatulliyev, a former staff writer at Elmar Husyenov's Monitor, founded Realniy
Azerbaijan after Huseynov's death.
Baku-based journalists reported that authorities in the exclave of Nakchivan
continued to block distribution of opposition newspapers.
As in the previous year, the government tightened enforcement on unregistered,
independent newspaper vendors who mainly distributed opposition newspapers,
stating that the illegal vendors created traffic hazards on city streets. In
March the government lifted a prohibition on the sale of opposition newspapers
within the subway system.
Gaya, the country's largest independent newspaper distributor, reopened 11 of
its 20 newsstands in Baku that were torn down in 2002 by the Baku mayor's
office.
The government did not restrict access to the Internet, but it required Internet
service providers to be licensed and have formal agreements with the Ministry of
Communications and Information Technologies. There was no evidence to support
the widely held belief that the government monitored Internet traffic of foreign
businesses and opposition leaders.
The government generally did not restrict academic freedom.However, during the
year the government expelled four students from Baku State University, the State
Economic University, and the Pedagogical University due to their political
activities in support of opposition parties. For example, in separate incidents
on November 9, university authorities threatened to expel Elturan Mursalzade and
did expel Polad Mehdiyev for their involvement in postelection opposition
political activities. Officials cited Mehdiyev's failure to complete final exams
as the reason for his dismissal. Classmates reported Mehdiyev was told to
denounce the opposition on television in return for permission to return to
school. On December 28, the minister of education readmitted Medhiyev after he
made a public apology to the rector.On November 25, Baku State University
authorities expelled Turan Aliyev for inciting public disorder on campus in
support of the opposition's political activities. Within days of his expulsion,
Aliyev received military enlistment orders. On December 28, Aliyev began a
hunger strike, which drew increasing media attention and continued at year's
end. Three opposition youth activists joined the hunger strike in protest of the
universities' expulsions.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
Freedom of Assembly
The law provides for freedom of assembly; however, the government restricted
this right in practice. On May 11, the president issued a decree ordering the
government to hold free and fair parliamentary elections in November consistent
with international standards. In compliance with the decree, on June 4, the
government partially restored the constitutional right to freedom of assembly,
which had not been permitted since the demonstrations following the 2003
presidential election. However, the government restricted implementation of this
right in the period before the November elections. The government interpreted
the law to require individuals and political parties to obtain permission from
the authorities in order to assemble and organize demonstrations.
In the pre-election period, the government authorized political rallies
exclusively at predetermined venues approved by local authorities. Most of these
locations were removed from city centers. The opposition held authorized rallies
at some of these locations and attempted to hold unauthorized rallies in city
centers.
Opposition parties often held unauthorized rallies when government permission
was not granted.In these instances authorities restricted public transportation
to the sites, and in one instance, blockaded Azadliq's local party offices to
prevent opposition party members from congregating in the downtown area.
In some cases local authorities also interfered to undermine authorized
opposition rallies. For example, on October 15 in Agstafa and Tovuz, credible
reports indicated that local authorities prohibited public buses from
transporting individuals to the city center where the opposition planned a
demonstration.
On May 21, the government deployed riot police throughout Baku's city center in
response to an unsanctioned Azadliq bloc rally of approximately one thousand
participants. Riot police used truncheons to beat approximately 15 members of
the opposition parties Popular Front, Musavat, and the Azerbaijan Democratic
Party, as well as a member of the press, when they attempted to gather near the
main train terminal. Police detained over 60 persons, sentencing them to 1 to 5
days in jail; an additional 30 persons were detained preemptively, before the
event took place (see section 1.d.).
On June 4, the Azadliq bloc held its first authorized rally in Galaba Square.
The 15 thousand participants gathered a mile from the square and marched
peacefully toward the venue. The police deployed approximately 500 riot troops,
who cordoned off the square; the police acted with restraint, and the event
concluded peacefully after several hours of speeches by opposition figures.
At a June 28 rally, a group of 30 demonstrators briefly clashed with an equal
number of police when the demonstrators broke through a portion of the police
line. The police used minimal force to restore their position. No one was
seriously injured or arrested.
In late September Azadliq unsuccessfully sought government authorization to hold
political rallies in downtown Baku. On October 1 and 9, the opposition attempted
to hold multiple, simultaneous, unauthorized rallies in Baku. The government
deployed more than a thousand riot police, closed off several central city
squares, and used force to disperse crowds. Police beat with truncheons 40
opposition activists, seriously injuring 27. Police also seriously beat three
local journalists covering the rallies. On October 1, authorities detained 14
persons and on October 9, 12 persons, for periods of 7 to 12 days. On October
23, Azadliq held its fourth unauthorized pre-election rally in central Baku.
Groups of 200 to 300 Azadliq supporters gathered in pockets around the city
center before being dispersed by riot police. Police detained approximately 65
Azadliq supporters in a police station near the city's central square for
several hours.
Following the November 6 parliamentary election, Azadliq held four
government-authorized political rallies at Baku's Galaba Square to protest the
election's conduct.
On November 26, approximately 800 security forces violently dispersed a
government-authorized Azadliq bloc rally at Galaba Square in response to an
opposition leader's call for a participant "sit down" to protest the results.
Diplomatic observers reported that riot police charged through the crowd of
seven thousand opposition supporters striking them with truncheons. Riot police,
joined by MIA special forces units and plainclothes police officers, charged the
platform where opposition leaders were standing, destroying it and the cordon
that surrounded it. Two opposition leaders, Ali Kerimli and Lala Shovket
Hajiyeva, were struck in the melee. Police seriously beat a third opposition
leader, Liberal Party Deputy Chairman Avaz Temirhan, while apprehending him.
