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Armenia Urged To Follow Azeri 'Democratic Reform'

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  • Armenia Urged To Follow Azeri 'Democratic Reform'

    ARMENIA URGED TO FOLLOW AZERI 'DEMOCRATIC REFORM'
    By Harry Tamrazian in Prague

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    June 26 2006

    Azerbaijan is moving faster than Armenia in democratizing its political
    system despite being considered a more undemocratic country by Western
    human rights organizations, according to a senior U.S. administration
    official.

    In an RFE/RL interview late last week, Matthew Bryza, the U.S. deputy
    assistant secretary of state for Europe and Eurasia, implied that
    President Robert Kocharian has to follow Azerbaijan's reform example if
    he wants to be received by President George W. Bush at the White House.

    Washington normally snubs those foreign leaders who were not elected
    in polls deemed free and fair by the international community. Bush
    made what is widely seen as an exception to that rule when he held
    talks with Azerbaijan's Ilham Aliev at the White House last April.

    The talks came five months after an Azerbaijani parliamentary election
    that was denounced as fraudulent by Western observers.

    Asked whether Kocharian too can now count on securing a White
    House reception, Bryza said, "We obviously don't look at balancing
    presidential meetings like that, but there's no reason not to want
    President Kocharian to come to Washington. Let me just say I hope we
    can see a similar series of positive steps on democratic reform in
    Armenia as we hope we are starting to see in Azerbaijan."

    "Maybe we're wrong about Azerbaijan. Maybe we're overly hopeful. But
    we think things are moving in a positive direction. And we hope to
    see more of that from Armenia," he said.

    Bryza claimed that there were "some significant improvements" in
    the Azerbaijani authorities' conduct of the November parliamentary
    election even if they "didn't go as far as we would like."

    A monitoring mission from the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe, headed by a U.S. congressman, described the
    polls as deeply flawed, citing numerous serious violations witnessed
    by its observers. Western human rights groups also condemned a brutal
    break-up by security forces of a big opposition demonstration in Baku
    against the official vote results.

    In a statement issued ahead of Aliev's Washington trip, Human Rights
    Watch urged Bush to "press for concrete progress in Azerbaijan's poor
    human rights record." The respected watchdog said the Azerbaijani
    government continues to harass political opponents and has yet to
    implement election-related recommendations of the OSCE and the Council
    of Europe.

    Another New York-based group, Freedom House, again rated Armenia more
    highly than Azerbaijan in it latest annual survey of political reform
    across Eastern Europe and the former Soviet that was released earlier
    this month. "Azerbaijan's democratic performance continues to show
    signs of deterioration, especially in the categories of electoral
    process and civil society," the survey said, explaining a drop in
    the country's already poor democracy rating.

    By contrast, the same rating assigned by Freedom House to Armenia
    improved slightly. The watchdog argued that although the November
    constitutional referendum in Armenia was also flawed, it resulted in
    the enactment of amendments that "should provide a more even balance
    of power between the president, Parliament and the judiciary."

    Bryza insisted that democratic reform is high on the Bush
    administration's agenda but admitted that other factors such as
    Azerbaijan's oil reserves and geographic location are also at play.

    "Just because Azerbaijan hasn't gone as far as we would like on
    democracy doesn't mean we're going to ignore our energy interests or
    our military interests," he said.

    "Why would we freeze out President Ilham Aliev from contact with our
    president forever because we think he needs to do more on democracy?

    That doesn't make sense," he added.

    Turning to the Armenian government, Bryza pointed to its handling of
    the constitutional referendum which was also criticized by European
    observers and denounced as fraudulent by the Armenian opposition.

    Washington expects relevant "positive changes" from Yerevan before
    the next Armenian elections, he said.

    Incidentally the Bush administration official stopped short of
    questioning the Kocharian administration's commitment to democratic
    change when he spoke with RFE/RL in the wake of the disputed
    referendum. "It's too early to judge whether or not democracy has
    moved forward," he said on December 7.

    Bryza also steered clear of criticizing the Armenian authorities'
    democracy and human rights records when he visited Yerevan last March,
    stressing instead the importance of building democracy "from the bottom
    up." He said Washington regards Armenia as a "democratizing country."
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