BAKU: Human rights situation worsens in Azerbaijan – rights activist

Human rights situation worsens in Azerbaijan – rights activist

Turan news agency
29 Mar 07

Baku, 29 March: With every pre-election year the human rights
situation in Azerbaijan continues to deteriorate, Eldar Zeynalov, head
of the Azerbaijani Human Rights Centre, has told Turan.

Lawsuits against newspapers, physical violence against journalists and
the arrest of MP Huseyn Abdullayev are all parts of the election
campaign which is effectively under way. "However, the authorities
will not stop here. As the election draws closer and the election
campaign starts officially, the situation will become even worse,"
Zeynalov said.

He believes that the machinery of putting pressure on the independent
press is started each time PACE [Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe] prepares to discuss the situation in Azerbaijan. The main
objective is to make society fearful so that people cease to fight for
their rights and freedoms. "Through these actions the authorities
form the negative image of the head of state and put him in a
difficult position vis-a-vis international organizations," the human
rights champion said.

Still, Zeynalov said that reforms under way in prisons are bringing
them closer to European standards. Compared to previous years, there
has been some improvement in this area. At the same time, there are a
lot of those who do not realize that inmates have rights as
well. Isolation of prisoners from society leads to
suicides. "Rehabilitation requires that inmates be treated kindly,"
Zeynalov said.

Another issue is use of torture in police departments during
preliminary investigation. Even though the number of such facts keeps
growing, only several people have been brought to justice. As a
result, 10 people died of torture in police departments in 2006,
Zeynalov said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russian power exporter threatens to cut electricity to Azerbaijan

Russian power exporter threatens to cut electricity supplies to Azerbaijan

RIA Novosti
30 Mar 07

Moscow, 30 March: The company Inter RAO UES [Unified Energy Systems of
Russia], the only operator for the import and export of electricity in
Russia, could cut off supplies to Azerbaijan from 1 April, which
threatens the country with a rise in prices on the domestic energy
market, RIA was told by a source in the company.

If it loses power transmissions from Russia, Azerbaijan, whose power
system is subject to peak surges, could come up against a serious
shortage of electricity.

The source said supplies to Azerbaijan are currently being made under
a contract signed in 2006: it is in force until the end of the current
year, but in the area of supplies only until 31 March. "From 1 April,
unless we receive acceptable proposals from Azerbaijan, supplies could
be halted," the source told the agency. [Passage omitted]

BAKU: Air Forces carry out demonstration flights in front-line areas

Azeri air forces carry out demonstration flights in front-line areas

Azerbaijani news agency APA, Baku
30 Mar 07

30 March: Azerbaijan’s air forces carried out peaceful flights over
population centres situated along the front-line today. The Karabakh
bureau of APA news agency reports that the flights were aimed at
demonstrating fighter jets and helicopter gunships. The air manoeuvres
interested local residents and had a major psychological influence on
the population.

The Defence Ministry press service told APA that the flights of the
Azerbaijani air forces were carried out in line with a training
programme. The flights were carried out by planes and helicopters of
the air forces.

Administrative Fines For Violation of Traffic Rules Made Stricter

ADMINISTRATIVE FINES FOR VIOLATION OF TRAFFIC RULES MADE STRICTER

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, NOYAN TAPAN. The bill on making additions and
amendments to the RA Code of Administrative Infringements took effect
on March 24. The meeting held at the RA Police on March 30 was
dedicated to discussion of amendments and additions to administrative
fines for violation of traffic rules. The speakers presented in
detail the fines to be imposed for certian types of
violation. Particularly, a fine of 20 thousand drams (about 55
dollars) is envisaged in case of violation that results in a road
accident. Fines of 50 or 75 thousand drams are envisaged for driving a
vehicle in drunken state, while in case of repeated violation, the
driver may be deprived of the driving license for a year. A fine of 20
thousand drams is envisaged for driving a vehicle without a driving
license, and if the driver is already deprived of the licence, the
fine will make 300 thousand drams. If the driver does not stop the
vehicle in case of forbidding signal of the traffic-light, a fine of
10 thousand drams is envisaged, if the same violation is committed
within a year, the fine makes 30 thousand drams, and in case of
committing this violation for a third time, the driver is deprived of
his/her driving license for 6 months.

A fine of 20 thousand drams is envisaged for violation of pedestrian
crossing rules, and a fine of 5 thousand drams is imposed in case of
driving a vehicle without fastening the safety belt. A fine of 200
thousand drams is envisaged for not obeying the policeman’s order to
stop the vehicle, a fine of 300 thousand drams – in case of committing
the same violation within a year by a person without a driving
license; if the same violation is committed by a person with a driving
license, the driver is deprived of the license for 6 months.

