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Contest for young film directors open

Young directors of documentary, fiction and animated films from around the world can participate in this contest.

The international film school festival and workshop “Kinoproba” is organized by the Sverdlovsk Region Ministry of Culture and the Ural Department of Cinematographers Union of RF. The festival and contest will take place in Yekaterinburg, Russia, from December 1 — 4. The four-day festival program ranges from master-classes focused mainly on a professional audience to information programs for a nonprofessional audience.

Applications are accepted from film schools in Russia and abroad, as well as from independent filmmakers and studios.

Submitted films should be no longer than 30 minutes, and produced no earlier than January 2012. Submissions must be by a student or a debut work of a director.

Deadline for applications is Oct. 1.

For more information, click herehttp://kinoprobafest.com/english/129/

Picture Dignity photo contest open

Professional and amateur photographers from around the world can enter this contest.

Picture Dignity 2013, sponsored by +Acumen, is a photography contest aimed at inspiring the global community to define, illustrate and show what dignity means to them.

Photographs must be in digital format and have been taken in the past two years.

The winner will receive a US$500 grand prize. The top 30 finalists will win a subscription of 500px, a photo sharing platform.

The deadline to enter is Sept. 1.

For more information, click herehttp://picturedignity.strutta.com/about

LinkedIn training for journalists offered

Journalists can attend this free online session.

LinkedIn is offering a tutorial and a free one-year upgrade to LinkedIn Executive. The 35-minute session will take place at 2:30 p.m. EDT on Aug. 15.

The tutorial will be led by Yumi Wilson, journalism professor at San Francisco State University and community manager of LinkedIn for Journalists.

The session and access to LinkedIn Executive is available to all professional journalists and members of the media. To join the session, participants must be logged in to their LinkedIn account. LinkedIn will provide a call-in number, depending on where participants are located.

For more information, click herehttp://www.linkedin.com/groups/JOURNOS-NEXT-LFJ-tutorial-is-3753151.S.259422148?qid=9af663c2-c502-4e90-a996-2d0590fb62e6&trk=group_most_popular-0-b-ttl&goback=%2Egmp_3753151

Photojournalism contest provides €50,000 grant

Photojournalists worldwide can participate in this contest.

The Carmignac Gestion Foundation is accepting applications for the fourth annual Carmignac Gestion Photojournalism Award. The foundation awards those who wish to go where others will not, visiting zones that are largely ignored by the mainstream media. The topic of this year’s competition is Iran.

Every year, a EUR€50,000 (US$66,170) grant is awarded to fund a photo series completed over a period of several months on a specific, topical subject. The foundation promotes the award via an exhibition and the publication of a monograph. It also purchases four of the photographs included in the report.

The application deadline is Sept. 30.

For more information, click herehttp://www.fondation-carmignac.com/photojournalism-award/call-for-candidates/

International peace fellowship open

Journalists whose work addresses international peace and security challenges can apply for this fellowship.

The United States Institute of Peace (USIP) Jennings Randolph (JR) Senior Fellowship provides scholars, policy analysts, policy makers, journalists and other experts with opportunities to spend time at the Institute in D.C., reflecting and writing on proposed projects.

Priority is given to proposals deemed likely to make timely and significant contributions to the understanding and resolution of ongoing and emerging conflicts and other challenges to international peace and security. Projects will also be chosen based on the quality of project design and its ability to be implemented, as well as the candidate’s project track record and potential as a fellow.

Senior Fellowships usually last for 10 months, starting in October, but shorter-term fellowships are also available. Fellowships are open to citizens of any country. Fellows will contribute to the collegial life of the Institute by presenting their work and participating in workshops, conferences and other events. The editorial staff of the Institute will work closely with Fellows to develop manuscripts for consideration by the Institute Press or for publication as Institute reports.

The program attempts to match the recipient’s earned income during the year preceding the fellowships, up to a maximum of US$100,000 for 10 months. In certain cases and budget permitting, the Institute will provide coverage of 80 percent of health premiums for the fellow and eligible dependents, with a cap of $500 per month. Fellowship housing will not be provided. Each Fellow is given part-time research assistance during the fellowship.

The application deadline is Sept. 6.

For more information, click herehttp://www.usip.org/grants-fellowships/jennings-randolph-senior-fellowship-program/senior-fellowship-application-informa#Fellowship_Activities

Knight Center offers free online course on data journalism

Journalists, designers, developers and public information officers can register for this free online course.

