Capital: Baku
Population: 9.3 million
GNI/capita, PPP: US$16,180

Source: The data above are drawn from the World Bank's World Development Indicators 2015.

Regime Classification: Consolidated Authoritarian Regime
Democracy Score: 6.75
NIT Country Rank: 27/29

NIT edition2006200720082009201020112012201320142015
Electoral Process6.506.506.506.756.757.007.007.007.007.00
Civil Society5.005.255.255.505.755.755.756.256.506.75
Independent Media6.006.256.256.756.756.756.756.756.756.75
National Democratic Governance6.006.006.006.256.506.506.756.756.756.75
Local Democratic Governance6.006.006.006.256.256.506.506.506.506.50
Judicial Framework and Independence5.755.755.755.756.256.256.506.506.506.75
Corruption6.256.256.256.506.506.506.506.756.756.75
Democracy Score5.936.006.006.256.396.466.576.646.686.75

NOTE: The ratings reflect the consensus of Freedom House, its academic advisers, and the author(s) of this report. The opinions expressed in this report are those of the author(s). The ratings are based on a scale of 1 to 7, with 1 representing the highest level of democratic progress and 7 the lowest. The Democracy Score is an average of ratings for the categories tracked in a given year.Executive Summary:

Executive Summary:

Azerbaijan is ruled by an authoritarian regime characterized by intolerance for dissent and disregard for civil liberties and political rights. After President Heydar Aliyev came to power in 1993, he secured a ceasefire in Azerbaijan's war with Armenia (1994) and established relative domestic stability, but he also instituted a Soviet-style vertical power system based on patronage and the suppression of political dissent. Ilham Aliyev succeeded his father in 2003, continuing and intensifying the most repressive aspects of Heydar's rule. Since then, the inflow of significant oil revenues has fueled presidential patronage, strengthened the state's security apparatus, and partially subdued both domestic and foreign criticism of the regime.

Azerbaijani leaders present the country as a modern, secular, Muslim-majority state that is an island of stability in a dangerous neighborhood. The state uses repressive legislation and a subservient court system to punish or preempt criticism and its total control of the media to ensure the dominance of the official narrative. The government has marginalized all opposition parties other than those which in reality favor the ruling Yeni [New] Azerbaijan Party (YAP).

Repressive measures against perceived threats to regime stability have escalated rapidly since 2009 and became still more severe in 2014. Throughout the year, human rights activists, journalists, and other regime critics were subjected to criminal charges and physical and financial harassment. Numerous nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) had their bank accounts frozen and many were forced to close, further reducing the space for political discourse. Youth movements and associated bloggers are particularly threatening to the regime, and were key targets of the crackdown.

Several of Azerbaijan's strategic allies expressed concern at the heightened pressure on civil society, but the regime resolutely rejected any criticism of its human rights record. At year's end President Aliyev's chief of staff publicly accused the United States of conspiring with NGOs to overthrow the government.[1]

No progress was made toward settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in 2014. Clashes along the line of contact between Azerbaijani forces and Armenian-held areas were more numerous and deadly, especially in August.[2] In November, the Azerbaijani military shot down an Armenian helicopter.[3]

National Democratic Governance:

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Separation of powers is guaranteed by Azerbaijan's constitution, but in practice the executive branch controls both the judiciary and the Milli Majlis (parliament), a rubber-stamp body with no oversight or public debate function. The 125-seat legislature is dominated by the New Azerbaijan Party (YAP), in power since the election of current president Ilham Aliyev's father, Heydar Aliyev, in 1993.

No genuine opposition party won seats in the fraudulent parliamentary elections of 2010. Independent deputies in the parliament vote overwhelmingly with Aliyev's YAP and the many small, pro-YAP parties. After the deeply flawed elections of October 2013, President Aliyev began his third term by strengthening his control over politics and society. He vigorously suppressed critics, distributed budget funds to local executive branches in the regions, and deployed relentless propaganda via state-controlled media.

Azerbaijan's natural resource wealth, which fueled a vast GDP growth in the mid-2000s, has entrenched the executive's control over the country and financed the growth of the state's security apparatus. Despite the economic growth of the last decade, wealth and economic power remain largely concentrated among the president, his family, and a small group of oligarchs, creating a dangerous convergence of political and economic interests.[4]

About 25 percent of the population is employed by the state, down from a third in 2000.[5] As was true under Soviet rule, civil servants are effectively forced to join and support the ruling party because they depend on the state for work and access to patronage networks. Outside of the state security services, wages and pensions for state employees are extremely low. Although average national earnings rose by about 4 percent in 2014, civil servants received no wage increases during the year. Low earnings and the absence of comprehensive social policy are partly compensated for with illegal petty trade in the shadow economy, contributing to the high level of corruption in the country. Workers in the state bureaucracy regularly supplement their incomes by demanding bribes in exchange for expedited work.

As the Euromaidan demonstrations in Ukraine led to the ouster of President Yanukovych and subsequent Russian military interference, the Aliyev regime escalated its multiyear crackdown on government critics under the pretext of preempting threats to Azerbaijan's independence and security. Throughout 2014, the state brought charges of tax evasion, fraud, and even treason against nongovernmental organizations and individual regime critics while presenting itself as a vigilant defender of the rule of law. Representatives of the already marginalized political opposition were also subjected to harassment and arbitrary arrests on dubious charges in 2014. In late May, the parliament introduced amendments to the Law on Citizenship that define reasons for stripping an individual of her/his citizenship in Azerbaijan. An individual may now be deprived of citizenship for "behav[ing]" in a way that is "damaging to state security"[6] – a phrase open to broad interpretation.

As the regime's crackdown on human rights defenders, journalists, and NGOs persisted, Western governments and international organizations voiced their concerns. In December, the head of Aliyev's presidential staff, Ramiz Mehdiyev, responded to mounting international criticism with a 13,000-word denunciation of the "foreign interests" that seek to destabilize Azerbaijan.[7] In his statement, which was issued in Azerbaijani and Russian, Mehdiyev accused EU President Martin Schultz and U.S. President Barack Obama of using NGOs and sympathetic Azerbaijani citizen groups to overthrow the Aliyev regime under the pretext of building democracy.[8] Two days later, Azerbaijani authorities arrested journalist Khadija Ismayilova, whose investigations into the Aliyev family's finances had made her a target of informal reprisals for several years. On 26 December, the Azerbaijani government closed the office of Radio Liberty (Azadliq), a US-funded organization that has operated in Azerbaijan since the 1990s. Equipment was seized and staff were taken for questioning on multiple occasions without legal representation.

Azerbaijan's police are part of the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MIA). By law, they are not only responsible for combatting crime, protecting individuals and property, and maintaining public order, but also for protecting human rights.[9] Although some sections of the Police Code reference limits on police power, the only active check against them is non-civilian, "intra-corporate" oversight.[10] Regulations governing service in the MIA do not specify any particular type of oversight.[11]

Personnel changes within the MIA are totally opaque to the media and general public. Appointments to the MIA are made by the head of state, but when Lieutenant General Asker Alekperov stepped down after 13 years as deputy minister of the MIA in October 2014, the fact was not announced on the official website of the office of the president.[12] The opposition newspaper Azadliq speculated that the resignation might be followed by the departure of Minister of Internal Affairs Ramil Usubov, an appointee of Ilham Aliyev's predecessor and father, Heydar. By year's end, however, no other changes had been made to the president's cabinet.

