person:khadija ismayilova

  • Hunger Strike Gains Momentum in Azerbaijan – Foreign Policy
    https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/01/16/hunger-strike-gains-momentum-in-azerbaijan-political-prisoner-protest


    From left, Rafik Bakhishov, Zafar Ahmadov, and Tofig Yagublu take part in a hunger strike at the headquarters of the opposition party Musavat in Baku, Azerbaijan, on Jan. 15.
    (Khadija Ismayilova)

    Seeing Baku as a strategic partner, the United States and Europe overlook rights violations.

    More than a dozen political prisoners, activists, and members of the opposition in Azerbaijan have joined a solidarity hunger strike to call attention to the plight of the imprisoned anti-corruption blogger Mehman Huseynov, who has refused food for three weeks.

    Huseynov, 29, launched his own hunger strike on Dec. 26 after new charges were brought against him that could keep him detained for another seven years.

    His supporters include the prominent Azerbaijani investigative reporter Khadija Ismayilova, who announced on her Facebook page Monday that she would stop eating and called on the international community to intervene on Heseynov’s behalf. Ismayilova’s own imprisonment between 2015 and 2016 sparked an international outcry.

    “I can only sacrifice my time, health and stamina. Please, respond, world,” she wrote.

    Daniel Balson, the Europe and Central Asia advocacy director for Amnesty International USA, said the solidarity hunger strike was unprecedented in Azerbaijan.

    Corruption and human rights abuses are rife in the southern Caucasus country. President Ilham Aliyev, who succeeded his father in 2003, has abolished term limits and appointed his wife as vice president, drawing accusations that he has effectively established a monarchy in Azerbaijan.

    It is estimated that there are currently more than 100 political prisoners in the country, according to Amnesty International USA, and the media is tightly controlled. Last year, the Azerbaijani journalist Afgan Mukhtarli was abducted in the capital of neighboring Georgia and brought to Azerbaijan, where he was sentenced to six years for smuggling and illegally crossing the border.

    “All well-known human rights defenders and journalists spend at least one or two years in prison,” said Huseynov’s brother, Emin Huseynov.

    He told Foreign Policy that while his brother began his hunger strike by refusing to eat or drink water, he has since begun to drink milk, enabling him to prolong his protest.

    Mehman Huseynov ran SANCAQ (“Pin” in Azerbaijani), a popular online magazine across Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram. His video reports, which explored government corruption and social problems, frequently garnered hundreds of thousands of views.

    In January 2017, plainclothes police officers dragged Huseynov into a van, placed a hood over his head, and took him to a police station, where he was electrocuted and beaten. After he spoke out about the abuse, Huseynov was charged with slander and sentenced to two years in prison for defaming an entire police station.

    The blogger was due to be released in March, but new charges that were brought against him, which are widely thought to be politically motivated, could add years to his sentence.

    The European Parliament is set to debate a resolution on Thursday calling on Azerbaijan to release all political prisoners unconditionally and to respect the freedom of the press.

    The Azerbaijani Embassy in Washington did not respond to a request for comment.

  • Azerbaijan
    Journalist detained for reporting on high-level Azerbaijan corruption is freed at last!
    In fantastic news from Azerbaijan today, the Supreme Court ordered the release of award-winning investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova from prison.

    Khadija Ismayilova smiles as she leaves prison after 18 months of imprisonment on bogus charges, Baku, Azerbaijan, on May 25, 2016.
    EXPAND Khadija Ismayilova smiles as she leaves prison after 18 months of imprisonment on bogus charges, Baku, Azerbaijan, on May 25, 2016.
    © 2016 MeydanTV
    Khadija is known for her in-depth pieces on corruption and human rights abuses in Azerbaijan, the oil rich Caspian state. Her investigative pieces exposed evidence of corruption networks that pointed to the country’s top elite, including the President Ilham Aliyev and his family.
    http://bit.ly/20DgvPZ

  • Azerbaijan frees investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova | Daily Mail Online
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/ap/article-3608744/Azerbaijan-court-orders-release-investigative-journalist.html

    A prominent, award-winning Azerbaijani journalist was released on probation Wednesday following a storm of international protests about her imprisonment, which has been widely seen as an attempt to silence a critical voice.

