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Khadija Ismayilova
Khadija Ismayilova

BAKU -- Investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova went on trial on August 7 in a packed courtroom in Baku, facing charges of embezzlement, tax evasion, and abuse of power that she says are politically motivated punishment for her dogged reporting.

Dozens of activists, journalists, and some members of the diplomatic corps -- eager to monitor the trial of a journalist who has reported extensively on official corruption in tightly controlled, oil-rich Azerbaijan -- were unable to get inside the courtroom.

The trial comes eight months after the arrest of Ismayilova, a contributor to RFE/RL. Rights groups and Western governments have urged her release from pretrial detention, calling the case part of a persistent campaign by long-ruling President Ilham Aliyev's government to silence dissent.

Ismayilova's relatives were not allowed to be present in the courtroom, and journalists were also kept out. Aside from people who court officials said were participants in the process, only some representatives of foreign embassies were allowed to attend.

"Really, it is shameful," said Avaz Zeynalli, a journalist who tried to attend. "If...not a single journalist, none of Khadija's family members or friends, and no work colleagues were allowed into the courtroom, then what kind of trial is that?"

After the session got under way, Ismayilova's lawyers asked the judge to let their client out of the defendant's glass cage during the trial.
The judge rejected the request, saying that it would be better for her safety to be kept inside the enclosure.

The judge also rejected a defense motion to drop the tax evasion charge. Defense lawyer Fariz Namazli said the charge was imposed despite the fact that a tax inspection was frozen in May, caling that "a sign of particular ill-will."

During a break, Namazli said his client told the court she is innocent.

"Khadija Ismayilova spoke [before the court], and in her speech she said that she does not consider herself guilty of any charges," he told reporters, adding: "In general, none of these charges apply to her."

After the break, Ismayilova and her lawyers made a motion to replace the panel of judges. The judge chairing the trial announced a break, after which he adjourned the hearing until August 10 without ruling on the motion -- one that judges in the former Soviet Union very rarely satisfy.

Corruption Reporting

Ismayilova, 39, has reported extensively on the financial dealings of Aliyev -- who has tolerated little dissent and shrugged off Western criticism since he succeeded his father as president in 2003 -- and members of his family.

She was detained in December on suspicion of inciting a former colleague, Tural Mustafayev, to attempt suicide, but was later also charged with embezzlement, tax evasion, and abuse of power.

Mustafayev, who was required to attend the trial on April 7, did not show up. He told a preliminary hearing on July 24 that he had "defamed" Ismayilova under pressure from law-enforcement agencies, but a defense motion to dismiss the charge was rejected at that time.

Ismayilova called for Mustafayev to be present at the trial, and the judge ruled that he must be brought to trial by force if he refuses. It was unclear when that would happen.

Islmayilova is among the most prominent of dozens of activists, journalists, and government critics who have been jailed in Azerbaijan as part of what rights groups say is a clampdown on dissent and independent voices.

Amnesty International has called Ismayilova a "prisoner of conscience" and the Committee to Protect Journalists has termed the charges against her retaliation for her journalistic activity. On July 29, the U.S. National Press Club presented its John Aubuchon Press Freedom Award to Ismayilova.

In May, she won a prestigious media freedom award from the PEN American Center, whose executive director said Ismayilova has "tackled corruption at the highest levels of the Azerbaijani government."

Last month, a group of 16 U.S. senators sent a letter to Aliyev expressing concern over a "systematic crackdown on human rights and independent civil society." They called on him to "provide a more tolerant environment" and urged him to release Ismayilova.

Representatives of The Broadcasting Board of Governors, the U.S. agency that oversees RFE/RL and Voice of America, have repeatedly contacted Azerbaijani officials to protest Ismayilova's incarceration.

RFE/RL Editor in Chief Nenad Pejic has called Ismayilova's detention "the latest attempt in a two-year campaign to silence a journalist who has investigated government corruption and human rights abuses in Azerbaijan."

Leyla Yunus in an undated photograph
Leyla Yunus in an undated photograph

BAKU -- Azerbaijan's state prosecutor has asked a court in Baku to sentence human rights defender Leyla Yunus to 11 years in prison.

In a statement delivered to the Baku Court for Serious Crimes on August 6, the prosecutor also asked the court to sentence Leyla Yunus's husband, Arif Yunus, to nine years in prison.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) made a new call for the immediate release of the couple, who deny guilt and contend that the charges are politically motivated.

After about a year in custody with their health deteriorating, they went on trial on July 27 on charges of fraud, forgery, tax evasion, and illegal business activities.

Treason charges against Leyla Yunus, 59, and Arif Yunus, 60, are expected to be addressed at a separate trial.

They are among dozens of activists, journalists, and government critics who have been jailed in Azerbaijan, where rights groups say President Ilham Aliyev is pursuing a persistent campaign to silence dissent.

The United States and European Union, as well as international groups such as HRW, Amnesty International, and the International Federation for Human Rights have condemned the incarceration of Leyla and Arif Yunus and demanded their release.

"Azerbaijani authorities should immediately release and stop the prosecution of Leyla and Arif Yunus," HRW said in a statement on August 6.

"To lock up and prosecute Leyla and Arif Yunus was already a travesty of justice, but to pursue the trial given their poor health is despicable," the New York-based group quoted Hugh Williamson, its Europe and Central Asia director, as saying.

"Leyla and Arif Yunus need medical care, not prison," Williamson said. "Azerbaijan’s international partners should flatly and unanimously condemn this mockery of justice."

Arif Yunus lost consciousness in court on August 3. Doctors were called in each of the three subsequent days to give him injections in order to enable hearings to continue.

Arif Yunus in a photograph taken in July 2014
Arif Yunus in a photograph taken in July 2014

Both of the Yunuses have said they have been denied proper medical treatment while jailed in pretrial detention.

HRW said that Arif's condition is "poor."

In June, the couple's daughter Dinara told reporters her mother has diabetes and Hepatitis C and that the health of both her parents had gotten "worse and worse" since their arrests.

Dinara Yunus said earlier that her father was in solitary confinement and that her mother had been attacked by officers and inmates and humiliated by doctors at the facility.

Leyla Yunus, the award-winning founding director of the Peace and Democracy Institute in Baku, has been actively involved for years in people-to-people diplomacy with Armenian rights activists.

She has been a vocal critic of Azerbaijan's human rights record.

Arif Yunus is a well-known historian and researcher of conflicts across the Caucasus, focusing primarily on the conflict in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, a mainly Armenian-populated region that Armenian-backed separatists seized from Azerbaijan in the early 1990s.

A lawyer for Arif Yunus said on August 6 that the fraud charge against his client was vague and that prosecutors have not identified the alleged victim.

The couple's trial is to resume on August 10. It is unclear when the judge will reach a verdict.

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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