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Azerbaijan frees top anti-corruption journalist Ismayilova

Agence France-Presse

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Azerbaijan frees top anti-corruption journalist Ismayilova
The reporter, who turns 40 on Friday, probes the vast riches allegedly amassed by President Ilham Aliyev and his family

BAKU, Azerbaijan – Azerbaijan on Wednesday, May 25, released jailed prominent investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova, who was convicted of corruption charges last year, triggering an international uproar.

Ismayilova, an award-winning journalist and anti-graft crusader, was sentenced in September 2015 for 7-and-a-half years for economic crimes, in a case denounced by her supporters and rights groups as politically motivated.

She walked out of prison on Wednesday evening after a Supreme Court ruling earlier in the day, having spent more than 17 months in jail since her initial arrest in December 2014.

“I am full of energy and will continue my journalistic work,” Ismayilova told journalists in brief comments before she headed home, an AFP journalist reported.

“Azerbaijan’s Supreme Court threw out Ismayilova’s initial seven-and-a-half-year sentence and handed her a three-and-a-half-year suspended sentence,” her lawyer Fariz Namazly told AFP.

The reporter, who turns 40 on Friday, probed the vast riches allegedly amassed by President Ilham Aliyev and his family.

Some of her reporting was recently confirmed by journalists working on the Panama Papers leaked materials.

Last month she was given the prestigious World Press Freedom Prize by UNESCO.

New York-based media advocacy group, the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — which ranks Azerbaijan among 10 most censored countries in the world — called the decision to free Ismayilova a “cause for celebration.”

“We call on Azerbaijani authorities to remove the conditions on her freedom, and to release all journalists imprisoned for their work immediately,” CPJ Europe and Central Asia Program Coordinator Nina Ognianova said in a statement.

Considered Azerbaijan’s most prominent opposition journalist, Ismayilova served as bureau chief for the local service of the US-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty network between 2008 and 2010.

Authorities raided the RFE/RL’s offices in late December 2014, seizing papers and equipment and detaining staff, according to the company, which closed its sealed bureau last May.

‘Prisoner of conscience’

Rights activists applauded the release, with Human Rights Watch’s Europe director Lotte Leich calling it “best news in a long time”.

The journalist has been proclaimed a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International and has seen celebrities step in to the campaign for her freedom.

British human rights lawyer Amal Clooney, who represents Ismayilova before the European Court of Human Rights, has said that the journalist’s case “involved a politically motivated prosecution to restrict her freedom of speech.”

Last year, rocker and political activist Bono spoke out in support of jailed Azerbaijani activists, including Ismayilova.

In 2012, Ismayilova said she was the victim of blackmail, after a covertly-filmed video with sex scenes purportedly involving her was posted on the Internet.

Rights groups said the footage was released by Aliyev’s supporters in retaliation for Ismayilova’s work exposing his daughters’ alleged business interests.

In a leaked diplomatic cable from 2009 published by Wikileaks, Aliyev is said to have described Ismayilova as an “enemy of the government,” asking the US ambassador to Azerbaijan to intervene to have her sacked by Radio Liberty.

Wednesday’s ruling came after Aliyev freed 14 jailed rights activists and opposition politicians in an amnesty in March — a move welcomed by the Western governments and rights groups.

They were all on a 28-member list of “political prisoners” compiled by leading Azerbaijani rights groups.

Dissent is kept under strict control in Azerbaijan and is often met with a tough government response.

Rights groups say the government of the oil-rich ex-Soviet republic has stepped up pressure on opponents since Aliyev’s election for a third term in 2013.

Aliyev — who came to power in 2003 following an election seen as flawed by foreign observers — strongly denies accusations of rights abuses, while his administration has dismissed criticism as a smear campaign.

He took over after the death of his father Heydar Aliyev, a former KGB officer and communist-era leader who had ruled newly independent Azerbaijan with an iron fist since 1993. – Emil Guliyev, AFP/Rappler.com

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