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  • It's Azerbaijan's turn

    It's Azerbaijan's turn

    INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE
    TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2005

    By Farhad Husseinov

    ANKARA -- As the threat from terrorism becomes ever more acute, the
    West is caught in a strategic dilemma between stability and
    democratization in the Muslim world. While the pursuit of stability
    has been mostly abandoned in the Middle East, it remains operative in
    the Muslim countries of the former Soviet empire - as displayed until
    recent times in the West's cooperation with autocrats like
    Uzbekistan's Islam Karimov.

    Azerbaijan is the latest victim of this sacrifice of freedom in the
    pursuit of stability. A country of 8.5 million people - roughly half
    of whom live in poverty - on the Western shores of the energy-rich
    Caspian Sea, it is preparing for parliamentary elections in early
    November. Baku, the capital, is the next obvious candidate for a
    democratic revolution of the kind witnessed in Georgia and Ukraine. At
    stake are the multibillion-dollar investments of oil giants like BP
    and Chevron.

    The incumbent president, Ilham Aliyev, is a Soviet-educated autocrat
    who inherited power from his late father, Geidar Aliyev, in late 2003
    as a result of rigged elections followed by a ruthless police
    crackdown. Opposition activists were imprisoned and tortured. Yet the
    creation of the first dynastic regime in the post-Soviet space was,
    incongruously, blessed by the administrationof George W. Bush.

    So far, Aliyev junior has proved less adept than his ex-Communist
    father at playing political cat-and-mouse with Western capitals. His
    regular consultations with President Vladimir Putin of Russia have not
    escaped analysts' attention. One development that apparently
    infuriated Washington was the security arrangement he made with Iran
    in May. This was followed by news that Azerbaijan had been used as a
    conduit for supplying Russian nuclear technology to Iran.

    Now that the campaign for the November elections has officially
    started, efforts by the regime to steal votes are once again under
    way. The main issue is the formation of election commissions dominated
    by the government. The U.S. Congress and the Council of Europe demand
    that these be amended to create a balance between representatives of
    the government and the opposition.

    Cases of harassment by the regional authorities on behalf of regime
    favorites are abundant. The media - with a few embattled exceptions in
    print and on the Internet - is entirely under state control. The
    latest trend on Azeri TV channels is to describe opposition leaders as
    either homosexual or agents of Al Qaeda. Criticism of the president
    is characterized as betrayal of the motherland.

    Another sign of the regime's contempt for fair elections is the recent
    reshuffling of posts within the power ministries. Hard-liners
    responsible for organizing the crackdown in 2003 were rewarded with
    promotions and even state medals. In this way, the government has
    perpetuated a climate of arbitrariness and arrogant lawlessness.

    Despite the campaign to denigrate and destroy real political
    opposition, it now poses a serious challenge to the regime. Indeed,
    many in Baku predict the downfall of a bankrupt government built on
    corruption, nepotism, coercion and a record of political murder.

    The greatest hope is invested in the newly forged Freedom Bloc, with
    the pro-Western Musavat Party as its driving force, which succeeded in
    holding a series of rallies across the country that the government was
    compelled to allow because of domestic and international pressure. The
    last such demonstration was organized in Baku on Sept. 10 and drew
    about 50,000 people, many of them wearing orange shirts and waving
    orange flags in an echo of the pro-democracy rallies in Ukraine last
    year.

    In today's globalized world, democracy requires support from
    without. The Bush administration's "freedom agenda" is a praiseworthy
    step in this regard. It should, however, also be extended to illiberal
    countries that possess oil or host a NATO military base. Democratic
    turnover in the post-Soviet states is not Western imperialism by
    another name, as some would like us to believe. What they represent,
    rather, is a shift toward the rule of law, democracy and national
    reconciliation.

    Azerbaijan presents the next opportunity for Western leaders to prove
    their commitment to the founding principles of their own
    nation-states. With time, this moral choice will prove to be a smart
    strategic choice as well.

    As for Putin, instead of bemoaning his country's imperial past, he
    should be the first to desire the creation of a progressive and
    liberal space around it, as this would benefit no state more than
    Russia itself.


    Farhad Husseinov is professor of economics at Bilkent
    University in Ankara and a pro-democracy activist in Azerbaijan.
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