The state's largest source of revenue is oil – which brought in about $25.3 billion in 2014, according to the government – followed by taxes and customs duties.[13] The 2015 state budget approved in November 2014 assumes an average oil price of $90/barrel[14] and reflects higher revenues and expenditures, targeting a state budget deficit of 2.8 percent of GDP (roughly $2 billion).[15] As oil prices dropped, Azerbaijan sharply reduced oil exports in late 2014.[16] Still, the government announced a budget surplus at year's end, thanks in part to large transfers from the State Oil Company of the Azerbaijan Republic (SOCAR). SOCAR transferred an estimated 1.8 billion to the state budget in 2014, an increase of approximately 17 percent from the previous year.[17]

Azerbaijan's military spending has increased dramatically in the last decade ("over twentyfold," according to Aliyev himself). In November, Finance Minister Samir Sharifov announced that in 2015 Azerbaijan's defense budget would increase 27 percent to $4.8 billion, 17.9 percent of the government's budget expenditures.[18] Azerbaijan buys arms from Russia, Turkey, the U.S., and Israel, which also gets about 40 percent of its oil from Azerbaijan.[19] Arms sales from Russia evoke criticism from Armenia, whose dependence on Russia is partly related to fear of Azerbaijani military aggression.[20]

Meanwhile, internal troubles in the armed forces suggest that it may not be a reliable fighting force. According to the Doktrina Journalists' Center for Military Investigations, a total of 19 military servicemen in Azerbaijan died in non-combat situations between January and June 2014.[21]

Despite the Aliyev regime's deplorable human rights record, Azerbaijan is or has been a member of numerous international organizations, many of which exist to promote and support accountable government, civil liberties, and peaceful cooperation between nations. Azerbaijan has been a member of the European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission) since 1996. In 2001, it joined the Council of Europe. While it is not a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), Azerbaijan is part of the NATO Partnership for Peace plan. At a press conference in Brussels in January 2014, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogg Rasmussen called Azerbaijan "a staunch member of the program from the beginning." At the same conference, President Aliyev added €1 million to Azerbaijan's existing €2 million commitment to NATO's Afghanistan National Army Trust Fund.[22]

From mid-May to mid-November 2014, Azerbaijan chaired the executive body (Committee of Ministers) of the Council of Europe (CoE). A stocktaking document issued by the CoE at the conclusion of Azerbaijan's chairmanship praised Azeri leadership for "deploy[ing] considerable efforts in furthering the objectives of the Council of Europe around its three key pillars – human rights, rule of law, and democracy."[23] The document makes no mention of Azerbaijan's human rights record at home. Instead, it highlights numerous major CoE conferences hosted or chaired by Azerbaijan, including one on corruption in sports and another on "public service delivery in the context of human rights and good governance." Another conference organized by Azerbaijan during this period focused on the problem of hate speech against minorities and Islamophobia, a quality the Azerbaijani government has been quick to ascribe to its critics.

Since 2003, Azerbaijan has been a founding member of Extractive Industries Transparencies Initiative (EITI) – an organization dedicated to promoting greater transparency about state revenues earned from energy extraction and mining operations. Also inherent in EITI membership is a commitment by member states to protect civil liberties, particularly freedom of the press and broad access to information. Azerbaijan's reporting of oil revenues has been judged compliant with the organization's standards since 2009; however, in 2014, EITI threatened to review Azerbaijan's compliance ahead of schedule and said Azerbaijan might be expelled from the organization due to the recent crackdown on individual liberties and its implications for transparency.[24] In response, Azerbaijan threatened to withdraw from EITI, criticizing the organization for "mov[ing] away from its original goals" and "beginning to resemble an organization for the protection of human rights, and more specifically, NGOs."[25] Transparency Azerbaijan, which monitors energy sector finances, had its bank accounts frozen in the summer and was denounced in the National Assembly for "treasonous" criticism.[26]

After a long standoff between Azerbaijan and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the mandate of the OSCE Office in Baku was reduced in 2014 to "special projects" that "support cooperation" of the Azerbaijani government with the OSCE.[27]

Violent clashes between the armed forces of Azerbaijan and those of the breakaway territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, supported by Armenia, escalated dangerously in 2014. In March, Azerbaijan had an opportunity to champion the inviolability of internationally recognized borders by voting in favor of a United Nations General Assembly resolution calling on states not to recognize Russia's annexation of Crimea. (Armenia voted against the resolution.)[28]

Fighting along the heavily militarized line of contact between Azerbaijani forces and Armenian-held areas peaked in August with the use of heavy weapons that resulted in over 20 combatant deaths.[29] Despite a series of high-level meetings[30] between the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia – mediated by the OSCE-appointed Minsk Group co-chaired by France, Russia, and the United States – the conflict deteriorated further in November 2014 when Azerbaijani forces shot down an Armenian helicopter flying over occupied territories near the town of Aghdam, near the line of contact.[31] Azerbaijani authorities said the helicopter was in Azerbaijan's airspace and shooting at ground positions. Armenia denied this, insisting the helicopter was unarmed and on a training mission.[32] Criticism from the European Parliament was followed by calls from both the U.S. and NATO to exercise restraint. No further fighting followed the incident.[33]

Resettlement of Azerbaijani IDPs from the Karabakh war continued in 2014. Two of the newest settlements are close to the territories occupied by ethnic Armenians, in Aghdam and Ganje.[34]

Electoral Process:

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The political environment in Azerbaijan is neither pluralistic nor competitive and no election since the early 1990s has been deemed free or fair by international observers. Opposition candidates' access to campaign funding and their ability to organize and hold rallies are heavily restricted. They have virtually no access to coverage on television, which remains the most popular source for news and information in Azerbaijan. Voter intimidation, carousel voting, and ballot stuffing are regular election day practices.

Although Azerbaijan has closely cooperated with organizations like the Venice Commission and the OSCE in reforming its electoral laws and ensuring a free and fair electoral process, the key recommendations of these international bodies remain unimplemented. The OSCE's Office of Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (OSCE/ODIHR) described the October 2013 presidential elections as "undermined by limitations on the freedoms of expression, assembly and association ... allegations of candidate and voter intimidation and a restrictive media environment" and called on Azerbaijan to make changes in law and practice to meet international standards. The election handed incumbent Ilham Aliyev a third term in office with 84.6 percent of the vote.

A delegation from the European Parliament (EP) initially called the 2013 presidential election "free, fair, and transparent." Some critics speculated that the positive assessment was the result of successful lobbying efforts on the part of the Azerbaijani government and European business interests in the country. The EP ultimately backed away from its own delegation's findings and supported the conclusions of the OSCE/ODIHR. No elections laws were changed in 2014.[35]

The country's two main opposition parties, Musavat and Azerbaijan Popular Front, lost representation in the 2010 parliamentary elections. Aliyev's YAP emerged with 71 seats, up from 61 in 2005, and the remaining mandates went to 41 independents and 10 minor parties, none of which garnered more than three seats. Azerbaijan's next parliamentary elections are scheduled for November 2015.

The 18-member Central Electoral Commission (CEC) continues to be dominated by the ruling party and its non-party supporters: The CEC chair and five regular commission members are from YAP; the deputy chair, one secretary, and four other members are non-party YAP supporters; and six other members, including one CEC secretary, hail from parliamentary minority parties that also vote with YAP on most matters.

The Baku-based Election Monitoring and Democracy Studies Center (EMDS) declined to monitor the municipal elections held on 23 December 2014. EMDS explained that the contest could not be considered democratic due to "gross violations of human rights and crackdown on civil society and opposition political parties, as well as systematic restriction of political freedoms, particularly, freedom of expression, assembly and association."[36] Some election observers and journalists visited several polling stations and observed ballot stuffing, including some incidents caught on camera in the presence of the official election monitors. When one journalist from Meydan TV tried to question a woman who had just put a thick wad of ballots into the ballot box, he was evicted from the polling station by the monitors.[37] Video footage of the latter incident was published online by Meydan TV – by this time already forced to operate from outside of Azerbaijan – as well as by Radio Liberty (Azadliq). Radio Liberty's Baku offices were raided and shut down by the authorities three days later.

The official CEC report on the municipal elections claimed that unnamed international and local monitors had successfully monitored all polling stations and no complaints were reported in official sources. The CEC report also noted the successful implementation of reforms "facilitating the pre-election campaign on equal footing."[38]

Civil Society:

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Conditions for civil society activity in Azerbaijan have been deteriorating for at least a decade, but in the last four years the government has committed to an intense crackdown on civil society organizations, nonstate media, and other independent voices perceived as threatening to the regime. Throughout 2014, the government used legal and extralegal means to harass and intimidate regime critics into silence.