The Knight Center for Journalism in the Americas has brought together five experts, including practitioners from The New York Times, ProPublica, NPR and the Houston Chronicle, to teach the Massive Open Online Course (or MOOC) in English, “Data-Driven Journalism: The Basics.”

The MOOC will give participants an overview of what data-driven journalism is and how it is practiced in newsrooms in the United States. Besides learning about the basics of this increasingly vital discipline, students will learn how data is used in the media industry today, where to locate data, how to clean and analyze it critically, and how to optimize the presentation of information for maximum readability and interactivity.

The five-week course, from Aug. 12 to Sept. 16, will have a different instructor leading the class each week. The instructors and the topics they will cover are:

  • Amy Schmitz Weiss, San Diego State University – Intro to Data Journalism
  • Lise Olsen, Houston Chronicle – Where to Find Data and the Stories
  • Derek Willis, The New York Times – How to Interview the Data
  • Jeremy Bowers, National Public Radio – How to Bring Data to Life, Part 1
  • Sisi Wei, ProPublica – How to Bring Data to Life, Part 2

For more information, click herehttps://knightcenter.utexas.edu/00-14174-team-experts-teach-knight-centers-new-mooc-data-driven-journalism-basics-register-now

Deadline approaching: writing contest on freedom

Competitors will submit their works on the importance of freedom for the Bastiat Prize for Journalism.

The Reason Foundation is presenting the 12th Annual Bastiat Prize for Journalism. The prize is named after Frédéric Bastiat, the classical liberal essayist whose writings on free markets, political economy and individual rights remain a touchstone in libertarian thought.

Submissions are judged by their intellectual coherence, persuasiveness, wit and creativity, relevance, clarity and simplicity and wider impact.

Participants can enter more than one article, but the materials should be no more than 5,000 words combined. Articles must have been published for the first time between July 1, 2012 and June 30, 2013.

The Bastiat Prize is open to all writers, anywhere in the world; writers need not be full-time journalists or associated with any specific publication.

The first place winner will receive US$10,000, and second and third places will receive US$5,000 and US$1,000, respectively.

The deadline is July 31.

For more information, click herehttp://reason.org/news/show/bastiat-prize-2013

Freedom of Speech in Tajikistan July 2013

Freedom of Speech in Tajikistan

July 2013

In July 2013, the Monitoring Service received 31 reports. Seventeen of them describe the factual situation in the media in the light of social, legal and political environment; six reports describe direct violations of rights of media professionals; and eight reports describe conflicts and accusations against the media and journalists.

I. POLITICAL, SOCIAL, ADMINISTRATIVE AND LEGAL ENVIRONMENT DEFINING THE FACTUAL SITUATION IN THE MEDIA

1. Statements and actions of public officials defining the factual status of the mass media

2 July

General Jurakhon Zoirov, Ministry of Interior, Dushanbe

General Jurakhon Zoirov, representative of the Tajik Ministry of Interior stated that Tajikistan is facing a new problem – the growing number of crimes committed in the Internet using modern technologies.

Speaking at the Regional Conference in Dushanbe on countering cyber crimes, the official stated that cyber crimes are a threat to the national information security in Tajikistan. The Interior Ministry created a special task force to counter these crimes. “Such Internet resources as www.irshod.ru are receiving support from extremist organizations and illegal movements.

11 July

Rakhmatillo Zoirov, Social-democratic Party, Dushanbe

Rakhmatillo Zoirov, chairman of the Tajik Judicial Consortium and the leader of the Social-democratic Party of Tajikistan stated that the lawsuit against the Tajik weekly Asia Plus and its editor Olga Tutubalina is objectless and ungrounded.

In his statement published on Facebook, Zoirov said that he has thoroughly analyzed the article by Olga Tutubalina, as well as the text of the claimants’ accusation. “This case has gone beyond the limits of a routine lawsuit and now it has political and ideological features”. “It should be noted that Tutubalina only expresses her personal thoughts in the article, which does not contain any words insulting the intelligentsia”.

12 July

Karomatullo Olimov, Academy of Sciences, Dushanbe

“Olga Tutubalina, the author of the article in the Asia Plus weekly, should have considered the culture of the Tajik people and keep in her mind that the western standards differ from the oriental ones”, — Karomatullo Olimov, vice president of the Tajik Academy of Sciences was quoted as saying at a press conference held on 11 July in Dushanbe.

