Azerbaijan’s human rights on knife edge: CoE Secreary General

Azerbaijan’s human rights on knife edge: CoE Secreary General

PanARMENIAN.Net - Azerbaijan’s six-month chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe comes to an end in November, when it hands over to Belgium. Like the Eurovision song contest in Azerbaijan’s capital Baku in 2012, the chairmanship has been an opportunity for NGOs and activists to highlight the country’s numerous human rights violations. Much less is reported about how the Council of Europe itself confronts these violations, CoE Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland writes in the Guardian.

Earlier this month, the European court of human rights, which is part of the Council of Europe, confirmed an earlier decision ruling that Azerbaijan’s arrest and detention of Ilgar Mammadov, a well-known opposition politician and commentator, violated the European convention on human rights.

The judgment was as critical as it was clear: the court concluded that “the actual purpose of his detention had been to silence or punish Mammadov for criticizing the government and publishing information it was trying to hide”, Mr. Jagland writes.

A request from the authorities to have the case transferred to the grand chamber of the court was rejected. The 47 member states of the Council of Europe are bound by the convention to implement the court’s decisions, and I have urged the authorities in Azerbaijan to release Mammadov without delay. This pivotal judgment underscores the deep-rooted systemic problems in Azerbaijan’s judiciary.

“We are closely following several other trials against human rights defenders in Azerbaijan. I have called on Council of Europe member states with larger embassies in Baku to observe the current court proceedings. The UK has already responded positively,” Mr. Jagland writes.

“Several Azerbaijani and international NGOs, whose representatives I meet with regularly, complain that current legislation stifles their activities. I have tasked the Council of Europe’s group of international constitutional experts – the Venice Commission – with scrutinising Azerbaijan’s NGO-related laws, and their compatibility with the convention. Legal opinions of the commission are recognized globally, and member states cannot afford to ignore their advice.”

“We have repeatedly warned Azerbaijan over its poor human rights record. Earlier this year, the Council of Europe’s human rights commissioner, Nils Muižnieks, issued a report on the freedom of assembly and expression in the country, in which he expresses his serious concern about the harassment and arrest of journalists. Muižnieks recently visited prominent activists including Anar Mammadli and Leyla Yunus in prison, and called on Azerbaijan to stop reprisals against human rights defenders. But there are glimmers of hope. Three weeks ago, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev pardoned some 80 prisoners, among them four human rights defenders. The move was welcomed by the U.S. and the EU,” Mr. Jagland writes.

He goes on to say: “Following an agreement I reached with Aliyev last August, a Joint Working Group on Human Rights Issues – composed of human rights defenders, parliamentarians, officials of the presidential administration and a Council of Europe expert – recently met for the first time since 2008 in Baku. We intend this group to facilitate fresh talks between civil society and the Azerbaijani authorities, which I hope will lead to further releases of activists. In addition, the Council of Europe and Azerbaijan have been able to agree on an action plan incorporating projects to promote freedom of expression and independence of the judiciary.”

Azerbaijan was accepted into the council in 2001. Our member states, Mr. Jagland writes, including the 28 EU states, also accepted its six-month chairmanship of the organisations’ committee of ministers. Senior European officials like Germany’s foreign minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier – also in Baku last week – have reminded Azerbaijan to use this opportunity to show it is willing to begin to turn the tide.

“Abandoning our efforts would mean abandoning the country’s struggling civil society. Excluding Azerbaijan would mean depriving 9.4 million citizens of their last resort to access the rule of law in Europe and the right of individual appeal to the European court of human rights. The case of Azerbaijan is also important in another regard. When politicians in established democracies such as the UK threaten to leave the ECHR for essentially domestic reasons, this is likely to have negative repercussions on the respect of fundamental freedoms in Europe’s younger democracies. Conservative party proposals to render the binding decisions of the Strasbourg court merely advisory, if enacted, will be welcomed by regimes less committed to human rights than the UK,” he writes.

“Europe is already witnessing a serious erosion of minority rights, freedom of expression and judicial independence, as highlighted in the council’s 2014 consolidated report on the state of human rights, democracy and the rule of law. Urgent action is needed to stop this dangerous development, starting with a clear commitment of member governments to implement the European convention on human rights. In the interest of peace and stability, Europe’s leaders should promote the rule of law at the European level, not denounce it,” Mr. Jagland concludes.

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