According to official data, there are more than 2,700 nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) registered with the state,[39] while as many as 1,000 remain unregistered.[40] Some of the organizations, such as Institute for Peace and Democracy or the Election Monitoring and Democracy Training Center, have been trying to register for years.[41] The Government of Azerbaijan has lost at least five cases before the European Court of Human Rights, which has found denials of registration to violate the freedom of association.[42]

Legislation passed in 2013 requires NGOs to register all grants and donations with the Ministry of Justice, and to inform authorities of all donations over $250; those that fail to acquire proper registration are prohibited from opening or maintaining bank accounts. In February and November 2014, additional changes were made to the Law on Grants, the Law on State Registration of Legal Entities, and the State Registry and the Code of Administrative Offenses, creating new obstacles to the work of Azerbaijani and foreign organizations. They introduce new registration requirements – extending the existing ones from organizations to individual grant recipients – as well as new rules for grant use and reporting and harsh penalties for violations of the law.[43] A December 2014 report by the Venice Commission criticized Azerbaijan's latest NGO legislation for raising barriers to the registration and activity of NGOs; imposing excessive fines for errors in applications; and effectively precluding foreign donors from making grants to local NGOs, among other serious problems.[44] The commission's rapporteurs requested a visit to Azerbaijan that was never arranged by the government and eventually had to be cancelled.

Throughout 2014, Azerbaijan's NGO laws were used to put pressure on both local and foreign organizations. The authorities froze the bank accounts of two U.S.-based NGOs, IREX and the National Democratic Institute (NDI), and raided the offices of IREX in September, forcing both groups to close their operations in the country.[45] Transparency International experienced difficulty accessing funds in Azerbaijan.[46] Oxfam and the National Endowment for Democracy had bank accounts frozen and were forced to reduce or eliminate activities.[47] District courts also froze the bank accounts of the Media Rights Institute, Democracy and Human Rights Resource Center, Azerbaijan Lawyers Association, and Center for National and International Studies, among others.[48]

Transparency and accountability NGOs, including the National Budget Group and the EITI NGO Coalition, were also pressured into curtailing or abandoning their activities. Funding to the Economic Research Center, which acts as a financial agent for the EITI Coalition, was blocked. Two members of the coalition board and one member of the multi-stakeholder group (MSG) were forced to leave the country. Most of the board and MSG members were investigated by the state prosecutor's office.[49] The bank accounts of the Democratic Institutions and Human Rights Public Union, another organization on EITI's national steering committee, were frozen, as was the personal bank account of its director, Elchin Abdullayev. The Justice Ministry also rejected the group's application to register a foreign grant.[50]

The apparent aim of the new NGO laws and their aggressive application is to drive independent organizations from Azerbaijan and leave behind only GONGOs that rely on the central government for funding. In 2014, government officials repeatedly accused foreign-funded NGOs of undermining political stability (see National Democratic Governance section).[51] They emphasized that the Azerbaijani state budget is more than capable of funding cultural, humanitarian, and social projects within the country's borders, as it already does abroad.[52]

When Azerbaijan assumed chairmanship of the executive body of the Council of Europe in May 2014, a group of prominent civil society actors sent a letter to CoE Secretary General Thorbjørn Jagland, drawing the council's attention to the escalating legal persecution and harassment of critical voices in Azerbaijan:

As organizations and individuals working against the odds in Azerbaijan, we count on your voice, and your moral authority, to be heard in condemning the systemic human rights crackdown in Azerbaijan, a Council of Europe member state since 2001 ... As an immediate step, we urge you to demand the immediate release of all journalists, bloggers, political activists and human rights defenders in prison or detention in connection with exercising their rights to freedom of expression, assembly and association, and to stop using the courts to imprison critics and opponents. Furthermore, we ask you to mandate a group of independent experts to examine cases of other alleged political prisoners in Azerbaijan and to render opinions on the said cases as to whether the persons in question may be defined as political prisoners on the basis of the criteria adopted in previous Council of Europe documents. We ask you to remind the Azerbaijani government of the rules of a fair hearing, as set out in the European Convention on Human Rights and clarified in case law of the European Court of Human Rights, to be applied in every case. Finally, we ask you to publicly highlight that intimidation and harassment of activists in Azerbaijan is unacceptable and to demand an immediate end to these practices ...[53]

In November, Jagland published an opinion piece in The Guardian, stating, "Azerbaijan's human rights are on a knife edge" and urging Europe's leaders not to walk away.[54]

Numerous civil society activists who had been arrested in 2013 were sentenced in 2014, including 7 activists from the youth network NIDA, who were sentenced to 6-8 years in prison on trumped up drug charges in the spring.[55] Anar Mammedli, founder and head of the Election Monitoring and Democracy Studies Center, was arrested in December 2013 after his organization's criticism of the conduct of presidential elections in October; in May 2014, Mammadli was convicted of illegal entrepreneurship, tax evasion, abuse of official authority, and sentenced to 5.5 years in prison. In August, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) awarded its prestigious Vaclav Havel Human Rights Prize to Mammadli, who remained in prison at year's end.[56]

New arrests and harassment of individual activists did not decline during Azerbaijan's chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers. On the contrary, they spiked, targeting some of the country's best-known human rights defenders. Leyla Yunus, the director of the Institute for Peace and Democracy, was arrested on 30 July 2014 and charged with treason, fraud, tax evasion, and forgery. Her husband, historian Arif Yunus, was charged with treason and fraud. At first, he was placed under house arrest because of his poor health, but he was then incarcerated on 5 August.

Leyla had recently been engaged in citizen-to-citizen (or "Track II") diplomacy with Armenian counterparts over the conflict in Nagorno-Karabagh. With lawyer and human rights defender Rasul Jafarov, she had also spearheaded the compilation of a comprehensive list of Azerbaijan's political prisoners. By the time the 93-page report[57] was issued in late August 2014, both Yunus and Jafarov were in detention themselves.

Ilqar Nasibov, a human rights defender and journalist working for the Resource Centre for Development of Democracy and NGOs in Nakhchivan City, was hospitalized in August 2014 after a brutal attack by unknown assailants. Nasibov has been involved in researching cases related to the torture and ill-treatment of Nakhchivan residents by the local branch of the Ministry of National Security.[58]

Members of the political opposition were targets of questionable arrests and harsh prison sentences throughout 2014. Yadigar Sadiqov, a leading member of the opposition party Musavat, was convicted in January 2014 of assaulting a man with his mobile phone in a tea house in June of 2013. Sadiqov was sentenced to 6 years in prison, though an appeals court reduced the sentence to 4 years. Sadiqov maintains that the alleged victim actually assaulted him. Murad Adilov, an activist in the Popular Front opposition party, was arrested during a police raid in August 2014 on his parents' house in a village in the Sabirabad region. During a search of the home, the police said they had found 600 grams of a drug under a pillow. Adilov was charged with concealing drugs and sentenced to three months' pretrial detention.[59] He remained in jail at year's end.

Activists working on politically sensitive issues were not the only ones singled out for harassment in 2014. Hasan Huseynli, the head of the education charity Intelligent Citizen, was sentenced to six years in prison in July for a stabbing incident that he said was fabricated.[60]

As the Aliyev regime's reprisals against independent civil society escalated, so did international attention and criticism.[61] In August, CoE Human Rights Commissioner Nils Muižnieks visited Anar Mammadli and Leyla Yunus in prison. Muižnieks called the wave of arrests "totally unacceptable" and said the pattern "flies in the face of the human rights obligations undertaken by Azerbaijan" when it joined the 47-nation European human rights body.[62] U.S. State Department spokesperson Jan Psaki echoed these concerns in December, declaring, "The government of Azerbaijan is not living up to its international human rights commitments and obligations. We urge the government to respect the universal rights of its citizens and allow them to freely express their views. They will be best able to ensure their future stability and prosperity by allowing a more open society."[63] In September, the European Parliament adopted a resolution recognizing the worsening of the human rights situation in Azerbaijan over the last five years.[64]

Independent Media:

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Azerbaijan's constitution and legislative framework guarantee freedom of expression as a fundamental right. However, the authorities regularly use violence, intimidation, and criminal laws to stifle public debate and silence dissenting voices. At the end of 2014, over 15 journalists and bloggers were in custody in Azerbaijan, up from 8 at the end of 2013.[65] Azerbaijan was ranked 160th out of 180 countries in the 2014 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.[66]

The government completely controls broadcast media. The president appoints the head of the National Television and Radio Council, which regulates broadcast outlets and allocates licenses and frequencies. There is one state channel, Azerbaijan Television (AzTV), and one public channel, İctimai Television (ITV).[67]

Although there is more pluralism in the print media, some 80 percent of newspapers are owned by the state, and circulation and readership are relatively small. Independent and opposition papers struggle financially and have faced heavy fines and imprisonment of their staff. State-owned companies rarely if ever advertise in such papers. Local radio broadcasts of key international news services, including the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), RFE/RL, and Voice of America, were banned in 2009, though they are available via shortwave and online for those with connections.

