Amnesty International - Denmark: Azerbaijan uses major sporting and entertainment events to cover up gross human rights violations

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The Danish national football team will play the European Championship quarter-final against the Czech Republic in Baku in Azerbaijan today. The authoritarian government, led by President Ilham Aliyev, uses major sporting and entertainment events to cover up gross human rights violations. Here are five things you should know about the country.

1. Critics are harassed and imprisoned

Authoritarian rule is cracking down on all forms of criticism, and human rights activists and government critics are being silenced. Some have been sentenced to years in prison, others have left the country, and many do not dare to speak freely for fear of arrest or harassment. Female critics of the government are particularly severely persecuted and subjected to threats, coercion and smear campaigns, where they are hung out as "bad mothers" or "mentally unstable". Some have had their accounts hacked on social media, after which private conversations, personal information and material of a sexual nature have been published. In journalist Khadija Ismayilova, authorities set up hidden cameras in her apartment and filmed intimate scenes with her boyfriend, which they later released.
Authorities are also trying to silence critics in exile by going after their families in Azerbaijan. Among other things, it has been seen that the police have planted drugs in family members and then arrested and imprisoned them.
Most media are government-controlled, or advocates of government policy, and the authorities have used control of the press and television to smear their critics.

2. Demonstrations are banned or dissolved by force  

Authorities do not tolerate people gathering in large groups to express their views. Both the COVID-19 pandemic and the conflict against Armenia have been used as a pretext to ban and dismantle demonstrations. The police like to use water cannons against peaceful protesters, beaten and arrested if they have the courage to gather and protest against the regime. Journalists receive the same treatment and risk having their equipment confiscated.

3. NGOs have been thrown out of the country

Freedom of association is threatened, and in 2015 Amnesty was thrown out of the country along with several other international civil society organizations. All local human rights NGOs - about 20 in all - have been forced to close their offices.

4. Torture and ill-treatment

Torture and other forms of ill-treatment are used by the authorities and prison staff to obtain information and "confessions" from detainees and inmates.
Imprisoned protesters following a protest connected with the war against Armenia were detained in overcrowded, hot rooms without ventilation and with limited access to food and drink. They were allegedly beaten and abused and denied contact to both lawyers and their families.

5. Behind war crimes in Nagorno-Karabakh

Amnesty has documented that Azerbaijani forces committed war crimes in the war against Armenia in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020. Several verified videos show the treatment of prisoners of war and other detainees, beheadings and desecration of the bodies of dead soldiers.

 

Source - AntiFake.am

Համաձայն «Հեղինակային իրավունքի եւ հարակից իրավունքների մասին» օրենքի՝ լրատվական նյութերից քաղվածքների վերարտադրումը չպետք է բացահայտի լրատվական նյութի էական մասը: Կայքում լրատվական նյութերից քաղվածքներ վերարտադրելիս քաղվածքի վերնագրում լրատվական միջոցի անվանման նշումը պարտադիր է, նաեւ պարտադիր է կայքի ակտիվ հղումի տեղադրումը:

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