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  • BAKU: All is black in Baku

    All is black in Baku

    The Times (London)
    October 19, 2004

    By Martin Samuel

    Just blew in from the Windy City. The Windy City ain't mighty pretty
    and it ain't got what we got -- because we've got what its got.

    Message from Baku: Can we have our oil back, please? Or some of the
    money from it, at least? Winter is coming and we are freezing to death
    here. This isn't called the City of Wind for nothing, you
    know. Heating costs are through the roof; fuel is scarce.

    P. J. O'Rourke wrote that communism was brought to its knees because
    nobody wanted to wear Bulgarian shoes. What he didn't tell the freshly
    empowered was that ten years on, moccasins from Plovdiv would be the
    least of their worries. The liberating army of petrochemical
    executives in Azerbaijan are having a fine time: an almost completed
    pipeline connecting the land-bound Caspian oil reserves with the
    Turkish coast; a choice of five-star hotels; a Breitling on the wrist,
    an SUV in the garage and a Britannia pub that shows the football at
    the weekend. For the eight million permanent residents, however, their
    country might as well be back in the USSR.

    Azeri oil is being exploited efficiently after years of Soviet
    incompetence; but its impact at the local level is minimal. Times are
    high for hookers and taxi drivers, but more than half the population
    exists below the poverty line in crumbling apartments as the best of
    their filthy-rich country trickles into the pockets of the oil boys.

    It used to be that when oil executives located a new source they would
    pop the $64 million question to Foreign Office diplomats. "Seriously,
    how long have we got?" These days, ballpark insurrection estimates are
    no longer required. Azerbaijan was ruled by Heydar Aliyev, a former
    KGB boss who passed power to his son, Ilham, having first rigged the
    election. Some ballot boxes were stuffed; others disappeared, along
    with most of the opposition and the free press. Aliyev Jr is just as
    accommodating to the West, though, so it turns a blind eye to his
    human rights infringements.

    Possibly it will use the need to protect Caspian oil and prop up his
    ghastly regime as a pretext for an assault on Iran. The hope is that
    the riches of Azerbaijan will stave off Western dependency on Opec,
    and the last thing the West wants is for the mad mullahs to stake a
    claim. Meanwhile, in the region that built the world's first oil well
    in 1849, a fuel shortage is predicted. Too bad. Let them burn Jimmy
    Choos, eh?

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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