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Officials: Oil-Rich Azerbaijan Scraps Term Limits

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  • Officials: Oil-Rich Azerbaijan Scraps Term Limits

    OFFICIALS: OIL-RICH AZERBAIJAN SCRAPS TERM LIMITS
    By Aida Sultanova

    AP
    19 March 09

    BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) -- Election officials in Azerbaijan said Thursday
    that citizens overwhelmingly voted to scrap presidential term limits
    in the oil-rich country courted by Russia and the West. Opposition
    leaders claimed the constitutional referendum was rigged and vowed
    to dispute the outcome in courts.

    The official result opens the door for indefinite rule by President
    Ilham Aliyev in the Caspian Sea nation that critics say is closer to
    a monarchy than a democracy. Based on returns from more than half the
    polling stations counted, the Central Election Commission reported 92
    percent of voters approving the referendum, with 71 percent turnout
    in the country of 8 million people.

    Aliyev's beleaguered opponents claimed the vote was riddled with
    violations encouraged or organized by the state. They said their
    observers witnessed abuses including ballot-box stuffing and multiple
    voting. Ali Kerimli, head of the Popular Front party, said the
    opposition believes actual turnout was no more than 15 percent.

    "The referendum was not free or fair and we do not consider it valid,"
    Kerimli told a news conference. He said the official results "do not
    reflect the will of the people."

    "The vote showed that the people have said 'no' to the ruling regime,"
    said Isa Gambar, leader of the opposition Musavat party.

    Opposition leaders had said bef ore the vote that they suspected its
    timing reflected government concerns that plunging oil prices and
    economic troubles could damage its popular support and weaken its grip.

    Azerbaijan's Caspian Sea oil fields and its location straddling a
    strategic corridor for westward oil and gas exports from Central
    Asia -- bypassing Russia and Iran -- make it a focus in the struggle
    between Moscow and the West for regional influence.

    Aliyev is the son of the late Geidar Aliyev, who ruled Azerbaijan
    first as the Communist Party boss during the Soviet times, then as
    president in 1993-2003. He has courted Western oil money and moved to
    strengthen ties with the U.S., including by sending troops to Iraq,
    while maintaining mostly friendly ties with Russia.

    The commission said voters on Wednesday also approved changes include
    establishing financial and other benefits for former presidents and
    prohibiting presidential and parliamentary elections during wartime.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory within Azerbaijan, has been controlled
    by Armenians since a war that ended with a shaky cease-fire in
    1994. Without a settlement of its status, a new armed conflict
    remains possible.

    Aliyev, 47, won his second term in October in an election that
    opponents called unfair and foreign observers said fell short of
    international democratic standards.

    Opposition parties have reported serious government pressure in recent
    years and Western governments ha ve expressed concern over the state's
    treatment of critics and the independent media.

    With ballots from more than half the polling places counted, only
    8 percent of voters supported the current limit of two consecutive
    five-year presidential terms, Central Election Commission chairman
    Mazahir Panakhov said.

    Other oil-rich ex-Soviet republics have made similar changes. Lawmakers
    in Kazakhstan waived term limits for the long-ruling president in 2007,
    and Russia's leadership pushed through a law last year extending the
    presidential term from four years to six.

    Voters approved 40 changes to Azerbaijan's constitution, Panakhov
    said, according to the partial results, which he said were sufficient
    to determine the outcome. The official turnout was far above the 25
    percent needed to make the referendum count, and each proposed change
    required a simple majority of votes cast.
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