On October 15, 2003, citizens of Azerbaijan will vote for a new president, following an election campaign that from the beginning was heavily manipulated by the government to favor Prime Minister Ilham Aliev, son of President Heidar Aliev. The government ensured that election commissions would be stacked to favor Aliev, and banned nongovernmental organizations from monitoring the vote. As the election drew nearer, government officials openly sided with Ilham Aliev, obstructed opposition rallies, and sought to limit participation in them. Police have beaten and arbitrarily detained hundreds of opposition activists, including a seventy-three-year-old woman.
|
Background Briefing
Azerbaijan: Citizens Vote in Election after Campaign Interference
A Human Rights Watch Briefing Paper
Your tax deductible gift can help stop human rights violations and save lives around the world.
Region / Country
Topic
Most Viewed
-
December 11, 2025
Russia’s Systematic Torture of Ukrainian POWs
-
November 25, 2019
A Dirty Investment
-
November 25, 2024
Haiti: Scarce Protection as Sexual Violence Escalates
-
September 20, 2017
Iraq/KRG: 1,400 Women, Children From ISIS Areas Detained
-
November 12, 2018
“Shall I Feed My Daughter, or Educate Her?”