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  • Baku Angered by US Criticism

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    May 8 2008



    Baku Angered by US Criticism


    Americans accused of interfering in forthcoming Azerbaijani
    presidential election.


    By Leila Amirova in Baku (CRS No. 443 07-May-08)


    A war of words over Azerbaijan's democratic record has damaged
    relations between Baku and Washington, less than six months before
    Azerbaijan's presidential elections.


    Both Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and President George Bush
    have made critical remarks about Azerbaijan in the last month,
    eliciting a furious response from Azerbaijani officials.


    Speaking to the US Peace Corps 2008 Worldwide Country Director
    Conference on April 29, Rice said, `[In] the Caucasus ¦ not so much
    Georgia, but Azerbaijan [and] to a certain extent Armenia¦ there is
    important work to be done¦to bring that part of the Caucasus closer
    to [democratic] standards that we thought they were once meeting. And
    it has been a disappointment.'


    Rice said that the failure to resolve the Nagorny Karabakh conflict
    was holding back both Azerbaijan and Armenia.


    President Bush, in a speech to mark World Press Freedom Day on May 1,
    underlined the country's poor record on detention of journalists. "In
    2007, for the ninth consecutive year, China remained the world's top
    jailer of journalists, followed by Cuba, Eritrea, Iran, and
    Azerbaijan," he said.


    Azerbaijan has been criticised in the past. What seemed to rankle this
    time with Azerbaijani officials this time was that their country had
    been set below its traditional enemy, Armenia, despite Armenia's
    recent disputed elections, bloody street clashes and state of
    emergency. The Georgian government also brutally suppressed opposition
    demonstrators last November.


    Azerbaijani foreign ministry spokesman Khazar Ibrahim said that US
    officials had been misinformed.


    `The assessment of the situation in our region displays double
    standards. We do not shoot at demonstrators, do not kill them, do not
    impose a state of emergency or shut down independent media,' he said,
    in a reference to Armenia.


    `There is an impression that in Washington they do not have a real
    picture of the region, which is very disappointing when you take into
    account the relationship of strategic partnership between Azerbaijan
    and the USA.'


    Ramiz Mekhtiev, the veteran head of the presidential office, was even
    more scathing.


    `Condoleezza Rice's statements about Azerbaijan cannot be taken
    seriously,' he said. `You can only conclude from her words that
    Azerbaijan ought to copy the March events in Armenia so as to earn a
    good report on us.'


    Political analyst Mubariz Ahmedoglu argued that Azerbaijan was in a
    better situation than either of its two neighbours and that Rice
    `wants to see Azerbaijan as a client state of the USA'.


    The Azerbaijani opposition, however, which is currently considering
    whether to announce a boycott of October's presidential elections,
    took heart from the criticism.


    `The Azerbaijani authorities need to take criticism against them more
    seriously,' said Isa Gambar, head of the opposition Musavat party.


    `Declarations that President Bush and Secretary of State Rice are not
    properly informed about the situation in Azerbaijan are
    astonishing. Instead of doing that they need to properly assess the
    situation in the country and take steps to improve it.'


    Head of the Liberal Party Lala Shovket said she hoped the statements
    would force the authorities to hold more democratic elections later
    this year.


    `We also hold the opinion that there is an undeclared state of
    emergency in the country, we cannot hold rallies or speak on
    television,' she told Trend news agency.


    The row became even more heated when the US embassy in Baku announced
    it was allocating the sum of three million dollars in technical help
    and media assistance to help make the elections more free and fair. US
    ambassador Anne Derse also called on the opposition not to boycott the
    polls.


    Presidential official Ramiz Mehtiev was scornful of the initiative.


    `Personally, as a citizen of Azerbaijan, I regard the allocation of
    three million dollars by the USA for our presidential elections as
    interference in the internal affairs of the country,' he said. `I
    don't consider it normal. The US would not permit the interference of
    another country into its internal processes, so why should that happen
    in Azerbaijan?'


    Opposition member of parliament Fazil Gazanfaroglu also criticised the
    American plans saying, `I think that non-governmental organisations
    ought to control and monitor this initiative by the embassy of the USA
    so that government officials and members of the opposition who are
    close to them don't share out the money amongst themselves. That's
    what happened to the money allocated for the last elections.'


    Recently, most of the criticism against Azerbaijan has focussed on the
    issue of the harassment and imprisonment of journalists. In April
    alone, 72 incidents against journalists were recorded by the League of
    Democratic Journalists, four media employees received death threats
    and the city authorities in Baku banned the sale of newspapers on the
    street or at bus stops. Twenty one journalists went on hunger strike.


    Another US State Department report which praised Azerbaijan for its
    positive contribution to the `war on terror' went virtually unnoticed
    in Baku.


    Analysts say that this kind of criticism of Azerbaijan's democratic
    credentials has been heard before. What is different this time is the
    response.


    `The USA always spent money on observing elections and in principle
    nothing new has happened,' said commentator Ilgar Mamedov. `The only
    thing that's changed is the attitude of Azerbaijan. And that is
    connected to the fact that the authorities feel more confident because
    of the inflow of petro-dollars, greater geopolitical opportunism and
    the importance of our country when it comes to the energy security of
    Europe.'


    Leila Amirova is a freelance journalist in Baku.


    http://www.iwpr.net/?p=crs&s=f&o=3 44521&apc_state=henh
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