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NGOs in Azerbaijan Criticized for Contacts with Karabakh

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  • NGOs in Azerbaijan Criticized for Contacts with Karabakh

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC

    NGOS IN AZERBAIJAN CRITICIZED FOR CONTACTS WITH KARABAKH

    By Fariz Ismailzade

    Friday, September 15, 2006


    Public protests have erupted in Azerbaijan after the chair of the
    Azerbaijan branch of the Helsinki Citizens' Assembly visited the
    disputed Karabakh region and met with the leadership of the
    unrecognized Karabakh republic. Arzu Abdullayeva and several young
    activists from her organization went to Armenia's Lori region as part
    of their participation in the `Gugark' youth summer camp from July 28
    to July 30.

    Several local NGOs, such as the pro-governmental youth movement IRELI,
    the Forum of NGOs of Azerbaijan, and mass media outlets have lambasted
    Abdullayeva for her `treasonous' action and for her cooperation with
    Armenians. The private TV stations ANS and ATV have even gone so far
    as to accuse Abdullayeva of `mis-educating our youth and visiting an
    Armenian cemetery after drinking with Armenian hosts.'

    Public diplomacy, exchange visits by the media and NGO
    representatives, are strongly condemned in Azerbaijan. This attitude,
    mainly coming from the government and pro-government circles, is
    derived from the belief that such reciprocal visits will help draw the
    Karabakh republic out of its international isolation and eventually
    legitimize its existence. `These visits only favor the interests of
    Armenia and harm the interests of Azerbaijan,' says Akif Nagi,
    chairman of Karabakh Liberation Organization and a strong opponent of
    such visits. Nagi believes that both the government and the public
    must do everything possible to prevent such contacts.

    The head of the Information and Press Department at the Ministry of
    Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan, Tahir Tagizadeh, refuses to accept the
    blame on the part of the authorities. He says it would be improper to
    `put limits on the exchanges.' But he suggested that the visits not
    take place until after the first stage of conflict settlement is done;
    that is, until the occupied territories are freed and the status of
    Karabakh is being determined. Only then we will consider them as a
    strong and important part of the peace process, he said.

    Thus, any direct political and people-to-people contacts between
    official Baku and the authorities of the unrecognized Karabakh
    republic have been minimal throughout the past decade. The liberation
    of the occupied territories is held up as a pre-condition for any
    possible contacts between Baku and Khankendi. Contacts are allowed
    for human rights activists and media representatives, who still are
    branded traitors in Azerbaijan. Such individuals typically work in
    collaboration with international organizations, often the donors
    supporting such bilateral meetings, to allegedly aid the separatists.

    Similarly, international sport and cultural events that include
    participants representing Karabakh lead to protests in
    Azerbaijan. Several days ago, Azerbaijani NGOs sent a protest letter
    to the municipal government of the eastern Turkish city of Kars for
    inviting folk groups from Karabakh to participate in the city's
    cultural festival. As a result, organizers withdrew their the
    invitation to the Armenian delegation. Last year, official Baku
    denounced chess tournaments and Independence Day concerts in
    Khankendi. The Azerbaijan national soccer team even refuses to host
    the Armenian team in Baku as part of the European qualification games
    in order not to appear to be cooperating with the Armenian government.

    There are, however, some politicians and activists who believe that
    public diplomacy and the gradual build-up of trust between Armenians
    and Azerbaijanis are vital for the peaceful resolution of the
    conflict. `Visits to Armenia will produce dividends in five to ten
    years,' says Avaz Hasanov, the chairman of the Humanitarian Research
    Center and a frequent visitor to Armenia.

    With the peace process on Karabakh deadlocked and both sides using
    bellicose rhetoric, conflict analysts around the world are once again
    pushing the idea of public diplomacy. It is widely believed that the
    political leadership of both Armenia and Azerbaijan understand the
    benefits of the painful compromises and seek a way to settle the
    conflict, but they are either unable or incapable of convincing their
    respective publics. More than 15 years of war propaganda portraying
    the opposite side as a mortal enemy make a peace-settlement process
    based on compromise very difficult, because the Azerbaijan and
    Armenian peoples do not want to accept anything less than what they
    believe belongs to them. The longer this problem continues, the more
    difficult it will be for the governments of both countries to open the
    minds of their citizens.

    (ATV, ANS TV, Musavat, Day.az, Trend, Olaylar, September 10-15)
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