AZERBAIJAN: Supreme Court rejects conscientious objectors' appeals
Two Jehovah's Witnesses – given one-year suspended prison terms and living under restrictions for refusing compulsory military service on grounds of conscience – failed to overturn their criminal convictions at the Supreme Court in April. Shia Imam Sardar Babayev, jailed for leading Muslim worship after gaining religious education outside Azerbaijan, awaits a European Court of Human Rights decision.
Two conscientious objectors – both of them Jehovah's Witnesses – have failed to overturn their criminal convictions at Azerbaijan's Supreme Court in the capital Baku. The court rejected Emil Mehdiyev's appeal on 10 April. It similarly rejected Vahid Abilov's appeal on 24 April. Both were given one-year suspended jail terms in 2018 and have to live under restrictions.Both sentences expire in October 2019, after which the men will still have a criminal record.
Only once Mehdiyev and Abilov have received the Supreme Court decisions in writing will they be able to decide whether to appeal further, either to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg or to the United Nations, Jehovah's Witnesses told Forum 18 (see below).
Javad Javadov
Voice of America
The Human Rights Ombudsperson's Office in Baku has not responded to Forum 18's December 2018 enquiry as to what action (if any) it had taken to defend the rights of Mehdiyev and Abilov or push for an alternative civilian service to be established in line with Azerbaijan's Council of Europe commitment (see below).
In December 2018, Azerbaijan wrongly told the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights that "in recent years" no one had refused to perform military service "due to religious identity" and that no legal cases had occurred over "evading military service for religious reasons" (see below).
Meanwhile, jailed Shia Muslim Imam Sardar Babayev is awaiting a decision in his case from the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, his lawyer Javad Javadov told Forum 18. Babayev is the first (and so far only) individual known to have been punished for the "crime" of leading worship in a Muslim community after having gained his religious education outside Azerbaijan (see below).
Muslim prisoner of conscience Telman Shiraliyev, given an extra nearly six months' jail term in October 2018 for alleged violation of prison rules, was freed on 18 February after a Baku court reduced his jail term by just over a month. He had been jailed since 2012 for protesting against an Education Ministry ban on girls wearing the hijab headscarf (see below).
Muslim theologian and prisoner of conscience Zulfuqar Mikayilzade (also known as Mikayilov) was freed from prison on 17 March, the day after he was included in a presidential amnesty decree. Deputy leader of the Muslim Unity Movement, he was arrested in November 2015 amid a massive security assault on the village of Nardaran near Baku. He had been serving a 17-year jail term (see below).
First conscientious objector's Supreme Court appeal fails
Emil Mehdiyev
Jehovah's Witnesses
After his call-up for military service in December 2017, Mehdiyev repeatedly told the Conscription Office he could not perform military service on grounds of conscience and was willing to perform an alternative civilian service.
However, prosecutors brought a case against Mehdiyev under Criminal Code Article 321.1. This states: "Evasion without lawful grounds of call-up to military service or of mobilisation, with the purpose of evading serving in the military, is punishable by imprisonment for up to two years [in peacetime]".
On 6 July 2018, Barda District Court convicted Mehdiyev and handed down a one-year suspended prison term, and required that he live under probation for one year. (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2408) During this time, Mehdiyev must report to the authorities each week and remains under travel restrictions.
Mehdiyev appealed against his conviction, but Ganca Appeal Court rejected his appeal on 8 October 2018. (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2440) The sentence then came into legal force, meaning that it will expire on 8 October 2019.
Mehdiyev lodged his appeal against his criminal conviction to the Supreme Court on 10 December 2018.
Second conscientious objector's Supreme Court appeal fails
Vahid Abilov outside Agdam District Court
Jehovah's Witnesses
Abilov refused to serve in the army after his call-up in May 2017. "My Bible-trained conscience prevents me from taking up military service," he told Agdam District Conscription Office in writing. "I do not evade, or even think of evading, the fulfilment of my civic duty. I just kindly ask you to provide me with alternative civilian service instead of military service."
Prosecutors brought a criminal case against Abilov on 9 July 2018 under Criminal Code Article 321.1.