Defamation remains a criminal offense punishable by exorbitant fines and imprisonment, and the law was amended in 2013 to specifically include online content and commentary. No steps were taken to amend laws on defamation or to decriminalize libel in 2014.[68] Laws restrict access to information that may damage "the protection of public order, health and morality."[69]

Journalists are threatened and assaulted with impunity, and several have been jailed on fabricated charges of drug trafficking, weapons possession, ethnic hatred, high treason, and hooliganism, among other offenses. A series of such arrests and harsh sentences were reported during 2014. Parviz Hasimli of the news website Moderator and the opposition daily Bizim Yol was sentenced in May to eight years in prison for illegal weapons possession,[70] and blogger Omar Mammadov was sentenced to five years in July on similarly dubious drug charges.[71] In August, Seymur Hazi of the opposition paper Azadliq was arrested on suspicion of hooliganism.[72]

Rauf Mirqadirov, an award-winning journalist critical of both Azerbaijani and Turkish regimes, was deported from Turkey shortly after Turkish President Erdogan's visit to Baku. He was told his visa had expired but it had in fact been extended. He was immediately jailed in Baku on charges of providing state secrets to Armenia.[73]

In the year's most highly publicized case, investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova of RFE/RL was ordered into pretrial detention in December as part of a case in which she was accused of encouraging a man to commit suicide.[74] She had already faced years of intense harassment and trumped-up criminal charges as a result of her reporting on the Aliyev family's finances. Two days before her arrest, Aliyev's chief-of-staff Ramiz Mehdiyev published his article denouncing Western attempts to subvert Azerbaijan using Azerbaijani citizens and NGOs as a "fifth column." Mehdiyev specifically named Ismayilova as an agent of such "anti-state" efforts.[75] She remained in detention at year's end.

On 16 December, the parliament passed a law allowing courts to shut down a media outlet if it is found to be receiving funding from abroad, or if it has had two guilty verdicts against for defamation in the space of one year.[76] Ten days later, the Baku office of RFE/RL (Radio Azadliq), was raided and closed down by interrogators from the state prosecutor's office. Computers and other equipment were seized. Employees were detained en masse, including a cleaning woman. The procurator's office said staff would be brought for questioning the following week, to give them time to find legal representation, but over the weekend staff members were forcibly taken from their homes, some during the night, for questioning. OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media Dunja Mijatović denounced Azerbaijan's targeting of RFE/RL's Baku bureau as "another severe blow to free media and free expression."[77] In a statement on its website the EU said the closure of the Baku office of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty "contraven[es] Azerbaijan's international commitments to protect media freedom."[78]

Persecution of freedom of expression watchdogs also increased in 2014 in tandem with the regime's broader crackdown on nongovernmental activity in the country. The accounts of about one dozen media-related NGOs were frozen on 5 August. Among these were the Azerbaijan section of IREX, the legal NGO Media Rights Institute (MRI), and the Institute for Reporters' Freedom and Safety (IRFS). The latter two groups had been at the forefront of calls to fully decriminalize libel and defamation in Azerbaijan.[79] Both IRFS director Emin Huseynov and Rashid Hajili, the director of MRI, had their personal accounts frozen.[80] On 6 August, Huseynov was notified that he was prohibited from leaving the country. He went into hiding shortly after IRFS's offices were searched on 8 August.[81] Huseynov has been a consistent critic of regime repression of civil society activists. His brother, Mehman, a political blogger who works for IRFS, was detained, questioned, and released in November, on his way to an OSCE meeting in Tbilisi, and again in early December.

Local Democratic Governance:

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The constitution of Azerbaijan provides for local self-governance, which is carried out through elected municipal authorities and the local bodies of state administration. Azerbaijan ratified the European Charter of Local Self Government in 2002, granting municipalities substantial responsibilities and decision-making authority. In practice, however, municipalities serve as arms of the country's executive branch, a reality reinforced in 2012 by a new presidential decree that significantly extended the control of state authorities over the local structures of national ministries.[82]

The patterns of governance at the local level in Azerbaijan mirror those at the higher levels of administration. Municipal authorities align themselves with local branches of state administration, which are extensions of the ruling party and its structure. These provide access to and further distribute patronage, also ensuring electoral victory at the municipal level for individuals who comply with the ruling party's wishes. The first municipal elections took place in 1999 in Azerbaijan, but a national association of municipalities was set up only in 2006. The body, however, has existed largely as a formality so far. In 2010, in order to increase their efficiency, the Milli Majlis reduced the number of municipalities from 2,757 to 1,766.[83] The move did not result in increased powers for local government bodies vis-à-vis local executive power structures, and an EU committee expressed regret that Azerbaijan did not make a simultaneous reduction in the number of local authorities working for the state administration.

Municipalities continue to be seriously underfunded and do not use the property remaining in their hands profitably. Instead of leasing it to local citizens, municipally owned lands are often sold off. According to the Chairman of the State Committee on Land and Cartography, only a minor part of the 5 million acres owned by municipalities was leased to citizens in 2013.[84]

Despite a number of regional development plans adopted in the past few years, regional disparities remain significant. The Absheron region, for example, constitutes only 3.9 percent of Azerbaijan's territory but produces 80 percent of overall industrial output and accounts for about 90 percent of all oil and non-oil investment.[85]

The central government's 2015 budget earmarks about 1.5 billion AZN ($1.9 billion) for investment in highway, electricity, water supply and other infrastructure projects throughout the country. Although the government forecasts that revenue to regions and cities will increase 6.7 percent in 2015 (to 835 million AZN), that amount is far short of local governments' projected expenses for the year (about 1.6 billion AZN).[86] The shortfall must therefore be made up by the central government, preserving the pattern of dominance and dependency[87] between the central government and the rest of the country.

The state's official long-term regional development strategy ("Azerbaijan 2020") stresses the improvement of education, agriculture, infrastructure, and technology in rural areas. The document highlights the need to address the material wants of youth and to incorporate them into society but makes few references to political plurality, self-government, or democratization. With regard to NGOs, many of which are rural and address rural needs, the document's emphasis is on cultivating their cooperation with the government and state funding for NGOs.[88]

As the chair of the CoE Committee of Ministers for mid-May through mid-November 2014, Azerbaijan hosted the annual conference of the CoE Congress of Local and Regional Authorities on 18 June.[89] The official CoE theme for 2014 was supposed to be "Empowering Youth" but the Baku conference chose instead to explore "Local Self-Government and Youth Policy."[90]

In January 2014, President Aliyev signed a new law on the creation of Public Councils under central and local executive authorities. These councils, which are composed of civil society organizations, are charged with initiating public consultations. However, their deliberations are purely consultative and have no force in the legislative process.[91]

Judicial Framework and Independence:

2006200720082009201020112012201320142015
5.755.755.755.756.256.256.506.506.506.75

Despite occasional demonstrations of independence, Azerbaijan's courts are largely tools of the regime, which uses them to protect its own interests. The influence of the executive branch undermines citizens' equality before the law and the judiciary's ability to impartially interpret and enforce the constitution. In addition to political interference, courts are plagued by a lack of professionalism. Throughout 2014, Azerbaijan's justice system meted out legal harassment of NGOs and their employees, individual activists, opposition figures, and journalists, serving as the primary weapon in the regime's escalating crackdown on dissent.

Fundamental to the judiciary's flaws is an entrenched structure of control, patronage, and corruption. Courts are financed from the state budget, but the salaries of judges are low, which feeds into widespread graft. The selection of judges is a complicated process based on exams and lacks external monitoring to ensure fairness. After exams and training, judicial candidates are put forward by a judicial legal council chaired by the minister of justice; they are then appointed by the president or the parliament, depending on the court. This system provides no safeguards against political favoritism in the selection process.

