Baptist Pastor in Azerbaijan Still in Jail: Prosecution Given Another Chance


By Jeremy Reynalds
Correspondent for ASSIST News Service

AZERBAIJAN (ANS) — The judge in the criminal trial of Baptist pastor Hamid Shabanov in Azerbaijan has not yet convicted him.

Azerbaijan is located in Southwestern Asia, bordering the Caspian Sea, between Iran and Russia, with a small European portion north of the Caucasus range.

Defense lawyer Mirman Aliev told Felix Corley of Forum 18 News Service that he asked for Shabanov to be acquitted, for an end to the criminal case and for him to be freed.

“But the judge was afraid to do so, and instead sent the case back for further investigation,” Aliev told Forum 18.

Aliev said the judge ordered the re-investigation to be complete by Aug. 23, ready for a new trial.

“We expect they will try again to imprison Shabanov – and we will try again to get him freed,” Aliev told Forum 18. “He’s not guilty. They are doing this solely because he is a Christian.”

The judge rejected the lawyer’s application to have Shabanov released pending the retrial.

“We regard this as a first victory, but there is still much struggle ahead to free Hamid,” Ilya Zenchenko, head of Azerbaijan’s Baptist Union, told Forum 18.

He added, “Hamid spoke up in court to declare that he was not guilty. But they are one team, the police, the prosecutors and the judge.”

Hekimkhan Seferov of the Zakatala District Prosecutor’s Office, who is leading the prosecution case, was not available to talk to Forum 18. Officials at the government’s State Committee for Work with Religious Organizations were reluctant to discuss Shabanov’s case with Forum 18.

The official spokesperson, Yagut Alieva, was not available either. An official called Vugarov in the Expert Analysis Department, which censors religious literature, told Forum 18 that the case is a matter for the courts. “The Committee doesn’t get involved in legal cases.”

Told that “illegal” Christian literature had been confiscated from Shabanov at the time of his arrest on June 20, as well as in 2007, Vugarov confirmed to Forum 18 that the Committee had received no religious literature from the police in Zakatala to review in the past few months.

Members of Shabanov’s family are very critical of the entire case.

“We’re very unhappy – we want Hamid vindicated and freed. But they don’t want to free him,” his brother Badri Shabanov told Forum 18.

He added, “The proceedings are not objective. The whole case is a charade. They’re holding him now at the police station as if he’s a terrorist.”

Zenchenko of the Baptist Union told Forum 18 that Zakatala’s Deputy Police Chief, Kamandar Hasanov, reacted angrily to the judge’s decision. Hasanov met Zenchenko in the corridor outside the courtroom and had him taken to his office at the police station, where Zenchenko was interrogated and threatened for an hour.

“Hasanov called me an English spy who acts only for money,” Zenchenko told Forum 18. “He demanded in a threatening manner that I should not return to Zakatala, stop helping local Baptists, and that I should abandon my faith.”

Zenchenko said Hasanov forced him to write a statement, and took a copy of his identification documents after checking that they were genuine.

“He also told me that there is a special instruction not to allow Baptists to function in Zakatala District,” Zenchenko told Forum 18.

He added that he plans to write to Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliev to find out whether such an instruction exists and who has issued it. He said, “I doubt that it comes from the president – if it exists it must be from the local administration.”

Forum 18 said the news service was unable to determine from the Zakatala District Administration if such an instruction exists, and if so why. The official who answered the telephones of Asif Askerov, head of the Administration, and his deputy both refused to identify themselves or discuss anything with Forum 18.

According to Forum 18, Zenchenko and defense lawyer Aliev had traveled the 280 miles from the capital Baku to attend the full trial, which began on July 28. An initial hearing had been held on July 22, but had been adjourned after the lawyer complained he had not been given the prosecutor’s case ahead of the hearing and had not had time to prepare the defense case.

Forum 18 said Shabanov is leader of one of several Baptist congregations in the majority Georgian-speaking village of Aliabad.

The 51-year-old pastor is married with three adult children. Forum 18 reported that members of the congregations have long faced harassment from local officials, including refusal to approve registration applications, police raids, confiscation of Christian literature and denial of birth certificates to children whose parents give them Christian first names.

