Azerbaijan
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices - 2004
Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
February 28, 2005
Azerbaijan is a republic with a presidential form of government. The Constitution
provides for a division of powers between a strong presidency and parliament
(Milli Majlis), which has authority to approve the budget and to impeach the
President. The President dominated the executive, legislative, and judicial
branches of government. Ilham Aliyev, the son of former president Heydar Aliyev,
was elected President in October 2003 in a ballot that did not meet international
standards for a democratic election due to numerous, serious irregularities.
There were similar irregularities during parliamentary elections in 2001 and
2003, and some domestic groups regarded the Parliament as illegitimate. Only
5 of the Parliament's 125 members were opposition members. The Constitution
provides for an independent judiciary; however, it was corrupt, inefficient,
and did not function independently.
The Ministry of Internal Affairs (MIA) and Ministry of National Security are
responsible for internal security and report directly to the President. Civilian
authorities maintained effective control of security forces. Members of the
security forces committed numerous human rights abuses.
The Government continued programs to develop a market economy; however, the
pace of reforms was uneven. The population was approximately 8 million, of which
an estimated 2 million lived and worked abroad. Widespread corruption and patronage
reduced competition. The slow pace of reform limited development outside the
oil and gas sector, which accounted for more than 80 percent of export revenues.
Private commercial agriculture remained weak; subsistence farming dominated
the rural economy. Economic growth was approximately 10 percent. Nationwide
poverty decreased, although 44 percent of the population lived below the poverty
level. Unemployment estimates ranged from 15 to 20 percent.
The Government's human rights record remained poor, and it continued to commit
numerous abuses. The Government continued to restrict the right of citizens
to peacefully change their government. There were four deaths that occurred
in custody allegedly due to beatings. Police tortured and beat persons in custody,
and used excessive force to extract confessions. In most cases, the Government
took no action to punish abusers. Prison conditions remained harsh and life
threatening, and some prisoners died as a result of these conditions; however,
the Government permitted independent monitoring of prison conditions by local
and international humanitarian groups. Arbitrary arrest and detention and lengthy
pretrial detention continued to be problems. After the October 2003 presidential
elections, authorities conducted a wave of politically motivated arrests of
more than 700 persons, including, opposition members, journalists and election
officials. According to Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE) observers, many of the trials of those accused of post-election violence
did not meet OSCE and other international standards. In a series of presidential
pardons, a number of political prisoners, as defined by the Council of Europe
(COE), were released. Authorities interfered with privacy rights.
The Government continued to restrict freedom of speech and of the press. Defamation
lawsuits brought by officials against independent journalists and newspapers
and high court fines for libel remained significant problems for the media.
The Government restricted freedom of assembly and did not sanction any demonstrations
by opposition political parties during the year. The Government continued to
restrict freedom of association by harassing domestic human rights activists
and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). There were some restrictions and abuses
of religious freedom, and low-level and local government officials continued
to harass minority religious groups. Violence against women, societal discrimination
against women and certain ethnic minorities, trafficking in persons, and limitations
of some worker rights remained problems.
Despite a cease-fire in effect since 1994, minor outbreaks of fighting with
Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh occurred, resulting in six deaths of civilians
and combatants during the year. Armenian forces continued to occupy an estimated
16 percent of the country's territory, including Nagorno-Karabakh. The occupation
dominated national politics and undermined democratic and economic development
in the country. The Government did not exercise any control over developments
in territories occupied by Armenian forces, and little verifiable information
was available on the human rights situation there. Approximately 800,000 Azerbaijanis
remained refugees or internally displaced persons (IDPs) after fleeing or having
been forced from their homes between 1988 and 1993.
RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Section 1
Respect for the Integrity of the Person, including Freedom from:
a. Arbitrary or Unlawful Deprivation of Life
There were no reports of politically motivated killings by the Government or
its agents; however, during the year there were four deaths in custody due to
alleged abuse and mistreatment. Authorities did not prosecute suspected abusers
in these cases (see Section 1.d.).
In March, Etibar Najafov was arrested on misdemeanor charges and taken to Sabayil
District Police Department. Authorities allegedly beat him during questioning,
but the Government reported that he died while trying to escape from a 2nd floor
window. In April, Akif Mirzayev died in a prison hospital after allegedly being
beaten in the Organized Crime Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs
while serving a 5-year sentence for kidnapping. The Government said he was a
drug addict who had cirrhosis of the liver. In May, Azer Safarov died after
allegedly being beaten at the Sumgayit City Police Station. Authorities acknowledged
arresting Safarov on burglary charges but denied responsibility for his death.
In December, Badal Babayev died after allegedly being beaten in an Absheron
police station. His body was covered in bruises. Authorities said Babayev died
of a heart attack after he left the police station. Authorities did not conduct
further investigations into any of these cases.
In October 2003, law enforcement officials beat to death one person at a post-election
demonstration that turned violent (see Section 2.b.). There was no development
in this case or in the 2002 death of Beylar Kuliyev, who died in police custody
after 10 days of interrogation.
During the year, the press reported that four army conscripts died of causes
attributed to military hazing.
Occasional cease-fire violations by both sides in the conflict with Armenia
over Nagorno-Karabakh resulted in six deaths and injuries to civilians and soldiers
during the year. According to the National Agency for Mine Actions, landmines
killed 13 persons and injured 21 during the year.
b. Disappearance
There were no reports of politically motivated disappearances.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) continued to urge the Government
and Armenia to provide information on the fate of persons missing in action
since the fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh began. Since the early 1990s, the ICRC
has collected the names of approximately 3,100 individuals of various ethnic
backgrounds that remain missing because of the conflict. However, the Government
estimated that approximately 4,850 citizens remained missing and were allegedly
held by Armenia.
During the year, the ICRC assisted in the return of four Azerbaijani citizens
from Armenia at the request of the Government.
c. Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment
The law prohibits such practices and provides for punishment of up to 10 years
in jail; during the year, there were fewer credible reports that security forces
beat and tortured detainees and used excessive force to extract confessions
during interrogations and pretrial detention. However, torture remained a problem.
Following post-election disturbances that turned violent in Baku in October
2003, MIA personnel detained, tortured, and beat three leading opposition leaders:
Hope Party Chairman Iqbal Agazade, Azerbaijan Democratic Party (ADP) Secretary
General Sardar Jalaloglu, and the ADP's election secretary Natiq Jabiyev (see
Section 3).
In 2003, Human Rights Watch (HRW) documented numerous cases of beatings, torture,
and verbal abuse, including threats of rape, by the MIA's organized crime unit
following the post-election violence in October 2003 (see Section 1.d.). HRW
reported that police also severely beat and tortured detainees to extract confessions
and pressured them to sign false statements to denounce and implicate opposition
leaders in the post-election violence. For example, during the trial of seven
opposition leaders accused of organizing and participating in the post-election
violence, some witnesses testified that they were coerced into giving false
depositions (see Section 1.e.). By year's end, there had been no investigation
into these abuses.
Police also harassed members of certain religious groups, such as Baptists,
Adventists, Jehovah's Witnesses, and the Muslim Juma Mosque Community, and there
were reports of several beatings of members of the Jehovah's Witnesses (see
Section 2.c.). No measures were taken against police who detained and beat Haji
Jubrail Alizade following clashes in 2002 in Nardaran between protesters and
police.
Prison conditions remained harsh and sometimes life threatening. Overcrowding
and poor medical care combined to make the spread of infectious diseases a serious
problem. Tuberculosis (TB) remained the primary cause of death in prisons. The
Government reported that 774 prisoners were treated for TB during the year.
However, due to the absence of systematic medical screening, prisoners often
started TB treatment when already seriously ill. Many prisoners relied on families
for food and medicine, who often paid bribes to gain access to imprisoned relatives.
Harsh prison conditions resulted in deaths during the year
There were separate facilities for men, women, juveniles, convicts, and pretrial
detainees.
In maximum-security facilities, authorities limited physical exercise for prisoners,
as well as visits by attorneys and family members. Some pretrial detainees were
kept in "separation cells," often located in basements, to conceal
evidence of physical abuse and where food and sleep reportedly were denied to
elicit confessions.
During the year, the Ministry of Justice (MOJ), which oversees the prison system,
continued a program to improve prison conditions and renovated five prisons.
In 2003, the Government built five new prisons and several were renovated.
The government permitted visits by international and local humanitarian and
human rights groups. In 2002, the Government extended the ICRC's access to all
detainees and prisoners. The ICRC also had access to prisoners of war (POWs)
and to civilians held in connection with the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.
Foreign observers were allowed to enter maximum-security prisons and to meet
with alleged political prisoners. During the year, human rights activists worked
with the MOJ to create a monitoring group that could visit prisons regularly
and report on conditions. The group worked with the MOJ's Deputy Minister to
increase accountability of prison staff and to improve prison conditions. In
September, the head of one Baku prison was dismissed after the monitoring group
complained to the MOJ about his conduct. Domestic observers' access to police
stations remained restricted.
d. Arbitrary Arrest or Detention
The Constitution prohibits arbitrary arrest and detention; however, the Government
generally did not observe these prohibitions in practice, and impunity remained
a problem.
The MIA and Ministry of National Security are responsible for internal security
and report directly to the President. The MIA oversees local police forces and
maintains internal civil defense troops. The Ministry of National Security has
a separate security force.