The official also noted that Tutubalina is known in the Tajik society as a journalist who touches upon serious problems in her publications, and people do respect her for that. “However, the insulting of the intelligentsia is not acceptable. Thus, the Academy of Sciences supports the creative unions that took a legal action at the economic court to protect their honor, dignity and business reputation”.

12 July

Asadullo Rakhmonov, chairman, State Broadcasting Committee, Dushanbe

Asadullo Rakhmonov, chairman of the State Broadcasting Committee under the government expressed bewilderment over accusations and allegations regarding his involvement in the public broadcasting of Emomali Rakhmon sun’s wedding party.

The Tajik opposition activist and the founder of the Vatandor movement Dodojon Atovulloev played the video made at the wedding party of Rustami Emomali (the son of the Tajik president).

We did not have such a video in our archive. You are all professional journalists, and you should get information from reliable sources”, — said Asadullo Rakhmonov. He also deflated the rumor about interrogations of his staff at the National Security Committee.

Commenting on the regular jamming of the K Plus TV channel, which broadcasts from the territory of Kazakhstan, the official said that the government of Tajikistan has nothing to do with that.

12 July

Mekhmon Bakhti, chairman, the Union of Writers, Dushanbe

“Our claim against Olga Tutubalina do not imply limitation of the freedom of speech during the election campaign”, — Mekhmon Bakhti, chairman of the Tajik Union of Writers was quoted as saying by the Asia Plus weekly.

The official added that the author of the article published in a popular independent weekly has distorted the words of Vladimir Lenin, and – in his opinion – the author dislikes the nation of Tajiks. He also said that the lawsuit against Tutubalina and the Asia Plus is a joint initiative of the Union of Writers, the Tajik Academy of Sciences and a number of other creative unions.

22 July

Naim Mansurov, chairman, Supreme Economic Court, Dushanbe

Naim Mansurov, chairman of the Supreme Economic Court told the media that the lawsuits related to protection of honor and dignity can be considered by the court if they concern entrepreneurial or economic activities (Asia Plus weekly, #55 (480), 22 July 2013).

However, the judge refused to comment the reasonableness of the lawsuit initiated by the “Tajik intelligentsia” (government-controlled creative unions) against the editor of Asia Plus Olga Tutubalina.

23 July

Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Dushanbe

The Tajik Ministry of Foreign Affairs gave permissions for work to two correspondents of the Sadoi Khuroson Radio.

Abdulfaiz Atoev, head of the Information Department under the Foreign Ministry told Radio Ozodi that the two correspondents of the Iranian radio station Sadoi Khuroson will resume their activities. Three months ago, the Foreign Ministry terminated the accreditation for Ziyoratsho Akhmadov and Aloviddin Kasymov, the two correspondents. The official added that these two journalists submitted improperly filled accreditation application forms and their behavior was provocative. “Now, there won’t be any impediments for their activities”, — Atoev said.

25 July

Mirzoshohrukh Asrori, Minister of Culture, Dushanbe

The Tajik minister of culture Mirzoshohrukh Asrori was quoted by the media as saying that “Olga Tutubalina “has cut it too fat” in her article, having addressed the words of Vladimir Lenin to the Tajik intelligentsia…” However, the minister does not support the lawsuit initiated by the government-controlled creative unions.

“There was no essential necessity to put the law on the journalist. It would have been sufficient to respond to the publication in the media”, — the official said.

2 . Factual situation in the media and the freedom of expression

11 July

NGO Homa, Dushanbe

According to the Najot weekly (#28, 11.07.2013), 68 percent of the population in Tajikistan do not watch the official state television.

These data are taken from a study conducted by the NGTO Homa. Shahlo Akobirova, the chair of the non-governmental organization told the media the audience mainly uses satellite aerials, the Internet and other mass media. The study also says that many entrepreneurs would be willing to create private TV companies, but the Tajik communication authorities create numerous obstacles, mainly related to licensing.

25 July

All media, Dushanbe

The Ebert Foundation, the Asia Plus media group and the NGO Media Consulting conducted a Conference “Problems of the formation of political journalism in Tajikistan”.

Rashid Abdullo, independent political expert, in his presentation at the Conference called the Tajik media “the third political power in the country”. He considers that the Tajik media are rather politicized. “As a political power, the Tajik media are the third after the president and his structures (the first power), and the Islamic Renaissance Party (the second power)”, — he stated. — “The Tajik independent mass media are not only a political power, but also “a political party”; they participate in the formation of political thinking of the masses. The main audience are the citizens longing for better wellbeing”.

