Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azerbaijan: Has Government Taken A Troubling Example From Andijon?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Azerbaijan: Has Government Taken A Troubling Example From Andijon?

    AZERBAIJAN: HAS GOVERNMENT TAKEN A TROUBLING EXAMPLE FROM ANDIJON?
    By Richard Giragosian

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    Sept 23 2005

    As campaigning for the 6 November parliamentary elections gets
    under way, the Azerbaijani authorities are directing their efforts
    toward ensuring that the ruling Yeni Azerbaycan Party, together with
    ostensibly independent but loyal candidates, retains control of the new
    parliament. While such efforts are not unexpected in light of previous
    tainted elections, the Azerbaijani government's blatant disregard
    for the international community's insistence on electoral fairness
    and transparency is surprising. Moreover, this apparent disdain for
    world public opinion is at odds with -- and signals a retreat from --
    initial moves apparently aimed at reversing the country's record of
    election "illegalities."

    In mid-May, President Ilham Aliyev issued a decree warning election
    officials and local councils against any voting irregularities. The
    decree also tasked local election officials with compiling accurate
    and updated voter lists, set forth procedures for uniform exits polls,
    and made provision for all candidates to have equal access to state
    run media.

    Just a few weeks later, however, in late June, the parliament adopted
    numerous minor amendments to the election law that failed to include
    a number of the most significant recommendations of the Council of
    Europe's Venice Commission. Those changes, which opposition parties,
    too, deemed indispensable to ensuring a fair and democratic election,
    ranged from greater opposition representation on electoral commissions
    to the use of indelible ink to mark voters' fingers in a bid to
    prevent multiple voting.

    The Crackdown Begins The passage of half-hearted electoral reforms
    was soon eclipsed by much more disturbing events, however. Starting
    in early August, the country's already embattled political opposition
    was targeted in a new campaign of intimidation and innuendo. Ruslan
    Bashirli, chairman of the opposition youth movement Yeni Fikir (New
    Thinking), was arrested, charged with conspiring to overthrow the
    government and, for good measure, accused of accepting money from an
    unlikely combination of Armenian intelligence officers and American
    nongovernmental organizations. The case also implicated Azerbaijan
    Popular Front Party (AHCP) Chairman Ali Kerimli by charging that
    Bashirli was acting on Kerimli's behalf.

    Perhaps fearful of the Ukrainian example of the potential power of
    a youth movement, the Azerbaijani authorities arrested Yeni Fikir
    deputy head Said Nuri and another of the organization's leaders in
    September on similar treason charges. Those arrests were followed
    by a raid on the offices of the AHCP during which police "seized"
    three grenades and an undisclosed amount of explosives in a room used
    by the Yeni Fikir movement. Then, on 15 September, a special team of
    security officers from the Azerbaijani Border Service and National
    Security Ministry arrested Serhiy Yevtushenko -- an activist of the
    opposition Ukrainian youth movement Pora -- at the Baku airport and
    interrogated and later expelled him. Yevtushenko had been invited to
    Baku by the opposition Azadlyg bloc, of which the AHCP is a member,
    to attend a conference on democratization.In mid-May, President Ilham
    Aliyev issued a decree warning election officials and local councils
    against any voting irregularities.

    In a more imaginative move, some recent Azerbaijani media reports
    also "reported" that opposition Musavat party Chairman Isa Gambar
    recently met with an Armenian intelligence operative to discuss plans
    to disrupt the election. The most amusing aspect of that report was
    the contention that Gambar was able to meet freely with the Armenian
    during a visit to Turkey, not a country known for permitting Armenian
    intelligence such freedom of action.

    Bold Tactics Such actions on the part of the Azerbaijani government
    so close to the election raise several questions as to Baku's motives
    for such outright disregard for international opinion and, even more
    confusing, why the Aliyev administration assumes that it has far less
    to lose by adopting such confrontational tactics. Such actions also
    give grounds for serious concern over the actual conduct of the voting
    and the possibility of a repeat of the postelection violence that
    erupted in Baku after the flawed presidential ballot of October 2003.

    One factor driving the Azerbaijani government's disregard for
    international reaction to its tactics over the past six weeks may be
    its inferences from Western -- specifically the U.S. -- response to
    two other developments.

    The first test case for Azerbaijan was what Baku perceived to be the
    lukewarm Western reaction to the May unrest in Uzbekistan. Not only
    did Uzbek President Islam Karimov's bloody response to the violent
    events in the southeastern town of Andijon, his government's dubious
    definition of the events as an uprising by Islamic extremists, and
    the repressive handling of the victims and witnesses not result in
    international sanctions, most importantly, the Uzbek case was a direct
    and blatant challenge to U.S. credibility.

    The second key development was Washington's praise for Egypt's
    presidential election earlier this month. That praise may have been
    construed in Baku as signaling that the United States would be content
    with even the most modest progress toward greater democracy.The first
    test case for Azerbaijan was what Baku perceived to be the lukewarm
    Western reaction to the May unrest in Uzbekistan.

    Moreover, for a presidential republic like Azerbaijan, which remains
    as much a one-family state as a one-party state, the test for its
    November parliamentary election will be limited to the conduct,
    and not the outcome, of the poll. (By contrast, the role of the
    parliament in Azerbaijan is almost cosmetic.) Thus, assuming that
    the Azerbaijani authorities are acting in line with a carefully
    crafted strategy, they may be assuming they have wide latitude to
    ensure a victory for the pro-government majority, albeit allowing
    for greater opposition representation than before, perhaps in line
    with the prognosis by Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
    rapporteur Andreas Gross, who calculated that the opposition is capable
    of winning at least 25 of the 125 seats. If the Egyptian case is any
    indication, such an outcome -- which would be a marked improvement
    over previous Azerbaijani elections -- might induce Washington to
    overlook violations in the preelection campaign and deliver an overall
    favorable assessment.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X