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Azerbaijan president vows tougher fight against poverty, corruption

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  • Azerbaijan president vows tougher fight against poverty, corruption

    Azerbaijan's president vows tougher fight against poverty, corruption

    AP Worldstream; Jul 25, 2005

    AIDA SULTANOVA


    Azerbaijan's president vowed Monday to intensify a fight against
    poverty and corruption in this oil-rich Caspian Sea nation, promoting
    his government's course in a speech ahead of crucial parliamentary
    elections later this year.

    Ilham Aliev told several hundred people gathered in a city park in
    Guba, 160 kilometers (100 miles) north of the capital, Baku, that his
    government would earmark more than US$1 billion (Aâ=82¬830 million) in
    the coming years for electric power plants and other infrastructure
    projects.

    "My goal is eliminate poverty, so that there are no people living in
    horrible conditions; to eliminate the problems that worry people; to
    put an end to the bribery and corruption that is shaking our society,
    in order to create a free society," Aliev said.

    With tensions mounting ahead of parliamentary elections four months
    away, Aliev has been traveling around the country, giving speeches,
    meeting local officials and promoting development plans in outlying
    regions, where poverty is more endemic than in Baku.

    Opposition political parties fear the government could rig the
    November balloting. The October 2003 presidential vote, in which Aliev
    succeeded hislate father, was widely alleged to have been fraudulent,
    and it triggered clashes between police and demonstrators.

    "I don't doubt that the parliamentary elections will be conducted
    completely transparently and fairly and the Azerbaijani people will
    express their will, just as they did in 2003," Aliev said.

    However, in a sign of the government's nervousness at potential
    protests, Deputy Interior Minister Vilayat Eyvazov on Monday accused
    unnamed opposition forces of planning acts of unrest and claimed some
    radical elements aimed to acquire weapons.

    "We warn them that we will not tolerate this," said the deputy
    interior minister.

    Separately, the Azerbaijani leader said efforts to resolve the dispute
    with neighboring Armenia over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh were
    yielding positive results.

    But at the same time, he appeared to give Armenia a warning, saying
    military expenditures would increase by more than 75 percent this
    year.

    "We don't have our eye on someone's land, but we will also not give up
    our own land," Aliev said. "We will build a strong army and we will
    free our land at any time, by any means."

    Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous region inside Azerbaijan, has been
    under the control of ethnic Armenians since the early 1990s, following
    fighting that killed an estimated 30,000 people.

    A cease-fire was signed in 1994, but the enclave's final political
    status has not been determined and shooting breaks out frequently
    between the two sides, which face off across a demilitarized buffer
    zone.

    Thousands of Azerbaijanis displaced by the fighting continue to live
    in often squalid conditions scattered around the country.
    From: Baghdasarian
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