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EU: Raise Human Rights Crisis in Azerbaijan during COP29

EU Leaders Should Press Azerbaijani Authorities to End Assault on Government Critics 6 November 2024

The COP29 stand at Baku Boulevard in Baku, Azerbaijan, July 28, 2024. © 2024 Aziz Karimov/Getty Images

(Brussels, November 6, 2024) – European Union leaders attending COP29, the 29th annual United Nations Climate Change Conference, in Baku, Azerbaijan, from November 11 to 22, should raise directly with the Azerbaijani authorities the cases of those imprisoned on politically motivated grounds and aim to secure their release, 17 international human rights organizations including Human Rights Watch said in a joint statement today. 

Azerbaijan’s assault on government critics has seriously worsened over the last two years. The EU should now use the rare international spotlight of COP29 to speak publicly and achieve concrete improvements for civil society, independent media, and human rights defenders in the country.  

The following is the statement: 

In advance of COP29, the 29th annual United Nations Climate Change Conference, in Baku, Azerbaijan, 17 international human rights organizations call on attending EU leaders to draw urgent attention to and raise directly with the government of Azerbaijan the deteriorating human rights situation in the country.

Azerbaijan has a record of human rights abuse that has seriously worsened over the last two years with the government targeting the remaining vestiges of independent media and civil society including human rights defenders. Among the methods the government uses are politically motivated arrests and prosecutions on bogus criminal charges, as well as the arbitrary enforcement of highly restrictive laws regulating non-governmental organizations (NGOs). This abusive regulatory system effectively denies independent activists, media, and human rights defenders lawful ways to carry out their work, thereby pushing them to the margins of the law and heightening their vulnerability to retaliatory criminal prosecution.

The EU should ensure that economic and political ties with Azerbaijan, including energy cooperation, contain concrete human rights commitments, in line with Azerbaijan’s obligations as a member of the EU’s Eastern Partnership initiative. Azerbaijan depends heavily on fossil fuels for its state budget and the 2022 EU-Azerbaijan Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on energy partnership is an important instrument of political influence. The EU should use its political and diplomatic weight with the authorities to ensure that this partnership is in line with the EU’s treaty commitments to defend and promote human rights in its foreign policy. We also call on the EU to fulfill its human rights obligations by implementing COP28’s commitment to transition away from fossil fuels in an equitable, time-bound and rights-respecting manner.

Since the signing of the MoU, the government of Azerbaijan has engaged in a relentless crackdown against independent media and civil society, including human rights defenders, eradicating most forms of dissent and legitimate human rights work. In July 2023, the authorities arrested renowned scholar, anti-corruption expert and one of the finalists for the 2024 Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought, Gubad Ibadoghlu. Following nine months of pretrial detention, during which his health rapidly deteriorated as a result of the authorities’ failure to provide him with adequate medical treatment, he was transferred to house arrest and police supervision. While his investigation is temporarily suspended, if convicted, he could face up to 17 years in prison. In April 2024, the winner of the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly’s 2014 Václav Havel Human Rights Prize, human rights defender Anar Mammadli was arrested and put in pretrial detention, where his health has deteriorated. Mammadli’s arrest came shortly after his organization, the Election Monitoring and Democracy Studies Center (EMDS), published an assessment on the conduct of the February presidential elections and as he and other human rights defenders announced a coalition on climate justice ahead of COP29.

Since November 2023, the Azerbaijani authorities have arrested at least 11 independent journalists and media workers and remanded them to pretrial detention on various bogus criminal charges. These include Ulvi Hasanli, Sevinj Vagifgizi, Hafiz Babali, Nargiz Absalamova, Elnara GasimovaAziz Orujov, Shamo EminovMushfig Jabbarov, Alasgar Mammadli, and Imran Aliyev. Other prominent civil society representatives, government critics, human rights defenders, and trade union activists put behind bars in the last two years include Bakhtiyar Hajiyev, Akif Gurbanov, Ruslan Izzatli, Afiaddin Mammadov, Mahyaddin Orujov, Elvin Mustafayev, Aykhan Israfilov, Fazil Gasimov, and Famil Khalilov. As recently as July and August, Azerbaijani authorities arrested researchers and peace activists Igbal Abilov and Bahruz Samadov, charging them with treason on spurious grounds. They remain in pretrial custody, facing potentially lengthy prison terms. 

In addition to the arrest spree against government critics, the authorities have placed scores more on travel bans, among them a well-known Azerbaijani researcher Javidan Aghayev, who was prevented from taking a flight to Lithuania and put under a travel ban after being interrogated as a witness in another bogus criminal investigation.

The EU has issued several statements over the crackdown, referring to “an unsettling rise of arrests of independent journalists, human rights defenders, and political activists on politically motivated charges,” and the European Parliament has adopted several resolutions. Azerbaijan has one of the worst records among Council of Europe member states on implementation of judgements by the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) which has in multiple instances found that the Azerbaijani government violated the right to freedom of association. It also found multiple instances in which Azerbaijan pursued “ulterior motives” while imprisoning government critics, in retaliation for their activism. 

In July, the Council of Europe’s Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CPT) took the “exceptional decision” to make a public statement denouncing Azerbaijan’s “persistent lack of cooperation” and expressing extreme concerns over “continued resort to physical ill-treatment/torture by the police and the pervasive practice of threats, planting evidence, forced confessions and extortion.” Yet, the government of Azerbaijan has faced little consequence for its actions. The speed of the ongoing crackdown ahead of COP29 attests to the lack of willingness to improve the government’s longstanding and well-documented record of repressing critical voices. 

EU leaders attending COP29 should: 

  • Raise directly with the authorities the cases of those imprisoned on clearly politically motivated grounds and aim to secure their release. They should prioritize in particular the cases of those needing urgent medical attention such as Gubad Ibadoghlu, Anar Mammadli, Alasgar Mammadli, Hafiz Babali, Fazil Gasimov, and Famil Khalilov, as well as Ulvi Hasanli who has reportedly received threats after publicizing allegations of torture and ill-treatment in the detention center where he is held.
  • Request to meet with some of the individuals imprisoned on political grounds, and/or arrange meetings with their families, particularly individuals mentioned in the EU’s statements on Azerbaijan.
  • Speak publicly on all occasions to express support for independent media and civil society, including human rights defenders; call on the authorities to unconditionally release all wrongfully imprisoned individuals; and repeal repressive NGO laws. Such public calls were particularly important during previous COPs.
  • Meet with journalists and independent civil society including human rights defenders while in the country in a demonstration of political support.
  • Stress in interactions with the Azerbaijani government that robust civil society participation is essential for effective climate action, before, during, and after COP29, and that any retaliatory action taken against those who participate will not be tolerated. 


Signatories:

Amnesty International

Anar Mammadli Campaign to end repression in Azerbaijan

Committee to Protect Journalists

European Centre for Press and Media Freedom

European Federation of Journalists

Freedom Now

Free Press Unlimited

Frontline Defenders

Human Rights House Foundation

Human Rights Watch

International Partnership for Human Rights

Netherlands Helsinki Committee

Norwegian Helsinki Committee

PEN International

Publish What You Pay

Secretariat of the Eastern Partnership Civil Society Forum

World Organisation against Torture

 

 

Correction

The statement was updated to reflect the accurate spelling of Javidan Aghayev's name. 

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