Access to information is the key to transparency and accountability

On 14 December the Tajik Union of Journalists, NANSMIT and TAJANESMI jointly with the OSCE Bureau in Dushanbe held a round table to discuss the issues of access to information.

Participants of the round table discussed legal and practical issues of access to information. Particular attention was paid to the recent government decree “On the order of payment for information to government bodies”. Agenda of the round table is available here: http://www.nansmit.tj/?page=events&id=86

Abdufattokh Vokhidov, expert of the Tajik National Association of Independent Media (NANSMIT) expresses the opinion of his colleagues saying that, “This decree is not in compliance with legal guarantees for the media, and it can impede access to information”.
Abdusator Nuraliev, professor of the Russian-Tajik Slavic University also stated that “Publicly important information cannot be commercial”. “The Tajik Constitution and the Media Law guarantee the right of media professional to acquire information”, – he added.
Note: On 31 October 2009 the Government of Tajikistan endorsed the Decree “On the order of remuneration to state institutions and organizations for provision of information”.

Khovar, State News Agency

Kazakh Court Rejects Appeal By Jailed Journalist

The Zhambyl regional appeals court in southern Kazakhstan has upheld the verdict against jailed independent journalist Ramazan Esergepov, RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service reports.

Esergepov’s wife, Raushan Esergepova, told RFE/RL that her husband intends to appeal to Kazakhstan’s Supreme Court.

Esergepov, the owner and chief editor of the Almaty-based weekly «Alma-Ata Inform,» was sentenced to three years of jail this summer for revealing state secrets in an article printed in his newspaper in November 2008.

The weekly has since stopped publishing.

Esergepov and his relatives say the case against him is politically motivated.

Esergepov was arrested by the Committee of National Security (KNB) in January.

His wife says he has not been allowed to be represented by his own lawyer since he was arrested and forced to have a state-appointed attorney defend him.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Kazakh_Court_Rejects_Appeal_By_Jailed_Journalist/1903662.html

Kyrgyz Analyst Beaten, Robbed In Bishkek

BISHKEK — A Kyrgyz political analyst was severely beaten and robbed in Bishkek late on December 9, RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz Service reports.

Four assailants attacked Aleksandr Knyazev near his apartment and took his briefcase and laptop.

Knyazev said one of the assailants shouted, «That is for your politics!» as he left the scene of the attack.

Knyazev is as a well-known political analyst who has often criticized the foreign policy of Kyrgyzstan’s current government.

He is also the director of the Bishkek branch of the Commonwealth of Independent States Institute.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Kyrgyz_Analyst_Beaten_Robbed_In_Bishkek/1900456.html

Kyrgyz High Court Returns Journalist’s Murder Case To Osh Court

The Kyrgyz Supreme Court has ruled that the case of slain journalist Alisher Saipov should be sent back to an Osh city court for further investigation, RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz Service reports.

Sapiov’s father, Avaz Saipov, initiated the Supreme Court appeal, hoping that his son’s murder would be reinvestigated by a different court.

But the Supreme Court’s ruling means the same court will be conducting the fresh investigation.

Former policeman Abdufarid Rasulov has been accused of involvement in Saipov’s murder and was awaiting trial.

Twenty-six-year-old Alisher Saipov, who was murdered in broad daylight in 2007, was an ethnic Uzbek and editor in chief of an Osh-based newspaper who often wrote articles critical of Uzbek President Islam Karimov and his government.

He also worked as a correspondent for RFE/RL and Voice of America.

In 2007 Saipov was shot dead as he left his office in central Osh.

His father told RFE/RL that he was unhappy with today’s Supreme Court decision.

He insisted he has evidence that shows his son was killed by agents from Uzbekistan in retaliation for the critical articles he wrote.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Kyrgyz_High_Court_Returns_Journalists_Murder_Case_To_Osh_Court/1899852.

Number Of Jailed Freelance Journalists Soars, CPJ Finds

The number of freelance journalists jailed around the world has almost doubled in the past three years and reflects a changing global news business, the Committee to Protect Journalists said today.

A report by the New York-based press freedom group found that as of December 1 there were 136 reporters, editors, and photojournalists behind bars, an increase of 11 from 2008. Almost half of those jailed are freelance media members.

It said the number of freelance media jailed had grown as the Internet allowed more journalists to work independently and some news organizations started relying on freelancers rather than staff for international coverage to cut costs.

«The days when journalists went off on dangerous assignments knowing they had the full institutional weight of their media organizations behind them are receding into history,» said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon.

«Today, journalists on the front lines are increasingly working independently. The rise of online journalism has opened the door to a new generation of reporters, but it also means they are vulnerable,» he said in a statement.

China was found to have jailed the most journalists for the 11th year in a row, holding 24 members of the media, followed by Iran, Cuba, Eritrea, and Burma, the report found.