Forum 18 said Shabanov is facing trial under Article 228, part 1 of the Criminal Code, which punishes illegal holding of a weapon with a sentence of up to three years’ imprisonment. Shabanov’s congregation and his family insist that the Nagan pistol a Prosecutor’s Office official claims to have found, during the June 20 house search, was planted. Shabanov was arrested immediately after the alleged discovery.

Forum 18 said among the confiscated Christian books that the police claimed were “illegal” were copies of the Bible in Azeri and Georgian.

Forum 18 said Zenchenko was a witness in Shabanov’s defense that the books had been approved by the Committee for Work with Religious Organizations under Azerbaijan’s controversial system of mandatory prior censorship of all religious literature.

Shabanov’s brother Badri complained to Forum 18 that neither the Christian literature confiscated in the June house search, nor literature confiscated during a raid in 2007, has been returned. He said that internal church documents also confiscated in June – which were not recorded in the official police record – have not been returned either.

Shabanov’s lawyer, Aliev, reported that he had told Deputy Police Chief Hasanov bluntly that the pistol and bullets they claim to have found during the house search were planted by the police.

Forum 18 said Hasanov has long demonstrated hostility to the Baptist community in Aliabad, which culminated in his leadership of the June raid when Shabanov was arrested. In the wake of the release from prison of Shabanov’s colleague Pastor Zaur Balaev on March 19, Hasanov and two colleagues threatened him with a new prison sentence if he continued his work with his congregation.

Forum 18 said local Jehovah’s Witnesses have also faced raids and harassment by police.

Reached by Forum 18, Hasanov rejected the Baptists’ claim that the gun had been planted by police. But he refused to discuss Shabanov’s case further. “Ask the judge,” he told Forum 18.

He also refused to explain why the police have repeatedly harassed the Baptists in Aliabad and other religious communities in the region. He then asked Forum 18 why Shabanov’s case was of interest. “This is our state. You do your job and we’ll do ours.” He then hung the phone up.

Forum 18 said that Aliev, Shabanov’s lawyer, complained of “numerous, gross violations of procedure” during the preparation of Shabanov’s case.

Signatures of unknown witnesses were on documents, and the “witnesses” were not made available when Aliev for them to be called to testify in court. He also complained of forged documents, with alleged interrogations of Shabanov being recorded on days when no interrogations had taken place.

Forum 18 said that fabricated evidence, “witnesses” who did not witness events and lack of due process were also evident in the case of Pastor Balaev.

In particular, Aliev noted that all the case materials were prepared in Azeri, written in the Latin alphabet which has been in use for the language since independence. “Shabanov’s native language is Georgian and he studied in Georgia,” he told Forum 18. “He is therefore very weak in Azeri and finds reading it difficult, especially when it is in the Latin script.”

Court proceedings were conducted in Azeri, with no translation into Georgian for Shabanov on July 22, Forum 18 said. However, on July 28 and 29 the judge arranged for a translator to assist Shabanov, who he said has a “poor understanding” of Azeri.

The Baptist congregation led by Balaev and Shabanov has also got no further in its long battle to get state registration, which in law requires an application by ten adult citizens. The congregation has been unable to register since the early 1990’s, as the State Notary refuses to confirm the signatures on the registration application, the first stage of the process.

Forum 18 said on July 22 when the lawyer was in Zakatala, he and Zenchenko of the Baptist Union accompanied ten members of Shabanov’s Baptist church to the Notary’s Office. When the lawyer presented the documents to confirm the signatures on the community’s registration application, the notary Najiba Mamedova again refused to do so.

Complaining that the Baptists were preventing her from getting on with her work, she summoned the police and representatives of the Prosecutor’s Office, who arrived quickly. “She said we were hooligans,” Badri Shabanov, one of the church members present, told Forum 18. Mamedova has a long record of similar behavior

After Mamdova called the police, “I and the lawyer were taken to the police station,” Zenchenko told Forum 18reported. “Instead of defending the rights of believers, the lawyer had to begin to defend himself.”

For more background information see Forum 18’s Azerbaijan religious freedom survey at www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=92.

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