Police used truncheons and water cannons to remove protesters from the square.
Diplomatic observers witnessed at least one person beaten unconscious and
several beaten to the ground. Opposition officials subsequently reported that 90
persons were seriously injured (broken bones), 4 were taken to city emergency
rooms in critical condition, and 67 others sustained minor bruises.
Despite the peaceful conduct of participants, the government arrested 57
opposition supporters for "hooliganism" and "public disorder" at the November 26
rally. Within hours of the arrests, courts sentenced 27 opposition supporters to
jail for 10 to 15 days. The remaining 30 were released with administrative
penalties or fines. No police officials were held accountable for the excessive
use of force.
On January 12, a court convicted 10 individuals on charges stemming from their
alleged participation in demonstrations following the 2003 presidential
election. Two defendants received three-year prison sentences, and the other
eight received three-year suspended sentences.
Freedom of Association
The law provides for freedom of association, although in practice the government
continued to restrict this right. A number of provisions allowed the government
to regulate the activities of political parties, religious groups, businesses,
and NGOs, including a requirement that all organizations register either with
the MOJ or the State Committee on Work with Religious Associations (SCWRA).
Although a new law requiring the government to act on registration applications
within 30 days of receipt was implemented, vague, cumbersome, and nontransparent
registration procedures continued to result in long delays that effectively
limited citizens' right to associate.
The government used a 2003 requirement for all existing NGOs to reregister with
the MOJ to delay or deny registration to some previously registered groups,
often citing the failure of applicants to follow proper procedures. During the
year the MOJ registered 379 NGOs, which it reported was more than twice the
number registered in 2004. However, the MOJ did not provide information on the
total number of NGO applications received or the number of NGO applications
rejected during the year.
In May the OSCE issued a report on NGO registration, identifying problems and
offering recommendations. Its conclusions noted that the government procedurally
evaded NGO registration by taking an excessive amount of time to discover
shortcomings, which unduly prolonged processing times for NGO registration
applications. While the report noted many of the shortcomings in applications
cited by authorities were valid, most of them were correctable during the
registration process and should not have been grounds for final rejection.
c. Freedom of Religion
The law provides for freedom of religion; however, there were some abuses and
restrictions in practice. Although the law expressly prohibits the government
from interfering in the religious activities of any individual or group, there
are exceptions, including cases where the activity of a religious group
"threatens public order and stability."
A number of legal provisions enable the government to regulate religious groups,
including a requirement that religious organizations, including individual
congregations of a denomination, be registered by the government (see section
2.b.). Muslim religious groups must receive a letter of approval from the
Caucasus Muslim Board (CMB) before they can be registered by the SCWRA. The
SCWRA and its chairman have broad powers over registration; control over the
publication, import, and distribution of religious literature; and the ability
to suspend the activities of religious groups violating the law.
Registered Muslim organizations are subordinate to the CMB, a Soviet-era entity
which appoints Muslim clerics to mosques, periodically monitors sermons, and
organizes annual hajj pilgrimages. It has been subject to some interference by
the SCWRA, which has attempted to share control with the CMB over the
appointment and certification of clerics and internal financial control of the
country's mosques. Some Muslim religious leaders objected to interference from
both the CMB and SCWRA.
The SCWRA continued to delay or deny registration to some Protestant Christian
groups, including two Baptist churches. Three of the Baptists' five main
churches successfully reregistered.At the end of August, the SCWRA had
registered more than three-quarters of the number of religious communities
previously registered. Jehovah's Witnesses and other nontraditional faiths
continued to have problems registering. Some groups reported that SCWRA
employees tried to interfere in the internal workings of their organizations
during the registration process.
Although unregistered religious groups continued to function, some, such as
Seventh-day Adventists, Jehovah's Witnesses, and Baptists, reported official
harassment, including disruption of religious services and police intimidation,
fines, and occasional beatings of worshippers by police. Some nontraditional
religious groups operated in an atmosphere of fear.
For example on June 12, police conducted televised raids of the Jehovah's
Witnesses' place of worship detaining 29 persons overnight, including foreign
nationals, and confiscating the group's imported religious literature.
In a mid-March television appearance, the head of the CMB described
nontraditional religious groups as subversive sects. In a separate incident the
chairman of the SCWRA, speaking on television, stated that Seventh-day
Adventists used financial bribes to recruit adherents.
Local law enforcement authorities occasionally monitored religious services, and
some observant Christians and Muslims were penalized for their religious
affiliations. Christians were often suspected of illegally proselytizing but not
political activity. Government authorities took various actions to restrict what
they claimed were political and terrorist activities by Iranian and other
clerics operating independently of the organized Muslim community. For example
thegovernment deported several Iranian and other foreign clerics operating
independently of the organized Muslim community for alleged violations of the
law. The government outlawed several Islamic humanitarian organizations because
of credible reports about connections to terrorist activities. On May 8, the
government closed a Saudi Arabian-sponsored Sunni mosque in the city of
Sumgayit.
Jehovah's Witnesses reported that authorities regularly interfered with their
ability to rent public halls for religious assemblies and on occasion fined or
detained and beat individuals for meeting in private homes. On June 12, police
raided a gathering of approximately 200 Jehovah's Witnesses in Baku, detaining
29 members of the group and then releasing them after several hours in police
custody. Local television stations also aired "raids" of religious meetings for
"exposes" of religious groups.