In case of not paying the fine within 60 days, its amount is increased
fivefold, in case of refusal to pay the fine, it is confiscated by a
court decision. In response to questions of reporters, Head of the
Analytical Department of the RA Traffic Police Hayk Sargsian said that
cameras fixing violations of traffic rules have not been installed
yet. Responding to the question why 10 cars, which have parked near
the pedestrian crossing at the administrative building of the police,
are not punished for this violation, he said: "We have made the rules
of the Code stricter for efficient fight against violations.

There will be time when these violations will be eliminated, in any
case we want it to be so."

Russia Intelligence Predicts U.S. Missile Strike on Iran Early April

Russian Intelligence Predicts U.S. Missile Strike on Iran in Early April

30.03.2007
MosNews

Russian intelligence believes that the U.S. Armed Forces have nearly
completed preparations for a possible military operation against Iran,
and will be ready to strike in early April, the RIA-Novosti news
agency reported on Friday quoting an unnamed source in the Russian
security services.

The source said the U.S. had already compiled a list of possible
targets on Iranian territory and practiced the operation during recent
exercises in the Persian Gulf.

`Russian intelligence has information that the U.S. Armed Forces
stationed in the Persian Gulf have nearly completed preparations for a
missile strike against Iranian territory,’ the source said.

American commanders will be ready to carry out the attack in early
April, but it will be up to the country’s political leadership to
decide if and when to attack, the source said.

Official data says America’s military presence in the region has
reached the level of March 2003 when the U.S. invaded Iraq.

The U.S. is threatening Tehran with a military operation over Iran’s
refusal to abandon its nuclear program.

The UN Security Council passed a new resolution on Iran Saturday
toughening economic sanctions against the country and accepting the
possibility of a military solution to the crisis.

80 countries sign UN convention protecting rights of the disabled

80 countries sign U.N. convention protecting rights of the world’s disabled

By Edith M. Lederer
ASSOCIATED PRESS

12:15 a.m. March 31, 2007

UNITED NATIONS – In what the U.N. human rights chief called an
unprecedented show of support to empower the physically and mentally
impaired, 80 countries signed a U.N. convention enshrining the rights
of the world’s 650 million disabled.

The United Nations held a ceremony Friday on the first day the
convention opened for signatures and not only did 80 countries and a
representative ofthe European Union sign it but Jamaica announced that
it had also ratified the convention. That means only 19 more
ratifications are needed before the convention comes into force, and
speaker after speaker urged speedy approval.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour announced the
huge level of support at a news conference afterward.

`It’s certainly unprecedented in terms of support for a human rights
instrument, but it’s apparently setting records for the signature of
any convention in the United Nations,’ she said.

The convention is a blueprint to end discrimination and exclusion of
the physically and mentally disabled in education, jobs, and everyday
life. It requires countries to guarantee freedom from exploitation and
abuse for the disabled, while protecting rights they already have –
such as voting rights for the blind and wheelchair-accessible
buildings.

The convention guarantees that the disabled have the inherent right to
life on an equal basis with the able-bodied and requires countries to
prohibit discrimination on the basis of disability and guarantee equal
legal protection.

Countries must also ensure the equal right of the disabled to own and
inherit property, to control their financial affairs, and to privacy
over their personal lives.

The U.N. General Assembly adopted the 32-page convention by consensus
in December, culminating a campaign spearheaded by disability rights
activistsand the governments of New Zealand, Ecuador and Mexico.

`We would not be here today without the sustained efforts of the
disability community,’ Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro said
at Friday’s ceremony.

`In three short years, the convention went from dream to reality,’ she
said.

`On its adoption by the General Assembly late last year, it becamethe
first human rights treaty of the 21st century, and the fastest
negotiated international human rights instrument in history.’

Arbour said `it’s very appropriate’ that the first treaty of the new
century `targets a community that has been so marginalized for so
long=80=9D and that it focuses on rights – not just social welfare
and programs to meet the needs of the disabled.

She called the convention `a first step’ in empowering the disabled,
stressing that once it comes into force governments will have to enact
legislation and change practices to ensure the rights of the disabled.

Yannis Vardakastanis, representing the International Disability Caucus
which was in the forefront of the campaign for the convention,
congratulated the 80 countries that signed `this unprecedented
convention.’

He said it represents `a very drastic’ shift in the way the
international community looks at disabilities.

`The 650 million persons with disabilities around the world expect and
anticipate that this convention will change the real living
conditions, that this convention will take away the discrimination,
the exclusion, and all the obstacles that people with disabilities are
faced with in their daily lives,’ Vardakastanis said.

According to the latest U.N. figures, about 10 percent of the world’s
population, or 650 million people, live with a disability and the
number is increasing with population growth. The disabled constitute
the world’s largest minority, and 80 percent live in developing
countries, many in poverty.

The convention advocates keeping the disabled in their communities
rather than removing them and educating them separately as many
countries do.

Find this article at:
331-0015-un-disabledrights.html

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/world/20070