Zaur Gurbanli has become the latest blogger to get into trouble with the Azerbaijani authorities. Gurbanli has long been critical of the authorities in Baku, and in recent months the 25-year-old activist has been particularly busy. He was part of the Sing for Democracy campaign, which brought international media attention to the issue of human rights in Azerbaijan during the Eurovision contest in May. Among its successes was persuading the winner of the contest, the Swedish pop singer Loreen, to publicly condemn rights abuses in Azerbaijan. Gurbanli also helped organize a leaflet campaign calling on Azerbaijanis to vote Aliyev out of office in next year's presidential election. The leaflet, from the youth opposition group Nida, where Gurbanli is a board member, features a silhouette of Aliyev in profile and the words, "I will go in 2013 if you join Nida." On September 29, plainclothes policemen seized Gurbanli outside Nida's headquarters in Baku and escorted back inside. There, they searched the premises and confiscated documents, including some of the 2013 election leaflets. The plainclothes policemen identified themselves to Gubanli's co-workers only as officers from the Department for Combating Organized Crime before taking Qurbanli off to an unknown destination. He was then kept incommunicado for the rest of the day before he was finally allowed to contact his lawyer on October 1. He has been charged with resisting the police, which is enough to keep him in detention ...