The law expressly prohibits religious proselytizing by foreigners, and this was
enforced strictly. On April 24, police authorities seized Jehovah's Witnesses
religious literature in Baku on these grounds.
In April 2004 following a flawed trial, a court convicted the imam of the Juma
Mosque, Ilgar Ibrahimoglu, of participating in postelection demonstrations in
2003 and sentenced him to a five-year suspended sentence after he had spent four
months in pretrial detention. Since his conviction, Ibrahimoglu has not been
allowed to travel outside the country, including to several meetings of the UN
and the OSCE where he was to be an official NGO participant (suspended sentences
carry a restriction on international travel).
On June 30, the first anniversary of the Juma community's eviction from its
mosque, police briefly detained and released Ibrahimoglu for leading a group of
worshippers into the officially closed mosque to conduct prayers. He and
approximately 30 members of the Juma Mosque community also participated in
demonstrations earlier in the day in front of the SCWRA. Ibrahimoglu was also
briefly detained on September 4 in Baku after leading a group of 30 persons
marching in support of women's right to wear the hijab (headscarf).
Despite a court ruling in favor of the right to wear headscarves in passport
photos, the Center for Protection of Conscience and Religious Persuasion Freedom
reported that authorities continued to prohibit Muslim women from wearing
headscarves in passport photos. In December 2004 a group of women appealed to
the European Court of Human Rights to protest the ban. At year's end there was
no resolution to the case, and no developments were expected.
Some local officials also continued to discourage Muslim women from wearing
headscarves in schools. In June a court in Sumgayit upheld a school teacher's
right to wear a headscarf while teaching and ordered the school to pay her back
wages for the two months she was not allowed to teach.
The law permits the production and dissemination of religious literature with
the approval of the SCWRA; authorities also appeared selectively to restrict
individuals from importing and distributing religious materials. The procedure
for obtaining permission to import religious literature remained burdensome, but
religious organizations reported that the SCWRA appeared to be handling requests
more effectively.
Some religious groups continued to report restrictions and delays in importing
religious literature caused by government ministries, although the SCWRA
facilitated the import of such literature. The SCWRA limited the number of
copies of a Jehovah's Witnesses publication that could be imported. The Baptist
Union reported the SCWRA restricted the quantity of religious books allowed
after granting initial import permission.
On February 4, the supreme court ruled that, while the country remained in a
state of war with Armenia, the military's service requirement superseded an
individual's constitutional entitlement to alternative service due to religious
beliefs and that, absent implementing regulations, the military was not
obligated to provide alternative service. The defendant in this case and his
family subsequently left the country.
Societal Abuses and Discrimination
There were an estimated 30 thousand Jews in the country. There were few cases of
prejudice and discrimination against Jews, and in the few instances of
anti-Semitic activity the government responded quickly. There was popular
prejudice against Muslims who convert to non-Islamic faiths and hostility toward
groups that proselytize, particularly evangelical Christian and missionary
groups. The government appeared to encourage such social stigmatization through
orchestrated exposes and raids of nontraditional groups.
For a more detailed discussion, see the 2005 International Religious Freedom
Report.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration, and
Repatriation
The law provides for these rights, although at times the government limited
freedom of movement, particularly for internally displaced persons (IDPs). The
law required men of draft age to register with military officials before
traveling abroad; some travel restrictions were placed on military personnel
with access to national security information. Citizens charged with criminal
offenses were not permitted to travel abroad. Officials regularly extracted
bribes from individuals who applied for passports.
The law prohibits forced exile, and the government did not employ it.
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs)
IDPs were required to register their place of residence with authorities and
could live only in approved areas. This so‑called propiska system, a carryover
from the Soviet era, was imposed mainly on persons forced from their homes after
the Armenian occupation of western parts of the country. The government asserted
that registration was needed to keep track of IDPs to provide them with
assistance.
While official government policy allowed ethnic Armenians to travel, low-level
officials often extracted bribes or harassed Armenians who applied for
passports. According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), some
Armenians of mixed descent reported to a local NGO that they had problems with
officials in the passport and registration department when applying for
identification cards; applicants who applied with Azerbaijani surnames
encountered no problems except for having to pay bribes.
There were approximately 575 thousand IDPs in the country. The vast majority of
these persons fled their homes between 1988 and 1993 as a result of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
During the year the government received $30 million in assistance from
international and domestic humanitarian organizations for refugees and IDPs.
According to the government, it also allocated $44 million (202 billion manat)
from the country's oil fund to improve living conditions for IDPs and refugees.
During the year the government constructed new settlements in Agdam, Agjabedi,
and Bilasuvar under a 2004 presidential decree to improve living conditions for
refugees and IDPs.
The State IDP and Refugee Committee's estimated expenditures were $82 million
(377 billion manat). IDPs received monthly food subsidies of $6 (30 thousand
manat) from the government.
According to the IOM, approximately 21 thousand IDPs lived in the Sabirabad,
Saatli, Aghjabadi, and Barda camps. Many IDPs lived at below-subsistence levels,
without adequate food, shelter, education, sanitation, and medical care.
Approximately 28 thousand IDPs lived in settlements provided by the European
Union, while another 12 thousand lived in housing provided by the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Other IDPs were scattered among unfinished
buildings (in some cases mud dwellings), hostels, public health facilities, and
the homes of friends or relatives.
Protection of Refugees
The law provides for the granting of asylum and refugee status in accordance
with the 1951 UN Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967
protocol, and the government has established a system for providing protection
to refugees. In practice the government provided some protection against
refoulement, the return of persons to a country where they faced persecution,
and granted refugee status or asylum during the year. The largest number of
applicants was from Afghanistan; however, the government did not recognize these
individuals as refugees.