The government has implemented several reforms in the past few years, overhauling the system of military courts, increasing the number of judges, and establishing administrative-economic courts in seven regions. However, these changes have had no impact on the independence of the judicial system. Arbitrary arrests and detention are common. Detainees are often held for long periods before trial, and their access to lawyers is restricted. Police abuse of suspects during arrest and interrogation reportedly remains common; torture is sometimes used to extract confessions. Allegations of such abuses are regularly dismissed in the prosecutorial stage without further investigation.[92]

The opposition figures, journalists, and civil society activists who were arrested or sentenced during 2014 reported a variety of due process violations, evidence that was allegedly fabricated or withheld from the defense, and abuse in custody. Leyla Yunus, for example, reported suffering psychological and physical abuse in jail, and her health worsened as chronic illnesses (including Yunus's diabetes) were left untreated.[93] Yunus was also deprived of several of her team of lawyers when they were declared by authorities to be witnesses in the case against her.[94] The Ministry of Justice spokesperson dismissed Yunus's reports of abuse, without investigation, as a fabrication of the attorneys.[95]

Initial pretrial detentions of 2-3 months are common, even when the evidence points against any "flight risk." This was the case with Khadija Ismayilova, who had returned to Azerbaijan from Europe even after threats to arrest her had been circulated by the authorities. Leyla Yunus, Rasul Jafarov, and journalist Seymour Hazi all had their initial pretrial detentions extended in 2014.

In several cases in 2014, lawyers were prevented from defending their clients altogether. Popular Front activist Murad Adilov was arrested during a police raid of his parents' house on 12 August but was not permitted to see an attorney for two days, by which time he had already been awarded three months' pretrial detention.[96] Leyla Yunus's attorneys were declared to be witnesses in her case.Prominent defense attorney Khalid Baghirov was disbarred on 10 December when he agreed to represent Khadija Ismayilova.[97]

The list of Azerbaijan's political prisoners compiled by a working group led by Leyla Yunus and Rasoul Jafarov in 2014 groups prisoners by type and provides information on each individual, the charges against them, their locations, and the sentences they have received. The largest category (including about 50 names) is that of religious activists, convicted on criminal charges ranging from violent hooliganism or tax evasion to treason or drug possession.[98]

The Aliyev regime maintains that these are legitimate criminal charges and that there are no political prisoners in Azerbaijan.[99] However, the regime did pardon four imprisoned activists in mid-October. The released inmates had all signed statements renouncing political activity and pledging support for the present government. In a staged event, two of the pardoned prisoners were filmed bringing flowers to the grave of former president Heydar Aliyev.[100] A presidential decree issued on 29 December released several more people considered political prisoners, including two of the jailed NIDA activists and two journalists. Even after these pardons, human rights groups counted more than 90 political prisoners behind bars at year's end.[101]

Prison conditions in Azerbaijan are severe, with many inmates suffering from overcrowding and inadequate medical care. In September, the UN Subcommittee on Human Rights cut short a visit to Azerbaijan because it was barred from visiting "places of detention" to which it had been promised access.[102]

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has issued a number of rulings against politically motivated prosecutions in Azerbaijan. Responding to complaints in the 2013 arrest of Ilgar Mammedov, head of the Republican Alternative Civic Movement ("REAL"), the ECHR issued a ruling on 22 May 2014 that the state of Azerbaijan, in its police and court proceedings against Mammedov, committed five violations of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. Mammedov had been arrested in connection with a public disturbance in the town of Ismayilli and convicted of organizing mass disorders. The judgment included the conclusion (Paragraph 143) that "the actual purpose of the impugned measures was to silence or punish the applicant for criticizing the Government and attempting to disseminate what he believed was the true information that the Government were trying to hide." The decision was affirmed 13 October.[103]

In November, the Court ruled in Islam-Ittihad Association and others v Azerbaijan (No. 5548/05) that the dissolution by the state of the Islam-Ittihad Association for "religious activity" violated the right to freedom of association under Article 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). The Court stated it was "struck by the fact that the domestic courts, instead of giving an interpretation of the term 'religious activity' [...], imposed the burden of proof on the Association, holding that it had failed to submit any reliable evidence proving that it had not engaged in any such activity."[104]

Corruption:

2006200720082009201020112012201320142015
6.256.256.256.506.506.506.506.756.756.75

Azerbaijan has consistently ranked in the lowest third of global corruption indices as a net result of several factors. State monopoly over oil resources, Soviet-type bureaucracy, and the oligarchic structure of the economy all contribute to low ratings, along with the absence of independent institutions and checks and balances in government.

Several investigative reports published by foreign media in early 2012 revealed that President Aliyev and his immediate family controlled prodigious private assets, including monopolies in the economy's most lucrative sectors. In response, the president signed a series of legal amendments that allowed companies' organizational structures and ownership to remain secret, significantly limiting journalists' ability to uncover corruption.

The lack of transparency in the spending and distribution of state oil revenues has strengthened political patronage, one of the critical building blocks of the Aliyev regime's stability. Complicity in this system can ensure high salaries and kickbacks for public officials close to ruling circles, while income for most civil servants remains very low.

Experts agree that artificially sustained, bribe-based monopolies and links between business and political interests, along with the non-transparent regulatory environment, create obstacles for foreign investment and regular businesses. The size of Azerbaijan's shadow economy remains large, and competitiveness lags behind due to the difficulties of doing business in the country.[105]

Formally, Azerbaijan has shown great interest in working to counter corruption. In 2011, Azerbaijan joined the Open Government Partnership (OGP), an intergovernmental organization promoting transparency and civil society involvement in monitoring state finances. In keeping with its membership obligations, the government adopted the National Action Plan for 2012-2015 and set up a State Agency for Public Service and Social Innovations, supervising the Azerbaijani Service and Assessment Network (ASAN). As part of ASAN, nine ministries and agencies offer numerous types of services, including issuing residence permits and birth certificates. In the past, many of these services were accessible to citizens only in exchange for a petty bribe.[106]

The regime has widely publicized survey results according to which 68 percent of individuals consider anticorruption measures to be effective, but the implications of such measures only affect low-level anomalies at best.[107] Local experts stress that the involvement of civil society in the OGP remains limited by the weakness of the organizations themselves as well as to the lack of fundamental freedoms and transparency to enable effective monitoring.[108]

Azerbaijan has also signed a number of international anticorruption instruments, such as the UN Convention Against Corruption. It was even the first signatory of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative. However, despite this formal posturing, there is no effective oversight over corruption, and Azerbaijan's elites have continued to take advantage of this failing.

The civil sector is involved in the monitoring both of production and at least partly of spending income from natural resources through the National Budget Group, an umbrella watchdog organization. Overall, however, oil revenue distribution has not become more transparent, with resource-related income partly disappearing from the budget.[109] A report by economist Gubad Ibadoglu claimed that more than $12 billion had been "hidden" from the export-import accounts during 2010-12, a major reason that Azerbaijan did not complete its application to join the WTO.[110]

Prior to her arrest in December, journalist Khadija Ismayilova submitted testimony on the state of corruption in Azerbaijan to a hearing by the U.S. Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe.[111] Ismayilova, who has reported extensively on the financial activities of the Aliyev family, was unable to attend the November hearing in person due to a travel ban.[112]

In October 2014, Meydan TV produced a three-part series on procurement of supplies to Azerbaijan's military.[113] The program notes that Azersun Holding, a major supplier of food for the armed forces, and AZENCO, the company that dominates military construction projects, are both linked to President Aliyev's daughters.


Notes:

1 Ramiz Mehtiyev, "Ikili standartlarin dunya nizami ve muasir Azerbaican" [Double standards of world order of contemporary Azerbaijan], Milli.Az, 3 December 2014, http://news.milli.az/politics/312011.html.

2 Neil Melvin, "Nagorno-Karabakh – the not-so-frozen conflict, Transconflict, 21 October 2014, http://www.transconflict.com/2014/10/nagorno-karabakh-frozen-conflict/.

3 Thomas de Waal, "Nagorno-Karabakh: Helicopter Downing Threatens Shaky Truce," BBC News Europe, 13 November 2014, www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-30044414.