Police corruption mainly consisted of levying spurious and informal fines for
traffic and other minor violations and extracting protection money from local
residents. Police officers received a pay raise during the year; however, low
wages of law enforcement officials continued to contribute to police corruption.
In most cases, the Government took little or no action to investigate reports
of arbitrary arrest or detention; however, the Government reported that during
the year, it took disciplinary action against 78 police officers for 57 cases
of abuse of human rights and civil liberties. Of these, 11 officers were dismissed
from the Ministry of Interior, 12 officers were charged criminally, 6 officers
were dismissed from their positions, and 1 officer was demoted.
By year's end, the Government did not arrest any police officers or announce
the results of an investigation into election-related police clashes with journalists
and opposition activists in September and October 2003.
The Government did not investigate or take any punitive action against individuals
named in a 2003 HRW report that documented numerous cases of torture and abuse
of opposition supporters that were detained by the MIA's Organized Crime Department
following the post-election violence in October 2003. Several of the officers
allegedly involved in the abuses received promotions during the year, including
the Chief of the Organized Crime Department, who was promoted from Colonel to
General (see Sections 1.c. and 2.b.).
During the year, an international foundation trained more than 160 security
officers attached to the Special State Protective Service (SSPS) in human rights
theory, standards, and practices. The officers who participated in the training
were recruited from the SSPS, the State Border Guard, the Army, and police.
The SSPS, a government agency responsible for protecting the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
pipeline, coordinates pipeline security with different ministries.
Authorities often arbitrarily arrested and detained persons without legal warrants.
The law allows police to detain and question individuals for 3 hours without
a warrant. The Constitution also states that persons who are detained, arrested,
or accused of a crime should be advised immediately of their rights, reason
for arrest, and should be accorded due process of law; however, authorities
did not respect these provisions in practice.
The Constitution also provides for access to a lawyer from the time of detention;
however, access to lawyers was poor, particularly outside of Baku (see Section
1.e.). Authorities often restricted family visits and withheld information from
family members; frequently, days passed before they could obtain any information
about detained relatives. Bail was commonly denied and lengthy pretrial detention
was a serious problem.
Police detained more than 700 persons across the country in October 2003, most
of whom were members of the opposition Musavat party, following post-election
demonstrations in Baku that turned violent. Of 126 persons found guilty, 41
were given prison terms, 79 others received suspended sentences, and 6 received
limited liberty sentences. The trial for the remaining 10 defendants continued
at year's end. Other opposition parties also reported numerous brief detentions
before the October 2003 presidential election.
In August, authorities again detained ADP Secretary Taliyat Aliyev following
an incident outside the trial of seven opposition leaders charged with participating
and organizing the October 2003 post-election violence (see Section 1.e.). Authorities
charged Aliyev with pressuring a witness to give false testimony and with assaulting
and injuring a police officer and detained him while the charges were investigated.
At year's end, the case had not been tried and Aliyev remained in detention.
Authorities had also detained Aliyev in September 2003.
As compared with the previous year, there were fewer incidents of police harassing
members of opposition political parties or their families.
In August, police reportedly threatened the family of Gabil Rzayev, Deputy Chairman
of the Umid ("Hope") Party, to disclose his whereabouts. According
to party officials, Rzayev sought political asylum outside the country after
he alleged that police tortured him in detention in September 2003.
On April 2, a three-judge panel convicted Ilgar Ibrahimoglu, the Imam of the
independent Juma Mosque, of inciting and committing violence in connection with
a post-election demonstration in October 2003 that turned violent. He was given
a 5-year suspended sentence and released immediately, having served 4 months
in pre-trial detention. On July 30, authorities detained the Imam again together
with 25 members of the Juma Mosque in connection with activities of the Juma
Mosque but released him the same day (see Sections 2.c. and 4).
Two relatives of former Speaker of Parliament and exiled ADP leader Rasul Guliyev
remained in jail at year's end after convictions for crimes related to corruption
during Guliyev's term in office. In September, authorities pardoned one other
relative who was jailed in 2003.
During the year, President Aliyev pardoned 810 prisoners, including 55 prisoners
considered political prisoners by local activists. For example, in March, 33
persons accused of participating in 2 coup attempts against the late President
Heydar Aliyev were freed. They included former Prime Minister Surat Huseynov.
In May, Faina Kunqurova, an ADP member convicted on hooliganism charges in 2002,
and Jan Mirza-Mirzoyev, who publicly criticized the Minister of Defense and
was convicted of murder in 2001, were both pardoned. In September, former separatist
leader Alikram Humbatov and four other persons connected with coup attempts
against the late President were freed. None of the 126 persons convicted on
charges stemming from the October 2003 post-election violence were pardoned.
Forty-one remained in prison, and the others were either on suspended sentences
or limited liberty.
Also during the year, authorities reportedly released three POWs from Armenia
taken in connection with the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
e. Denial of a Fair Public Trial
The Constitution provides for an independent judiciary; however, in practice,
judges did not function independently of the executive branch. The judiciary
was corrupt and inefficient.
The executive branch exerts a strong influence over the judiciary. The President
appoints Supreme and Constitutional Court judges, whom Parliament confirms.
The President appoints lower-court judges without confirmation, as well as the
Prosecutor General and the Deputy Prosecutor General, both of whom Parliament
confirms. The Prosecutor General hires prosecutors at the district and republic
level.
Judges' salaries have steadily increased over several years; however, there
continued to be credible allegations that judges accepted bribes, which contributed
to the overall lack of respect for the rule of law. There were also credible
reports that judges and prosecutors took instruction from the Presidential Administration
and the MOJ, particularly in cases that drew attention from international observers.
Judges preside over and direct trials. Courts of general jurisdiction may hear
criminal, civil, and juvenile cases. District courts try the majority of cases.
The Supreme Court may not act as the court of first instance. One judge hears
cases at the district court level, while a three-judge panel hears cases at
the Court of Appeals, the Court of Grave Crimes, and the Supreme Court. The
Constitution provides all citizens with the right to appeal to the Constitutional
Court. Citizens also have the right to appeal to the European Court of Human
Rights.
The Constitution provides for public trials except in cases involving state,
commercial, or professional secrets or matters involving confidential, personal,
or family matters. The Constitution provides for the presumption of innocence
in criminal cases, pretrial discovery, a defendant's rights to confront witnesses
and present evidence at trial, a court-approved attorney for indigent defendants,
and appeal for both defendants and prosecutors; however, these provisions were
not generally respected in practice. Foreign and domestic observers usually
were allowed to attend trials. Although the Constitution prescribes equal status
for prosecutors and defense attorneys, in practice prosecutors' prerogatives
outweighed those of the defense.
The law limits representation in criminal cases to members of a state-controlled
Collegium of Lawyers (bar association), thereby restricting the public's access
to legal representation. In August, the Government enacted a law that was expected
to reform the legal profession and establish a more independent bar association
by allowing independent lawyers to join the Collegium automatically. However,
by year's end, there was still no independent bar association. The Government
retained control over the Collegium by using a narrow and questionable interpretation
of the new law that prevented most independent lawyers from joining the bar.
Instead, the state-controlled Collegium instituted examinations for new members
and for the right to argue cases before the Supreme and Constitutional Courts.
In December, several groups of independent lawyers filed lawsuits against the
Collegium and the MOJ challenging the membership rules. At year's end, one case
was decided against the lawyers, and two others were pending.
The Constitution prohibits the use of illegally obtained evidence; however,
investigations often focused on obtaining confessions rather than gathering
physical evidence against suspects. Despite defendants' claims that testimony
was obtained through torture or abuse, no cases based on claims of abuse were
dismissed, and there was no independent forensic investigator to determine the
occurrence of abuse (see Section 1.c.). Serious crimes that were brought before
the courts were likely to end in conviction; this was a result of judges requiring
only a minimal level of proof and the close collaboration between prosecutors
and judges. In the rare instance when a judge determined the evidence presented
was not sufficient to convict a defendant, judges could and did return cases
to the prosecutor for additional investigation, in effect giving the prosecution
a "second chance" for a conviction.
On October 22, the Court of Grave Crimes found seven opposition leaders guilty
of inciting post-election violence in October 2003 and sentenced them to prison
terms ranging from 30 months to 5 years. On November 19, the Court of Appeals
upheld the convictions. At year's end, the defendants' appeal was pending with
the Supreme Court. The defendants were: Rauf Arifoglu, Deputy Chairman of the
Musavat Party and Editor-in-Chief of Yeni Musavat newspaper; Arif Hajili, Deputy
Chairman of Musavat Party; Ibrahim Ibrahimli, Deputy Chairman of Musavat Party;
Panah Huseynov, Chairman of the People's Party; Sardar Jalaloglu, General Secretary
of the ADP; Igbal Agazade, Chairman of the Hope Party; and Etimad Asadov, Chairman
of the Karabakh Veterans Association.
The trial began with pretrial testimony in May and was marked by lengthy delays
and questionable court decisions. In August, several witnesses testified that
they either had been beaten or pressured to give false depositions against the
defendants (see Section 1.c.). However, the judges neither requested a thorough
investigation into the allegations of torture, nor gave the witnesses' testimony
serious consideration in the conviction and sentencing. The OSCE, in its report
issued after the trials, stated that many of the international rights that defendants
were entitled to were violated, from the time of arrest through the right to
a public and reasoned judgment. Specifically, officials did not adequately investigate
pervasive, credible claims of torture; the seven defendants did not have adequate
access to the prosecution's evidence or time to prepare a defense once they
were given the materials; there were questions as to the impartiality of the
judges; and the judgment, which rejected the defense's witnesses on spurious
grounds and did not address inconsistencies in witness testimonies, was not
reasoned.