The government cooperated with the UNHCR and other humanitarian organizations in
assisting refugees and asylum seekers. According to the UNHCR, over 90 percent
of the 3,458 refugees and asylum seekers registered by the UNHCR in the country
at the end of the year were Chechens from the Russian Federation. However, the
government did not identity Chechens as refugees under the 1951 convention, and
it did not accept applications for refugee status fromChechens. Instead, the
UNHCR carried out all functions toprovideChechens with required assistance and
protection to remain in the country legally. Only Chechens who registered with
the UNHCR were protected from forcedrepatriation to their homeland.
Reports of arbitrary harassment, detention, and arrests of undocumented Chechens
continued to be a problem, althoughUNHCR noted fewer cases than in the previous
year. The laws on residence, registration, and the status of refugees and IDPs
did not apply to Chechens, who were required to register with the police and not
entitled to residence permits. Chechens may enter the country visa-free
following the March implementation of a new bilateral external passport system
with Russia, which required Chechens to carry Russian passports to enter
Azerbaijan. Chechen children were allowed to attend public schools. Access to
basic medical services for Chechen refugees was available.
Section 3 Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change Their
Government
The law provides citizens with the right to change their government peacefully;
in practice the government continued to restrict this right by interfering in
elections. The law also provides for an independent legislature; parliament's
independence was minimal, and it exercised little legislative initiative
independent of the executive branch.
Elections and Political Participation
The government held national parliamentary elections on November 6. The
OSCE's preliminary election assessment concluded that the elections did not meet
a number of the country's OSCE commitments and COE standards for democratic
elections.
In the pre-election period, President Aliyev repeatedly and publicly affirmed
the government's commitment to holding free, fair, and transparent elections and
issued a decree instructing national and local government officials to conduct
an election process that would meet international standards. In spite of the
decree, there were numerous credible reports of local officials' interference
with the campaign process to the benefit of progovernment candidates. For
example in Sabirabad, domestic and international monitors reported that the
executive authorities threatened public school teachers with dismissal for
failing to support the progovernment candidate.
During the campaign period, the government did not punish local executive
authorities' widespread misuse of state resources. Local executive authorities
frequently misused administrative resources to the benefit of progovernment
candidates. Local authorities also restricted freedom of assembly for opposition
candidates. Police used disproportionate force to disrupt rallies (see section
2.b.). State and private television news coverage of the campaign period
disproportionately favored progovernment candidates, although opposition
candidates had access to free and paid airtime on a daily basis throughout the
campaign period while independent candidates had access to paid airtime and free
airtime on a limited number of regional channels and through public interest
programming.
On October 25, two weeks before the election, President Aliyev issued a second
decree on the election ordering the Central Election Commission (CEC) to use
finger inking at polling stations to prevent voter fraud and instructing the
public prosecutor to investigate and prosecute election fraud complaints.
However, the late issuance of the decree hampered its implementation on election
day. According to the OSCE assessment, 11 percent of polling stations visited
failed to follow inking procedures, a shortcoming it attributed to inadequate
training for election officials.
More than 500 candidates withdrew in the final weeks of the parliamentary
election campaign; many cited government pressure to withdraw.
The government generally respected the legal provisions of the election code.
Candidates were able to hold numerous town hall meetings with voters, although
police disrupted some gatherings. According to the OSCE, June amendments to the
election code made limited improvements to the electoral framework, although
most recommendations were not implemented or only partially implemented. The CEC
approved a number of regulations to enhance the integrity of voting, counting,
and the vote tabulation process. The CEC undertook an extensive, pre-election
voter education campaign.
The president's October 25 decree also reversed a ban on election observation by
NGOs receiving greater than 30 percent of their financial support from
international sources. The change had no impact on this election, as all
observers were required to have registered in advance; however, domestic
election observers were generally able to register as individuals (rather than
NGOs as entities). There were an estimated three thousand individual domestic
NGO observers for the parliamentary election.
Voting proceeded in a more orderly and transparent manner than in previous
national elections, although there were some irregularities. The OSCE-led
International Observation Mission assessed 87 percent of the more than 2,500
polling stations it visited during the daytime voting process as positive.
However, in some instances international observers reported unauthorized
persons, such as policemen, in the polling station during the voting. Observers
also witnessed candidates or candidate representatives attempting to influence
voter choices and ballot box stuffing in one-third of the polling stations
visited as well as family (group) voting in one-fifth of the polling stations
visited.
Fraud and major irregularities marred the vote counting and tabulation process.
International observers assessed the ballot counting process as bad or very bad
in 43 percent of polling stations observed, reporting that election precinct
officials refused to count election ballots in front of them and attempted to
complete official tabulation protocols behind closed doors. In one precinct,
observers witnessed election commission members taking instructions from an
unidentified person in the polling station's basement. In Ganja international
observers witnessed a precinct chairwoman writing the vote tally in pencil,
which would have given officials the ability to alter the final results. In
Shamkir observers witnessed a precinct chairwoman hide an already completed
election protocol after an unidentified person handed it to her. On election
night in Baku, a candidate objecting to the fraudulent vote counting procedure
at a polling station in his district was detained, along with his wife, at a
local police station for more than an hour. International observers reported
that precinct-level voting results were not posted in 54 percent of the counts
observed.
Following the election, authorities acted to address some instances of election
fraud. The CEC annulled results from 423 of more than 5,100 election precincts.