4 Vugar Bayramov, "The Diversification of Azerbaijani Economy; Ways to European Integration," Russkii Vopros (2014): 3, http://www.russkiivopros.com/?pag=one&id=588&kat=5&csl=67.

5 State Statistical Committee of the Republic of Azerbaijan, LabourMarket (Baku: State Statistical Committee, August 2014), http://www.stat.gov.az/source/labour/indexen.php.

6 Dominika Bychawska-Siniarska, "An Alarming Situation in Azerbaijan," New Eastern Europe, 7 August 2014, http://www.neweasterneurope.eu/interviews/1288-an-alarming-situation-in-azerbaijan.

7 Ramiz Mehtiyev, "Ikili standartlarin dunya nizami ve muasir Azerbaican" [Double standards of world order of contemporary Azerbaijan.]; Robert Coalson, "Azerbaijan Tightens Screws on Civil Society, Media," Eurasianet.org, 10 September 2014, http://www.eurasianet.org/node/69931.

8 "Mehdiyev Accuses US of 'Color Revolution,'" Contact Online news, 4 December 2014, http://www.contact.az/docs/2014/Politics/120400098728en.htm#.VLroRi7reYy.

9 Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Police Act of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Section 3, Part 3 (11 November 1999, last amended in 2004), http://www.mia.gov.az/index.php?/en/content/29004/.

10 Ibid, Section 12 and Section 26, Part VIII.

11 Service in the Internal Affairs Bodies of the Republic of Azerbaijan Regulation (Approval) Act of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Azerbaijan, 29 June 2001, www.mia.gov.az/index.php?/en/content/29022/.

12 "Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs resigns," Contact Online news, 1 November 2014, http://contact.az/docs/2014/Politics/110100095154en.htm#.VGo51smwRCN.

13 "Azerbaijan's oil and gas export for 2014 exceeds $26.6 bn, including $22.1 bn due to AIOC," Fineko/Abc.az, 29 March 2015, http://abc.az/eng/news/main/87411.html.

14 Azad Hasanli, "Azerbaijan to revise 2015 state budget," Trend News Agency, 14 March 2015, http://en.trend.az/business/economy/2374059.html.

15 Revenues for 2015 are forecasted at 19.4 billion manat (about $18.5 billion at the mid-2015 exchange rate of 1.05 AZN/1 USD) with expenditures at 21.1 billion manat (about $20.1 billion).

16 According to SOCAR: "overall export of Azeri oil products totaled 77,851 tons in November versus 133,067 tons in October, 183,931 tons in September, 280,705 tons in July (the best level for 2014)..." But Baku oil, which is "sweet" with lower sulfur, generally commands a higher price: the "cost of a barrel of oil BTC FOB Ceyhan exceeded cost of a barrel of Brent by $0.8 versus $2.1 in October, $0.99 in September, $2.11 in April (maximum in 2014)." Center for Economic & Social Development (CESD), "SOCAR reacts to falling energy prices by cutting oil exports," 3 December 2014, news release, http://cesd.az/new/?p=8787.

17 "SOCAR transferred over $1.8 billion to state budget of Azerbaijan in 2014," Azerbaijan State Telegraph Agency, 9 January 2015, http://azertag.az/en/xeber/SOCAR_transferred_over_18_billion_to_state_bu....

18 "Azərbaycanın hərbi xərcləri 5 milyard dollara çatdı" [Azerbaijan's military spending reaches 5 billion dollars], Oxu.az, 18 November 2014, Oxu.az/war/52385; and John C.K. Daly, "Azerbaijan's Defense Spending Hits $4.8 Billion," Silk Road Reporters, 25 November 2014, http://www.silkroadreporters.com/2014/11/25/azerbaijan-defense-spending-....

19 Zulfugar Agayev, "Putin Stirs Azeri Angst that Russia is Set to Extend Sway," Bloomberg Business, 7 April 2014, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-04-06/putin-stirs-azeri-angst-russia-will-seek-to-extend-sway.html; and Zulfugar Agayev, "Israel's Top Oil Supplier Endures Gaza as Azeri Ties Grow," Bloomberg News, 28 September 2014, http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2014-09-28/israel-s-top-oil-supplier-endures-gaza-as-azeri-ties-grow.

20 Tigran Gevorkyan, "Yerevan Angry at Russia for Arms Sales to Baku," Institute for War and Peace, Global Voices: Caucasus, 22 July 2014, https://iwpr.net/global-voices/yerevan-angry-russian-arms-sales-baku.

21 Afgan Muhtarlı, "Bidding Secrets of the Armed Forces Part 1: Purchases without tenders," Meydan TV, 16 October 2014, http://www.meydan.tv/en/site/politics/3402/Bidding-Secrets-of-the-Armed-....

22 "NATO Secretary General with President of Azerbaijan- Joint Press Point, 15 January 2014," YouTube video, posted by "NATO," 15 January 2014, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5MlneMakw80.

23 Council of Europe: Committee of Ministers, Stocktaking of the Azerbaijani Chairmanship of the Committee Ministers of the Council of Europe (14 May – 13 November 2014) (Strasbourg: Council of Europe, 7 November 2014), https://wcd.coe.int/ViewDoc.jsp?id=2257605&Site=CM&BackColorInternet=C3C....

24 "Azerbaijan may excluded from the EITI," Contact Online news, 8 October 2014, http://www.contact.az/docs/2014/Social/100800092711en.htm#.VGuWacmwRCM.

25 "Azerbaijan considers its withdrawal from EITI," News.Az, 25 October 2014, http://www.news.az/articles/economy/93025.

26 "Civil society harassed as Azerbaijan assumes Council of Europe Chairmanship," IFEX, 14 May 2014, https://www.ifex.org/azerbaijan/2014/05/14/council_chairmanship/.

27 Report on dispute between Azerbaijan and OSCE in Vienna that led to this down grade: "Stand-off in Vienna as Azerbaijan tries to change the mandate of the OSCE Office in Baku," Caucasus Election Watch, 20 May 2013, http://electionswatch.org/2013/05/20/stand-off-in-vienna-as-azerbaijan-tries-to-change-the-mandate-of-the-osce-office-in-baku/; the language of the new mandate can be found at http://www.osce.org/baku/105921.

28 United Nations, "General Assembly Adopts Resolution Calling upon States Not To Recognize Changes in the Status of the Crimea Region," press release, 27 March 2014, http://www.un.org/press/en/2014/ga11493.doc.htm.

29 Neil Melvin, "Nagorno-Karabakh- the not-so-frozen conflict."

30 European Commission, High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Implementation of the European Neighborhood Policy in Azerbaijan Progress in 2013 and recommendations for action (Brussels: European Commission, 27 March 2014), 10, http://eeas.europa.eu/enp/pdf/2014/country-reports/azerbaijan_en.pdf; Ara Khachatourian, "Putin, Sarkisian and Aliyev Meet on Karabakh," Asbarez.com, 10 August 2014, http://asbarez.com/125821/putin-sarkisian-and-aliyev-meet-on-karabakh/.

31 "Azerbaijan downs Armenian helicopter," BBC News, 12 November 2014, http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-30025296.

32 Ibid..

33 Alex Godson, "International uproar after Azerbaijan downs Nagorno-Karabagh helicopter," European Movement International, 14 November 2014, http://europeanmovement.eu/news/international-uproar-after-azerbaijan-do....

34 List of OSCE reports at ReliefWeb, http://reliefweb.int/country/aze.

35 European Commission, High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Implementation of the European Neighborhood Policy in Azerbaijan Progress in 2013 and recommendations for action.

36 Election Monitoring and Democracy Studies Center (EMDS), Statement on Situation of Human Rights in Azerbaijan in the run-up to the 23 December 2014 Municipal Elections (Baku: European Platform for Democratic Elections, 8 December 2014), http://www.epde.org/tl_files/EPDE/EPDE%20PRESS%20RELEASES/Situation%20of....

37 Azadliq Radiosu, "Azerbaijan's 4th Municipal Elections," Covcas bulletin, 23 December 2014, http://www.covcasbulletin.info/?p=1187.