31 July

The government Communication Service, Dushanbe

Officials representing the Communication Service under the government stated at a press conference in Dushanbe that the Internet tariffs have been decreasing in the country.

The Communication Service officials said that the tariffs on the Internet have decreased (although insignificantly) compared to the last year, and this trend will continue. “Every Internet provider has his own pricing policy and own tariffication. Most probably, the prices will be going down, but the connection speed will be increased approximately twofold”, — a Communication Service official added.

More than 20 Internet providers are active in Tajikistan at present. The Biggest ones are Babylon, Telecom Technology, and Saturn Online.

According to the Communication Service, 3,8 million residents of Tajikistan have access to the Internet.

3. Journalists protecting their professional rights

1 July

All media, Dushanbe

On 1 July, the Tajik National Association of Independent Mass Media presented a new manual for government bodies’ press secretaries and journalists titled “The power and the media: interaction between public press services and the media”.

This manual was published under support of the Danish NGO International Media Support within the frameworks of the project “Improving access to reliable public information”. While developing the new manual, NANSMIT used and adapted its previous original publications, as well as materials provided by Russian, Kazakh and Tajik counterparts.

5 July

Olga Tutubalina, editor, Asia Plus weekly, Dushanbe

Olga Tutubalina, the editor of the Tajik popular weekly Asia Plus told the media that she is going to appeal against the lawsuit initiated by a group of representatives of the Tajik government-controlled creative unions.

Tutubalina stated that she is going to file a case against Mekhmon Bakhti, the chairman of the Tajik Union of Writers, one of the initiators of the lawsuit against Asia Plus and its editor.

“I have attentively watched all his interviews, and I believe that such original phrases as “She insulted not only the Tajik intelligentsia, but the whole Tajik nation” is a sufficient ground for filing a libel case”, — said Tutubalina. — “And the sentence “there’s a feeling that she dislikes the Tajiks” could be interpreted as incitement of interethnic discord”.

11 July

The Media Council of Tajikistan, Dushanbe

Members of the Media Council of Tajikistan have come to the conclusion that the original article written by Olga Tutubalina contains nothing insulting; neither does it violate any professional or ethical standards.

Kirinshoh Sharifzoda, the head of the Media Council told the media that Tutubalina’s article published in the Asia Plus weekly on 30 May 2013, is an expression of her personal opinion; the publication contains nothing “personally insulting”.

“The Media Council considers that the agiotage around the article is not for the benefit of the society. According to Article 4 of the “Ethical Norms of Journalism in Tajikistan”, an author cannot be persecuted for expressing his/her personal opinion”, — Sharifzoda said. — “Certain ethical norms have been breached in the publications of the author’s opponents”.

In this regard, the Media Council in its statement reminded the Tajik media professionals that journalists should not use the media as a tool for personal contentions.

23 July

The Media Council of Tajikistan, Dushanbe

The Media Council of Tajikistan has commenced the preparation of monthly reports based on the monitoring of ethical standards of journalism. The reports will be regularly published on the Council’s web site www.Odob.tj.

According to Kirinshoh Sharifzoda, the chairman of the Media Council, the project on observance of professional ethical standards in the media is supported by the OSCE office in Tajikistan. The main goal of this project is to promote the principles of self-regulation among the Tajik mass media.

Independent experts will be monitoring more than 40 printing outlets and online resources; after a while, they will develop recommendations for the media to better observe professional ethical standards.

II. VIOLATION OF RIGHTS IN THE MEDIA

1. Freedom of expression

 

8 July

Olga Tutubalina, editor, Asia Plus weekly, Dushanbe

Representatives of the State Visa and Registration Service paid a visit to the Asia Plus weekly to collect information on Olga Tutubalina, the editor of the periodical. The officials explained that they possess information about Tutubalina who has Russian citizenship and resides in Tajikistan without registration, i.e. illegally.

One of the officials explained that the inspection is conducted after the errand given by the Interior Ministry.

Olga Tutubalina told the NANSMIT monitoring service that the Visa and Registration Service officials are perfectly aware that she resides in Dushanbe – she was born here and has lived here most of the time, and – respectfully – she has all proper documents. At the same time, she has a dual citizenship – Tajik and Russian.

2. Limitation of access to information

5 July

TV Station K Plus

The Central Asia TV Channel K Plus made a statement complaining that its broadcasting signal is being jammed from the territory of Tajikistan. The K Plus broadcasts through the HotBird satellite.

