IFEX
Human Rights Watch 12 February 2013
(Human Rights Watch/IFEX) - 12 February 2013 - The Azerbaijani
government should immediately end a hostile campaign of intimidation
against writer Akram Aylisli, Human Rights Watch said today. Aylisli
recently published a controversial novel depicting relationships between
ethnic Azeris and Armenians in Azerbaijan.
Foreign governments and intergovernmental organizations of which
Azerbaijan is a member should speak out against this intimidation
campaign. They should urge the authorities to immediately investigate
those responsible for threats against Aylisli, and to respect freedom of
expression.
“The Azerbaijani authorities have an obligation to protect Akram
Aylisli,” said Hugh Williamson, Europe and Central Asia director at
Human Rights Watch. “Instead, they have led the effort to intimidate
him, putting him at risk with a campaign of vicious smears and hostile
rhetoric.”
Aylisli, a member of the Union of Writers of Azerbaijan since the
Soviet era, is the author of Stone Dreams. The novel includes a
description of violence by ethnic Azeris against Armenians during the
1920s, and at the end of the Soviet era, when the two countries engaged
in armed conflict. Aylisli told Human Rights Watch that he saw the novel
as an appeal for friendship between the two nations. The novel was
published in Friendship of Peoples, a Russian literary journal, in
December 2012.
Azerbaijan and Armenia fought a seven-year war over
Nagorno-Karabakh, a primarily ethnic Armenian-populated autonomous
enclave in Azerbaijan. Despite a 1994 ceasefire, the conflict has not
yet reached a political solution.
Against the background of the unresolved nature of the conflict,
Aylisli's sympathetic portrayal of Armenians and condemnation of
violence against them caused uproar in Azerbaijan. An escalating
crescendo of hateful rhetoric and threats against Aylisli started at the
end of January 2013, culminating in a February 11 public statement by
Hafiz Hajiyev, head of Modern Musavat, a pro-government political party.
Hajiyev publicly said that he would pay AZN10,000 [US$12,700] to anyone
who would cut off Aylisli's ear.
“Azerbaijan's authorities should immediately investigate and hold
accountable anyone responsible for making threats against Aylisli, and
ensure his personal safety,” Williamson said.
On January 29, officials from the Yeni Azerbaijan, Azerbaijan's
ruling party, publicly called on Aylisli to withdraw the novel and ask
for the nation's forgiveness. Aylisli told Human Rights Watch that two
days later, a crowd of about 70 people gathered in front of his home,
shouting “Akram, leave the country now,” and “Shame on you”, and burned
effigies of the author. Witnesses told Human Rights Watch that police
were present but made no effort to disperse the crowd. No damage was
done to Aylisli's home.
In a speech about Aylisli's book, a high level official from
Azerbaijan's presidential administration said that, “We, as the
Azerbaijani people, must express public hatred toward these people," a
comment that appeared aimed at Aylisli.
During a February 1 session, some members of Azerbaijan's parliament
denounced Aylisli, called for him to be stripped of his honorary
“People's Writer” title and medals, and demanded that he take a DNA test
to prove his ethnicity. On February 7, President Ilham Aliyev signed a
decree stripping Aylisli of the title, which he had held since 1998, and
cutting off his presidential monthly pension of AZN1000 [US$1,270],
which he had drawn since 2002. Aylisli learned of the presidential
decree from television news.
In the wake of the public vitriol, Aylisli's wife and son were fired
from their jobs. On February 4, a senior officer at Azerbaijan's
customs agency forced Najaf Naibov-Aylisli, Aylisli's son, to sign a
statement that he was “voluntarily” resigning from his job as department
chief.
Aylisli told Human Rights Watch his son had received no reprimands during his 12 years on job.
“My son had nothing to do with politics,” Aylisli said. “In fact he
always advised me not to write about politics and never agreed with my
political views.”
On February 5, Aylisli's wife, Galina Alexandrovna, was forced to
sign a “voluntary” statement resigning from her job at a public library,
following an inspection announced several days before.
Public book burnings of Aylisli's works, some organized by the ruling party, have taken place in several cities in Azerbaijan.
“The government of Azerbaijan is making a mockery of its
international obligations on freedom of expression,” Williamson said.
“This is shocking, particularly after Azerbaijani officials flocked to
Strasbourg last month to tout the government's human rights record at
the Council of Europe.”
The European Court of Human Rights has issued numerous rulings
upholding the principle that freedom of speech also protects ideas that
might be shocking or disturbing to society. In a judgment handed down
against Azerbaijan, in a case that dealt speech related to the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict, the court said, “[F]reedom of information applie[s]
not only to information or ideas that are favorably received, but also
to those that offend, shock or disturb.”