JOIN AN INTERNATIONAL CAMPAIGN TO END THE ABUSE OF LIBEL LAWS BY AZERBAIJANI OFFICIALS

August 18, 1999

To all who respect basic human rights and freedoms, including freedom of expression and the press, all who respect the rights of every person to due process, and all who are concerned about democratic development around the world:

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), in partnership with The Trade Union of Journalists of Azerbaijan (TUJO) and the International Press Institute (IPI) calls on the international community to support our campaign to overturn the unjust convictions of journalists and newspapers in Azerbaijan and to end the abuse of libel laws by Azerbaijani officials.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Azerbaijan became independent, and its people began to build a secular, democratic and open society, which included a multiparty political system and an independent press. However, the administration of President Heidar Aliyev has done much to reverse these trends.

Although the government caved in to domestic and international pressure by abolishing official censorship on August 6, 1998, Aliyev’s regime has found other ways to control and oppress independent media. Since the presidential elections in October 1998, close relatives of the President and high-ranking state officials have filed multiple lawsuits against leading newspapers and journalists. Consequently, many newspapers now face bankruptcy and closure while journalists face heavy fines and even imprisonment. This clampdown on the independent media is taking place in the run up to municipal elections on December 12.

The following is a list of newspaper and journalist trials:

SEND APPEALS:

SEND APPEALS TO:

His Excellency Heydar Aliyev
President of Azerbaijan
19 Istiglaliyat Street
Baku, Azerbaijan 370066
Fax: +-994 12 92 06 25
E-mail: president@gov.az

Please copy appeals to the source if possible. For further information contact Azer H. Hasret at TUJO (hasret@azeurotel.com), Peter Goff at IPI (info@freemedia.at), and Chrystyna Lapychak at CPJ (europe@cpj.org).


Back to top.

Exit mobile version