On 6 September 2018, Agdam District Court found Abilov guilty and sentenced him to a one-year suspended prison term. During this time, Abilov must report to the authorities each week and remains under travel restrictions. (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2415)
Abilov appealed against his conviction, but Ganca Appeal Court rejected his appeal on 31 October 2018. (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2440) The sentence then came into legal force, meaning that it will expire on 31 October 2019.
Abilov lodged his appeal against his criminal conviction to the Supreme Court on 12 January 2019.
"The terms of the restrictions Vahid Abilov must live under during the year remain very vague," Jehovah's Witnesses complained to Forum 18 in December 2018.
Jehovah's Witnesses told Forum 18 that only once Mehdiyev and Abilov have received the Supreme Court decisions in writing will they be able to decide whether to appeal further either to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg or to the United Nations human rights bodies in Geneva.
Will Ombudsperson's Office help conscientious objectors?
Ahead of its accession to the Council of Europe in January 2001, Azerbaijan promised "to adopt, within two years of accession, a law on alternative service in compliance with European standards and, in the meantime, to pardon all conscientious objectors presently serving prison terms or serving in disciplinary battalions, allowing them instead to choose (when the law on alternative service has come into force) to perform non-armed military service or alternative Civilian service".Azerbaijan has never done this, and conscientious objectors to military service have been repeatedly prosecuted and even jailed under Criminal Code Article 321.1.
Four conscientious objectors jailed earlier as prisoners of conscience and another who received a suspended prison term are awaiting decisions from the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2408)
Forum 18 asked the Human Rights Ombudsperson's Office in Baku in writing on 17 December 2018 (resent on 30 April 2019) what action (if any) it had taken to defend the rights of Mehdiyev and Abilov. It also asked what action (if any) it had taken to push for the adoption of a law to allow for those who have conscientious objections to military service to perform a civilian alternative service, which Azerbaijan committed to introduce by 2003.
Forum 18 had received no reply from the Ombudsperson's Office by the end of the working day in Baku on 1 May.
Government's untrue information to United Nations
In response to a request for information for a United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council review of conscientious objection around the world, the Azerbaijani government responded to the High Commissioner for Human Rights on 10 December 2018. In its reply, posted on the UN human rights website (https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/RuleOfLaw/ConscientiousObjection/2019/Azerbaijan.pdf), Azerbaijan wrongly claimed that "in recent years" no one had refused to perform military service "due to religious identity" and that no legal cases over "evading military service for religious reasons" had occurred.Awaiting European Court decision
Sardar Babayev
Web screenshot/Voice of America
Arrested in February 2017, Imam Babayev was given a three-year prison term by a court in the southern town of Masalli in July 2017. He is the first (and so far only) individual known to have been punished for the "crime" of leading worship in a Muslim community after having gained his religious education outside Azerbaijan.
Imam Babayev was jailed despite having led prayers at the state-controlled Caucasian Muslim Board's invitation, but local human rights defenders suggested that the state saw the popularity of the Imam's sermons among Muslims as a threat. (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2295)
Prisoner of conscience Babayev was sentenced under Criminal Code Article 168-1.3.1 ("Violation of the procedure for religious propaganda and religious ceremonies"), including the conducting of Islamic rites by a citizen who received their Islamic education abroad, and committing this "crime" repeatedly carries a penalty of a prison term of between two and five years.
Babayev's lawyer Javad Javadov lodged the case to the ECtHR (Application No. 34015/17) on 2 May 2017, after he failed in his challenge through the local courts to Babayev's February 2017 arrest.
European Court of Human Rights courtroom, 8 October 2014
Adrian Grycuk/Wikimedia Commons [CC BY-SA 3.0 PL] (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/pl/deed.en)
On 4 September 2018, the ECtHR asked the Azerbaijani government whether it violated Babayev's right to freedom of thought conscience and religion under Article 9 of the European Convention of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, as well as the related rights to a fair trial (Article 6), freedom of expression (Article 10), freedom of assembly and association (Article 11), and prohibition of discrimination (Article 14). (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2420)
The ECtHR also asked on what grounds Babayev was held for months in pre-trial detention (Article 5 - "Right to liberty and security") and whether being held in a metal cage in the courtroom broke the Convention's prohibition of torture, inhuman or degrading treatment (Article 3). (http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/eng?i=001-186531)
The Azerbaijani government submitted its response to the ECtHR on 1 February 2019, the deadline the court had given it, court officials told Forum 18 from Strasbourg. "The government's response was, as usual, not serious," Javadov told Forum 18. "The communication phase is over and we are now awaiting a decision. It is not yet known when this will be."
