The 2015 European Games in Azerbaijan: Human Rights Violations Already

As oil-rich Azerbaijan prepares to host next year’s inaugural ‘European Games,’ the Azerbaijani government has stepped up its crackdown on activists speaking out against its abysmal human rights record.

Originally published on

TriplePundit.com

by Michael Kourabas

As oil-rich

Azerbaijan

prepares to host next year’s inaugural ‘

European Games

,’ the Azerbaijani government has stepped up its crackdown on activists speaking out against its abysmal human rights record.  As of this writing, more than 20 human rights defenders have been detained by the government,

including

four of the country’s most prominent activists.

Meanwhile, the European Games’

lead organizer

has claimed that it is not his job to criticize the host country;

denied

any knowledge of the government’s oppressive habits; and

declared

Azerbaijan an “incredibly free society.” Current and future corporate sponsors of the games should take notice and carefully consider their decision to be affiliated with the event.


Azerbaijan and the 2012 Eurovision Song Contest

The last major world event Azerbaijan

hosted

was the 2012

Eurovision Song Contest

, which was also the post-Soviet Republic’s real debut on the world stage.  Prior to the singing competition, the Azerbaijani government took the usual steps taken by an authoritarian state before it invites international attention — it “beautified” the city and created a land seemingly devoid of dissent or criticism.

In the eyes of Azerbaijani

President Ilham Aliyev

, “beautification” meant the

forcible eviction

of homeowners and the demolition of partially-occupied buildings in order to make room for Eurovision-related development projects in Baku, Azerbaijan’s capital.  Prior to the contest, dozens of families were

evicted

from the neighborhood that would eventually be home to the main Eurovision arena. At times, these evictions came without warning or took place in the middle of the night.

The run-up to Eurovision was also marked by a crackdown on civil society and the attempted creation of a “criticism-free” zone, a tactic not unique to the Aliyev government (and frighteningly reminiscent of a

Nazi propaganda campaign

 before the 1936 Olympics in Berlin).  In Baku

in 2012

, journalists critical of the regime were prosecuted and detained, human rights activists were imprisoned, and protests were quelled.

The Aliyev regime’s brutal tactics continued into 2013.  In order to facilitate the creation of the controversial Winter Garden development in Baku, the Azerbaijani government waged a

similar campaign

of displacement and destruction, effectively rendering homeless anyone in the

planned footprint of the park-cum-shopping mall

.  Likewise, the weeks and months preceding the (not even remotely free and fair) October presidential elections were

marred

by a familiar war against dissenting voices, including the enactment of numerous draconian laws meant to curtail Azerbaijani rights to freedom of assembly, association and expression.


The 2015 European Games and the persecution of human rights activists

Which brings us to present day and Azerbaijan’s role as host of the European Games.*

Given the rosy picture painted by the Azerbaijani government’s house-cleaning projects prior to Eurovision, as well as ongoing

threats

by President Aliyev to wage war against Armenia, human rights activists were justifiably afraid of what the European Games might bring, and they sought to use the prospect of international attention to raise awareness of the regime’s human rights record.  Unfortunately, the government’s response was swift, unlawful and wholly in keeping with past practice.

In the first two weeks of August, the government escalated its crackdown on civil society, rounding up and detaining

Leyla Yunus

, one of the country’s leading human rights defenders; Yunus’ husband, historian

Arif Yunus

;

Rasul Jafarov

, an outspoken critic of politically-motivated prosecutions in Azerbaijan; and long-time activist and lawyer

Intigam Aliyev

. All were charged with trumped-up violations of Azerbaijani law — including drug-possession, treason and tax-evasion — and will likely be held indefinitely (and without due process) unless international pressure is brought to bear.


The responsibility of business and the European Games’ organizers

So here we are preparing for another international sporting event, and it feels like Sochi all over again.  As

I wrote

before the kickoff of the 2014 Winter Olympics, the International Olympic Committee, as organizer of the Sochi Games, had a duty under the

U.N. Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights

to ensure that Russia’s Olympics-related activities did not contribute to or cause human rights violations.  Russia’s reprehensible behavior in preparation for Sochi is well documented, as is the

failure

 of the IOC to do anything about it; yet, there is still time for the European Games’

Organizing Committee

to take a stand.  Unfortunately, the committee has thus far attempted to ignore the situation in Azerbaijan and has claimed that “politics” are

not within

the committee’s purview.

International sporting events like the Olympics or the European Games also raise questions about the roles and responsibilities of corporate sponsors, as

Christine Bader

and others, including Susan McPherson and Laura Clise

in an article on Triple Pundit

, pointed outduring Sochi.  As pressure

mounted

, a

few

Sochi sponsors spoke out against Russia’s

anti-LGBT laws and actions

, but none pulled their sponsorship.  The European Games already count massive corporations

like BP

among the official corporate sponsors.  Hopefully, BP and others will re-think their business relationships the games — and with the Aliyev government.  Until then, their sponsorship implies tacit approval of the Azerbaijani government and its tactics as it prepares for the 2015 games.


The UN’s trip

Coincidentally, this past Monday also marked the first day of a timely United Nations’ Business and Human Rights

Working Group


visit

to Azerbaijan.  According to the

Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights

, the Working Group will examine “current initiatives, opportunities and challenges to implement [

sic

] the U.N. Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights in Azerbaijan.”  In addition to meeting with government authorities and companies, the Working Group will

speak to

civil society organizations, trade unions and other stakeholders.

Of course, the Working Group is visiting Azerbaijan at the

behest of

President Aliyev, so it is unlikely that the government will boast about its recent crackdown and/or what role (if any) business has played in allowing that to happen.  However, the week-long visit should at least provide a brief respite for activists in the country, and one hopes that the Working Group gets a clear picture of the human rights challenges facing the country at this crucial time.  Thus far, however, the Group has been silent on recent events in Baku.

__________

* One would be forgiven for not knowing much (if anything) about the European Games.  Announced in 2012, the 2015 games in Baku will be the

first ever

.  Ten of the 19 sports held at the games will serve as

qualifying

events for European athletes hoping to compete in the 2016 Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,

including

such classic Olympic draws as table tennis, archery and taekwondo.  In order to become the European Games’ first host country, Azerbaijan won a competition against … no other country in the world, actually, as Baku was the

only city

on the planet to bid for the honor.


Image courtesy of

Baku 2015 European Games

Ana səhifəNewsThe 2015 European Games in Azerbaijan: Human Rights Violations Already