  • Ismayilova Marks 1 Year in Prison Today; New Stories Posted
    https://www.occrp.org/en/daily/4682-ismayilova-marks-1-year-in-prison-today-new-stories-posted

    One year ago today, investigative reporter Khadija Ismayilova, 39, was unjustly jailed in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku.
    […]
    Ismayilova, an OCCRP partner, was detained on Dec. 5, 2014, on trumped-up charges that included inciting a former colleague to attempt suicide (accusations later recanted). She was eventually convicted of tax evasion and embezzlement in another bogus case connected to her job as a talk show host at Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL).
    She vehemently denies all allegations, insisting that she is being prosecuted because her work exposing insider deals worth billions has annoyed Azerbaijan’s powerful president, Ilham Aliyev, and his inner circle of family and friends.
    Ismayilova has been sentenced to 7.5 years in prison. Since her arrest, journalists for OCCRP have launched The Khadija Project to finish her work and send a single, stark message to those who would try to muzzle an independent press: “Until Khadija is free, we will be Khadija x 100.

  • #Azerbaidjan : condamnation à 7 ans et demi de prison pour la journaliste Khadija Ismayilova

    Azerbaijani investigative reporter faces more than 7 years in prison
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/russia-and-former-soviet-union/azerbaijani-investigative-reporter-gets-jail-sentence-396951.html

    Investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova, who has written numerous hard-hitting stories on corruption in Azerbaijan, was today sentenced to seven and a half years in prison by the Azerbaijani authorities.

    Ismayilova insists she is being imprisoned for her investigative work and that the charges lodged against her are fabricated, an assessment backed by civil society groups and media freedom organizations.

    Her journalism for Kyiv Post partner Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and other press outlets, included major exposes of graft and improper business links of those in the close circle of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, including his family members.
    […]
    Acquitted of the initial charge of incitement to attempt suicide, Ismayilova was convicted of embezzlement, tax evasion and running an illegal business at the RFE/RL bureau – charges she has called ridiculous.

    This case was a travesty. It has more in common with the Stalin show trials than modern justice,” says Drew Sullivan, editor of OCCRP. “It appears Khadija was convicted politically and not criminally for her reporting.

    OCCRP joins media freedom and human rights organizations worldwide to demand Ismayilova’s immediate release. Organizations from Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, and the Helsinki Committee for Human Rights have noted she is a political prisoner and her incarceration cannot be tolerated.

  • Baku Prosecutors Wrap Up Case Against Ismayilova
    http://www.rferl.org/content/azerbaijan-ismayilova-trial-/27199018.html

    Prosecutors in Azerbaijan wrapped up their case against investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova on August 20 at a closed trial in Baku.

    After concluding their case against the 39-year-old Ismayilova, the prosecutors asked the court for an additional day in order to present their sentencing request.

    Ismayilova, an RFE/RL contributor who reported extensively on corrupt officials in Azerbaijan, faces charges of embezzlement, tax evasion, and abuse of power.

    She could face up to 17 years in prison if convicted.

  • Bakou accentue la répression des voix indépendantes
    http://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2014/12/27/bakou-accentue-la-repression-des-voix-independantes_4546609_3210.html

    Tôt dans la matinée du vendredi 26 décembre, les bureaux de l’un des derniers médias indépendants d’#Azerbaïdjan ont été la cible d’une perquisition musclée des enquêteurs du bureau du procureur national. Les journalistes de Radio Free Europe-Radio Liberty (RFE-RL), dont certains ont été retenus plusieurs heures avant d’être convoqués pour des interrogatoires, ont diffusé des images de bureaux et d’armoires saccagés. Des ordinateurs et des documents officiels ont été emportés, et les locaux placés sous scellés, faisant craindre une longue fermeture.