Most of the 23 journalists jailed in Iran were detained during a crackdown on protesters and media after the June reelection of President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, CJP said.

Cuba is holding 22 journalists, 20 of whom were jailed when former leader Fidel Castro targeted independent press in 2003. Eritrea has imprisoned 19 journalists and Burma is holding nine.

Another 21 countries have jailed journalists, the report found, including the United States, which has detained for more than a year a freelance Iraqi journalist who worked for Reuters.

The number of online journalists in jail continued to rise to 68 this year. Print reporters, editors, and photographers account for 51 and television, radio, and documentary filmmakers make up the rest.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Number_Of_Jailed_Freelance_Journalists_Soars_CPJ_Finds/1898740.html

Radio Vatan expands broadcasting, covering Khatlon

On 6 December Radio Vatan launched broadcasting in Khatlon province of Tajikistan at the frequency 102,4 FM.

So far, Khatlon province was covered only by government radio and TV stations. Radio Vatan has become the first private radio station that received a license for broadcasting in country regions.

The radio company intends to organize broadcasting 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Radio Vatan appeared on 7 May 2003. Vatan’s information service is an official partner of the Tajik news agency Avesta and the Deutche Welle World Service. Vatan produces news programs every 30 minutes in Russian and Tajik languages.
Estimated audience of Radio Vatan is 2,5 million listeners.

Avesta

President Rakhmon is going to meet with Tajik journalists

President of Tajikistan Emomali Rakhmon is going to hold a meeting with representatives of the mass media on 8 December in Dushanbe.

According to the President’s executive office, Rakhmon is going to discuss problems of the media, and issues of interaction between private media with ministries and other government agencies.

It is expected that the meeting will be held in the form of discussion, which will touch upon the influence of the mass media on Tajikistan’s economy.

Avesta

Tajikistan, Russia Agree To Fight Drug-Related Crime

DUSHANBE — Tajik and Russian officials signed an agreement in Dushanbe today to fight drug-related crime, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reports.

The agreement was signed by the head of Tajikistan’s antidrug agency, Lieutenant General Rustam Nazarov, and Russian Ambassador to Tajikistan Yury Popov.

Nazarov said after signing the agreement that it creates a new framework for joint efforts to fight drug trafficking and to rehabilitate drug addicts.

Popov said it opens new ways for various Russian and Tajik ministries to crack down on drug-related businesses.

The Tajik Interior Ministry told RFE/RL that officials have confiscated some 4,200 kilograms of illegal drugs, including 1,046 kilograms of heroin this year.

Some Tajik analysts told RFE/RL that they hope the agreement will help remove Russian stereotypes about Tajiks and their involvement in drugs.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Tajikistan_Russia_Agree_To_Fight_DrugRelated_Crime/1895206.html

Tajik Wrongly Imprisoned In Russia Finds Justice In Strasbourg

Aspiring veterinarian Rahmatullo Nazarov was at work at a poultry farm on the outskirts of Dushanbe in late November when he received the news he had been waiting for.

It came in the form of a verdict from the European Court of Human Rights, which ruled in favor of the 29-year-old Tajik citizen’s complaint against Russia.

Nazarov had turned to the Strasbourg-based court to seek justice for the inhumane treatment he suffered while imprisoned in Russia for three years on drug charges. The court supported Nazarov’s claims that his right to freedom and personal security had been violated, and ordered Russia to pay more than 18,000 euros ($27,000) in compensation.

Nazarov tells RFE/RL’s Tajik Service that the ruling marks the first step toward justice and the restoration of his honor.

«The same people who turned their backs on me came to tell me: ‘We heard the radio reports and want to congratulate you on your court victory and ask for forgiveness. Sorry we had bad thoughts about you,’” Nazarov says. “This was my first victory.»

Nazarov waited nearly six years for that victory.

He recalls that in April 2004 he had only three months left to go to complete the postgraduate studies in Russia that would make him a veterinary surgeon. But his dream was derailed when he was arrested on the streets of Vladimir, located 200 kilometers east of Moscow, and charged with the possession of a large amount of drugs.

According to the verdict of the European Court of Human Rights, Nazarov was placed in custody on the basis that «he had been charged with a serious crime and that, if he remained at liberty, he could have absconded or interfered with the investigation or continued his unlawful activities.»

Nazarov’s pretrial detention went on for 23 months. When his trial in a Russian court finally began, prosecutors sought a nine-year prison sentence on charges of dealing drugs. He eventually was found guilty of lesser possession charges and sentenced to three years in prison, minus the nearly two years he had already served.

Nazarov says he endured threats, beatings, and terrible conditions in prison, but maintained his innocence throughout.

«I knew that I was innocent, even though the Russian investigators wanted [to prove] the contrary,” Nazarov says. “This allowed me to cope with all the terrible conditions, hunger, and a lack of water in prison and to survive those inhumane conditions.”

