folks following #KhadijaIsmayil case tune in this Wednsday as @HelsinkiComm holds hearing to scrutinize #Azerbaijan https://t.co/yimoZg76zz
— Arzu Geybulla (@arzugeybulla) 14.12.2015
U.S. Bill Seeks Sanctions On #Azerbaijani Officials For 'Appalling' Rights Record https://t.co/2mXP7tcRzB via @RFERL #KhadijaIsmayil
— Arzu Geybulla (@arzugeybulla) 18.12.2015
December 16, the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, also known as the Helsinki Commission, held a hearing "Azerbaijan's persecution of RFE/RL reporter Khadija Ismayilova".
The hearing examined the conduct of the trial against Khadija Ismayilova. And looked whether or not the U.S. Government done all it could to secure her release and to address the closing of the Baku bureau of RFE/RL in December 2014.
Presiding over the hearing, Representative Christopher Smith (R-NJ), Chairman of the Commission for Security and Cooperation in Europe raised a number of important questions with regard to Khadija Ismayilova's case.
Some of the highlights from the hearing:
Judicial processes against political prisoners are often farcical. In Khadija’s case, the prosecutors charged her initially with, quote, “incitement to suicide.” Their case completely collapsed when their witness retracted. The prosecutor also charged that she had illegally signed service agreements with Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty employees. The prosecution never produced any of the 11 agreements they said she had signed, and the four witnesses called to testify for the government’s case denied that they had signed such agreements with Khadija.
Smith: "Over the years, the human rights situation has seriously deteriorated in Azerbaijan, causing damage to its relations with the United States and other countries, and damaged its own society by imprisoning or exiling some of the best and the bravest and the brightest of that country. The time has come to send a clear message."
"Today, the Council of Europe is sending the same message to Azerbaijan. The secretary-general announced that he is investigating the human rights situation in Azerbaijan to determine whether or not Azerbaijan is meeting their Council of Europe commitments. This is a very rare step for the Council of Europe, and it’s the first time that this secretary-general has launched this type of inquiry. "
Senator Cardin: "The situation for civil society in Azerbaijan has only deteriorated further since her arrest. Azerbaijan’s new regulations on NGO registration, and specifically NGOs’ ability to receive funding from outside sources, are so restricted that almost all of the independent NGOs that have been working in Azerbaijan’s multilateral stakeholder group for EITI can no longer operate. I don’t see how Azerbaijan can maintain its status as a complaint country under these circumstances, something that we should be pushing hard for. We need to see much greater space for independent NGOs and journalists to operate for the EITI process to achieve its true value."
The full transcript is available here.
if you missed hearing on #KhadijaIsmayil you can watch it on our live blog here and read the transcript too! https://t.co/0QqwcEjJ5s
— Arzu Geybulla (@arzugeybulla) 18.12.2015