38 Central Election Commission of the Republic of Azerbaijan, "Mərkəzi Seçki Komissiyası bələdiyyə seçkilərinin yekunlarını elan etdi" [The Central Election Commission has announced the results of municipal elections], news release, 13 January 2015, http://www.msk.gov.az/az/newsmsk/748.

39 "NGOs in Azerbaijan receive grants below 50 million.manats over 2013," Trend News Agency, 3 December 2013, http://en.trend.az/news/society/2218003.html.

40 Center for Legal Initiatives Public Union, The Situation with the Right to Association in Azerbaijan (Warsaw: Center for Legal Initiatives Public Union, 25 September 2012), http://www.osce.org/odihr/94545.

41 "Stop further restrictions to the right to freedom of association in Azerbaijan," Human Rights House Foundation, 5 March 2013, http://humanrightshouse.org/Articles/19106.html.

42 International Center for Nor-for-Profit Law (ICNL), "NGO Law Monitor: Azerbaijan," 5 August 2014, http://www.icnl.org/research/monitor/azerbaijan.html.

43 Ibid.

44 European Commission for Democracy Through Law (Venice Commission,) Opinion In the Law on Non-Governmental Organizations of Azerbaijan (Strasbourg: Council of Europe, 15 December 2014), http://www.venice.coe.int/webforms/documents/default.aspx?pdffile=CDL-AD....

45 "Azerbaijani Officials Raid U.S.-Based NGO," Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 5 September 2014, http://www.rferl.org/content/azerbaijan-raids-us-ngo-irex/26569077.html; IREX, "IREX Azerbaijan Office Searched, Equipment Seized," news release, 8 September 2014, http://www.irex.org/news/irex-azerbaijan-office-searched-equipment-seized; and Shahin Abbasov, "Azerbaijan: Human Rights Plummet to New Low," Eurasianet.org, 31 July 2014, http://www.eurasianet.org/node/69296.

46 "Transparency International under Pressure in Azerbaijan," Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 27 August 2014, http://www.rferl.org/content/azerbaijan-corruption-transparency-internat....

47 Rayhan Demytrie, "Azerbaijan cracks down while chairing Council of Europe," BBC News, 13 October 2014, http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-29559009.

48 Dominika Bychawska-Siniarska, "An Alarming Situation in Azerbaijan."; with reference to Azerbaijani press at "More seven NGO bank accounts frozen," Azeri-Press Agency, 5 August 2014, http://en.apa.az/news/214809.

49 Natural Resources Governance Institute, "Surviving a Crisis: Q&A with Azerbaijan's Gubad Ibadoglu," 29 October 2013, http://www.resourcegovernance.org/node/70210.

50 "Azerbaijan: Transparency Group Should Suspend Membership," Human Rights Watch, 14 August 2014, http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/08/14/azerbaijan-transparency-group-should-....

51 "QHT-lərlə bağlı qanunvericiliyə dəyişikliklər kimin xeyrinədir?" [Who is in favor of changes to the legislation on NGOs?], Contact.az, http://contact.az/docs/2014/Social/111900097093az.htm#.VGzw_cmwRCM.

52 Sara Rajabova, "Azerbaijan possess sufficient funds for NGO financing," Azernews, 20 November 2014, http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/73524.html?utm_medium=twitter&utm_source=twitterfeed.

53 "Civil society harassed as Azerbaijan assumes Council of Europe chairmanship," Institute for Reporters' Freedom and Safety, 14 May 2014, https://www.ifex.org/azerbaijan/2014/05/14/council_chairmanship/.

54 Thorbjørn Jagland, "Azerbaijan's human rights are on a knife edge. The UK must not walk away," The Guardian, 3 November 2014, http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/nov/03/azerbaijan-human-ri....

55 Seven activists with the youth network NIDA who had been arrested in 2013 were sentenced in May 2014 to prison terms of 6-8 years on various drug and weapons charges. Amnesty International considers them all to be prisoners of conscience. In an apparent deal with the authorities, one of the sentenced activists wrote a letter petitioning for his pardon on 19 May in which he renounced NIDA and asked that his name be removed from lists of political prisoners.

56 "PACE Awards Annual Havel Prize To Azerbaijani Activist," Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 29 September 2014, http://www.rferl.org/content/havel-rights-prize-azerbaijan-mammadli/2661....

57 Leyla Yunus and Rasul Jafarov, "The List of Political Prisoners in Azerbaijan," http://www.nhc.no/filestore/Dokumenter/Land/Azerbaijan/THELISTENGLISHFIN....

58 "Journalist beaten unconscious in Azerbaijani exclave," Reporters Without Borders, 23 August 2014, http://en.rsf.org/azerbaijan-journalist-beaten-unconscious-in-23-08-2014....

59 "Repression unleashed against information freedom defenders," Reporters Without Borders, 18 August 2014, http://en.rsf.org/azerbaijan-repression-unleashed-against-18-08-2014,468....

60 Tahmina Tagizade, "Six Years' Jail for Leading Azeri NGO Head," Institute for War &Peace, 21 July 2014, https://iwpr.net/global-voices/six-years-jail-leading-azeri-ngo-head.

61 "Azerbaijan: Government Repression Tarnishes Chairmanship," Human Rights Watch, 29 September 2014, http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/09/29/azerbaijan-government-repression-tarn....

62 "Council Of Europe Commissioner Slams Baku For Human Rights Violations," Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 8 September 2014, http://www.rferl.org/content/muiznieks-council-of-europe-human-rights-commissioner-azerbaijan/26572064.html.

63 "U.S. Criticizes Azerbaijan Crackdown," Covcas bulletin, 2 December 2014, http://www.covcasbulletin.info/?p=1059.

64 European Parliament, Resolution on the Persecution of Human Rights Defenders in Azerbaijan 2014/2832(RSP), http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?pubRef=-//EP//TEXT+MOTION+P8-RC-2014-0090+0+DOC+XML+V0//EN.

65 The Committee to Project Journalists (CPJ) listed 9 imprisoned journalists as of 1 December 2014. Khadija Ismayilova was detained on 5 December. Bloggers and social media activists in detention at year's end included Abdul Abilov; Faraj Karimli; Siraj Karimli; Omar Mammadov; Ilham Muradov; Rashad Ramazanov; and Ilkin Rustemzade. CPJ, "2014 prison census: 221 journalists jailed worldwide" (New York, NY: CPJ, December 2014), https://cpj.org/imprisoned/2014.php.

66 Reporters Without Borders, "World Press Freedom Index 2014," http://rsf.org/index2014/en-index2014.php.

67 "Emin Huseynov Demands Canceling Election Results of the ITV Director General's," Contact.az, 24 April 2013, http://www.contact.az/docs/2013/Politics/042400035832en.htm.

68 European Commission, High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Implementation of the European Neighborhood Policy in Azerbaijan Progress in 2013 and recommendations for action (Brussels: European Commission, 27 March 2014), http://eeas.europa.eu/enp/pdf/2014/country-reports/azerbaijan_en.pdf.

69 United States Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, Helsinki Commission Hearing, Corruption in Azerbaijan: Statement submitted by Khadija Ismayilova, Azerbaijan (Washington DC: CSCE, 19 November 2014), 1, http://docs.rferl.org/en-US/2014/11/20/bdcca939-bb36-4635-b4a1-0a2f5744ce18.pdf. She sent the statement because she was banned from participating.

70 "Azerbaijani Opposition Journalist Jailed For Eight Years," Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 15 May 2014, http://www.rferl.org/content/azerbaijani-opposition-journalist-jailed-fo....

71 "Facebook Blogger Omar Mammadov Sentenced to Five Years in Jail," Azeri Report, 7 July 2014, http://azerireport.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4358.

72 "Opposition Journalist In Azerbaijan Detained on Hooliganism Charges," Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 29 August 2014, http://www.rferl.org/content/azerbaijan-free-press-arrest/26556989.html.

73 "Well-known journalist arrested on spying charge after deportation," Reporters Without Borders, 23 April 2014, http://en.rsf.org/azerbaidjan-well-known-journalist-arrested-on-23-04-2014,46181.html; Liz Fuller, "Azerbaijan Arrests Prominent Journalist for Espionage," Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 20 April 2014, http://www.rferl.org/content/azerbaijan-journalist-mirkadyrov-arrested/2....