President Aliyev dismissed three local executive authorities because of their
interference in the campaign and voting process. The prosecutor general opened
17 criminal cases against local government officials, election commission
members, and opposition candidates for violations of the election code on voting
day. The prosecutor also ordered the arrest of four local election officials for
election fraud, who were in pretrial detention at year's end. The CEC annulled
four constituency results and ordered reruns of these races in May 2006. The CEC
overturned the results of two other constituencies in favor of opposition
candidates because of serious precinct irregularities and dismissed the election
commission members of these six constituencies citing the members' involvement
in fraud or failure to following election procedures. The CEC also dismissed a
total of 108 precinct-level election commissions and 6 constituency commissions,
also on fraud-related grounds.
In a December 1 hearing to certify the election results, the constitutional
court annulled the results of an additional 6 constituencies, bringing to 10 the
total number of annulled constituencies that will be rerun in May 2006; however,
the 6 additional annulments also included the court's reversal of previous CEC
decisions. Opposition supporters criticized the court's action because it
cancelled a race previously awarded to an opposition Azadliq bloc candidate as
well as a race that Azadliq claimed it had won in a fair contest.
The CEC and constitutional court actions did not fully address reports of fraud
and other irregularities or allay the concerns of the international community
about the extent to which the results fully reflected the will of the people.
Some opposition members refused to take their seats in protest of election
fraud. The OSCE's final election assessment was pending at year's end.
The most recent presidential election was held in October 2003 and formally
brought Ilham Aliyev to power. This election failed to meet international
standards for democratic elections due to a number of serious irregularities.
In December 2004 nationwide municipal elections were marred by widespread fraud
and serious irregularities, including ballot-box stuffing, forging of voters'
signatures, multiple voting, voting without proper identification, and
intimidation of election officials and voters by local government authorities
appointed by the presidential administration. There were also technical
problems.
Opposition parties played an active role in politics. There were 48 registered
political parties in the country, at least 20 of which were considered to be
opposition. Members of the opposition were more likely to experience official
harassment and arbitrary arrest and detention than other citizens.Incidents of
police harassing members of opposition political parties or their families
increased(see section 1.f.) in connection with November's national parliamentary
elections.
In August violent gangs attacked the party offices of the PFP in Baku and
Naxhchivan in the immediate aftermath of the government's high-profile arrest of
Ruslan Bashirli on charges of fomenting a revolution. Progovernment media
outlets attempted to link opposition PFP leader Ali Kerimli to Bashirli's
arrest, which spurred attacks on the party's offices.
On March 17, the president pardoned the seven opposition leaders arrested in
2003 postelection violence (see section 1.d.). On June 24, the courts vacated
the convictions of these persons, allowing them to run for parliament in the
November election.
There were no legal restrictions on the participation of women in politics,
although traditional social norms limited women's political roles, and they were
underrepresented in elective offices. The practice continued of "family voting,"
whereby men voted on behalf of their wives and other female family members.
There were 15 women in the 125-seat parliament. Several women held senior
government positions, including deputy speaker of parliament and deputy chair of
the CEC.
Ethnic minorities such as the Lezghins, Talysh, and Avars continued to serve in
parliament and in government.
Government Corruption and Transparency
The law penalizes corruption by outlawing bribery; however, there was widespread
public perception of corruption throughout all facets of society, including the
civil service, government ministries, and the highest levels of government.
According to the prosecutor general's office, criminal cases related to
corruption were opened during the year, specifically on bribery charges;
however, these cases had little or no impact on the prevalence of bribery and
corruption in the country.
In January a new anticorruptionlaw came into force that required public
officials to report annual income, sources of income, property owned, and
financial liabilities. It also prohibited nepotism and limited giving gifts and
direct or indirect financial benefits to public officials or third parties;
however, official records do not exist to validate the implementation of this
law.
The law provides for public access to government information by individuals and
organizations; however, the government often did not provide access. Although
government ministries have separate procedures on how to request information,
they routinely denied requests, claiming not to possess the information.
Individuals have the right to appeal the denials in court; however, the courts
generally upheld the decisions of the ministries.
Section 4 Governmental Attitude Regarding International and Nongovernmental
Investigation of Alleged Violations of Human Rights
A number of domestic and international human rights groups generally operated
without government restriction, investigating and publishing their findings on
human rights cases. Although the government maintained ties with some human
rights NGOs and responded to their inquiries, on occasion the government
criticized and intimidated other human rights NGOs and activists. The MOJ
routinely denied or failed to register some human rights NGOs.
The major local human rights NGOs were the Association for the Protection of
Women's Rights, the Bureau of Human Rights and Respect for the Law, the
Azerbaijan National Group of ISHR, the Azerbaijan Foundation of Democracy
Development and Human Rights Protection, Azerbaijani Committee Against Torture,
and the Institute for Peace and Democracy. Most of the leading NGOs affiliated
themselves with one of two independent, umbrella organizations: the Human Rights
Federation or the Helsinki Citizens Assembly.
The government met with a variety of domestic NGO monitors. The MOJ formed a
joint prison condition monitoring commission with several representatives of the
NGO community. The ministry also formed a joint political prisoner review
committee with several representatives of the human rights community. In August
the MIA granted permission for the first time for an NGO to have immediate
access to police and pretrial detention facilities; the NGO exercised this right
without obstruction.
