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  • TOL: High Hopes

    HIGH HOPES
    by Ali Valiyev

    Transitions on Line
    Feb 18 2009
    Czech Rep.

    A beleaguered but united opposition insists it can thwart the Azeri
    president's bid to kill term limits.

    BAKU | In the past several years in Azerbaijan, hundreds of opposition
    figures have been arrested, along with critical journalists, academics,
    and even government ministers. Human rights groups say the government
    has detained dozens of political prisoners. And state-controlled
    TV channels have either ignored these incidents or sympathetically
    reported the authorities' version of events.

    Even young activists on bicycles have been detained by police after
    staging demonstrations urging motorists to consider alternate forms
    of transportation.

    Yet members of a new alliance that opposes the government of President
    Ilham Aliev think they have a chance to foil Aliev's bid, next month,
    to eradicate presidential term limits.

    "I think that we will be able to defend our position because our
    position is supported by the majority of people," said Isa Gambar,
    chairman of the Musavat Party, which is part of the alliance. "An
    already-dissatisfied society is very concerned about the Aliev regime's
    attempts to prolong its grip on power."

    The new coalition, called the Movement for Karabakh and Republic,
    aims to defeat an 18 March referendum that would lift a two-term limit
    on the presidency, effectively allowing Aliev to stand for president
    again after his second term expires in 2013.

    Aliev has said the changes are aimed at boosting democracy.

    "You will not find any member of the European Union whose leader
    cannot be elected as many times as the people want him to be in this
    position. Is it democratic? Yes. So the same should be applied to
    Azerbaijan," Aliev said in an interview with Reuters on 30 January.

    "It is democratic, so if the people support this or that leader,
    they have the right to elect him. So I think lifting the restrictions
    [on the number of presidential terms] is more democratic than having
    these restrictions," he said, speaking in English.

    But critics say the goal is to keep Aliev in power indefinitely and
    "legalize the monarchy."

    Aliev took over from his father, Heidar Aliev, in an election in 2003
    that European observers said did not meet democratic standards.

    FOR KARABAKH AND REPUBLIC

    The Movement for Karabakh and Republic brings together almost all
    of the country's major opposition parties and groups, including the
    Musavat Party, the Popular Front Party, the National Unity movement,
    the Democratic Party, the Public Forum for Azerbaijan, the Umid
    (Hope) Party, the Citizen and Development Party, and several dozen
    nongovernmental organizations. It has established an advocacy group
    to campaign against the proposed changes.

    Musavat and the Popular Front have also formed a separate advocacy
    group, the Republicans.

    The Central Electoral Commission registered both opposition groups on
    11 February, entitling them to public money to finance their campaigns
    and free airtime on public television.

    Ali Karimli, the leader of the Popular Front Party, said the Movement
    for Karabakh and Republic is the largest opposition alliance Azerbaijan
    has seen in recent years. He believes that the alliance has brought
    new hope to Azeris.

    "If this unity continues, we can achieve serious results," Karimli
    said. "The referendum can mark the beginning of the end of the current
    authorities."

    The government predicted that the weakened and fragmented opposition
    would not be able to unite again, but it proved wrong, Karimli said.

    Major opposition parties have been under increasing pressure in the
    past few years. The People's Front and Musavat have been forced out
    of their offices in central Baku, as have been several newspapers
    connected to the opposition. Opposition leaders have largely been
    denied access to the broadcast media, which are tightly controlled
    by the authorities.

    Musavat Party leader Gambar said the growing pressure on the
    opposition is a sign of the government's fears in the face of
    widespread discontent.

    "They are in great fear and are seriously worried," Gambar said.

    Mehman Aliev, director of the major independent news agency Turan,
    said opposition groups are capable of putting their differences aside
    and uniting. He said a united opposition can be successful no matter
    how limited its financial resources might be.

    The opposition united ahead of the country's 2005 parliamentary
    elections but the alliance fell apart soon afterward as parties
    differed over how to react to results that independent observers said
    were marred by massive irregularities and fraud.

    "The main task for the opposition will be getting its messages across
    to the public, which lacks sources of objective information," Mehman
    Aliev said.

    LONG SHOT

    But a senior member of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party, Mubariz
    Gurbanli, has said that any suggestion of a united opposition is
    "ridiculous." He also scoffed at the name of the opposition alliance.

    "By choosing such a name, the opposition wants to demonstrate to the
    public that it really exists. But in reality, it doesn't, and the
    idea of a united opposition is laughable," he said.

    Rauf Mirgadirov, a columnist with the independent Russian-language
    daily newspaper Zerkalo, sees little reason for the opposition to
    be optimistic.

    "I don't think that anything serious will be accomplished," he
    said. "Because the resources of the opposition - human, information,
    and also financial resources - are extremely limited."

    "Although there are a lot of discontented voters, the active electorate
    is much smaller than those in previous elections," Mirgadirov
    said. "This is because of the fact that in the past 10 to 15 years
    people have lost their trust in democratic means of struggle," he said.

    The ruling party says Aliev enjoys massive popular support because
    of his government's economic achievements. Aliev received over 85
    percent of the vote in October's presidential election, widely viewed
    as flawed, and a majority of respondents in opinion polls consistently
    give him high marks. He has presided over sharp economic growth in
    the past five years. The oil-fuelled economy grew by 25 percent in
    2006, 35 percent in 2007, and 11 percent in 2008 despite the global
    financial crisis.

    Arzu Malikli, a Baku woman who works as a baby-sitter, said her life
    has improved during Aliev's tenure and that she would like him to be
    president for life.

    Another Baku resident, Samir Mammadov, who works for a law-enforcement
    agency, said he has no grievances with the government and that Aliev
    is the best person to lead Azerbaijan at the moment.

    HOPES FOR OBAMA

    The opposition is also hoping for U.S. support after the Bush
    administration's gentle treatment of Aliev, who sent Azeri troops to
    Iraq and who has tried to balance his country's relationships with
    the United States and Russia.

    "A new important center of power has emerged recently. This is the new
    U.S. president, Barack Obama," Gambar said. "During his inauguration
    ceremony, Obama addressed governments that hold on to power through
    corruption. He said that they had no future or past. From this
    viewpoint, it's clear who is going to become history."

    Gambar also warned of threats posed to the "free world" by
    authoritarian regimes.

    "We understand that sometimes there is a need for realpolitik. But I
    think that the authoritarian regimes, led by the Putin-Medvedev regime
    in Russia, have gone so far that they now pose a serious threat not
    only to democratic ideals but also to the pragmatic interests of the
    free world and the entire world as a whole," he said.

    Ali Valiyev is a pseudonym for a freelance journalist in Baku.
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