Human Rights Watch published its next annual report on the situation in the world in 2004. The report contains serious critics towards the Azerbaijani government which has “a long-standing record of pressuring civil society groups and arbitrarily limiting critical   expression and political activism”. It has done so with a new intensity   following the October 2003 presidential elections, which international and   domestic observers said were marred by widespread fraud, reads the report. (14-JAN-2005)

 

An environment of impunity for government officials   implicated in acts of torture, excessive use of force, and election fraud,   shows that the government did not seriously attempt the reconciliation that the international community was urging after the political and human   rights crisis surrounding the presidential elections. Freedom of assembly   for groups seen to be associated with the political opposition remains   severely curtailed and independent and opposition press face major   barriers to their work. 
  
Unfair charges over opposition activists
 Trials of opposition supporters, accused of the 2003 post-election violence, did not comply with fair trail standards and showed once again how the authorities use the criminal justice system to discourage   government critics.
Over one hundred opposition party members and supporters were tried on   charges relating to the post-election violence. Only four were released on   bail, the rest remained in pre-trial detention for up to six months.   Azerbaijani courts convicted all of the defendants, sentencing forty-six   people to custodial sentences ranging from two to six years. The remainder   were released on three- to five-year suspended prison sentences.

Opposition leaders in jail
On   October 22, the Court of Grave Crimes sentenced seven opposition leaders   to between two and a half and five years in prison for their role in the   post-election violence. According to local observers, prosecution   witnesses retracted their testimony in court, claiming that Ministry of   Interior officials had tortured and coerced them into signing statements   incriminating the defendants. Independent observers raised serious   allegations of procedural abuses, including defendants’ restricted access   to lawyers, and the admission of evidence in court that was based on   confessions extracted under torture. Judges’ failure to address these   deficiencies called into question, as in the past, the independence of the   judiciary.

Torture 
  Police abuse Torture, and excessive use of force by security forces are   widespread in Azerbaijan. Peaceful protests are frequently met with the   use of force and arbitrary arrest. Severe beatings at police stations are   outine and torture methods in pre-trial detention include electric shock   and threats of rape. In 2004, the government failed to address these   problems, perpetuating an environment of almost total impunity for   security force abuses surrounding the October 2003 presidential elections.   Although international interlocutors repeatedly called on Azerbaijan to   investigate allegations of torture by the Organized Crime Unit of the   Ministry of Interior, and security forces’ use of excessive violence   during the protests following the elections, at the time of writing the   authorities had not prosecuted any cases. 
 
New political prisoners
 Azerbaijan is making some progress toward releasing or retrying political   prisoners, a long-standing problem. By July 2004, following several   amnesties in late 2003 and early 2004, the government had released   thirty-two political prisoners and agreed to retry eleven, from a Council   of Europe list of forty-five. However, the Council of Europe and local   groups maintained that additional political prisoners remain in custody,   and that the recent imprisonment of opposition supporters, accused of the   post-election violence, added to their ranks. The chance of a fair trial   for political prisoners facing retrial remains slim because of the lack of   an independent judiciary. The Council of Europe previously condemned   retrials of political prisoners as a “sham” controlled by the presidential   authorities rather than the judiciary. 
   
Stifling oppositionists
The government attempts to tightly control civil society and pressures and   harasses groups that are critical of government policies. In a dramatic   example of this tendency, the authorities tried Ilgar Ibrahimoglu, the   head of the Center for the Protection of Conscience and Religious Freedom,   and a government critic, for alleged participation in the post-election   violence. In April 2004, a Baku court found him guilty and handed him a   five-year suspended prison sentence, despite serious allegations that the   charges were falsified. 

No independent media
    Authorities use a variety of informal measures to prevent or limit news   critical of the government from reaching the public. Major television   outlets are either state-owned or affiliated and the government fully   controls the issuing of radio and television broadcast licenses through a   licensing board that consists entirely of presidential appointees. The   opposition and independent media are under constant pressure, through   limited access to printing presses and distribution networks, imposition   of crippling fines from government-initiated defamation cases, and   harassment of journalists. 
    Journalists and editors face the threat of physical assault by unknown   attackers bent on intimidation. For example, on July 17, four masked men   kidnapped the editor-in-chief of the independent Baki Khaber newspaper   and demanded that he cease his journalism work, beating him for two hours   before releasing him. Also at the end of July, an unknown assailant  attacked a journalist for the Monitor, an independent weekly magazine.   At the time of writing no one had been prosecuted for either attack. 
Construction on two new major oil and gas pipelines routed across   Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey is currently underway. The huge foreign   investment in these projects has focussed international attention on   issues of security and stability in the region, sometimes at the expense  of human rights. 
   
Double standards on Azerbaijan
United States policy toward Azerbaijan has focused on military cooperation   and oil interests. Since 2001, U.S. military aid and cooperation has   increased significantly in Azerbaijan. The U.S. role in Azerbaijan has been   marred by inconsistent and sometimes weak responses to rights abuses,   particularly in response to the 2003 presidential elections. 
    In September 2004, the European Union (E.U.) and Azerbaijan met under the   framework of the Partnership and Cooperation Agreement. Unfortunately, the   E.U. failed to use this forum publicly to encourage human rights improvements,  issuing a press release that did not raise human rights concerns. 
    The Council of Europe has played a constructive role in attempting to   address human rights problems in Azerbaijan, pressing for the release of   political prisoners, greater pluralism, and a devolution of political power   away from the presidency. 
    The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) is one of the   largest multilateral investors in Azerbaijan, having committed more than   U.S. $473 million in projects. Although article 1 of the bank`s founding   document commits the EBRD to promoting democracy, human rights, and the   rule of law, the Bank did not raise human rights concerns during the human   rights crisis surrounding the 2003 presidential elections.