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Azerbaijan At A Glance

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  • Azerbaijan At A Glance

    AZERBAIJAN AT A GLANCE

    Agence France Presse
    October 13, 2008 Monday 7:50 PM GMT

    Azerbaijan, which stages presidential elections on Wednesday, is one
    of three Caucasus republics that became independent after the 1991
    collapse of the Soviet Union.

    Here are some key facts about Azerbaijan:

    LOCATION: Azerbaijan is located in the eastern portion of the Caucasus
    mountains range and is bordered by Russia to the north, Georgia to
    the northwest, Armenia to the west, Iran to the south and the Caspian
    Sea to the east. The country covers 86,000 square kilometres (33,200
    square miles).

    Nagorny Karabakh, a mountainous region in Azerbaijan populated
    mainly by Armenians, declared its independence in 1991, supported by
    Armenia. A war with Azerbaijan from 1988 to 1994 cost the lives of
    at least 20,000 people and created hundreds of thousands of refugees.

    The autonomous Azerbaijani republic of Nakhichevan is an enclave
    located southwest of Armenia and is separated from Azerbaijan by
    Armenian territory.

    CAPITAL: Baku

    POPULATION: 8.1 million

    RELIGION: More than 90 percent Shiite Muslim

    LANGUAGE: Azeri is the official language. Russian is also widely used
    in the Baku region.

    HISTORY: Control of Azerbaijan was long disputed between Turkey
    and Persia.

    The northern portion of this region (including Azerbaijan) was
    conquered by Russia at the beginning of the 19th century and Azerbaijan
    became a Soviet republic in 1920.

    It gained national independence on October 18, 1991, two months after
    the 1991 failed coup against then Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev.

    President Ayaz Mutalibov was overthrown in May 1992 and replaced
    by Abulfaz Elchibey, the pro-Turkish leader of the Popular Front
    party. Elchibey was himself overthrown the following year by Heydar
    Aliyev, the Soviet-era chief of Azerbaijan under Soviet leader Leonid
    Brezhnev.

    Aliyev was elected president of independent Azerbaijan in 1993 and
    reelected for a second term in 1998.

    INSTITUTIONS: The president and the parliament are elected through
    universal suffrage for five years. Ilham Aliyev, the son of the late
    Heydar Aliyev, was elected president on the first round on October 15,
    2003. This vote was followed by riots and hundreds of arrests.

    The president's party won by a landslide in parliamentary elections of
    2000 and 2005 which, according to observers, were marred by numerous
    irregularities.

    ECONOMY: With its booming oil sector, Azerbaijan has been courted by
    the West since the collapse of the Soviet Union.

    The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline, a mammoth US-backed project
    to transport oil from the Caspian region to the West without passing
    through Russia, was inaugurated in 2005.

    The Azerbaijani economy is now experiencing the fastest growth in
    the world, according to the European Bank for Reconstruction and
    Development (EBRD).

    GROWTH: 26.4 percent in 2007

    GDP: 3,500 dollars per capita in 2007

    DEFENCE: The state armed forces consist of 66,740 people, with another
    15,000 paramilitary forces, according to the International Institute
    of Strategic Studies.

    Azerbaijan joined the Council of Europe in 1991.

    The country has been a member of NATO's Partnership for Peace program
    since its launch in 1994 and has since set itself the goal of joining
    the military alliance.
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