In meeting, delegation presses for Fatullayev’s freedom

Washington, January 20, 2010—A delegation from the Committee to Protect Journalists met today with Azerbaijani Charge d’Affaires Khazar Ibrahim at the Azerbaijani Embassy to deliver a letter carrying the names of more than 500 international journalists petitioning for the immediate release of imprisoned editor Eynulla Fatullayev, a 2009 recipient of CPJ’s International Press Freedom Award. The petitioners signed the call for Fatullayev’s release during a November ceremony honoring the editor for his courageous journalism.

CPJ’s letter was delivered by CPJ board members Rajiv Chandrasekaran, Clarence Page, and Andrew Alexander; Executive Director Joel Simon; Europe and Central Asia Program Coordinator Nina Ognianova, and Washington Representative Frank Smyth. Addressed to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, the letter urges the president to open a new page in his government’s policies toward the independent and opposition press by immediately releasing Fatullayev.

The delegation met with Charge d’Affaires Ibrahim for an hour. Ibrahim said Fatullayev had been provided due process and that the government would respect the court decisions in the case. But Ibrahim also promised that CPJ’s letter would be delivered to President Aliyev, and he invited a continued dialogue with CPJ.

CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon said after the meeting: “President Aliyev should demonstrate his government’s tolerance to scrutiny and criticism, and there is no louder or clearer message toward that end than ordering the release of our unjustly imprisoned colleague, Eynulla Fatullayev. No just and democratic society can be built without a vibrant, free press.”

Imprisoned since April 2007, Fatullayev is serving an eight-and-a-half-year term on trumped-up charges of defamation, incitement of ethnic hatred, terrorism, and tax evasion. CPJ research shows that the charges were not based on factual evidence and were pursued, instead, to retaliate against Fatullayev and silence his critical journalism. The persecution of Fatullayev began after Fatullayev wrote an article about the unsolved 2005 murder of fellow Azerbaijani editor Elmar Huseynov. Fatullayev’s piece accused Azerbaijani authorities of deliberately obstructing the investigation into Huseynov’s killing and ignoring evidence that could lead to the masterminds.

After exhausting domestic appeals, Fatullayev has sought redress before the Strasbourg, France-based European Court of Human Rights.

In a disturbing new development, authorities with the Azerbaijani Penitentiary Service searched Fatullayev’s cell on December 29, 2009, and claimed to have found 0.22 grams of heroin. Fatullayev, who was charged with drug possession and moved into isolation, has denied possessing any drugs. Based on Fatullayev’s account, as relayed by his attorney, and based on the government’s long record of persecuting the editor, CPJ believes this new drug charge to be fabricated. The journalist’s supporters say they believe the new charge was intended to ensure Fatullayev would remain in jail no matter what the

European Court
finds.

Here is the full text of CPJ’s letter. Below is a chronology of Fatullayev’s case:

 

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