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Opinion: Is Azerbaijan next for a revolution?

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  • Opinion: Is Azerbaijan next for a revolution?

    Opinion: Is Azerbaijan next for a revolution?
    Alexei Makarkin

    Middle East Times

    UPI
    May 17, 2005

    MOSCOW -- Four presidents attended an April session of the GUUAM
    regional organization of Georgia, Uzbekistan, Ukraine, Azerbaijan
    and Moldova in the Moldovan capital, Chisinau. Uzbek President Islam
    Karimov ignored it because his country was preparing to withdraw
    from the organization. The news was made public officially on May 5,
    changing GUUAM into GUAM.

    Presidents Viktor Yushchenko of Ukraine and Mikhail Saakashvili of
    Georgia, who did attend the summit, were brought to power by so-called
    "color" revolutions - the "Orange" revolution in Ukraine and the
    "Roses" revolution in Georgia. President Vladimir Voronin of Moldova
    prevented a revolution in his country by becoming a sharper critic
    of Russia than the revolutionaries.

    The only exception was Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan. He went to Chisinau
    but does not want this to affect his country's relations with Russia
    and also hopes to prevent a color revolution at home.

    Color revolutions are timed for elections, as the methods behind
    them are based on using public protests against the real or imaginary
    falsification of election results. Observers from the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe have criticized all the elections
    held in Azerbaijan, which Aliyev's opponents can use as an additional
    argument. This April the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
    Europe Monitoring Committee once again criticized Baku for failing to
    ensure the freedom of speech and meeting, which are vital conditions
    for free and fair elections.

    The next parliamentary elections will be held in Azerbaijan this
    November. The opposition is pinning its hopes on them, thinking
    Aliyev's regime will be weaker than his father's.

    Three political forces that are opposing Aliyev's regime - Musavat,
    the People's Front and the Democratic Party - have created a coalition
    that hopes to win the elections. Musavat and the Democratic Party are
    led by the former parliament speakers, Isa Gambar and Rasul Guliyev,
    who now live in the United States. The leader of the People's Front
    is Ali Kerimli, a comrade of the late president Abulfaz Elchibei.

    In April the regional activists of these parties met with US Ambassador
    Reno Harnish, which provoked great displeasure of the political forces
    that are loyal to the current authorities.

    There is one more opposition bloc, New Policy, which consists of
    prominent figures, including the first president of independent
    Azerbaijan, Ayaz Mutalibov, who now lives in Moscow, Lala Shovket
    Gadzhiyeva, the leader of the National Unity Movement, Etibar Mamedov,
    former head of the National Independence Party and former premier Ali
    Masimov. According to Gadzhiyeva, "If large-scale falsifications are
    registered during the parliament election, there will be a revolution."

    The so-called Gongadze case greatly helped to discredit Leonid
    Kuchma in Ukraine. Azerbaijan could explode because of the killing
    of opposition journalist Elmar Guseinov.

    What do the Azerbaijan authorities hope to achieve? They hope
    Azerbaijan's participation in GUAM will prevent the export of a
    revolution into the country. Georgian activists helped Ukrainians last
    year and Ukrainians are now helping Belarussians. Aliyev is acting
    as a political ally of Yushchenko and Saakashvili, which makes him
    "untouchable" to the activists of color revolutions.

    Second, GUAM membership is complemented with the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
    oil pipeline project, which the West went to great lengths to
    promote. The project is to be commissioned on May 25 in the presence of
    US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. By the end of the year, when
    the parliamentary election is due in Azerbaijan, the first oil tanker
    will depart from Ceyhan. Therefore, Baku's leaders do not believe that
    the West will rock the boat in such a strategic country as Azerbaijan.

    Third, Azerbaijan is involved in the US-Iran confrontation. The April
    12 visit of Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld to Baku is indicative in
    this context. There were rumors before the visit that a US military
    base might be established in the country. They have been refuted so
    far, which is not surprising, as the truth may sour Baku's relations
    with Tehran and Moscow, but this does not mean that the base may not
    appear some time in the future.

    It is notable that Robert Simons, a special representative of the
    NATO secretary-general to the Caucasus and Central Asian countries,
    has announced that though the bloc's leaders have not approved the
    deployment of troops in the South Caucasus for the protection of
    the oil pipeline and other economic facilities, the issue may be
    discussed later.

    The Americans are energetically cooperating with Azerbaijan's security
    services. Foreign minister Elmar Mamedyarov said: They "are helping
    us fulfil several very interesting and important security programs".

    Will this guarantee peace and tranquility in Azerbaijan? Hardly. The
    problem is that not everything in color revolutions depends on the
    external or economic factors. Much depends on the effectiveness
    of the ruling regime and the ability of the opposition to use the
    available resources.

    If the regime preserves its own stability and becomes the main factor
    of stability in the country, the revolutionaries will have to wait
    for another chance. But if the regime becomes eroded the opposition
    may use this situation to claim the role of a guarantor of stability,
    just like it did in Georgia.
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