Several NGOs reported that the government and police at times refused to protect
them from so-called provocateurs who threatened, harassed, and attacked NGO
activists and vandalized their property. Leyla Yunus, director of Institute of
Peace and Democracy, received several death threats in connection with her
research and reporting. State television aired photographs of her private
residence on television and described her as an apologist for Armenia.
Local officials continued to harass and intimidate NGOs working outside Baku. In
March the government suspended the activities of the international agricultural
development NGO Adventist Development and Relief Agency, based on the statements
of a former employee that, 10 years ago, the organization proselytized on behalf
of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, with which it is affiliated. In May in
Mingechevir, local officials prevented the Legal Education Society, which
operated with some foreign funding, from conducting a seminar on civil
liberties. The president subsequently dismissed the head of Mingechevir
executive authority.
Despite an April 2004 presidential decree to implement the NGO registration law,
the process remained cumbersome. The 2003 amendments complicated requirements to
register grants from foreign entities and subjected the funds to a social
security tax of 22 percent on employee salaries, while grants from a few
countries with bilateral agreements with the government were subject to only a 2
percent tax. NGO activists reported that these provisions of the tax code
inhibited their organizations' activities.
In August vigilante groups protested outside of the offices of a leading
international democracy NGO because an arrested youth group activist falsely
claimed that the organization trained him to foment revolution in the November
election.
The government permitted visits by UN representatives and other international
organizations such as the ICRC. International NGOs, such as Human Rights Watch
and Reporters Without Borders, generally operated without government hindrance.
In July the OSCE representative on freedom of the media visited the country and
subsequently issued a report of observations and recommendations (see section
2.a.).
On October 25, a presidential decree reversed a ban on election observation by
NGOs receiving more than 30 percent of their financial support from
international sources (see section 3).
Citizens may appeal violations committed by the state or by individuals to the
ombudswoman for human rights. During the year the ombudswoman received 6,200
complaints, approximately 3 thousand of which were defined as authentic human
rights violations accepted by the office for investigation. The ombudswoman may
refuse to accept cases of abuse that occurred over a year ago, anonymous
complaints, and cases already being handled by the judiciary. The ombudswoman
traveled around the country to hear human rights complaints, cooperated with
foreign diplomats working on human rights activities, and submitted an annual
report to parliament. Compared with previous years, the ombudswoman was more
outspoken in her criticism of government actions: in September she sharply
criticized the NTRC for closing down a regional radio station of a large,
independent media conglomerate before the election. However, local human rights
NGOs and activists criticized the ombudswoman's work as ineffective and
generally regarded her as not independent of the government.
The parliament and MOJ also had human rights offices that heard complaints,
conducted investigations, and made recommendations to relevant government
bodies. Officials of the human rights office within the Foreign Affairs Ministry
regularly met with the diplomatic community to discuss issues of concern. The
parliament's human rights body did not operate fully independent of government
influence.
Section 5 Discrimination, Societal Abuses, and Trafficking in Persons
The law provides for equal rights without respect to gender, race, language,
disability, or social status,but the government did not always respect these
provisions or effectively enforce them. Violence and discrimination against
women, trafficking of persons, and discrimination against ethnic Armenians were
problems.
Women
Violence against women, including domestic violence, continued to be a problem.
In rural areas, women had no effective recourse against assaults by their
husbands or others; there are no laws on spousal abuse or specific laws on
spousal rape. Rape is illegal and carries a maximum 15-year prison sentence. The
government stated that 44 rapes and attempted rapes were reported during the
year. Most rape victims reportedly knew their assailants but did not report
incidents out of fear and shame.
There were no government-sponsored programs for victims of domestic violence or
rape. In Baku a women's crisis center operated by the Institute for Peace and
Democracy provided free medical, psychological, and legal assistance for women.
During the year the center provided services to 2,772 women, and 1,518 women
called the center's crisis hot line. The institute also broadcast three public
service announcements and short films in the regions, covering women's legal
rights and court procedures.
Prostitution is not a crime but is an administrative offense punishable by a
fine of up to $100 (500 thousand manat). Pimps and brothel owners may be
sentenced to prison for up to six years. Prostitution was a serious problem,
particularly in Baku. Trafficking in women for sexual exploitation was a problem
(see section 5, Trafficking).
Sexual harassment was prohibited by law, and the government reported that it
investigated 46 cases of sexual harassment during the year.
Women nominally enjoy the same legal rights as men; however, societal
discrimination was a problem. Traditional social norms and poor economic
conditions continued to restrict women's roles in the economy, and there were
reports that women had difficulty exercising their legal rights due to gender
discrimination. Women were underrepresented in high-level jobs, including top
business positions.
Children
The law requires the government to protect the rights of children with regard to
education and health care. In practice difficult economic circumstances limited
the government's ability to fulfill its commitments.
Public education was compulsory, free, and universal until the age of 17. The
Ministry of Education reported 100 percent elementary school attendance, 97
percent middle school attendance, and 88 percent high school attendance during
the year; the UN Children's Fund reported the elementary school figure was
approximately 88 percent. The highest level of education achieved by the
majority of children was high school. In impoverished rural areas, large
families sometimes placed a higher priority on the education of male children
and kept girls to work in the home. Some poor families forced their children to
beg rather than attend school (see section 6.d.).
The government provided a minimum standard of health care for children, but the
overall quality of medical care was very low.
There were isolated reports of child abuse and of trafficking in children (see
section 5, Trafficking), and the government reported that it opened an
investigation into one case of child trafficking.
Child marriage was not considered a significant problem, although evidence
suggested it was growing, primarily in rural central and southern regions among
poor families.
