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Azerbaijani opposition leader Faradj Kerimli (file photo)
Azerbaijani opposition leader Faradj Kerimli (file photo)

A court in Azerbaijan has jailed a leading opposition activist to six-and-a-half years in jail on drugs charges that have been described as politically motivated by government critics.

The serious crimes court in Baku found Faradj Kerimli, deputy head of the opposition party Musavat, guilty of large-scale narcotics dealing, his lawyer Neimat Kerimli said.

The lawyer said the defendant had already dismissed the charges as fabricated.

The attorney said Kerimli, who had run Musavat's website and Facebook page, used them as a platform to blow the whistle on widespread corruption in the regime of President Ilham Aliyev.

In March, Kerimli's brother, Siradj, was also sentenced to six years in prison.

Rights groups say the authorities have stepped up their campaign to stifle opposition since Aliyev's election to a third term in 2013.

Aliyev came to power in 2003 following an election seen as flawed by international observers.

He took over after the death of his father Heydar Aliyev, who had ruled newly independent Azerbaijan with an iron fist since 1993.

Based on reporting by AFP
Mikalay Statkevich in a Minsk courtroom in 2011
Mikalay Statkevich in a Minsk courtroom in 2011

The office of the European Union’s foreign policy chief has criticized a decision by a Belarusian court to add further punishments to a sentence against opposition politician Mikalay Statkevich.

Maja Kocijancic, a spokeswoman for the European External Action Service, said on May 6 that the decision to transfer Statkevich to a cell-type prison for allegedly violating prisoner rules was “deplorable.”

Kocijancic described Statkevich as a “political prisoner in Belarus” and said he has suffered “unacceptable treatment" since his arrest in December 2010.

Kocijancic also said “the importance of releasing all political prisoners remains crucial in the context of improving EU-Belarus relations."

Statkevich was found guilty of "organizing mass disturbances" following authoritarian President Alyaksandr Lukashenka's reelection in December 2010.

Statkevich, representing the Belarusian Social Democratic Party, finished with just over 1 percent of the vote in the 2010 poll.

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