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BAKU: BP accused of discriminating against Azeri staff - paper

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  • BAKU: BP accused of discriminating against Azeri staff - paper

    BP accused of discriminating against Azeri staff - paper

    Ekho, Baku
    30 Nov 04


    Britain's BP has been accused of discriminating against the local
    staff in Azerbaijan at the 58th Rose-Roth seminar of the NATO
    Parliamentary Assembly in Baku. Azerbaijani and Turkish MPs were
    irritated by a BP official's refusal to report on the salary of
    locally employed people and that of expatriates, Azerbaijani newspaper
    Ekho reported. Also discussed at the seminar was the security of
    Caspian energy resources. The head of the Azerbaijani State Oil
    Company, Natiq Aliyev, said that Baku, Tbilisi and Ankara had agreed
    not to militarize transport communications, while taking measures
    against possible acts of sabotage on the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil
    pipeline. The following if the text of R. Orucov's report by
    Azerbaijani newspaper Ekho on 30 November headlined "Rose-Roth seminar
    ends in accusations of BP"; subheadings have been inserted
    editorially:

    The 58th Rose-Roth seminar of the NATO Parliamentary Assembly, which
    was held in our country for the first time, finished on 27
    November. On the closing day, Azerbaijani Defence Minister Col-Gen
    Safar Abiyev addressed the seminar.

    Azerbaijan ready to host NATO exercises

    In his remarks, the defence minister said that in its military policy
    Azerbaijan was adhering to the concept of defence sufficiency - "the
    ability to ward off any attacks". Abiyev added that back in 1997
    Azerbaijan set up a peacekeeping company to contribute to
    international operations "which then grew into a battalion and now we
    are preparing a brigade". The minister said Azerbaijan was ready to
    host any NATO exercises. He noted that the charters of active
    participants in NATO's Partnership for Peace programme contain an
    article urging them to refrain from violating the territorial
    integrity of neighbouring countries.

    There is a total of 76,000 personnel in the Azerbaijani army
    today. More than 4,000 civilian specialists work in the system of the
    Defence Ministry and the figure is expected to rise, Abiyev said. He
    also expressed his astonishment with the fact that certain western
    countries are officially allocating millions of dollars in assistance
    to Armenia and to the separatist regime in Nagornyy Karabakh every
    year.

    Caspian energy security discussed

    The second half of the day was dedicated to the security of Caspian
    energy resources. The president of the State Oil Company of the
    Azerbaijani Republic [SOCAR], Natiq Aliyev, made a presentation,
    saying that two countries, Iran and Turkmenistan, are still opposed to
    dividing the Caspian, the idea supported by Azerbaijan, Russia and
    Kazakhstan. Another issue is the delivery of energy resources to world
    markets. "We have agreed with Georgia and Turkey to avoid the
    militarization of transport communications and to take precautionary
    measures. We are mindful of acts of sabotage aimed at undermining
    major energy projects like the BTC [Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil
    pipeline]."

    Speaking next was the sustainable development director of BP, Martin
    Miles, who said the oil reserves of the Caspian are comparable with
    those discovered in the North Sea. He said BP is the company that
    operates transparently and respects human rights.

    BP accused of discriminating against local staff

    Then the floor was taken by a member of the Turkish parliament, Emin
    Bilgic. "Mr Miles, you have spoken at length about transparency in
    your work and respect for human rights. Then could you please say what
    the difference is in the wages that BP pays to Azerbaijani and British
    citizens for the same work? And what is BP's revenue from the
    production of Azerbaijani oil?"

    Miles shied away from the question. "I would not like to discuss the
    salary issue here," he said. A few minutes later, a member of the
    Azerbaijani parliament, Alimammad Nuriyev, said: "You haven't answered
    my Turkish colleague's questions. Do you acknowledge that even though
    there are many highly-qualified specialists in Azerbaijan, you prefer
    to bring your specialists from abroad? Why? Why do you spend much
    less money on environmental activities here than elsewhere?" Miles
    said 80 per cent of BP's 2,000-strong personnel in Azerbaijan are
    local citizens.

    "As for the difference in their salaries, I don't think it is right to
    disclose figures here," he repeated.

    And then the deputy speaker of the Azerbaijani parliament, Ziyafat
    Asgarov, asked Miles directly: "But where can the salary question be
    discussed then? You are using the resources of our country and the
    rights of our citizens have to be taken into account. I constantly
    receive complaints about violations of the labour legislation by BP,
    people are made to work on holidays and days-off. We have tried to
    look into the salary issue in parliament, but BP is not answering even
    the legislature."

    The BP representative found nothing better to say than: "I don't know
    the details of the issue," to which Asgarov replied: "Then you should
    have told us from the very beginning that you are not competent enough
    in the issue."
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