Internasjonal støtte til Fritt Ords presseprisvinner Khadija Ismayilova
Den aserbajdsjanske journalisten Khadija Ismayilova vil få Fritt Ords og ZEIT-Stiftungs pressepris for 2012 under et arrangement i Hamburg rådhus den 24. mai i år. Khadija Ismayilova (1976) fra Baku er en av de viktigste undersøkende journalistene i Aserbajdsjan. I over ti år har hun arbeidet aktivt som journalist for forskjellige aviser og radiostasjoner, for eksempel for Ekhno, Caspian Business News, Deutsche Welle, Washington Times og fremfor alt for Eurasia Net og Radio Liberty. Hun er følgelig en svært betydningsfull informant om Aserbajdsjan for et internasjonalt publikum.
Khadija Ismayilova beretter modig om korrupsjon, maktmisbruk og brudd på menneskerettighetene. Hun underkaster seg ikke selvsensur. Hun ble nominert av Den norske helsingforskomite og Human Rights House Foundation, Oslo. En uavhengig jury som ledes av Theo Sommer, Editor-at-Large i Die ZEIT, har tatt avgjørelsen om å tildele en av årets pressepriser til Khadija Ismayilova.
Khadija Ismayilova har nylig blitt utsatt for en bakvaskelseskampanje som blir sterkt fordømt av The International Partnership Group for Azerbaijan (IPGA).
AZERBAIJAN: In Solidarity with Khadija Ismayilova
London, Thursday 15 March 2012.
The International Partnership Group for Azerbaijan (IPGA) condemns the blackmail and continued harassment of one of the few independent investigative journalists working in Azerbaijan, Khadija Ismayilova. The most recent episode in the harassment campaign involves a one minute film of an intimate nature being posted on the internet on Wednesday March 14. A week earlier Ismayilova said she had received a letter including intimate photographs and a threat, stating "Whore, behave. Or you will be defamed”. Ismayilova has publically refused to give into the blackmail attempts.
The intimate film, which was captured with a hidden camera, was posted early yesterday on a fake news website, making it appear to be linked to an opposition party. Members of the IPGA, a coalition of international NGOs, call for an immediate and full investigation into the harassment and intimidation of Ismayilova. The IPGA also reminds public and private broadcasters, print and on-line media of their ethical responsibilities and editorial oversight and urge them to refrain from further publication and dissemination of the material.
Envelopes containing the intimate photographs of Ismayilova, an award winning journalist who has investigated several cases of high-level corruption in Azerbaijan, were also sent to her boyfriend, several relatives and a number of opposition media outlets on March 7.
“Khadija Ismayilova is being subjected to a vicious campaign with the sole purpose of undermining her as a journalist and silencing her critical opinions. By using sexual images of Khadija Ismayilova those wanting to blackmail her appear to specifically target her gender, as such tactics in a society like Azerbaijan are likely to have particularly damaging repercussions. The Azerbaijani government must take immediate steps to investigate this personal attack and to ensure the climate in which these types of threats can occur ceases to exist,” said Agnès Callamard, Executive Director of ARTICLE 19, a co-ordinating member of the IPGA.
Taking the decision to make the attempted blackmail public, Ismayilova posted a message on her Facebook page on March 8, which stated: “This threat is not a surprise for me. For a long time I have been doing investigative journalism, including … [into] the family business of President Ilham Aliyev. I revealed corruption at the highest level and disclosed the mysteries of offshore business of members of the ruling family.”
Ismayilova recently consulted on a television report by American broadcaster CNBC entitled “Filthy Rich”, aired on February 23, 2012, which explored the President Ilham Aliyev’s family’s real estate holdings in Dubai.
This not the first time that smear campaigns have been used in an attempt to intimidate journalists in Azerbaijan. The editor and director of the newspaper Azadlig Ganimat Zahid and Azer Akhmedov have been subject to similar harassment, while journalist Agil Khalil was implicated as having had a homosexual partner in an attempt to harass him.
Background Information
Khadija Ismayilova hosts a popular Radio Azadliq talk show “After Work” on the RFE/RL network and frequently publishes reports for the service. From 2008 – 2010, she was the Baku bureau chief for Radio Azadliq, RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service. In February 2012 the Zeit Stiftung and Fritt Ord Foundation announced that Khadija Ismayilova will be given the Gerd Bucerius Free Press of Eastern Europe Award in May 2012.
NOTES TO EDITORS:
This press release has been signed by the following 11 members of the International Partnership Group for Azerbaijan:
1. ARTICLE 19
2. Norwegian Helsinki Committee
3. WAN-IFRA
4. Reporters Without Borders
5. Media Diversity Institute
6. Index on Censorship
7. Human Rights House Foundation
8. Freedom House
9. Committee to Protect Journalists
10. Human Rights Watch
11. International Federation of Journalists
As well as The Rafto Foundation
For more information on the cycle of violence against journalists and impunity for their attackers in Azerbaijan, see the joint report Free Expression Under Attack: Azerbaijan’s Deteriorating Media Environment
The International Partnership Group for Azerbaijan is a coalition of 20 international NGOs working to promote and protect freedom of expression in Azerbaijan. For more information about the Partnership, please contact Rebecca Vincent at ARTICLE 19 on +44 (0)207 324 2500 or rebecca@article19.org.