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Council of Europe Launches Investigation into Azerbaijani Corruption

by Contributor
May 31, 2017
in International, Latest, News, Top Stories
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Azerbaijani Minister for Foreign Affairs Elmar Mammadyarov (left) talks about the priorities his country will have during its six-month chairmanship of the Council of Europe in Vienna on May 6. Amid criticism of his country on liberties issues, Mammadyarov vowed to show "strong support" for human rights by making it one of the pillars of the chairmanship. (Photo: Council of Europe/Sandro Weltin)
Azerbaijani Minister for Foreign Affairs Elmar Mammadyarov (left) speaks during a Council of Europe session in Vienna on May 6.  (Photo: Council of Europe/Sandro Weltin)

STRASBOURG, France (BBC)—Europe’s top human rights watchdog, the Council of Europe, has launched an investigation into alleged corruption at the council involving Azerbaijan.

The criticisms concern some members of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), accused of doing favors for Azerbaijan.

The oil-rich ex-Soviet state has cracked down on political dissidents.

There are suspicions that Azerbaijan influenced PACE’s rejection of a report on Azeri political prisoners in 2013.

Azerbaijan is among the 47 member nations of the Strasbourg-based Council of Europe.

The council – not part of the EU – monitors compliance with the European Convention on Human Rights, and judges in Strasbourg enforce it.

In January 2013 PACE rejected a report by German Social Democrat MP Christoph Strässer, which deplored human rights abuses in Azerbaijan and urged the authorities there to release political prisoners.

Azerbaijani police round up opposition activists (Photo: Agence France-Presse)
Azerbaijani police round up opposition activists (Photo: Agence France-Presse)

The Azeri government denies that charges against opposition activists are politically motivated.

Opponents of President Ilham Aliyev have been jailed on various charges, including tax evasion, spying and weapons possession.

Top judges

Three top international human rights lawyers will investigate the PACE corruption allegations and will report their findings by the end of 2017. They can recommend action against any PACE members implicated in corruption.

The investigators are:

  • Sir Nicholas Bratza from the UK, a former president of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR)
  • Jean-Louis Bruguière, a top anti-terrorism judge from France
  • Elisabet Fura, a Swedish former judge at the ECHR

PACE elects the judges at the ECHR, whose human rights rulings are binding on Council of Europe states.

As part of the inquiry, PACE plans to revise its code of conduct.

An investigation published in December by the European Stability Initiative (ESI), a human rights think-tank, alleged that some parliamentarians in PACE had engaged in political lobbying for Azerbaijan. There were claims that some received Azeri payments.

Azerbaijan bans online insults to leader

In March a top Council of Europe official, Secretary General Thorbjorn Jagland, wrote to PACE President Pedro Agramunt, urging him “to establish an independent external investigation body without any further delay.”

A large group of European MPs in PACE made a similar plea in January. They said PACE’s integrity was threatened by “recent, serious and credible allegations of grave misconduct” by some fellow MPs.

Civil society groups in Europe sent an open letter to PACE in April, saying an independent investigation must “shed light on hidden practices that favor corruption.”

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