the journalist who won’t be silenced
The 2009 Rafto Prize
Malahat Nasibova - Azerbaijan - the journalist who won’t be silenced
The Rafto Prize for 2009 goes to journalist and human rights activist Malahat Nasibova. Nasibova has been awarded the prize for her courageous and unwavering struggle for a free and independent press. Risking her own safety, she reports on abuse of power, human rights violations and corruption in the isolated autonomous republic Nakhchivan, which is part of Azerbaijan.
Malahat Nasibova (40) is a correspondent
for the independent information bureau, ‘Turan’ in
Azerbaijan and for ‘Radio Free Europe’/‘Radio
Liberty’. She is the leader of the human rights
organisation ‘Democracy and NGO’s Development Resource
Center’ in Nakhchivan. Nasibova
has been a critical
voice against the authorities for ten years and she
steadfastly refuses to give up the fight for freedom of
speech. She reports on violations by the police against
ordinary citizens, kidnapping of members of the opposition,
and attacks on journalists. In the absence of other
independent institutions, Nasibova has become a kind
ofombudsperson whom the local population turn to, to be
heard.
Azerbaijan and Nakhchivan
Ilham Aliyev took over
as president in Azerbaijan after his father in 2003 and has
since lead the regime in a manner which has become more and
more authoritarian. The opposition has been marginalised and
the number of independent media has been severely reduced.
The
authorities force newspapers to limit their
circulation and distribution, and in addition they
monopolise radio and television. Attempts at criticising the
authorities are met with threats, violence and arrests.
Journalists who write about corruption and abuse of power
risk
imprisonment on false charges.
If the situation is bad in Azerbaijan, conditions are even worse in the autonomous republic Nakhchivan, which is surrounded by Armenia, Iran and Turkey. This closed enclave is ruled by the iron hand of Vasif Talibov, who is closely related to president Aliyev. All opposition is suppressed. As a result of the extreme harassment they have experienced, there are hardly any independent journalists left in the region today. Malahat Nasibova’s professional journalism and independent, critical voice is therefore profoundly important.
Journalism in extreme conditions
Nasibova draws attention to the general lawlessness and the absence of public security in Nakhchivan. In a news report from 2007 she wrote: ‘Policemen came to the village and demanded that the local people paid electricity bills. Those who refused were beaten and taken to the police station’. Nasibova further reported how several of those arrested were bound to trees and left for up to six hours in the cold February weather. The article ends with her usual laconic comment about how the local authorities deny that events have taken place in the way the victims’ describe them. In the same year, she reported about how the opposition politician Alesker Ismailov was forcibly admitted to a psychiatric hospital after he had written a complaint about the local police chief’s behaviour.
Nasibova has herself been arrested, brought before the courts and publicly harassed. The apartment where she lives with her husband and three children have been ransacked, their computer confiscated and her camera lens destroyed. She has received death threats, and
has been physically attacked. Her husband, Ilgar Nasibov, also a journalist, was sentenced in 2007 to 90 days imprisonment for insulting a public servant. There is no doubt that the intention is to silence journalists in Nakhchivan, and first and foremost, Malahat Nasibova.
After she received death threats last winter, an employee in the information section of Department of Internal Affairs said that ‘journalists who don’t want to be threatened should avoid insulting ordinary citizens and getting on their nerves’. Inspite of all this, she will not be silenced and she refuses to leave Nakhchivan.
Council of Europe
When Azerbaijan was taken
up as a member of the Council of Europe in 2001, one of the
conditions of membership was that the state had to
discontinue its practice of imprisoning members of the
opposition. This has not happened. Azerbaijan also has the
worst record in
Europe when it comes to the imprisonment
of journalists. The Committee to Protect journalists (CPJ)
registered nine imprisoned journalists in 2007 and five in
2008. One of these, Novruzali Mammadov, died in prison in
August this year. There are fewer and fewer independent
voices left and new arrests are made on purely political
grounds. In July 2009 two well known bloggers, Emin Milli
and Adnan Hajizade, were arrested. There is no doubt that
the arrests were politically
motivated.
Azerbaijan
Azerbaijan does not comply with
basic democratic principles. The lack of public security,
for example, is a serious problem. Judges are appointed by
the president and corruption is widespread in the legal
system and police force, as well as in the private business
world.
The country is rich in oil and gas reserves and
has a strategic position in the region. Many other countries
involved in the region, prioritise economic and political
energy interests above human rights, democracy and the rule
of law.
The Rafto Foundation in Bergen, Norway was established after the death of Professor Thorolf Rafto in 1986, in gratitude of his longstanding work to help people who are oppressed and persecuted, and in the realization that this work must be ongoing.Thorolf Rafto was a professor of Economic History at the Norwegian School of Ecominics and Business Administration(NHH). He was also well known for his political activism in Eastern Europe, especially in Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Poland. During a visit to Prague in 1979 to hold a lecture for students excluded from universities for political reasons, Rafto was arrested and brutally beaten up by the communist security police. Inflicted injuries dramatically weakened his health. On 4 November 1986 Thorolf Rafto died.
The Rafto Prize is awarded annually by the Rafto Foundation. Several Rafto Laureates: Aung San Suu Kyi, Burma ( Rafto Prize in 1990), people of East- Timor by Josè Ramos- Horta ( Rafto Prize in 1993) Kim Dae- Jung, South Korea ( Rafto Prize in 2000) and Shirin Ebadi, Iran ( Rafto Prize in 2001) have subsequently been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. The Rafto Prize contributes to a focus on human rights violations and on people and communities which need the attention of the world.
ENDS