Free Afgan Mukhtarli Demonstration, Tbilisi, Georgia © Onnik James Krikorian 2017
Stratfor has published my piece on the mysterious disappearance from Tbilisi of Afgan Mukhtarli. Many believe that the dissident Azerbaijani journalist was abducted because of his writing and other activities.
At around 7 p.m. on May 29, Afgan Mukhtarli, an Azerbaijani activist and journalist living in self-imposed exile in Tbilisi, rang his wife, Leyla Mustafayeva. Mukhtarli said he was on his way home after meeting a friend at a cafe in the Georgian capital. He never showed up. The next day, although his passport remained in Tbilisi, updates on social media reported that Mukhtarli was instead in Baku, Azerbaijan, where he faced charges for resisting arrest, illegally crossing the border, and smuggling 10,000 euros ($11,663) into the country.
Alarm bells rang among other Azerbaijani activists and journalists who had come to call Tbilisi home. Earlier the same month in Baku, Eynulla Fatullayev, a former prisoner of conscience now known to critics as a "government attack dog," had published an editorial on the Azerbaijani dissident community living in Georgia, alleging that it was planning to overthrow Azerbaijan's president. The piece mentioned Mukhtarli's name, along with those of a dozen other Azerbaijanis. Tbilisi, Fatullayev claimed, was acting against the interests of Azerbaijan, and he called on the Georgian government to expel “the underground from its own borders.”
That, Mustafayeva believes, is precisely what happened to her husband.
The full piece can be read here.