The country also has a military court system with civilian judges. Cases go
either to the Court of Grave Crimes on Military Cases or to the Collegium on
Military Cases under the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court.
Local NGOs maintained that the Government continued to hold political prisoners.
However, NGO estimates of the number of political prisoners varied, due in part
to differing definitions of what constitutes a political prisoner. For example,
some reported that the Government held more than 200 political prisoners, including
those sentenced in connection with the post-election violence in October 2003.
During the year, NGO activists forwarded to the COE more than 170 names for
consideration as political prisoners.
In 2002, the COE tasked 2 independent experts to examine 716 cases of individuals
whom local NGO activists said were political prisoners. Using a definition of
political prisoners developed by the COE for Azerbaijan and Armenia, independent
experts eliminated 504 names for lack of accurate information, such as a person
was not actually detained or a person's case had already been investigated.
Of the remaining 212 cases, the COE experts rendered decisions on 104 and released
those findings in July. The COE report stated that the experts determined that
45 persons were actual political prisoners. Of these 45, 11 were retried (in
retrials later determined not to meet international standards), 34 were pardoned
either in 2003 or during the year, 2 were released following a retrial, and
4 others were released 2 months after a retrial.
At year's end, 9 persons deemed to be political prisoners by the COE, together
with approximately 170 other persons who NGO activists said were political prisoners,
remained in prison.
f. Arbitrary Interference with Privacy, Family, Home, or Correspondence
The Constitution prohibits arbitrary invasions of privacy and monitoring of
correspondence and other private communications; however, in practice, the Government
restricted privacy rights.
The Constitution allows for searches of residences only with a court order or
in cases provided by law; however, authorities often conducted searches without
warrants, particularly after the October 2003 election.
It was widely believed that the Ministry of National Security and MIA monitored
telephone and Internet communications, particularly those of foreigners and
prominent political and business figures; however, there was no evidence to
support this claim.
Police continued to intimidate and harass family members of suspected criminals.
In comparison to the previous year, there were fewer allegations that the authorities
interfered with opposition members and members of their families (see Section
1.d).
Some local officials continued to prevent Muslims from wearing headscarves (see
Section 2.a.).
Section 2
Respect for Civil Liberties, Including:
a. Freedom of Speech and Press
The Constitution provides for freedom of speech and of the press and specifically
prohibits press censorship; however, the Government did not respect these rights
in practice.
The Government intimidated and harassed the media, primarily through defamation
suits, prohibitively high court fines for libel, and through measures that hampered
printing and distribution of independent newspapers and magazines. The print
media enjoyed more freedom than the broadcast media, and there was lively public
debate of government policies. However, the Government continued to control
state-run television and radio, which was the primary source of news and information
for most of the population.
A large number of opposition and independent media outlets operated during the
year. There were more than 40 active independent newspapers and magazines and
24 television and radio stations. There also were 10 "national" state
newspapers and 80 newspapers funded by city or district-level officials.
Most newspapers and magazines were printed in government publishing houses or
on private printing presses owned by individuals close to the Government. The
majority of independent and opposition newspapers remained in a precarious financial
position; they continued to have problems paying wages, taxes, and court fines.
These financial difficulties were worsened by the Government's practice of prohibiting
state businesses from buying advertising in opposition newspapers and pressuring
private business to do the same. In January 2003, the late President Aliyev
suspended until the end of 2005 an estimated $300,000 (1.5 billion manat) in
debt that newspapers owed to the state-owned publishing house. These unpaid
debts continued to put indirect pressure on opposition newspapers by influencing
their decision to shut down temporarily.
Government-run and independent kiosks distributed most newspapers and periodicals.
Distribution of independent and opposition newspapers outside of Baku was sporadic.
Baku-based journalists reported that authorities in the exclave of Nakchivan
continued to block distribution of opposition newspapers.
In Baku, the Government tightened enforcement on unregistered, independent newspaper
vendors who mainly distributed opposition newspapers. Authorities claimed that
the illegal vendors created traffic hazards on city streets. In December, the
administrator for the Baku subway system prohibited the sale of opposition newspapers
within the subway system; however, government-affiliated newspapers continued
to be sold. The country's largest independent newspaper distributor, Gaya, did
not report any new closures of its kiosks during the year. However, it was unable
to reopen any of its newsstands that were torn down in 2002 in an effort to
run the company out of business. Gaya reported that of the 55 newspaper stands
it once operated throughout the country, it retained 36. In June, the Economic
Court ruled that the 13 Gaya newsstands dismantled in Baku should be re-opened.
The Baku Executive Authority appealed the court's ruling, and both the Court
of Appeals and the Supreme Court upheld the appeal against Gaya. There were
no independent newsstands in Nakchivan or other parts of the country.
The Hurriyet newspaper closed in March, and the financial situation of most
other opposition newspapers remained precarious due to government harassment,
high court fines, libel lawsuits, and declining readership. Unlike previous
years, the courts began collecting libel fines primarily through freezing bank
accounts and collecting profits through distribution agencies, which increased
the financial burdens of some opposition newspapers. During the year, many opposition
and government-run newspapers reduced circulation and several, including prominent
opposition paper Yeni Musavat, reduced periodicity and stopped printing for
short periods because of lack of funds. Other publications like Monitor Magazine
stopped printing at times during the year because of technical difficulties.
However, some government newspapers also reduced circulation and moderate independent
newspapers like Echo, Zerkalo, and Ayna either maintained their circulation
or slightly increased it.
In addition, Monitor magazine, Yeni Musavat, and Baki Kheber endured additional
difficulties when they were forced to relocate after landlords threatened them
with eviction due to government pressure. Other opposition newspapers endured
threats from the state-owned publishing house, which stated that it would not
print opposition newspapers with unpaid debts.
Government-controlled radio and television remained the main sources of news
and information for much of the population. The Government periodically used
state-run television to denounce and harass political parties and leaders who
criticized the Government. Private television channels broadcast the views of
both government and opposition officials, but their programs were not available
in all parts of the country. A total of 36 television and radio channels were
registered with the MOJ, although only 15 television stations and 9 radio stations
operated. Most television stations were either controlled by the Government
or by individuals close to the Government.
Radio was oriented largely to entertainment programming. Radio Free Europe/Radio
Liberty (RFE/RL) and the Voice of America operated without restriction; however,
in January, the MOJ rejected RFE/RL's October 2003 registration application
because the paperwork was not in order. In April, RFE/RL reapplied, and the
MOJ approved the application in May. There were no restrictions on satellite
broadcasts by foreign stations.
Harassment and violence against journalists continued. The Azerbaijan Committee
for the Protection of Journalists (RUH) reported 81 incidents of physical attacks
or harassment during the year, in contrast to 170 during 2003.
In July, unknown persons allegedly kidnapped and beat Aydin Guliyev, editor
of the Baki Kheber newspaper. He was subsequently released. On July 25, two
unknown assailants struck Eynulla Fatulliyev, a staff writer for Monitor magazine,
on the head with a lead pipe. Both journalists had written articles critical
of presidential chief of staff Ramiz Mekhdiyev; however, there was no evidence
to suggest the attack on Fatulliyev was connected with his work. The Government
continued its investigation into the incidents at year's end.
In 2003, police injured and detained many journalists at various election-related
events (see Sections 1.c. and 1.d.). Most of the injuries occurred at election-related
demonstration in October 2003. According to the Azerbaijan Journalists Confederation
and RUH, police beat 54 journalists, detained or arrested 18, and damaged the
equipment of 6 others.
There is no transparent or independent mechanism to issue licenses for television
or radio stations. The National Council for Television and Radio, which was
created in 2002, was responsible for issuing licenses and for monitoring television
and radio broadcasts. However, it was inefficient and did not function independently
of the Government. Because the Government had not established a fee structure
to obtain a broadcast license, no new television stations could be licensed
within the provisions of the law during the year. At year's end, nine applications
for license renewals from entertainment-oriented television stations remained
pending.
In March, the President vetoed a bill on Public Television and Radio Broadcasting,
sending it back to Parliament for revisions that would bring it more in line
with international requirements set out by the COE. In September, the President
signed a new version of the law, which provides for a public television channel
to be created on the basis of a second, state-run channel, AZTV2. The primary
state-run channel, AZTV1, would continue operating. International and local
NGOs expressed concern that without abolishing AZTV1, a public television channel
would not have the resources to become an effective alternative source for news
and information.
Libel is a criminal offense; the law allows for large fines and up to 3 years'
imprisonment. According to the RUH, 13 lawsuits were successfully brought against
7 print media outlets during the year. Six of these cases resulted in monetary
fines, totaling approximately $69,000 (345 million manat). In contrast, in 2003,
40 libel suits were brought against 18 journalists and media outlets for total
fines of $325,000 (1,592.5 million manat). In 2002 and 2003, the popular opposition
newspaper Yeni Musavat was successfully sued for libel 22 times with fines totaling
approximately $100,000 (500 million manat).
In February, a libel suit brought against the Mukhalifat newspaper in 2003,
ended with a 2-year suspended sentence against the editor and editor-in-chief.
