Azerbaijan: Authorities must immediately release political opposition leader

Photo: Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev delivers a speech to the Council of Europe parliamentary assembly in Strasbourg. © FREDERICK FLORIN/AFP/Getty Images

The government of Azerbaijan must comply with international demands and immediately set free prominent opposition leader, Ilgar Mammadov, after the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe made a second call demanding his release, said Amnesty International.

He was sentenced to seven years in jail on trumped up, politically-motivated charges more than a year ago.

The Azerbaijani authorities have ignored several requests for Mammadov’s release by the Council of Europe following a European Court of Human Rights ruling that he had been arrested without any evidence and that the actual purpose of his detention had been to silence or punish him for criticising the government.

President Ilham Aliyev had the audacity to stand before the Council of Europe last year and declare that freedom of expression, association and assembly are assured in Azerbaijan. These have proven to be empty words as his government has continued to openly defy the European Court of Human Rights by refusing to release Ilgar Mammadov.

Denis Krivosheev, Amnesty International’s Deputy Director of Europe and Central Asia Programme

“President Ilham Aliyev had the audacity to stand before the Council of Europe last year and declare that freedom of expression, association and assembly are assured in Azerbaijan. These have proven to be empty words as his government has continued to openly defy the European Court of Human Rights by refusing to release Ilgar Mammadov,” said Denis Krivosheev, Amnesty International’s Deputy Director of Europe and Central Asia Programme.

“Keeping an innocent man in prison is an ultimate act of disrespect for fundamental human rights. Ilgar Mammadov is behind bars for lawfully exercising his right to freedom of expression and must urgently be released.”

Ilgar Mammadov’s lawyer recently told Amnesty International that his client is facing continuous pressure from prison officials to sign a confession requesting a pardon from President Ilham Aliyev in exchange for his release. He has refused as this would amount to him recognizing his “guilt”. The lawyer added that Ilgar Mammadov’s health is deteriorating because he is being held in a crowded, smoke-filled cell, along with 20 other inmates.

Background

Ilgar Mammadov was arrested on 4 February 2013, on charges of inciting mass violence, after he travelled to report on street riots which had broken out in northwest Azerbaijan the previous day.

Ilgar Mammadov was sentenced to seven years in prison by Sheki Court in Baku in March 2014. The European Court of Human Rights ruled in May 2014 that his arrest contravened the European Convention on Human Rights. The judgment became final on 13 October 2014, when the Strasbourg Court rejected the appeal from the government of Azerbaijan. The Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe demanded his release “without delay” on 4 December 2014. This request was ignored.

Ilgar Mammadov is one of at least 22 prisoners of conscience jailed in Azerbaijan on politically motivated charges, whose cases feature in Amnesty International’s latest report Guilty of Defending Rights: Azerbaijan’s human rights defenders and activists behind bars.

Call on Azerbaijan to release all prisoners of conscience.