“It was very difficult for me, for a child of an educated family, a postgraduate student, to fall from such a high position,” he says. “Sometimes we had just one bed for three or four inmates and we slept on it in turns.»

Long Search For Justice

Nazarov filed complaints with various Russian courts in an attempt to clear his name.

When none of his complaints were successful, he turned to the European Court of Human Rights, one of the most powerful checks on governmental abuse in Europe. As a member of the Council of Europe, which oversees the court, Russia is obliged to obey its rulings.

Tracey Turner-Tretz, a spokeswoman for the Strasbourg court, tells RFE/RL that Nazarov’s complaint centered on the poor conditions he endured while in pretrial detention, the excessive length of his custody as he awaited trial, and Russian judicial authorities’ failure to examine his appeals in a speedy fashion.

«The court found Russia breached Article 3 and 5 [of the European Convention on Human Rights] on all the counts invoked by Mr. Nazarov and awarded him 15,000 euros nonpecuniary damage and 3,500 euros for costs and expenses,» Turner-Tretz explains.

Nazarov’s lawyer, Mikhail Ovchinnikov, tells RFE/RL that he and his client are satisfied with the court’s decision, made on November 26. Ovchinnikov expects Russia to pay the settlement after 90 days.

The Russian side “can appeal to the Grand Chamber, but such appeals are not usually upheld,” Ovchinnikov said. “We bear in mind that all the judges ruled in favor of Nazarov, so we are sure that this victory is final.»

Not An Uncommon Story

After being freed from Russian prison in 2007, Nazarov returned to Tajikistan. Today he is married and has a young daughter.

But in search of justice and the restoration of his honor, Nazarov plans to take one more step — returning to Russia to complete his studies and receive his degree.

Nazarov’s case is not the first time a Tajik citizen has won a ruling against Russia at the European Court of Human Rights.

In 2008, Tajik citizen Doniyor Khudoyorov was awarded 50,000 euros ($75,000) after the court ruled in favor of his complaint stemming from his 1999 arrest in Russia on drug-related charges. Khudoyorov was freed in 2004 after Russian investigators failed to provide evidence to back the charges against him.

The experiences of Nazarov and Khudoyorov in Russia are not unique among Tajiks living in Russia.

Officially, about 300,000 to 400,000 Tajiks travel to Russia for seasonal work as migrants, although unofficial estimates place that number at closer to 1 million.

According to Russian data, about 3,500 Tajik citizens are currently imprisoned in Russia, most charged with drug possession or drug dealing.

Said Boev, a Tajik migrant in Moscow, acknowledges that some Tajiks living in Russia are involved in illegal activities. But he says they are the exception, not the norm, and that in most cases charges against them are groundless.

Boev claims that Russian police target Tajiks because they know they are afraid of the police and are not likely to contest their treatment. «Our citizens never complain to Russian Interior Ministry offices or the Russian authorities. They try to avoid it,» Boev said.

And this, Boev says, makes it easy for the Russian police to prove migrants’ «guilt.»

Iskander Aliev, Khiromon Bakoeva, Tohir Safarov

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/content/Tajik_Wrongly_Imprisoned_In_Russia_Finds_Justice_In_Strasbourg/1895480.

Tajik Activist Surprised At Kyrgyz Entry Ban

DUSHANBE — Tajik human rights activist Nigina Bakhrieva says the decision by Kyrgyz officials to ban her from entering Kyrgyzstan was a great surprise, RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz Service reports.

Bakhrieva told RFE/RL that border guards at Bishkek’s Manas Airport did not allow her to enter the country on December 2 when she arrived and told her she cannot enter Kyrgyzstan until 2019.

No explanations for the refusal were given.

Bakhrieva says she was invited by the Kyrgyz nongovernmental organization Voice of Liberty to take part in training for employees in the Kyrgyz ombudsman’s office.

She said rights activists will ask Ombudsman Tursunbek Akun to seek an official explanation for the ban against her.

Bakhrieva said she has traveled to Kyrgyzstan regularly since 2004 and it is «a pity» she will not be able to go there for 10 years.

She added that she has never been involved in politics and went to Bishkek as a human rights expert for seminars held by the United Nations’ office in Bishkek.

Bakhrieva said she has a visa to take part in a conference in the Turkmen capital, Ashgabat, next week «so I do not have any problems entering Turkmenistan, but I now have problems to enter the so-called ‘island of democracy’ in Central Asia, Kyrgyzstan.»

Bakhrieva was one of the experts who filed a report on the situation in the southern Kyrgyz village of Nookat where, in October 2008, Nookat residents protested after not being allowed to celebrate in a stadium the Eid al-Fitr festival marking the end of Ramadan.

Dozens of people were sentenced to jail for «organizing unsanctioned mass gatherings that led to mass disorder.»

Human rights activists consider the incident a politically motivated move against practicing Muslims.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Tajik_Activist_Surprised_At_Kyrgyz_Entry_Ban/1894996.html