Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Amnesty International Demands Release Protesters


Posted on Tue, Mar 15, 2011 at 2:56 AM
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL DEMANDS RELEASE 
OF MORE THAN 100 PEACEFUL PROTESTERS DETAINED IN AZERBAIJAN
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Amnesty International Staff Present at Protest; 
One Staffer Among Those Kicked By Police

Baku : Saturday, March 12, 2011: Amnesty International today condemned the violent dispersal of a peaceful opposition rally in Azerbaijan’s capital, Baku, that reportedly saw more than 100 people detained, and protesters punched and kicked by police.  

About 300 people had gathered in Baku's Fountain Square for a Musavat opposition party rally. Police also detained several people on their way to the event.

“There is no justification for the heavy-handed tactics to be used against obviously peaceful protestors,” said Natalia Nozadze, Amnesty International's Azerbaijan expert, who was present at the protest.  "All those detained merely for exercising their right to peaceful protest must be immediately released.  The Azerbaijani authorities have an international obligation to allow peaceful protests. They must not continue to deny their citizens the right to freedom of expression and assembly.”

Demonstrators chanted “liberty” and called for the resignation of the president and the release of imprisoned activists.  Some observing the protest said that they supported it but were too afraid to join in.  The square was surrounded by more than one hundred policemen. They targeted individuals chanting slogans, covered their mouths and dragged them to police vans from the crowd.  Police punched several protestors in the head after they had taken them into custody. They also kicked protesters, journalists and another Amnesty International staff member as they cleared the square.

Police also repeatedly charged people at the square in order to disperse them and the rally later turned into a running protest as officers chased youths around the streets of Baku.

The Musavat party had asked for permission to hold the rally, but the authorities refused. The Musavat Party told Amnesty International that more than 100 people had been detained including leading party activists and at least one journalist. Local activists expect most will be released, but that some could face administrative detention.

“We are calling for radical change. We want genuine democracy. We want dissolution of the parliament and new, democratic elections,” Musavat Party leader Isa Ghambar told Amnesty International.

The arrests are the latest in a series that have targeted activists.  On March 11 Baku police rounded up 43 people on their way to a protest calling for freedom and an end to government corruption and oppression.   Twenty three people were released after an official warning not to participate in the protest. The rest appeared in court on the evening of March 11 and were charged with misdemeanors. At least nine were convicted of disobeying police and sentenced from five days to eight days.

On March 8, police detained Rashadat Akhundov, a 27-year-old social media activist who was one of the first to call for the March 11 protest. He was charged with disobeying police orders and sentenced to five days of administrative detention.

Sahavat Sultanli,
 a member of the Musavat Youth party, was also arrested on March 8 after he posted information on his Facebook page about the March 12 opposition rally. He was charged with violating traffic rules and sentenced to five days of administrative detention.  

Bakhtiyar Hajiyev, a youth activist and the only co-founder of the March 11 Facebook event living in Azerbaijan, was taken into custody on March 4, accused of violating a conditional release on charges of evading military service.

At a court hearing later the same day he passed a letter to his lawyer in which he said while in custody he had been tortured and threatened with rape by a senior police official.
 

Dayanat Babayev
, a member of the Youth Committee of the Popular Front Party, which helped organize the protests, was also detained on March 4. He was held in incommunicado for two days and sentenced to 10 days administrative detention for obstructing the police.

Another man, Etibar Salmanly, a student who has been distributing leaflets advertising the March 11 protest, has gone into hiding after police called at his home this morning while he was out, reportedly to question him about allegations that he "cursed a woman" in the street.

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