Two of three criminal charges brought in 2002 against Yeni Musavat's Editor-in-Chief
Rauf Arifoglu were pending at year's end. Arifoglu himself was found guilty
in October of inciting post-election violence in October 2003 (see Section 1.e.).
In August, Baki Kheber editor Aydin Guliyev was sentenced to a 1-year suspended
sentence as a result of a libel suit brought by Jalal Aliyev, the brother of
former president Heydar Aliyev. Guliyev had reprinted an article from Alternative
newspaper; however, Aliyev did not bring a lawsuit against Alternative newspaper.
In October a district court in Baku ordered Eynulla Fatulliyev to begin paying
a $2,000 (10 million manat) fine for libeling two high-ranking Ministry of Defense
officers in a Monitor Magazine article in 2002 about military hazing. Under
the court order, Fatulliyev was required to pay $2 (10,000 manat) every month
for 30 years. In addition, court executors inventoried Fatulliyev's parents'
apartment. The court also impounded Monitor Magazine's profits from distribution
agencies to pay for its portion of the same libel fine.
The Government required Internet Service Providers to have licenses and formal
agreements with the Ministry of Communications and Information Technologies.
At year's end, there were 21 licensed providers. Public Internet access at a
wide variety of Internet clubs and cafes cost less than 50 cents (1,500-2,000
manat) per hour; however, home connectivity and access to affordable computers
were still cost-prohibitive for the average user. Internet usage grew significantly
in Baku, Sumgayit, Ganja, Mingechevir, Lenkoran, and Sheki, but it was less
common in other parts of the country. There was no evidence to support the widely
held belief that the Government monitored Internet traffic of foreign businesses
and opposition leaders (see Section 1.f.).
The Government generally did not restrict academic freedom. Several tenured
professors were active in opposition parties; however, some faculty and students
did experience political pressure. Following the October 2003 election, some
professors and teachers said they were dismissed because of their membership
in opposition political parties. Also in 2003, police harassed and detained
Elnur Sadikhov, a university student and correspondent for the Popular Front
Party's (PFP) Azadliq newspaper in Ganja. Ganja State University subsequently
suspended his enrollment; press reports said Sadikhov had left the country.
b. Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association
The Constitution provides for freedom of assembly; however, the Government restricted
this right in practice. While the law allows individuals and political parties
to assemble and organize demonstrations, it also requires prior notification
and in some cases a permit from government authorities. During the year, the
Government sanctioned only 1 rally, a gathering of some 250 persons in September
in Baku to protest the planned arrival of Armenian officers for a NATO exercise.
In May, the PFP applied several times for a permit to hold a demonstration.
The Baku Executive Authority (BEA) repeatedly denied the requests stating that
the issues the PFP wanted to protest were either being addressed by the Government
or were not true. In June, the PFP sought to overturn the BEA's denials in district
court, but the court upheld the BEA's actions. However, the Court of Appeals
overturned the lower court's ruling and remanded the case back to the district
court. The case remained pending at year's end. The BEA also repeatedly denied
requests from other opposition political parties during the year for permits,
and police frequently broke up pickets and demonstrations, at times detaining
protestors.
In June, members of the Organization of Karabakh Liberation (OKL) protested
the Armenian military presence at a planning conference for a NATO exercise.
Several protestors shoved their way into the conference room by breaking a glass
door. Authorities arrested 15 protestors. In August, six OKL members were convicted
of hooliganism and disrupting public order; they were sentenced from 3 to 5
years' imprisonment. In September, the Court of Appeals reversed the jail terms
and issued suspended sentences.
In the months before and after the October 2003 election, the Government routinely
and forcibly disrupted unsanctioned protests. Police and MIA officers harassed,
beat, and detained opposition party members, demonstrators, and journalists
who took part in mostly peaceful demonstrations and political meetings in Baku,
Lenkoran, and Nardaran. Authorities injured and detained many persons, some
of whom were beat in detention (see Sections 1.c., 1.d., and 2.a.). On October
22, the trial of seven opposition leaders arrested in connection with the post-election
demonstrations in October 2003 ended with guilty verdicts (see Section 1.e.).
They were sentenced to imprisonment of up to 5 years for inciting clashes between
police and protestors.
Following the election, Musavat Party supporters gathered outside party headquarters
to protest election results; security forces broke up the meeting, harassing
and beating many participants. The following day a large crowd gathered in downtown
Baku for an unsanctioned demonstration that turned violent. Security forces
used excessive force, beating demonstrators, killing 1 person, and injuring
at least 300 persons. Several hundred persons were arrested. Of that number,
41 were convicted of crimes related to the disturbances and given moderate prison
terms. Another 79 were found guilty but given suspended sentences (see Sections
1.c., 1.d. and 1.e.). The trial of the remaining 10 defendants continued at
year's end.
A joint monitoring group, created by an NGO and the MIA in 2003, continued to
work to improve police-journalist interactions at demonstrations. During the
year, the monitoring group distributed personal identification cards, vehicle
identification cards, and special clothing to distinguish journalists from demonstrators.
During the year, the Government took no action to investigate or prosecute MIA
officers who reportedly beat villagers in Nardaran in 2002.
The Constitution provides for freedom of association; however, in practice,
the Government continued to restrict this right. A number of provisions allowed
the Government to regulate the activities of political parties, religious groups,
businesses, and NGOs, including a requirement that all organizations register
either with the MOJ or the State Committee on Work with Religious Associations
(SCWRA). Registration was required to rent property, open a bank account, and
function as a legal entity. However, the vague, cumbersome, and nontransparent
registration procedures resulted in long delays that, in effect, limited citizens'
right to associate. There were more than 40 registered political parties (see
Section 3).
c. Freedom of Religion
The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and the law expressly prohibits
the Government from interfering in the religious activities of any individual
or group except in cases where public order and stability may be threatened;
however, several legal provisions allow the Government to regulate religious
groups. There were some abuses, restrictions, and instances of discrimination
against minority religions.
In the northern city of Khachmaz, community members reported that on several
occasions police harassed and detained some Muslims who had disrupted public
order. The police allegedly shaved the detainee's beards; however, police officials
denied detaining anyone for religious reasons.
The Law on Religion requires religious organizations to register with the SCWRA.
Government authorities gave SCWRA and its chairman, Rafiq Aliyev, sweeping powers
over registration; control over the publication, import, and distribution of
religious literature; and the power to suspend the activities of religious groups
that violate the law. The registration process was burdensome; there were frequent,
lengthy delays to obtain registration. Religious groups may appeal registration
denials to the courts. Since SCWRA was established in 2001, more than 350 groups
have successfully registered. Only registered religious groups may maintain
a bank account, rent property, and act as a legal entity. Unregistered organizations
were vulnerable to closure as a result of charges that they were engaged in
illegal activities. These restrictions made it difficult, but usually not impossible,
for groups to function.
Several religious groups reported that they were still not registered despite
repeated applications; however, they continued to function. Unregistered churches
included the Greater Grace Baptist Church, the Baptist community in Neftchala,
and Protestant churches in Sumgayit.
On January 16, authorities ordered the Juma Mosque congregation in Baku to vacate
its premises because of Imam Ilgar Ibrahimoglu's and the community's political
activities. The law prohibits a religious organization from directly involving
itself in political activities, and Ibrahimoglu was a human rights activist
with DEVAMM and head of the Baku Chapter of the International Religious Liberty
Association. The Juma Mosque congregation, which registered with the MOJ in
1993, has refused to reregister with SCWRA amid concerns that the new process
might allow the Government to interfere with its practices. On March 1, the
Sabayil District court ordered the mosque to be turned over to the Icheri Sheher
Historical and Architectural National Reserve. The mosque belongs to city of
Baku. On March 11, the community appealed the eviction. In April, the Court
of Appeals upheld the Sabayil District Court Decision. On June 30, MOJ officials
and police began the court-ordered eviction of the Juma Mosque community from
its premises.
The Caucasus Muslim Board, which approves Muslim religious groups, appointed
a new religious leader to replace Ibrahimoglu. The mosque remained open for
worship with the new Imam leading prayers. On July 8, authorities closed the
building for renovation. The following day, approximately 30 members of the
Juma Mosque community started afternoon prayers on the steps of the mosque.
Police used excessive force in arresting five worshippers. On July 30, police
detained 26 members of the Juma Mosque community, including Ibrahimoglu, who
had gathered at a private home for funeral rites. They were all released several
hours later. On August 11, the Supreme Court upheld the decision to evict the
Juma Mosque community from the historic mosque.
In April, following a flawed trial, a court convicted Ibrahimoglu of participating
in post-election demonstrations in October 2003 and sentenced him to a 5-year
suspended sentence; Ibrahimoglu had already spent 4 months in pretrial detention
(see Section 1.d.). Since his conviction, Ibrahimoglu has not been allowed to
travel outside the country, including to several OSCE meetings as an official
NGO participant because the law prohibits citizens convicted of criminal offenses
and with suspended sentences from traveling abroad.
Some local authorities at times discriminated against members of minority religions
and harassed nontraditional religious groups. In many instances, abuses by authorities
reflected the popular prejudice against conversion to Christianity and other
nontraditional religions (see Section 5).
Members of Jehovah's Witnesses also reported that authorities regularly interfered
with their ability to rent public halls for religious assemblies and, on occasion,
fined or detained and beat individuals for meeting in private homes.
