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  • BAKU: Foreign Minister Says Democracy Is A Work In Progress

    RFE/RL Azerbaijan: Foreign Minister Says Democracy Is A Work In Progress
    Wednesday, 21 July 2004

    By Annie Bang and Michelle Townsend

    Elmar Mammadyarov is the Azerbaijani foreign minister. He was invited to
    the United States by Secretary of State Colin Powell for his first visit
    as foreign minister. The minister spoke on 20 July at his only public
    appearance in Washington at the Center for Strategic and International
    Studies, a public policy and research organization.

    Washington, 21 July 2004 (RFE/RL) -- Mammadyarov said building a strong
    democratic state is extremely difficult, especially in a poor country
    like Azerbaijan.

    "This is a process and we are moving in this process," Mammadyarov said.
    "It doesn't mean that we are frozen in our position."

    Mammadyarov, who was appointed to President Ilham Aliyev's cabinet in
    April after serving as ambassador to Italy, suggested one good step
    toward economic progress would be building up the country's energy sector.
    "Sometimes it's very difficult to explain and sometimes it's very
    difficult to understand to some people who didn't visit there, that
    didn't live there, that it is not an easy task to build a Western-style
    society."

    He stressed that Azerbaijan is committed to transparency in its spending
    of oil and natural gas revenues.

    With its State Oil Fund, Azerbaijan is following British Prime Minister
    Tony Blair's launch in September 2002 of the Extractive Industries
    Transparency Initiative, which aims to ensure the transparency of funds
    being paid to states by companies.

    Mammadyarov said he is optimistic about contract negotiations over the
    natural-gas market among European countries and his country's near
    neighbors.

    "This will be also very, very important for the development not only of
    Azerbaijan, but the whole region, because it gets the access to the
    European market for the gas from Central Asia," Mammadyarov said.

    Some members of the audience questioned the Azerbaijani government's
    commitment to democratic change.

    The South Caucasus country has come under criticism for crackdowns on
    the political opposition and irregularities in last year's election of
    Ilham Aliyev, the son of Heidar Aliyev, who ruled the country --
    directly or indirectly -- for nearly 30 years.

    The topic put Mammadyarov on the defensive: "Sometimes it's very
    difficult to explain and sometimes it's very difficult to understand to
    some people who didn't visit there, that didn't live there, that it is
    not an easy task to build a Western-style society," he said.

    The foreign minister also responded to a question about anti-Armenian
    propaganda by the Azerbaijani press, saying his country's media was free
    to criticize Armenia or any other country.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan have been engaged in a years-long dispute over
    the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, which has a largely ethnic Armenian
    population but which is officially part of Azerbaijani territory.

    "If we will start to prohibit that because of the interest of anyone, we
    have to stop our democratic reforms. We have to stop and change our
    course, and this is not the case in Azerbaijan," Mammadyarov said.

    Critics say Azerbaijan has made some progress toward a freer media but
    that it has a long way to go.


    http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2004/07/87d67c76-cfd0-4e21-bea7-baff12036bec.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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