A large number of refugee and IDP children lived in substandard conditions in
camps and public buildings. In some cases, these children were unable to attend
school.
Trafficking in Persons
The government adopted new legislation in June and amendments to the criminal
code in October criminalizing trafficking in persons. However, for most of the
year trafficking was not a criminal offense. The government prosecuted
traffickers under laws prohibiting rape, forced prostitution and labor, and
forgery of travel documents. Most trafficking-related crimes prosecuted during
the year carried maximum penalties between 3 and 6 years' imprisonment, except
for rape and sexual violence, which both carried maximum 15-year prison
sentences. There also are specific criminal penalties for enslaving, raping, and
forcing children into prostitution. During the year the government opened 160
criminal investigations resulting in 153 convictions of individuals charged with
trafficking-related crimes.
The deputy minister of internal affairs was the national coordinator for
government antitrafficking activities, monitoring relevant government bodies'
efforts and dealing with the NGO community. Government bodies involved in
antitrafficking included: the Ministries of Internal Affairs, Foreign Affairs,
Justice, National Security, and Health; the prosecutor general; the state border
guard; customs; and the State Committee on Women's Issues.
The government regularly collaborated with neighboring countries on
antitrafficking investigations.
The country was primarily a country of origin and transit for trafficked women,
men, and children for sexual exploitation and forced labor. Russian, Central
Asian, and local women and girls were trafficked from or through the country to
the United States, United Arab Emirates (UAE), Turkey, Iran, and Pakistan for
work in the sex industry. There was also internal trafficking of women for
sexual exploitation. The government reported it identified 231 trafficking
victims: 218 Azerbaijani, 11 Uzbek, 1 Russian, and 1 Kyrgyz. During the year the
government also reported one case of trafficking of a child.
Women and girls were trafficked internally from rural areas to the capital for
sexual exploitation, men were trafficked to Turkey and Russia for forced labor,
and boys were trafficked internally for begging. Iranians, Iraqis, Afghans, and
migrants from South Asia were smuggled through the country to
Europe—particularly Germany, Sweden, France, and the Netherlands—and to the US,
where they at times had their passports confiscated and were subjected to forced
labor. Traffickers generally targeted women. Refugees, IDPs, and the rural poor
faced a higher risk of being trafficked.
Traffickers were either foreigners or ethnic Azerbaijanis who acted in loose
concert with international networks. They approached victims directly and
indirectly through friends and relatives, usually offering to arrange employment
abroad. Traffickers also used deceptive newspaper advertisements offering false
work abroad. Traffickers reportedly used forged documents to move victims.
Traffickers also used fraudulent marriage proposals from men posing as Iranian
businessmen to lure women into prostitution in neighboring Iran. Some families
willingly married their daughters to wealthy Iranians without concern for the
actual outcome.
There was no evidence of official complicity in trafficking, but corruption in
some government agencies facilitated trafficking.
In late June parliament passed antitrafficking legislation increasing
protections for trafficking victims by relieving them from civil,
administrative, and criminal responsibility for offenses committed under
coercion, intimidation, or other trafficking conditions. The law also allows the
use of pseudonyms to protect the identity of trafficking victims and provides
for assistance and shelters for trafficking victims. October revisions to the
criminal code implemented this legislation.
There was no standardized mechanism to return trafficked women to the country.
According to the IOM, some Azerbaijanis and third country nationals who were
either victims of trafficking or engaged in prostitution were deported to the
country, primarily from Turkey and the UAE. However, the government had no
program to assist them.
The government also referred victims to international organizations and domestic
NGOs for assistance. The IOM and OSCE provided training for domestic NGOs on how
to operate emergency hot lines, conduct awareness campaigns, and secure housing
for trafficking victims. There were no known shelters for victims, but some
NGOs, which cooperated with the government, reportedly sheltered victims in
private homes.
During the year the government continued to implement its antitrafficking action
plan. The government identified a site for a trafficking victims' shelter and by
year's end began renovations to the building. With international assistance, the
government developed but did not implement a standardized recruitment,
selection, and testing process for police officers of the new antitrafficking
unit.
Several NGOs, such as the Institute for Peace and Democracy and Clean World, and
government bodies, such as the State Committee for Women's Issues, worked on
antitrafficking activities. There were no government-sponsored antitrafficking
public education campaigns, although the Ministry of Education supported school
information programs run by domestic NGOs.
Persons with Disabilities
The law prohibits discrimination against persons with disabilities in
employment, education, and access to health care, or the provision of other
state services, but discrimination in employment was a problem. It was commonly
believed that children with disabilities were ill and needed to be separated
from other children and institutionalized. Several international and local NGOs
developed educational campaigns to change social perceptions and reintegrate
disabled children.
There are no legal provisions mandating access to public or other buildings for
persons with disabilities, and most buildings were not accessible.
Carein facilitiesfor the mentally ill and persons with disabilities varied--some
provided adequate care while others lacked qualified caregivers, equipment, and
supplies to maintain sanitary conditions and provide a proper diet.
The Ministries of Health, and Labor and Social Welfare were responsible for
protecting the rights of persons with disabilities.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
Some groups complained that authorities restricted their ability to teach or
print materials in their native languages. Specifically, Farsi-speaking Tallish
in the south, Caucasian Lezghins in the north, displaced Meskhetian Turks from
Central Asia, and displaced Kurds from the Armenian-occupied Lachin region
reported sporadic incidents of discrimination, restrictions on the ability to
teach in their native languages, and harassment by local authorities.