The Government remained concerned about "foreign," primarily Iranian
and Wahhabi Muslim, missionary activity. There were reports that the Government
closed Muslim groups and organizations with alleged ties to terrorists. In April
and September 2003, the Court for Grave Crimes sentenced six Muslim clerics
in Ganja to between 3 and 7½ years' imprisonment for allegedly preparing
a forcible seizure of power.
The law prohibits religious proselytizing by foreigners, and this was strictly
enforced. Authorities deported several Iranian and other foreign clerics operating
independently of the organized Muslim community for alleged violations of the
law. Although there were no legal restrictions on large religious gatherings,
authorities interfered with attempts by the Jehovah's Witnesses and the Pentecostal
"Cathedral of Praise" to rent halls for religious assemblies.
Some local officials continued to discourage Muslim women from wearing headscarves
in schools. The International Religious Liberty Association reported that women
were still prohibited from wearing them for identification and passport photos,
which complicated voter registration. In December, a group of women appealed
to the European Court of Human Rights to protest the ban.
Some religious groups, including the Union of Baptists, the Adventist Church,
and the Jehovah's Witnesses reported that some government ministries continued
to restrict and delay the importation of certain religious literature. However,
at the same time, the SCWRA facilitated the import of some religious materials.
Cases of prejudice and discrimination against Jews in the country were very
limited, and in the few instances of anti-Semitic activity, the Government was
quick to respond. Jewish community leaders consistently remarked on the positive
relationship they have with the Government and leaders of other religious communities.
In April, however, a rabbi in Baku received a threatening letter prior to the
start of Passover. Authorities responded quickly and took security precautions
to ensure that the festival proceeded without incident. In July, a new Jewish
Community Center was opened in Baku with high-level government participation.
Authorities also reserved one wing of a Baku school for secular and religious
classes for 200 Jewish students.
During the year, several newspapers and television broadcasts depicted nontraditional
religious groups as a threat to the country's identity. Some of these highly
critical reports extended to humanitarian organizations in the country that
had links with foreign religious organizations. Such hostility was also directed
toward foreign Iranian and Wahhabi Muslim missionary activity, which was viewed
as a threat to stability and peace and an attempt to politicize Islam. Pro-government
media targeted some Muslim communities that the Government claimed were involved
in illegal activities.
In those parts of the country controlled by Armenians, all ethnic Azerbaijanis
have fled, and mosques not already destroyed did not function. Animosity toward
ethnic Armenians elsewhere in the country forced most Armenians to emigrate,
and all Armenian churches, many of which were damaged in riots that took place
more than a decade ago, remained closed. As a consequence, the estimated 20,000
ethnic Armenians who remained in the country were unable to attend services
at their traditional places of worship.
The Constitution provides the right to alternative military service; however,
members of the Jehovah's Witnesses continued to have difficulties exercising
this right since there is no legal mechanism to implement this provision. At
year's end, the case of Mahir Baguirov, a Jehovah's Witness called into military
service in 2000 and again during the year, remained pending with the Supreme
Court.
d. Freedom of Movement Within the Country, Foreign Travel, Emigration, and
Repatriation
The Constitution provides for these rights; however, at times, the Government
limited freedom of movement. IDPs were required to register their place of residence
with authorities and could live only in approved areas. This so-called "propiska,"
a carryover from Soviet times, was imposed mainly on persons forced from homes
after the Armenian occupation of western parts of the country. The Government
asserted that registration was needed to keep track of IDPs to provide them
with assistance.
Residents of border areas in both the country and Iran traveled across the border
without visas. There were no exit visa requirements. The law required men of
draft-age to register with military officials before traveling abroad; some
travel restrictions were placed on military personnel with access to national
security information. Citizens charged with criminal offenses were not permitted
to travel abroad. Officials regularly extracted bribes from individuals who
applied for passports.
There were approximately 800,000 refugees and IDPs in the country. The vast
majority fled their homes between 1988 and 1993 as a result of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict. According to the State Statistics Committee, approximately 200,000
were refugees and 572,000 were IDPs. There were credible reports that Armenians
from outside of the country, including ethnic Armenian immigrants from the Middle
East had settled in parts of Nagorno-Karabakh and possibly other Azerbaijani
territories occupied by Armenian forces. The Government appealed to the U.N.
and the COE regarding those reports, and an OSCE Fact-Finding Commission was
established to investigate the matter.
The Constitution prohibits forced exile, and the Government did not use it in
practice.
There were no prohibitions against the return of citizens who left the country.
However, the government agency responsible for reintegrating citizens who were
refused asylum in other countries lacked the capacity to accommodate these individuals
upon their return.
Approximately 20,000 Armenians, almost all of mixed parentage or in mixed marriages,
continued to live in the country. This total does not include Armenians living
in the occupied territories. According to unofficial estimates, between 200
and 250 ethnic Armenians of mixed marriages leave the country each year. While
official government policy allowed ethnic Armenians to travel, low-level officials
often extracted bribes or harassed Armenians who applied for passports. According
to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), 43 Armenians of mixed
descent reported to an Azerbaijani NGO that they had problems with officials
in the passport and registration department when applying for identification
cards; applicants who applied with Azerbaijani surnames encountered no problems
except for having to pay bribes.
The Armenian Government continued to prevent the hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis
forced out of their homes in the occupied territories from returning; however,
the Armenian Government did permit the return of some ethnic Armenians.
In July, the President issued a decree to improve living conditions and to increase
employment for refugees and IDPs. Under the state-run program, all IDPs are
expected to be resettled from camps to newly constructed housing. According
to the Government, it directed $3.14 million (15.7 billion manat) from the State
Oil Fund to build housing and to improve socio-economic conditions of refugees
and IDPs. At year's end, the Government began construction of 5 new settlements
in Agdam and 1 in Agjabedi for 3,600 families.
During the year, the Government received $34 million (170 billion manat) in
assistance from international and domestic humanitarian organizations for refugees
and IDPs. According to the Government, it also allocated $18 million (88 billion
manat) from the country's oil fund to improve living conditions for IDPs and
refugees. In August, the IDP and Refugee Committee's estimated expenditures
were $60.8 million (297.7 billion manat).
According to the IOM, approximately 40,000 IDPs continued to live in camps,
60,000 in underground dugout shelters, and 20,000 in railway cars; however,
the Government took steps to relocate 40,000 IDPs out of railway cars and camps
to special settlements. Still, the majority of IDPs lived at below-subsistence
levels, without adequate food, shelter, education, sanitation, and medical care.
At the same time, approximately 40,000 IDPs lived in settlements provided by
the EU, while another 40,000 lived in housing provided by the U.N. High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR). The remainder were scattered among unfinished buildings,
hostels, public health facilities, and the homes of relatives.
The law provides for the granting of asylum and refugee status in accordance
with the 1951 U.N. Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967
Protocol, and the Government has established a system for providing protection
for refugees. In practice, the Government provided some protection against refoulement,
the return of persons to a country where they faced persecution, and granted
refugee status during the year.
The Government cooperated with the UNHCR and other humanitarian organizations
in assisting refugees and asylum seekers. These organizations reported full
and unrestricted access to the refugee population. Unlike in previous years,
all asylum applications were now sent directly to the Refugee Status Determination
Department (RSD) of the State Committee for Refugees instead of through the
UNHCR. By year's end, a total of 177 residual cases of asylum seekers from Afghanistan
and Iraq (161 Afghans and 16 Iraqis) were handed over to the RSD. The UNHCR
in Baku continued to provide assistance to asylum seekers while monitoring the
RSD's processing of asylum cases and providing referrals to legal assistance
for those whose claims were rejected.
At year's end, the RSD had received 235 applications for refugee status for
432 individuals. Of that number, 117 applications came from the UNHCR; the remaining
were new applications. The RSD granted refugee status to 18 persons during the
year.
By year's end, the UNHCR registered 10,764 asylum seekers or refugees, including
the 8,669 Chechens who fled from Russia and 581 Afghans. However, according
to re-registration figures, there were only 161 long-term Afghan residents in
the country. A small number of new refugees and asylum seekers from Iran, Iraq,
and other countries also registered during the year.
Under the non-visa regime with Russia, Russian citizens can enter, exit, and
move through the country without a visa, but they were expected to register
with the Baku Police Department within 3 days of their arrival. However, in
practice the majority of asylum seekers from the Russian Federation did not
register and remained in the country illegally. During the year, the UNHCR received
no information regarding expulsions or deportation of asylum seekers from Russia.
Arbitrary harassment, detention, and arrests of undocumented Chechens continued
to be a problem; however, the UNHCR noted fewer cases than in the previous year.
The laws on residence, registration, and the status of refugees and IDPs did
not apply to Chechens, who were required to register with the police and not
entitled to residence permits. Chechens may receive a 3-month visa. Chechen
children were allowed to attend public schools. As of September, approximately
700 Chechen children out of an estimated 3,000 attended public schools. Access
to medical services improved for Chechen refugees; however, access to specialized
medical assistance remained problematic.
During the year, the UNHCR reported that police arrested seven Chechens: Six
on suspicion of criminal activity and one for not having a residence permit.
Chechens accused of criminal offenses and wanted by Russian authorities were
extradited to Russia.
The RSD did not accept applications for refugee status from Chechens. Instead,
the UNHCR carried out all functions to provide Chechens with required assistance
and protection to remain in the country legally. Pursuant to UNHCR guidelines
and to the Government's policy, most refugees from Russia that originate from
Chechnya were considered persons of concern. Only Chechens who registered with
the UNHCR were provided letters of concern, which protected them from forced
repatriation to their homeland. These letters were not travel documents and
were valid for a limited time.
