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One Year Later: On the Anniversary of Dr. Gubad Ibadoghlu’s Arrest in Azerbaijan

July 23, 2024

One year ago today, Dr. Gubad Ibadoghlu, an Azeri economist and pro-democracy activist, was violently arrested by Azeri police on false charges related to counterfeit currency and extremist religious materials. These blatantly fabricated charges were used to unlawfully detain Dr. Ibadoghlu in a Baku detention center for 274 days, where he was subject to malnutrition, unhygienic conditions, and a complete lack of medical care.

Released under house arrest in April, Dr. Ibadoghlu remains under surveillance and is unable to seek the proper medical care he desperately needs as a result of his detention. He will stand trial in Baku for these false charges on August 20 and faces up to 17 years in prison. The New University in Exile Consortium and our colleagues at numerous human rights organizations now call for Dr. Ibadoghlu’s immediate, unconditional release and the dropping of all charges.

Find a letter calling for the end to the imprisonment and repression of activists in Azerbaijan on the anniversary of Dr. Ibadoghlu’s arrest, originally published by Freedom Now, below:

Azerbaijan: End Crackdown on Independent Activism and Release Political Prisoners

We, the undersigned organizations and individuals, strongly condemn the ongoing crackdown against civil society in Azerbaijan that has targeted a broad range of individuals, including human rights activists, journalists, political opposition members, and leaders of nongovernmental organizations. In particular, we call for the immediate and unconditional release of Dr. Gubad Ibadoghlu, who was violently and wrongfully arrested a year ago today.

Dr. Ibadoghlu is a well-known academic and anti-corruption expert who has taught and conducted research on public finance management and good governance, most recently at the London School of Economics. He also has served as chairman of the Azerbaijan Democracy and Prosperity Movement, an organization he has unsuccessfully tried to register as a political party since 2021. Previously, Dr. Ibadoghlu had led the Economic Research Center, an Azerbaijani nongovernmental organization working on anti-corruption and budget transparency issues until the government effectively closed it in 2014. Shortly afterward, Dr. Ibadoghlu began living in exile. He had returned to Azerbaijan in July 2023 to visit his family.

On 23 July, about 20 Azerbaijani police in civilian clothes violently arrested Dr. Ibadoghlu and his wife, Irada Bayramova, after cars without official markings rammed their vehicle, manufacturing a traffic accident. Police assaulted the couple during the arrest. Bayramova was released after several hours, but the authorities brought charges against Dr. Ibadoghlu based on blatantly fabricated offences related to counterfeit currency and to extremist religious materials.

Despite numerous appeals, Dr. Ibadoghlu spent nine months in a pre-trial detention facility before being transferred to house arrest, where he remains. During his detention, Dr. Ibadoghlu’s chronic health conditions deteriorated sharply as a result of the authorities’ refusal to provide him with adequate medical treatment. If convicted, he could face up to 17 years in prison.

Azerbaijani human rights groups estimate that hundreds of people are behind bars in Azerbaijan on politically motivated charges, at least several of whom are known to be in poor health. Azerbaijan has refused to heed numerous calls by human rights organizations and its bilateral and multilateral partners to release everyone who is unjustly imprisoned and to end the crackdown against government critics.

In an April 2024 urgent resolution, the European Parliament called on Azerbaijan to release all political prisoners and noted a number of measures that European authorities could consider if Azerbaijan failed to do so, including suspending the European Commission’s strategic energy partnership with Azerbaijan and imposing targeted sanctions on Azerbaijani officials.

The European Union’s other institutions and its member states, other key international actors and organizations, such as the Council of Europe, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, as well as companies with business interests in Azerbaijan, should support and join in making these calls, to help ensure that the Azerbaijani authorities follow through on them as a matter of priority.

Azerbaijan is under a global spotlight this year, as host to the United Nations climate conference (COP29), to be held in Baku in November. In the lead-up to COP29, United Nations Framework Convention for Climate Change (UNFCCC) member states should press Azerbaijan’s government, publicly and privately, to respect its human rights obligations, including by immediately and unconditionally releasing arbitrarily detained activists and human rights defenders. These countries should recommend concrete, structural reforms to ensure that positive changes endure beyond COP29.

Given the dire human rights situation in Azerbaijan, the UNFCCC Secretariat should work with the government of Azerbaijan to provide space for diverse civil society participation in the climate conference, including by individuals and groups critical of the government. Robust and rights-respecting climate action requires the full and meaningful participation of civil society in climate negotiations, including the outcome of COP29.

We urge the government of Azerbaijan to uphold the commitments it has as a member of numerous multilateral organizations and initiatives that have human rights elements, and the obligations it has as a party to key international human rights treaties, by taking the following steps:

Signatories

Organizations

Individuals

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