Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Oil Drives Corruption But Azeris Live In Hope Of Freedom

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

  • Oil Drives Corruption But Azeris Live In Hope Of Freedom

    OIL DRIVES CORRUPTION BUT AZERIS LIVE IN HOPE OF FREEDOM
    by Deaglan de Breadún

    The Irish Times
    April 17, 2006 Monday

    LETTER FROM BAKU: Azerbaijan is a place most of us would have
    difficulty finding on a map. Yet we have a good deal in common. Like
    the Irish, the Azeris are experiencing a boom. The difference is that
    their success is based on the country's vast oil and gas reserves.

    The Bush administration likes Azerbaijan and, when you arrive in the
    capital, Baku, it is easy to see why. The smell of oil hangs heavily
    in the air. It has to compete with an even stronger odour of gas
    that's almost overpowering when you turn on the tap in your hotel
    room. Waking up in the middle of the night, you wonder if it's all
    over and whether you'll ever breathe fresh air again.

    There are massive oil rigs in the bay and the landscape is dotted with
    those awkward-looking, angular drilling appliances that are shaped like
    a horse's head, busily drinking the black liqueur from the earth. The
    surrounding countryside stretches for miles, with a mountain range in
    the distance. "Just like Texas," says Rizvan, my Azeri guide, laughing.

    But there's a lot to like about Baku. Pollution notwithstanding, there
    is a raw energy and excitement about being in an oil town. This is what
    it must have been like in the Gold Rush days in America during the
    late 19th century. It takes five hours to get there from London and
    everyone on the plane except me seemed to be a Scottish oil rigger,
    reminiscing about the last time they went drinking in Finnegan's or
    O'Malley's - two pubs with Irish names in Baku.

    You feel safe walking the streets of the Azeri capital. Unlike other
    cities, such as a certain place by the Liffey, nobody pesters you as
    you pass along. But you quickly begin to notice that the prosperity,
    as in Ireland, is somewhat unevenly distributed. Mercs and SUVs
    jostle with clapped-out Ladas and Samaras on the roadway and many of
    the people look as though they haven't had a change of clothing or
    certainly a change of fashion since Soviet times. Figures from 2002
    showed 49 per cent of the population below the poverty line.

    Azerbaijan crept out from under Moscow's boot heel in 1991 and it
    has many problems today. Neighbouring Armenia occupies 16 per cent
    of the country's landmass, as a result of an ethnic and territorial
    dispute over the region of Nagorno-Karabakh. This heightens the sense
    of fragility about the place, as though it could be whittled away by
    the exigencies of power politics.

    There is also, by all accounts, corruption on a grand scale. Local
    journalists readily testify that virtually everyone in a position to
    do so is feathering his or her nest and that the political class is
    lacking in patriotism and a sense of civic duty. There is corroborating
    testimony from no less a source than the CIA World Factbook on the
    internet which states: "Corruption is ubiquitous and the promise of
    widespread wealth from Azerbaijan's undeveloped petroleum resources
    remains largely unfulfilled."

    Yet there is a sense of hope in the air. Despite the obvious cult
    of personality surrounding President Ilham Aliyev, whose portrait is
    everywhere, there is also a feeling of freedom about the place or, as
    Michael Collins said in another context, "freedom to achieve freedom".

    Ukraine is free, Belarus is on the path to freedom; perhaps Azerbaijan
    also is about to enter a new era.

    Azerbaijan does not have the trappings of a police state and men in
    uniform are relatively few in number. Visiting the Ministry of Foreign
    Affairs, I was impressed by the lack of elaborate security precautions
    as well as the frankness of the press spokesman, Tahir Taghizadeh,
    who freely acknowledged there were problems while insisting, as he
    is employed to do, that the country is headed in the right direction.

    For all its faults, including the decidedly dodgy aspects of last
    November's parliamentary elections and human rights concerns about
    the current trial of three opposition youth leaders, there is one
    feature of Azerbaijan that makes it a shining example today. Although
    the people are overwhelmingly Muslim, they cherish their small but
    significant proportion of Jewish citizens.

    There are Jewish villages in the north of the country, I was told,
    and relations between Muslims and Jews are excellent. If John F
    Kennedy were alive today, he might well come to Azerbaijan instead of
    Berlin and say to those who believe Islam and Judaism cannot co-exist:
    "Lass'sie nach Baku kommen." Let them come to Baku.

    --Boundary_(ID_9bK0kTpmknGLUSHPllyr0Q)--
Working...
X