According to IOM, the Government continued to deport illegal Iranian immigrants,
many of whom were economic migrants who continued to return to the country even
after they were deported.
Section 3
Respect for Political Rights: The Right of Citizens to Change Their Government
The Constitution provides citizens with the right to change their government
peacefully; however, the Government continued to restrict this right by interfering
in local elections. The Constitution provides for an independent legislature;
however, in practice, Parliament's independence was minimal, and it exercised
little legislative initiative independent of the executive branch.
The October 2003 presidential election, which formally brought Ilham Aliyev
to power, failed to meet international standards for democratic elections due
to a number of serious irregularities. These included the lack of a level playing
field in the pre-election campaign, police violence in the pre- and post-election
periods, and partisan election commissions.
Serious irregularities noted by observers included disenfranchisement of voters
because of inaccurate voter lists, intimidation of voters and election commission
members, ballot box stuffing, and irregularities in vote counting and tabulation.
The Government accredited approximately 2,000 domestic election observers but
banned domestic NGOs that receive foreign assistance from observing the election.
However, there were some improvements in the October 2003 election, including
application of parts of the Unified Election Code (UEC), which the President
signed into law in May 2003 and is scheduled to take full effect in 2005. The
Government also promptly posted election results on the Internet; however, the
observed irregularities and insufficient transparency in vote counting and tabulation
led to serious doubts about the accuracy of the 77 percent of the vote officially
recorded for Ilham Aliyev. In the days prior to the announcement of preliminary
results from the October 2003 presidential elections, the CEC denied OSCE/ODIHR
observers access to its documents and activities, resulting in a lack of transparency
during the final vote count (see Section 4). By year's end, the Government still
had not investigated the irregularities.
In December, nation-wide municipal elections were marred by widespread fraud
and serious irregularities. These included ballot-box stuffing, forging voters'
signatures, multiple voting, voting without proper identification, and intimidation
of election officials and voters by local government authorities appointed by
the presidential administration. There were also technical problems. For example,
in some districts, up to 110 candidates competed for 19 municipal seats, which
presented precinct commission members with the difficult task of accurately
counting all votes, and many commissions failed to do so.
Most prominent opposition political parties boycotted the election due to an
uneven playing field; however, many opposition candidates registered as independents.
In a positive step to acknowledge the gravity of the irregularities, the Central
Election Commission (CEC) for the first time forwarded 95 complaints of election
fraud to the Prosecutor General's office for criminal investigation. The law
stipulates up to 1 year in prison for election-related fraud.
The October parliamentary by-elections were also marked by serious irregularities
such as ballot-box stuffing, fraudulent voter lists, and falsification of figures
on precinct protocols. Some voters received ballots without providing valid
identification or by showing invalid documents, and election observers witnessed
poll workers forging signatures on voter registration lists. Unauthorized persons,
including representatives of local governments, were present in many precincts
during the vote counting and in some cases directed the counting.
Two amendments passed in the 2002 referendum continued to be controversial.
One eliminated the proportional representation system required for 25 of the
125 seats in Parliament; the second replaced the Chairman of the Parliament
with the Prime Minister in the line of succession to the presidency, a change
that makes it easier for the President to designate his successor. In August
2003, then President Heydar Aliyev named his son, Ilham, Prime Minister, which
allowed him to assume unofficially the responsibilities of acting president
because of his father's ill health, and to run as the incumbent in the October
2003 election.
During the year, authorities harassed and evicted opposition political parties
from their offices. Limitations on opposition activities were particularly acute
in certain remote regions, including Nakchivan where opposition activities were
severely limited. The Government also applied organized pressure against opposition
party members to limit their business activities and dismiss opposition-linked
persons from state-funded jobs.
Throughout the summer, local authorities around the country interfered with
a study on religious freedom conducted by the FAR Center, a Baku-based research
organization. The interference allegedly occurred because the director of the
center had close political ties to the opposition Musavat party.
In 2003, HRW documented more than 100 job dismissals around the country of either
opposition members or their relatives. Many of those who were dismissed said
their employers warned them before the election and explicitly told them afterwards
that they were dismissed because of their opposition activity or the activity
of their relatives. There were also credible reports that some election commission
members who refused to sign falsified vote tallies were also dismissed.
At least 20 of the 42 registered political parties were considered opposition
parties (see Section 2.b.). Unregistered political parties continued to function;
however, authorities prevented them, as well as registered opposition parties,
from conducting outdoor gatherings (see Section 2.b.). Registered parties were
able to hold indoor meetings. Members of unregistered political parties may
run for president but must be sponsored by a registered party or by an independent
"voters' initiative group." Members of unregistered parties also may
run for Parliament, although none was represented in the Parliament. Opposition
members occupied 5 seats in the 125-member Parliament.
The 2003 UEC includes provisions for a new CEC, District Election Commissions,
and Precinct Election Commissions that will come into force based on the results
of parliamentary elections in 2005. The UEC, which combines four existing election
laws and referenda, was drafted in consultation with international election
advisers, including IFES, the COE, and OSCE/ODIHR. However, the UEC permits
establishment of election commissions structured in favor of the ruling party,
and did not change provisions contained in other legislation that prohibit domestic
NGOs that receive foreign funding from observing elections.
The laws penalizes corruption by outlawing bribery; however, there was widespread
public perception of corruption throughout all facets of society, including
the civil service, government ministries, and the highest levels of government.
The law on bribery carries a sentence of 2 to 7 years for receiving a bribe,
and up to 5 years for offering a bribe. Presentation of a bribe to an official
is punishable by 3 to 8 years' imprisonment. According to the General Prosecutor's
office, 120 criminal cases related to corruption were opened during the year,
with 10 specifically on bribery charges; however, these cases had little or
no impact overall on the prevalence of bribery and corruption in the country.
In March, the President enacted a new law on corruption by decree, which is
scheduled to take effect in January 2005. It requires public officials to report
annual income, sources of income, property owned, and financial liabilities.
It also prohibits nepotism and limits giving gifts and direct or indirect financial
benefits to public officials or third parties.
The law provides for public access to government information by individuals
and organizations; however, it does not specify procedures for obtaining government
information.
Although government ministries have separate procedures on how to request information,
they routinely denied requests, claiming not to possess the information. Individuals
have the right to appeal the denials in court; however, the courts generally
upheld the decisions of the ministries.
There were no legal restrictions on the participation of women in politics;
however, traditional social norms limited women's political roles, and they
were underrepresented in elective offices. The practice of "family voting,"
whereby men voted on behalf of their wives and other female family members,
continued. There were 14 women in the 125-seat Parliament. Several women held
senior government positions, including Deputy Chair of Parliament, Chairperson
of the Supreme Court, and Deputy Chair of the CEC. Lezghins, Talysh, and Avars
continued to serve in Parliament and Government.
Section 4
Governmental Attitude Regarding International and Nongovernmental Investigation
of Alleged Violations of Human Rights
Many domestic and international human rights groups generally operated without
government restriction, investigating and publishing their findings on human
rights cases. Although the Government maintained ties with some human rights
NGOs and responded to their inquiries, on occasion, the Government criticized
and intimidated some human rights NGOs and activists, and the MOJ routinely
denied or failed to register some human rights NGOs (see Section 2.b.).
Several NGOs reported that the Government and police at times refused to protect
them from so-called "provocateurs" who harassed and attacked NGO activists
and vandalized their property. The NGOs accused authorities of inciting the
harassment and attacks in some cases. For example, in June authorities in the
exclave of Nakchivan allegedly beat and detained Avaz Hasanov, coordinator for
an international working group on prisoners, hostages, and lost persons in Karabakh,
after he returned from Nagorno-Karabakh. Also in June, the Ministry of Taxes
and MOJ in Nakchivan threatened to close the NGO Resource Center because it
was not registered. The Resource Center had applied for registration but was
denied. However, in October, Nakchivan authorities approved the Resource Center's
registration, making it the first registered NGO in the exclave. In May, Mahammad
Rzayev, a lawyer working for the resource center who also worked part-time as
a regional correspondent for opposition newspaper Azadliq, was kidnapped and
beaten by police.
In September, in Baku, provocateurs disrupted a major, high-level NGO conference
on coordinating NGO activity for December municipal elections by shutting off
the power and removing tables and chairs. The same NGO also had problems holding
similar conferences throughout the regions in the weeks leading up to the municipal
elections. In November, Akifa Aliyeva, coordinator of the Ganja branch of the
Azerbaijan Helsinki Citizens' Assembly (HCA) was presented on television as
an enemy of the state after her interview on a peace-building project between
Azerbaijanis and Armenians was edited to purposely distort her remarks. Individuals
subsequently protested at the HCA offices in Baku and in Ganja.
In early 2003, Leyla Yunus, Director of the Institute of Peace and Democracy,
and Eldar Zeynalov, Chairman of the Human Rights Center of Azerbaijan, were
harassed for their work on Nagorno-Karabakh. In September 2003, the Committee
for the Protection of Women's Rights reported that security officials at the
Nakchivan airport refused to assist a group of human rights activists who were
assaulted with eggs and tomatoes.
In April, the President issued a decree to implement the law on registering
NGOs; however, the registration law remained cumbersome, and some provisions
related to the liquidation of NGOs were vague. For example, amendments passed
in 2003 complicated requirements to register grants from foreign entities and
subjected the funds to a social security tax of 27 percent on employee salaries.