Some of the approximately 20 thousand citizens of Armenian descent living in the
country historically have complained of discrimination in employment, schooling,
housing, the provision of social services, and other areas. Azerbaijani citizens
who were ethnically Armenian often concealed their ethnicity by legally changing
the ethnic designation in their passports.
Other Societal Abuses and Discrimination
The government did not officially condone discrimination based on sexual
orientation; however, there was societal prejudice against homosexuals.
Section 6 Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
The law provides for freedom of association, including the right to form labor
unions, but there were some restrictions on this right in practice. The
overwhelming majority of labor unions remained tightly linked to the government,
with the exception of the independent journalists' unions.
Uniformed military and police are prohibited from participating in unions,
although civilians working in the interior and defense ministries were allowed
to do so. The law also prohibits managerial staff from joining a union, but in
practice managers in state industries often had union dues automatically
deducted from their paychecks.
The law prohibits unions from engaging in political activity, although some
government-aligned unions ignored this prohibition.
Many of the state-owned enterprises that dominated the formal economy withheld
union dues from workers' pay but did not deliver the dues to the unions. As a
result unions did not have resources to carry out their activities effectively.
Unions had no recourse to investigate the withheld funds.
The Azerbaijani Trade Union Confederation (ATUC) had approximately 1.5 million
members, including 26 labor federations in various industrial sectors. Although
registered independently, some workers considered the ATUC closely aligned with
the government.
Membership in the Union of Oil and Gas Industry Workers remained mandatory for
the State Oil Company's 60 thousand workers, whose union dues (1 percent of each
worker's salary) were automatically deducted from their paychecks.
There were no reports of government antiunion discrimination; labor disputes
were primarily handled by local courts, which, while not exhibiting antiunion
discrimination, were widely considered corrupt. There were reports of antiunion
discrimination by foreign companies operating in Baku. Most foreign oil
companies did not allow union membership.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
The law allows trade unions to conduct their activities without government
interference; in practice most unions were not independent. The law also
provides for collective bargaining agreements to set wages in state enterprises,
and trade unions actively negotiated with employers, particularly in the formal
sector. In reality unions could not effectively participate in negotiating wage
levels because government-appointed boards ran major state-owned firms and set
wages according to a unified schedule. In addition the Labor Ministry reported
that the government continued to have limited success in addressing
worker-related issues with foreign companies.
The law provides most workers with the right to strike and workers exercised
this right. Categories of workers prohibited from striking include high-ranking
executive and legislative officials, law enforcement officers and court
employees, health, electric power, water supply, telephone, fire fighters, and
railway and air traffic control workers. Striking workers who disrupt public
transportation can be sentenced up to three years' imprisonment. The law
prohibits retribution against strikers such as dismissal or replacement.
There are no export processing zones.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
The constitution allows forced or compulsory labor under certain circumstances,
and there were reports of forced or compulsory labor, including trafficking in
persons (see section 5).
There were continued reports that some military officers used conscripts as
unpaid laborers on construction projects.
d. Prohibition of Child Labor and Minimum Age for Employment
The law provides for the protection of children from exploitation in the
workplace and from work that is dangerous to their health, but there were few
complaints of abuses of child labor laws.
The minimum age for employment depended on the type of work. In most instances
the law permits children to work from age 15; 14-year-olds may work in family
businesses or at after-school jobs during the day that pose no hazard to their
health with parental consent. Children under 16 may not work more than 24 hours
per week; children between 16 and 18 may not work more than 36 hours per week.
The law prohibits employing children under 18 in jobs with difficult and
hazardous work conditions. The Ministry of Labor and Social Security is
responsible for enforcing child labor laws.
There were reports that some parents forced their children to beg, and children
were trafficked internally for this purpose. Children were also trafficked for
the purposes of forced labor and sexual exploitation (see section 5).
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
During the year the government raised the minimum monthly wage from $25 to $30
(150 thousand manat), the third raise in 18 months. The minimum wage was
insufficient to provide a decent standard of living for a worker and family,
although it was $6 (30 thousand manat) above the official poverty level of $24
(120 thousand manat) set by the government. The Ministry of Taxes, the Ministry
of Labor, and the State Social Protection Fund legally share responsibility for
enforcing the minimum wage. However, in practice the minimum wage was not
effectively enforced.
The law provides for a 40-hour work week; the maximum daily work shift is 12
hours. Workers in hazardous occupations may not work more than 36 hours per
week. The law requires lunch and rest periods, which are determined by labor
contracts and collective agreements. Local companies did not provide premium
compensation for overtime, although international companies generally did. There
was no prohibition on excessive compulsory overtime. The Ministry of Labor
reported little success enforcing such contracts and agreements in the informal
sector, where most individuals were employed.
The law sets health and safety standards; government inspections of working
conditions were weak and ineffective, and standards were widely ignored. The
ATUC also monitored compliance with labor and trade regulations, including
safety and health conditions. During the year the ATUC reported that it
inspected 2,300 enterprises and organizations and found 570 legal and technical
violations. The ATUC stated that virtually all of the violations were addressed,
and no official complaints were registered.
Workers could not leave jobs that endangered their health and safety without
fear of losing their jobs. According to theOil Workers Rights Defense Council
(ORDC), an NGO dedicated to protecting worker rights in the oil sector, five
State Oil Company workers died at sea in workplace accidents. One other oil
worker died in other industry-related accidents. Workplace accidents were also a
problem in other sectors of the economy. The law provides equal rights to
foreign and domestic workers, although local human rights groups, including
ORDC, maintained that disparities existed, particularly in foreign oil
companies.
http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2005/61637.htm