Babayev is also intending to seek conditional early release, Javadov told Forum 18. Prisoners who have already served the majority of their sentences can seek such early release from prison, where they serve the rest of their sentences at home, reporting regularly to the police and living under restrictions.
Babayev is currently being held in Prison No. 17 in Bina in eastern Baku. "He faces no obstacles in praying, and he has a Koran," his lawyer Javadov told Forum 18 on 1 May. "Conditions are reasonable."
The address of the prison where Babayev is being held:
17 sayli Cazacakma müassisasi
AZ-1045, Baki sahari
Khazar rayonu
Bina qasabasi
Azerbaijan
Last anti hijab ban protester freed
Anti hijab ban demonstration, Baku, 5 October 2012
Turkhan Kerimov (RFE/RL)
Shiraliyev was among a large group of Muslim men jailed for protesting on the streets of Baku on 5 October 2012 against a 2010 Education Ministry ban on girls wearing a headscarf (hijab) in schools. The protest outside the Education Ministry - the largest of three such street protests - ended in violence. Independent observers insisted that the violence did not come from the protestors, but from provocateurs among the crowd possibly controlled by the police or other security agencies. (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2016)
A Baku court handed Shiraliyev a six-year jail term in April 2013. It was due to end on 5 October 2018.
However, prosecutors brought new criminal charges against Shiraliyev in late September 2018, claiming he had kept illegal items in prison, including a knife under his pillow. Human rights defenders dismissed the claims.
Prosecutors brought the case against Shiraliyev under Criminal Code Article 317-2.1. This punishes "Preparation, storage, transportation or use of objects prohibited by a person detained in prisons or in detention facilities" with imprisonment of up to six months.
At the end of the short trial on 20 December 2018, Baku's Khazar District Court sentenced Shiraliyev to five months and 18 days' imprisonment. (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2440)
Shiraliyev was the last of the 32 men convicted for participating in the October 2012 anti hijab ban demonstration to be freed from prison.
Freed under amnesty
Shia Muslim theologian and prisoner of conscience Zulfuqar Sadraddin oglu Mikayilzade (born 1978, also known as Mikayilov) was freed from Prison No. 8 in Baku's Qaradag District on 17 March, local media noted the same day.Mikayilzade had been included among a large number of prisoners amnestied by President Ilham Aliyev in a 16 March decree.
Mikayilzade was deputy leader of the Muslim Unity Movement, launched in 2015 and led by jailed Imam Taleh Bagirov. The authorities quickly began to try to suppress the new Movement, which has both religious and political goals and aims to unify the Islamic and secular opposition to the regime of President Ilham Aliyev. (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2127)
Security forces arrested Mikayilzade on 26 November 2015 during their assault on the village of Nardaran, north of Baku. The General Prosecutor's Office accused the Muslim Unity Movement of planning "a violent change to the constitutional system of government" to establish "a religious state governed by Sharia law". It claimed that the "armed criminal group" stockpiled ammunition and explosives. The Muslim Unity Movement denied any attempt to seize power and denied collecting weapons for this purpose.
Mikayilzade was tried with eleven others in what became known as Nardaran case No. 3. On 6 December 2017, Baku's Serious Crimes Court sentenced him on a wide range of criminal charges to 17 years' imprisonment in strict regime prison. The other eleven received jail terms of between 12 and 15 years.
In April 2018, Baku Appeal Court increased the severity of the prison conditions of Mikayilzade's sentence from strict to special regime. On 16 November 2018, the Supreme Court rejected Mikayilzade's further appeal, according to court records. (END)
Full reports on freedom of thought, conscience and belief in Azerbaijan (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?query=&religion=all&country=23)
For more background, see Forum 18's Azerbaijan religious freedom survey (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2429)
Forum 18's compilation of Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) freedom of religion or belief commitments (http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=1351)
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