However, grants from a few countries, which had bilateral agreements with the
Government, were subject to a 2 percent tax on employee salaries. NGOs remained
exempt from value added tax (VAT).
In December, the President issued another decree to establish a central registration
point and eliminate artificial impediments to registration and other technical
improvements. By year's end, no information was available on whether this decree
eased the registration process. During the year, 168 NGOs were registered.
In September 2003, the MOJ revoked the registration of a Muslim NGO, Islam-Ittihad,
on charges of spreading religious propaganda and attempting to establish a religious
regime. The NGO focused on preventing alcoholism, narcotics abuse, and helping
orphans and children with thalassemia. The Islam-Ittihad directors, Azer Ramizoglu
and Ilgar Ibrahimoglu, who were both outspoken religious freedom activists,
appealed the decision (see Section 2.c.). In July, the Supreme Court upheld
the MOJ decision.
Foreign diplomats, the ICRC, and COE delegations all had access to prisons to
meet with prisoners (see Section 1.c.). The Government met with COE rapporteurs
who visited the country to monitor political conditions, and allowed OSCE/ODIHR
and other international observers to monitor the October 2003 election. However,
in the days prior to the announcement of preliminary results from the October
2003 presidential elections, the CEC denied OSCE/ODIHR observers access to its
documents and activities, resulting in a lack of transparency during the final
vote count (see Section 3).
In 2002, Parliament established the office of an Ombudswoman for human rights.
Citizens may appeal violations committed by the state or by individuals. The
Ombudswoman may refuse to accept cases of abuse that occurred more than 1 year
ago, anonymous complaints, and cases that are being handled by the judiciary.
During the year, the Ombudswoman traveled around the country to hear human rights
complaints and cooperated with foreign diplomats working on human rights activities.
However, according to local human rights NGOs and activists, the Ombudswoman's
work was ineffective. In December, the Ombudswoman presented her annual report
to Parliament, which was not made public by year's end.
The Parliament and MOJ also had human rights offices that heard complaints and
followed up with investigations and recommendations to relevant government bodies.
Officials of the human rights office with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs met
with the diplomatic community to discuss issues of concern to the international
community.
Section 5
Discrimination, Societal Abuses, and Trafficking in Persons
The Constitution provides for equal rights without respect to gender, race,
national origin, language, social status, or political affiliation; however,
in practice the Government did not always respect some of these provisions.
Women
Violence against women, including domestic violence, continued to be a problem.
In rural areas, women had no effective recourse against assaults by their husbands
or others; there are no laws on spousal abuse or rape. Rape is illegal and carries
a maximum 15-year prison sentence. The Government stated that 25 rapes and attempted
rapes had been reported during the year. Most rape victims reportedly knew their
assailants but did not report incidents out of fear and shame.
There were no government-sponsored programs for victims of domestic violence
or rape. In Baku a women's crisis center operated by the Institute for Peace
and Democracy provided free medical, psychological, and legal assistance for
women. Since 2001, the center has provided services to more than 4,200 women,
including 1,700 during the year. An additional 4,700 women have called the center's
hotline. During the year, the Institute also completed work with Internews on
a television series on women's rights, anti-trafficking, and gender issues,
which was broadcast on regional channels and in Baku.
Prostitution is not a crime; it is an administrative offense punishable by a
fine of up to $100 (500,000 manat). Pimps and brothel-owners may be sentenced
to prison for up to 6 years. The legal age of consent was 16. Prostitution was
a serious problem, particularly in Baku.
Women nominally enjoy the same legal rights as men; however, societal discrimination
and trafficking in women for sexual exploitation were problems (see Section
5, Trafficking).
Traditional social norms and poor economic conditions continued to restrict
women's roles in the economy, and there were reports that women had difficulty
exercising their legal rights due to gender discrimination. For example, women
were underrepresented in high-level jobs, including top business positions.
The law prohibits pregnant women and women with children under the age of 3
from working at night; pregnant women and women with children under 18 months
of age cannot work more than 36 hours per week.
There were approximately 50 registered NGOs that focused on problems affecting
women. One of the most active, the Society for the Defense of Women's Rights,
provided speech and communication training for women in politics, and urged
political party leaders to appoint women to high-ranking positions.
Children
The law requires the Government to protect the rights of children with regard
to education and health care; however, difficult economic circumstances limited
the Government's ability to fulfill its commitments.
Public education was compulsory, free, and universal until the age of 17. According
to the Ministry of Education, 100 percent of school-age children attended school
during the year; however, UNICEF reported that the figure was approximately
88 percent. The Government provided a minimum standard of health care for children,
but the overall quality of medical care was very low.
The law prescribes severe penalties for crimes against children, and children
were generally treated with respect, regardless of gender; however, there were
some reports of abuse of children, including trafficking (see Section 5, Trafficking).
A large number of refugee and IDP children lived in substandard conditions in
camps and public buildings (see Section 2.d.). In some cases, children were
unable to attend school. In impoverished rural areas, large families sometimes
placed a higher priority on the education of male children and kept girls to
work in the home. Some poor families forced their children to beg (see Section
6.d.).
A coalition of more than 30 local and international NGOs worked with the Government,
the local community, and international organizations such as UNICEF and the
World Bank, to raise awareness of children's needs and to build capacity to
meet those needs. During the year, the coalition worked with the World Bank
to redistribute the social benefit package for children and families in need,
and began work on the alternative report to the Government's spring submission
on the status of its obligations under the U.N. Convention on the Rights of
the Child.
From June through December, the coalition taught street children about healthy
lifestyle choices, brought in an occupational therapist to assess conditions
for children with disabilities in orphanages, and completed a public awareness
campaign on the rights of children with disabilities. The coalition also met
routinely with government officials for talks on the rights of children.
Trafficking in Persons
The law does not specifically prohibit trafficking in persons, although existing
provisions of the law are used to prosecute trafficking cases, and there were
reports that men, women, and children were primarily trafficked from the country
for sexual exploitation and forced labor. Corruption in some government agencies
facilitated trafficking.
While trafficking is not a criminal offense, traffickers may be prosecuted under
laws prohibiting rape, forced prostitution and labor, and forgery of travel
documents. Most trafficking-related crimes prosecuted during the year carried
maximum penalties between 3 and 6 years' imprisonment, except for rape and sexual
violence, which both carry maximum 15-year prison sentences. There also are
criminal penalties for enslaving, raping, and forcing children into prostitution.
During the year, the Government convicted 10 individuals on trafficking-related
crimes. It also arrested 48 individuals and opened 32 trafficking-related criminal
cases.
Numerous government officials and ministries were involved in efforts to combat
trafficking in persons; however, problems remained with providing formal assistance
for victims, corruption, and adopting anti-trafficking laws. In May, the President
signed a decree that ordered all government bodies to implement a new national
action plan to combat trafficking in persons. The decree named a Deputy Minister
of Internal Affairs as the national coordinator for anti-trafficking efforts.
Since then, the Government created a special anti-trafficking police unit and
began drafting legislation and Criminal Code amendments to specifically criminalize
trafficking in persons.
The MIA improved its capacity to track potential traffickers and victims transiting
through the country's international airport. The Government regularly collaborated
with neighboring countries on anti-trafficking investigations.
The country was primarily a country of origin and transit for trafficked women,
men, and children for sexual exploitation and forced labor. Azerbaijani, Russian,
and Central Asian women and girls were trafficked from or through the country
to the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Turkey, and Pakistan for work in the sex
industry. In addition, 162 Azerbaijani trafficking victims were identified in
other countries, including 63 in Pakistan, 45 in the UAE, 40 in Turkey, and
14 in India.
Women and girls were trafficked internally from rural areas to the capital for
sexual exploitation. Men were trafficked to Turkey and Russia for forced labor
and boys were trafficked internally for begging. Iranians, Iraqis, Afghans,
and migrants from South Asia were smuggled through the country to Europe-- particularly
Germany, Sweden, France, and the Netherlands--and possibly the United States
where they at times had their passports confiscated and were subjected to forced
labor. Traffickers generally targeted women.
Traffickers were either foreigners or ethnic Azerbaijanis who acted in loose
concert with international networks. They approached victims directly and indirectly
through friends and relatives. Traffickers also used deceptive newspaper advertisements
that offered false work abroad.
Traffickers also used fraudulent marriage proposals from men posing as Iranian
businessmen to lure women into prostitution in neighboring Iran. Traffickers
approached some families who willingly married their daughters to wealthy Iranians
without concern for the actual outcome.
There was no evidence of government complicity in facilitating trafficking in
persons; however, NGOs suspected that low-level government workers and police
officers accepted bribes from traffickers to overlook their activities. During
the year, the Government dismissed the chief of a regional passport registration
office and two inspectors for issuing illegal citizenship identification cards
to several individuals.
There were no government-sponsored anti-trafficking public education campaigns,
and no standardized mechanism to return trafficked women to the country; however,
during the year Azerbaijani consular officials began to work on an ad hoc basis
with international organizations to repatriate trafficking victims to the country.
The Government reported that by year's end it had sent 150 trafficking victims
(141 Azerbaijanis, 6 Uzbeks, 2 Russians, and 1 Georgian) to a special healthcare
center.
According to IOM, some Azerbaijanis and third country nationals who were either
victims of trafficking or engaged in prostitution were deported to the country,
primarily from Turkey and the UAE. However, the Government had no program to
assist them.