The text of the statement published on the web portal Respublica.kz says that the programs hosting Dodojon Atovullo, the leader of the Vatandor political movement were jammed especially intensively, as well as programs broadcast in Tajik language.

The statement also says that the jamming of the K Plus also affects the whole transponder, i.e. the package of different TV channels broadcasting from Europe and central Asia.

11 July

State television, Dushanbe

The Asia Plus weekly (#52, 11.07.2013) raised an issue of access of political parties to the mass media during the election campaign.

Asia Plus expresses concern over the probable lack of access to the media, mainly to the state TV stations. The publication indicates that the government-controlled TV channels cut off video segments, which depict leaders of the opposition political parties.

According to Saidumar Khusaini, representative of the Islamic Renaissance Party in the tajik parliament, “It is quite obvious that the TV-makers show only the “needful” parliamentarians; the opposition is practically invisible at the parliament sessions screened on TV”.

3. Honor, dignity and business reputation

 

19 July

Imruz News weekly, Dushanbe

On 19 July, the Economic Court in Dushanbe ruled that an article in the Imruz News weekly is defaming and obliged the newspaper to publish a formal denial and pay a moral compensation to the complainant in the amount of 30 thousand Somoni.

Earlier this year, the Tojiron company approached the Economic Court with a complaint against the Imruz News weekly demanding a moral compensation in the amount of 50 thousand Somoni (more than $10 thousand) for dissemination of information defaming the honor and reputation.

Naziri Nusrat, the editor of Imruz News told the media that his periodical does not agree with the court’s verdict and the newspapers is going to appeal to the Supreme Economic Court.

4. Appeal against the court decision in supervisory procedure

18 July

Imruz News weekly, Dushanbe

On 18 July, the Imruz News weekly appealed to the Presidium of the City Court in Dushanbe against the verdict of the lawsuit initiated by Rustam Khukumov.

In early June, the City Court obliged the newspaper to pay a moral compensation to Rustam Khukumov, the son of a Tajik high-ranking official and relative to the Tajik president in the amount of 50 thousand Somoni as a moral compensation for an article published in Imruz News.

III. CONFLICTS. VIOLATIONS

 

1. Accusation of extortion and fraud

1 July

Makhmadyusuf Ismoilov, freelance journalist, Khujand, Sughd province

Makhmadyusuf Ismoilov, a freelance journalist from Sughd province is charged with extortion and fraud. Ismoilov’s lawyer presented a complaint to the Sughd Province Court saying that the defendant has two small children and an elderly disabled sister, of whom he has to take care.

In the last three years, Ismoilov has had troubles with the law enforcement agencies. The first time, he was arrested in November 2010, and for the next 11 months, he was under custody on charges of defamation, insult, incitement of ethnic and religious hate and extortion. The court then imposed a fine on him in the amount of 35 thousand Somoni, and barred him from journalistic activities for three years. Later, the cassation court amnestied Ismoilov, and he was released from punishment.

2. Protection of honor, dignity and business reputation, moral compensation

5 July

Olga Tutubalina, editor, Asia Plus weekly

The Asia Plus weekly (#51, 8.07.2013) published an article titled “The intelligentsia has sued Olga Tutubalina”.

Representatives of the government-controlled creative unions filed a lawsuit against the journalist demanding a moral compensation from the author of the article and the newspaper in the amount of 200 thousand Somoni (more than $40 thousand).

The complainants also require to conduct a linguistic expertise and to arrest Tutubalina’s assets and property. The main complainant is the Union of Writers of Tajikistan; the co-complainants are the Tajik Academy of Sciences, the Union of Artists, the union of Composers, the Union of Architects, and certain individuals.

“We consider that the publication in Asia Plus defames business reputation of a big group of people, i.e. the social group comprising individuals involved in intellectual labor, who have specific educational background (engineers, physicians, teachers, lawyers, scientists, workers of arts, public servants)”, — the statement says.

11 July

The Samak newspaper, Dushanbe

The Firdavsi District Count in Dushanbe shelved the complaint of Askar Khakim, the Tajik poet and former chairman of the tajik Union of Writers against the Samak weekly.

Askar Khakim filed a lawsuit against the newspaper demanding a moral compensation in the amount of 150 thousand Somoni ($1 = 4,75 TJS) after a publication in the periodical.

According to Samak’s lawyer Inoyat Inoyatov, the courts usually “shelve” complaints when they do not meet certain legal requirements or when particular documents are missing.

