Religious Freedom In Azerbaijan Highly Restricted

RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN AZERBAIJAN HIGHLY RESTRICTED

asbarez
Wednesday, April 18th, 2012

OSLO-“Freedom of religion or belief and related human rights such as
the freedom of expression and of assembly remain highly restricted,”
says a report published by Forum 18, a Web and email initiative,
which provides original reporting and analysis on violations of the
freedom of thought, conscience and belief of all people, whatever their
religious affiliation, in an objective, truthful and timely manner.

Among issues documented in Forum 18’s religious freedom survey are:
state attempts to counter discussion of violations with claims of
inter-religious harmony and religious tolerance; officials behaving
as if the rule of law places no limitations on their actions;
unfair trials lacking due legal process; steadily increasing “legal”
restrictions on and punishments for exercising freedom of religion or
belief, often prepared in secret, forming a labyrinth of restrictive
state controls; “legal” denials of international human rights standards
Azerbaijan has agreed to implement; a highly restrictive censorship
regime; enforced closures of places people meet for worship; a ban on
praying outside mosques; jailing of prisoners of conscience exercising
the right to conscientious objection to military service; arbitrary
deportations of foreign citizens exercising the right to freedom of
religion or belief; and severe denials of human rights in Nakhichevan.

“Azerbaijan is likely to remain a place where fundamental human rights
are violated with impunity, and the state tries to make exercising
human rights conditional upon state permission,” says the report.

Forum 18, named after Article 18 of the Universal Declaration Human
Rights is a Norwegian-Danish non-profit charitable initiative

In his presentation government ministers on Monday, Azerbaijan’s
President Ilham Aliyev said that the Armenian lobby was to blamed for
the international community’s criticism of Baku’s abysmal policy on
human rights and continuous abuses.

Read the entire Forum 18 report.