Several NGOs, like the Institute for Peace and Democracy and Clean World, and
bodies such as the State Committee for Women's Issues, worked on anti-trafficking
activities and programs to prevent prostitution. The IOM and OSCE provided training
for domestic NGOs on how to operate emergency hotlines, conduct awareness campaigns,
and secure housing for trafficking victims.
Persons with Disabilities
There was social discrimination against persons with disabilities in employment;
however, there were no credible reports of discrimination in education or access
to health care.
The law gives priority to persons with disabilities to obtain housing, pension
supplements, and discounts for public transportation; however, the Government
did not have the means to fulfill these commitments. There are no special provisions
in the law mandating access to public or other buildings for persons with disabilities,
and improving access was not a government priority.
Depending on the severity of the mental illness, some individuals were denied
the right to vote.
The Ministries of Health and Labor and Social Welfare were responsible for protecting
the rights of persons with disabilities. Care in facilities for the mentally
ill and persons with disabilities varied. Some provided adequate care but others
lacked qualified caregivers, equipment, and supplies to maintain sanitary conditions,
and provisions to provide a proper diet. There were no credible reports of cruel
treatment of patients in government-run mental health facilities. The Ministry
of Health continued a program to renovate state mental health facilities in
recognition of the need to provide better care for persons with mental disabilities.
National/Racial/Ethnic Minorities
Numerous indigenous ethnic groups lived in the country, and the Constitution
provides them with the right to maintain their culture and language, and the
Government generally respected these rights; however, there were some problems.
For example, some groups complained that authorities restricted their ability
to teach or print materials in their native languages. Farsi-speaking Tallish
in the south of the country, Caucasian Lezghins in the north, displaced Meskhetian
Turks from Central Asia, and displaced Kurds from the Armenian-occupied Lachin
region reported incidents of discrimination, restrictions on the ability to
teach in their native languages, and harassment by local authorities.
Some Armenians and persons of mixed Armenian-Azerbaijani descent said they were
denied work, medical care, and education and could not register their residences
due to their ethnicity. The approximately 20,000 citizens of Armenian descent
also complained of discrimination in employment, schooling, housing, and other
areas. They said they experienced discrimination and harassment at work and
that local authorities refused to pay their pensions. Most Armenians concealed
their ethnicity, legally changed the ethnic designation in their passports,
or tried to leave the country. However, some persons of mixed Armenian-Azerbaijani
descent held government jobs. Public figures in mixed marriages or of mixed-Armenian
and Azerbaijani parentage were at times openly criticized by colleagues in newspapers
and on television and radio.
There was one senior government official responsible for ethnic minority policy;
however, preventing discrimination was not a government priority.
In the area occupied by ethnic Armenian forces, approximately 600,000 ethnic
Azerbaijanis were forced to flee their homes during the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
(see Section 2.d.). The authorities who controlled the occupied areas effectively
banned ethnic Azerbaijanis from all spheres of civil, political, and economic
life.
Other Societal Abuses and Discrimination
The Government did not officially condone discrimination based on sexual orientation;
however, there was societal prejudice against homosexuals, especially with regard
to housing.
Section 6
Worker Rights
a. The Right of Association
The Constitution provides for freedom of association, including the right to
form labor unions; however, there were some restrictions on this right in practice.
Uniformed military and police were prohibited from participating in trade unions,
although civilians working in the Interior and Defense Ministries were allowed
to do so. The law also prohibits managerial staff from joining a trade union;
however, in practice, managers in state industries often had union dues automatically
deducted from their paychecks. During the year, the Government refused to register
a trade union in the transportation sector because the Government alleged that
it had engaged in criminal activity.
The law prohibits unions from engaging in political activity; however, some
government-aligned unions ignored this prohibition. Individual members of trade
unions were not restricted from political activity. Trade unions were allowed
to draft legislation on labor, social, and economic matters, but most did not
take part in such activity.
Many of the state-owned enterprises that dominate the formal economy withheld
union dues from workers' pay but did not deliver the dues to the unions. As
a result, unions did not have resources to carry out their activities effectively.
The overwhelming majority of labor unions continued to operate as they did under
the Soviet system, and remained tightly linked to the Government; exceptions
were independent journalists' unions.
The Azerbaijani Trade Union Confederation (ATUC) had approximately 1.5 million
members, including 26 labor federations in various industrial sectors. Although
registered independently, some workers considered the ATUC a "yellow union"
because of its close alignment with the Government.
The Union of Oil and Gas Industry Workers continued to operate without a vote
by rank and file workers, and membership remained mandatory for the State Oil
Company's (SOCAR) 60,000 workers, whose union dues (1 percent of each worker's
salary) were automatically deducted from their paychecks.
There were no reports of government anti-union discrimination; however, labor
disputes were primarily handled by local courts, which were widely considered
corrupt. There were reports of anti-union discrimination by foreign companies
operating in Baku. Most foreign oil companies did not allow union membership;
however, in July free trade unions were established in one foreign company and
one joint venture involving a foreign company.
b. The Right to Organize and Bargain Collectively
The law allows trade unions to conduct their activities without government interference;
however, in practice, most trade unions were not independent. The law also provides
for collective bargaining agreements to set wages in state enterprises, and
trade unions actively negotiated with employers, particularly in the formal
sector. However, unions could not effectively participate in negotiating wage
levels because government-appointed boards ran major state-owned firms and set
wages according to a unified tariff schedule. In addition, the Ministry of Labor
reported that the government continued to have limited success in addressing
worker-related issues with foreign companies.
The law provides most workers with the right to strike. Categories of workers
prohibited from striking include high-ranking executive and legislative officials,
law enforcement officers and court employees, health, electric power, water
supply, telephone, fire fighters, and railway and air traffic control workers.
Striking workers who disrupt public transportation can be sentenced up to 3
years' imprisonment.
The law prohibits retribution against strikers such as, dismissal or replacement.
In July, police twice prevented workers from striking at Baku Tram Park.
There are no export processing zones.
c. Prohibition of Forced or Compulsory Labor
The Constitution allows forced or compulsory labor only under states of emergency
and martial law, or in court decisions affecting condemned persons; although
there were no reports of slavery or prison labor imposed by government authorities,
there were reports of forced or compulsory labor, including trafficking in persons
(see Section 5, Trafficking).
The law also permits compulsory labor in connection with the military or extreme
situations based on legislative authorization and under governmental supervision.
Two departments in the General Prosecutor's Office were responsible for enforcing
the prohibition on forced or compulsory labor.
There were continued reports that some military officers used conscripts as
unpaid laborers on construction projects.
d. Prohibition of Child Labor and Minimum Age for Employment
The law provides for the protection of children from economic exploitation and
from work that is dangerous to their health, and there were few complaints of
abuses of child labor laws.
The minimum age for employment depended on the type of work. In most instances,
the law permits children to begin work at age 15; however, with the consent
of their parents, 14-year-olds may work in family businesses or at after-school
jobs during the day that pose no hazard to their health. Children under 16 may
not work more than 24 hours per week; children between 16 and 18 may not work
more than 36 hours per week. The law prohibits employing persons younger than
18 in jobs with difficult and hazardous work conditions. The Ministry of Labor
and Social Security was responsible for enforcing child labor laws.
During the year, the Government ratified the ILO Convention 182 on the worst
forms of child labor. The country also joined the European Charter Article on
Protecting Child and Youth Rights.
There were reports that some parents forced their children to beg.
e. Acceptable Conditions of Work
In December, a presidential decree raised the minimum monthly wage from $20
(100,000 manat) to $25 (125,000 manat). The move followed an increase in July
that raised the minimum from $12 (60,000 manat) to $20 (100,000 manat). The
$25 minimum wage was slightly above the official poverty level of $24 (120,000
manat) set by the Government. However, it was not sufficient to provide a decent
standard of living for a worker and family.
Most workers earned more than the minimum wage, with the average monthly wage
reaching $93 (467,300 manat) during the first 8 months of the year. Many citizens
also relied on extended families or on remittances from relatives working in
Russia for support. The combination of these funds and other strategies allowed
most urban dwellers to attain a subsistence income level.
The law provides for a 40-hour work week; the maximum daily work shift is 12
hours. Workers in hazardous occupations may not work more than 36 hours per
week. The law requires lunch and rest periods, which are determined by labor
contracts and collective agreements. The Government attempted to enforce the
contracts and agreements; however, the Ministry of Labor reported little success
in the informal sector, where most individuals were employed, because of poor
cooperation from private companies.
The law set health and safety standards, but they were widely ignored; government
inspections of working conditions were weak and ineffective. The ATUC also monitored
compliance with labor and trade regulations, including safety and health conditions.
Between 1997 and year's end, the ATUC reported that it inspected 2,000 enterprises
and organizations and found 28,432 legal and technical violations. The ATUC
said that virtually all of the violations were addressed, and no official complaints
were registered.
Workers could not leave jobs that endangered their health and safety without
fear of losing their jobs. According to the Oil Workers Rights Defense Council
(ORDC), an NGO dedicated to protecting worker rights in the oil sector, six
State Oil Company workers were lost at sea due to workplace accidents during
the year. Another three oil workers died in other industry-related accidents.
Workplace accidents were also a problem in other sectors of the economy. The
law provides equal rights to foreign and domestic workers, though local human
rights groups, including ORDC, maintained that disparities existed, particularly
in foreign oil companies.