The “shelving” implies that the complainant has a chance to rectify mistakes or to present missing documents.

The lawyer added that the complainant also failed to pay a state fee, which must constitute 7 percent of the required moral compensation amount.

18 July

Olga Tutubalina, editor, Asia Plus weekly, Dushanbe

The Economic Court in Dushanbe dismissed the statement of claim against the editor of the Asia Plus weekly Olga Tutubalina.

The Court arrived at the decision that the dispute between the conflicting parties stands beyond the Economic Court’s competence.

 

 

Independent Uzbek Website ‘Suspends’ Work

The head of the independent UzMetronom.com news and information website, Sergei Yezhkov, has announced he is indefinitely suspending the site’s activities.

Fergananews.com on July 25 posted a letter on its site from Uzbekistan’s military prosecutor warning UzMetronom.com’s management about violations of the law.

The letter cited reports about the July 23 shooting along the Uzbek-Kyrgyz border that left two Uzbek border guards dead.

Yezhkov said he would attempt to find journalists outside Uzbekistan who specialize in reporting about the country to run the website.

He said he didn’t know how long the situation would last.

Yezhkov described the decision to stop publishing from inside Uzbekistan as a «time out» and not cessation of the website’s work.

UzMetronom.com has been posting reports about Uzbekistan since 2006.

Based on reporting by UzMetronom.com and Fergananews.com

http://www.rferl.org/content/uzbekistan-uzmetronom-website-closed/25056722.html

Baku Doles Out Apartments To Journalists

By Arifa Kazimova, Turxan Karimov and Deana Kjuka

Frequently criticized for its treatment of reporters and its crackdown on free media, Azerbaijan has thought of a way to give back to its journalists — by housing 155 of them in one apartment block.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev inaugurated the Baku building on July 22 — National Press Day — in a move reminiscent of the Soviet-era practice of awarding apartments to writers and other cultural figures.

In a speech at the inauguration ceremony, Aliyev was full of praise for freedom of the press in his country, which Reporters Without Borders ranks 156th on a list documenting freedom of the press in 179 countries.

A sign on the building — located in the Bibiheybat settlement — quotes Aliyev: «It’s a great honor to be a friend of journalists.»

In his speech, Aliyev said the housing project shows there is no discrimination in any sphere in Azerbaijan.

«Internet journalism is developing in Azerbaijan as in the world. The state carries out programs on the proliferation of the Internet. So we can say that freedom of speech has been fully ensured,» he said.

‘What’s Free Media?’

Many independent journalists, however, would probably be reluctant to label Aliyev as a «friend.» Earlier this year, the Committee to Protect Journalists called on Azerbaijan to halt its crackdown on the press.

According to the watchdog, imprisoned journalists such as newspaper editor Hilal Mamedov are serving time on politicized charges.

Just last month, the Azerbaijani president signed into law a bill that criminalizes online defamation. The move was criticized by media freedom groups who worry that the law could be used to restrict online dissent and provide obstacles for independent journalists ahead of the country’s presidential election in October.

Vuqar Safarli of the state-run Fund of Mass Media Development, which underwrote the apartment project, noted that independent journalists were also awarded apartments.

READ NEXT: One More ‘Hooligan’ Behind Bars In Azerbaijan
Independent journalists are often harassed and attacked for their work in Azerbaijan. Many have questioned whether the apartment-granting largesse is a government attempt to bribe journalists.

«What’s free media? Free media must have some independence from all of the organizations which they cover, including the government,» Qulu Maharramli, a media expert and professor at Baku State University’s Journalism Department, told RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service. «The main mission of journalism is to facilitate public oversight of the government. How can you criticize the government if you receive an apartment from them? This is why I think it is better to quit than to look for arguments to justify the receiving of apartments from the government.»

More Transparency Urged

In addition, not all journalists were happy with the process by which the apartments were awarded.

Roya Rafiyeva, from the opposition newspaper «Yeni Musavat,» told RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service that her editors were asked by the government’s Press Council to provide a list of journalists who needed apartments.

Rafiyeva said she was told that because of her short employment history at the newspaper — she has worked there for four years — she wasn’t eligible. The newspaper only considered those who had worked for the publication for at least 10 years. She called for a more transparent process in the future, noting that some people who were already owners of apartments were given an apartment anyway.

Written by Deana Kjuka, based on reporting by Arifa Kazimova and Turxan Karimov of RFE/RL’s Azerbaijani Service