74 "Investigative reporter Khadija Ismayilova jailed in Azerbaijan," CPJ, 5 December 2014, https://cpj.org/2014/12/investigative-reporter-khadija-ismayilova-jailed....

75 "Mehdiyev Accuses US of 'Color Revolution,'" Contact.az.

76 "Azerbaijan Law Makes it Easier to Stifle Media," Institute for War & Peace, 23 December 2014, https://iwpr.net/global-voices/azerbaijan-law-makes-it-easier-stifle-media.

77 "U.S. 'Alarmed' As Azerbaijan Targets RFE/RL's Baku Office," Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 29 December 2014, http://www.rferl.org/content/azerbaijan-official-lashes-out-criticism-ov....

78 "EU responds to RFE/RL raid," Prague Post, 31 December 2014, http://praguepost.com/world-news/43565-eu-responds-to-rfe-rl-raid.

79 "Azerbaijan: Supreme Court decision fuels call for libel reform," IFEX, 17 March 2014, https://www.ifex.org/azerbaijan/2014/03/17/libel_reform/.

80 "Repression unleashed against information freedom defenders," Reporters Without Borders.

81 "Emin Huseynov spending his 35th birthday in hiding in Azerbaijan," Human Rights House Foundation (HRHF), 4 December 2014, http://humanrightshouse.org/Articles/20606.html.

82 BINA – NGO Alliance for Municipal Development, Assessment of conformity of organizational and operational aspects of municipalities in Azerbaijan with principles and requirements of European Charter (Baku: BINA NGO Alliance, 2011), http://www.eap-csf.eu/assets/files/Downloads/english/Report_Monitoring_ENG_BINA_2011.pdf.

83 A. Huseynbala, "Azerbaijan adopts law to reduce number of municipalities," Journal of Turkish Weekly, 29 May 2009, http://www.turkishweekly.net/news/78725/-azerbaijan-adopt-law-to-reduce-number-of-municipalities.html.

84 Garib Mammadov, Our municipalities sell land plots once and for all (Baku: BINA NGO Alliance, Bulletin N.7).

85 European Parliament, Action Fiche to Support Regional and Rural Development in Azerbaijan. Ref. Ares (2013)2478234 – 24/06/2013 (Strasbourg: European Parliament, 2013), http://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/docs_autres_institutions/commission_europeenne/comitologie/ros/2013/D027933-03/COM-AC_DR%282013%29D027933-03%28ANN2%29_EN.pdf.

86 Aynur Jafarova, "State budget for 2015 financing external public debt management," AzerNews, 20 November 2014, http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/73463.html.

87 BINA – NGO Alliance for Municipal Development, Assessment of conformity of organizational and operational aspects of municipalities in Azerbaijan with principles and requirements of European Charter.

88 President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, "Azerbaijan 2020: A Look into the Future," presidential decree, 29 December 2012, http://www.president.az/files/future_en.pdf.

89 The Congress of Local and Regional Authorities, Council of Europe, "Azerbaijani Chairmanship of Committee of Ministers and Grassroots Democracy," http://www.coe.int/t/congress/Activities/governments/countries/azerbaija....

90 The Congress of Local and Regional Authorities, Council of Europe, Activity Report December 2013-mid-April 2014 (Strasbourg: Council of Europe, 16 April 2014) https://wcd.coe.int/com.instranet.InstraServlet?command=com.instranet.Cm....

91 European Commission, High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Implementation of the European Neighborhood Policy in Azerbaijan Progress in 2013 and recommendations for action.

92 Human Rights Watch, Tightening the Screws: Azerbaijan's Crackdown on Civil Society and Dissent (New York: Human Rights Watch, September 2013), http://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/reports/azerbaijan0913_ForUpload_....

93 "Azerbaijan: Leading Rights Defender Arrested," Human Rights Watch, 5 August 2014, http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/08/05/azerbaijan-leading-rights-defender-ar....

94 Details on these and over 95 other cases at Leyla Yunus and Rasul Jafarov, "The List: Political Prisoners in Azerbaijan." On Yunus' lawyers, "Azerbaijani Rights Activist Yunus 'Deprived of Lawyer," Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 30 October 2014, http://www.rferl.org/content/yunus-leyla-azerbaijan-lawyer-cavadov-right....

95 "Vəkilləri Leyla Yunusun döyülməsi ilə bağlı bəyanat yayıblar" [Leyla Yunus' lawyers issued a statement in connection with the beating], Azadlıq Radiosu [Radio Liberty], 24 September 2014, http://www.azadliq.org/content/article/26604075.html.

96 "Repression unleashed against information freedom defenders," Reporters Without Borders.

97 Amnesty International, Urgent Action: Investigative Reporter Faces Harassment (London: Amnesty International, 15 October 2014), https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/EUR55/019/2014/en/; Giorgi Lomsadze, "Azerbaijan: Next They'll Come for the Lawyers?" Eurasianet.org, 11 December 2014, http://www.eurasianet.org/node/71301.

98 Leyla Yunus and Rasul Jafarov, "The List of Political Prisoners in Azerbaijan."

99 "NATO Secretary General with President Azerbaijan – Joint Press Conference," YouTube video, posted by "NATO," 15 January 2014, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5MlneMakw80.

100 Vugar Gojayev, "Azerbaijan: Rights Activists on the Brink," Eurasianet.org, 14 November 2014, http://www.eurasianet.org/node/70936.

101 "Two Azerbaijan 'Political Prisoners' Released Under Presidential Pardon," Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty, 30 December 2014, http://www.rferl.org/content/azerbaijan-prison-rights/26769454.html.

102 United Nations Human Rights, "Prevention of Torture: UN human rights body suspends Azerbaijan visit citing official obstruction," news release, 17 September 2014, http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=15047&L....

103 European Court of Human Rights, Case of Ilgar Mammadov v. Azerbaijan (Strasbourg: ECHR, 22 May 2014), http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/sites/eng/pages/search.aspx?i=001-144124.

104 "European Court: Azerbaijan violated NGO's freedom of association," European Human Rights Advocacy Centre, 21 November 2014, http://www.ehrac.org.uk/news/european-court-azerbaijan-violated-ngos-fre....

105 Business Anticorruption Portal, "Business Corruption in Azerbaijan," http://www.business-anti-corruption.com/country-profiles/europe-central-asia/azerbaijan/show-all.aspx.

106 Marie Chêne, "Overview of Corruption and Anti-Corruption in Azerbaijan," Transparent International, July 2013, http://www.transparency.org/files/content/corruptionqas/Overview_of_corruption_in_Azerbaijan_2.pdf.

107 Aynur Jafarova, "Official: Transparency International report confirms Azerbaijan's advances in anti-graft fight," AzerNews, 10 July 2013, http://www.azernews.az/azerbaijan/56581.html.

108 Transparency Azerbaijan, Monitoring Report on Implementation of Azerbaijan 'Open Government Initiative National Action Plan 2012-2015' (Baku: Transparency Azerbaijan, 20 November 2013), 13, http://transparency.az/alac/files/OGP_Monitoring%20Report-ENG.pdf.

109 "Is State Budget of Azerbaijan Transparent?" Social Watch, 23 October 2013, http://www.socialwatch.org/node/16253.

110 "Qubad İbadoğlu: 'Başqan olmaq iddiam var'" [Gubad Ibadoglu: 'claim to be the party's'], Yeni Musavat, 19 February 2014, http://musavat.com/news/siyas%C9%99t/Qubad-%C4%B0bado%C4%9Flu:-Ba%C5%9Fq....

111 U.S. Helsinki Commission, "Corruption in Azerbaijan: Statement submitted by Khadija Ismayilova, Azerbaijan," 19 November 2014, http://docs.rferl.org/en-US/2014/11/20/bdcca939-bb36-4635-b4a1-0a2f5744ce18.pdf.

112 "Azerbaijan Bars Journalist from Testifying on Corruption," Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty, 20 November 2014, http://www.rferl.org/content/release-azerbaijan-bars-journalist-from-tes....

113 Afgan Muhtarlı, "Bidding Secrets of the Armed Forces Part 1: Purchases without tenders," Meydan TV, 16 October 2014, http://www.meydan.tv/en/site/politics/3402/Bidding-Secrets-of-the-Armed-....

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