    Les policiers ont expliqué que la perquisition entrait dans le cadre d’une enquête sur les financements étrangers de la station. Ceux-ci ne sont pas un mystère : RFE-RL, fondée à l’époque de la guerre froide, n’a jamais caché être financée par le gouvernement américain. Depuis que Bakou lui a interdit, en 2010, d’émettre sur les ondes nationales, elle se concentre sur ses activités en ligne.

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    • J’aime pas les #paywall

      Tôt dans la matinée du vendredi 26 décembre, les bureaux de l’un des derniers médias indépendants d’Azerbaïdjan ont été la cible d’une perquisition musclée des enquêteurs du bureau du procureur national. Les journalistes de Radio Free Europe-Radio Liberty (RFE-RL), dont certains ont été retenus plusieurs heures avant d’être convoqués pour des interrogatoires, ont diffusé des images de bureaux et d’armoires saccagés. Des ordinateurs et des documents officiels ont été emportés, et les locaux placés sous scellés, faisant craindre une longue fermeture.

      Les policiers ont expliqué que la perquisition entrait dans le cadre d’une enquête sur les financements étrangers de la station. Ceux-ci ne sont pas un mystère : RFE-RL, fondée à l’époque de la guerre froide, n’a jamais caché être financée par le gouvernement américain. Depuis que Bakou lui a interdit, en 2010, d’émettre sur les ondes nationales, elle se concentre sur ses activités en ligne.
      « Haute trahison »

      Ces dernières années, le régime autoritaire d’Ilham Aliev, qui a succédé à son père Heydar à la présidence en 2003, a accentué la pression sur toutes les voix d’opposition. L’organisation Human Rights Watch estime que plus de 50 journalistes indépendants, blogueurs et militants politiques ont été emprisonnés ces deux dernières années.

      Parmi eux, deux cas ont particulièrement ému ces derniers mois : le 30 juillet, Leyla Yunus, 59 ans, figure la plus emblématique de l’opposition, était arrêtée à Bakou, et inculpée de « haute trahison » et d’« espionnage » au profit de l’Arménie, l’ennemi juré de l’Azerbaïdjan. Son arrestation montrait le peu de cas que faisait l’Azerbaïdjan des pressions internationales : celle-ci était intervenue quelques semaines après que le président français François Hollande l’eut rencontrée à Bakou et alors qu’elle était pressentie pour recevoir le prix Sakharov des droits de l’homme du Parlement européen.

      Le 5 décembre, c’était au tour de Khadija Ismayilova d’être arrêtée. Depuis cette date, la journaliste, collaboratrice la plus renommée de la station Radio Free Europe-Radio Liberty, est en détention préventive, sous l’accusation farfelue d’avoir tenté de pousser au suicide l’un de ses anciens collègues.

      Mme Ismayilova, connue en Azerbaïdjan et à l’étranger pour le sérieux et la rigueur de ses articles, s’est surtout fait une spécialité, depuis plusieurs années, d’enquêter sur le tabou suprême de la riche République d’Azerbaïdjan : la richesse et la corruption du clan Aliev, qu’un câble diplomatique américain, révélé par WikiLeaks en 2010, comparait au clan Corleone du film Le Parrain.
      « Forces jalouses »

      La veille de son arrestation, le chef de l’administration présidentielle prenait moins de précautions en accusant publiquement la journaliste de trahison, et désignait les employés de RFE-RL comme espions. Depuis, le pouvoir a balayé les critiques venues du monde entier en dénonçant une « campagne anti-azerbaïdjanaise menée par des forces jalouses de notre pays ». Il s’est plaint que « les Etats-Unis grossissent chaque petit incident lié aux droits de l’homme en Azerbaïdjan ».

      Récemment, Mme Ismayilova, 38 ans, avait pu converser avec ses collègues de RFE-RL. « Le travail doit continuer », leur avait-elle glissé. La journaliste, connue pour sa force de caractère, a pourtant été particulièrement harcelée par les autorités de son pays, qui ont usé des procédés les plus glauques. En 2012, des vidéos filmées en secret et la montrant en train d’avoir des rapports sexuels avaient été diffusées sur Internet. La journaliste avait alors expliqué être victime d’un chantage afin de cesser ses enquêtes.