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  • Azeris feel Iranian pressure

    Azeris feel Iranian pressure

    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/ europe/8516682.stm

    Published: 2010/02/16 08:11:08 GMT

    Members of Iran's Azeri minority have long complained that their
    rights are stifled. They make up a quarter of Iran's population, but
    claim the authorities are worried about an uprising by ethnic Azeris,
    as Tom Esslemont reports from the Azerbaijan-Iran border.

    By 0900 the border between Azerbaijan and Iran is jammed.

    Dozens of Azeri men and women with large plastic bags jostle to
    squeeze through a grey metal gate to passport control - and beyond
    that, Iran.

    Border guards shout at them in an attempt to keep them in line. It fails.

    For decades Azeris have crossed this fluid border to see family and
    friends on the other side. More than 20 million Azeris live there and
    have done since the territory was annexed under the Shah after a
    settlement with the Russian and, subsequently, Soviet leaders.

    These days the existence of a border between the two Azeri-dominated
    lands is just taken for granted.

    "I go to market on the other side because the food is cheaper there,"
    says Gulchohra Hasanova as she emerges through the border gate, her
    shopping basket laden with nuts and fruit.

    She had returned from Iran with enough food to last her a few days.
    Hers is a story echoed by dozens who cross back and forth on a daily
    basis in the border town of Astara.

    Iranians also come here to buy alcohol - the sale of which is banned
    in their country.

    On the run

    But the freedom of movement is not open to everyone.

    Not far away in his damp, dark two-room apartment I meet Mohammad Rza
    Lavai, an Iranian Azeri.


    As he tries to light the gas stove in his kitchen he tells me he is on the run.

    He says he fled Iran in September, claiming he had been persecuted for
    his ethnicity.

    He shows me articles he wrote while he was there - printed in Azeri
    newspapers - in which he criticizes the Iranian government for their
    "treatment of the Azeris".

    "They did not like it when I used to write in Azeri and publish my
    work in newspapers: I strongly criticised the regime," he says.

    "Soon the authorities called me in. I was jailed several times."

    He is visibly shaken and points out that he is now on medication.

    "In jail I was electrocuted and beaten," he continues. "There is no
    such thing as human rights in Iran."

    Awkward relationship

    It is impossible to verify Mr Lavai's story, and the Iranian
    constitution does not ban Azeri - but I came across others with
    similar stories, who did not want to speak on record.


    ` There's no doubt that Sahar TV is the voice box of the Iranian authorities '
    Khagani Ibadov Azeri journalist
    Many Azeris living in Iran often complain that their culture and
    language are restricted there.

    Emin Huseynzade, Caucasus project manager at the think tank
    Transitions Online, says there has always been an awkward relationship
    between Azerbaijan and Iran.

    "It started during the Shah period," he says. "And [it has become] a
    tradition: to keep Azeris out of education, out of the [Iranian]
    culture.

    "People were not allowed to give their son or daughter an Azeri name.
    The cultural life in Iran pushed Azeris to become Persians. That is
    the main problem actually."

    Professor Ali Ansari of St Andrew's University, an expert in Iranian
    history, says it is seen differently by the Iranian authorities.

    "Azeri culture was suppressed in Iran but it has been tolerated and at
    times encouraged for political purposes," he says.

    "However the Iranians are understandably very sensitive to any murmur
    of separatism and will crack down quickly on this."

    Anger through television

    These days there is another problem, in that Azerbaijan now supplies
    Israel with much of its oil.

    By way of a response, Iran appears to be showing its anger through television.

    When you turn on a television set in southern Azerbaijan it is
    possible to pick up Iranian TV.

    Sahar TV broadcasts in the Azeri language. Its programmes regularly
    contain criticism of Azeri policy.

    Men watch Sahar in tea rooms in towns like Astara and nearby Lenkoran.

    The television set is always on, though not necessarily tuned into
    Sahar all the time.

    Many say they only watch it out of curiosity, calling it Iranian propaganda.

    Azeri nationalism?

    Azeri journalist Khagani Ibadov says: "There's no doubt that Sahar TV
    is the voice box of the Iranian authorities.

    "The presenters often accuse Azerbaijan of being a Zionist regime
    because of our strong ties with Israel. It shows just how worried they
    are about Azeri nationalism."

    Sahar TV has, on at least one occasion, doctored an image of the Azeri
    flag so that the crescent moon was replaced with the Star of David, I
    was told.

    As Mr Ibadov warms his hands on his glass of hot green tea he tells me
    Sahar TV is state-controlled.

    "The programme presenters say everything that the Iranian government
    is too afraid to say directly," he says.

    Back at the border Azeris continue to cross freely into and out of Iran.

    In spite of everything Iran and Azerbaijan do enjoy bilateral ties and
    last year their trade turnover was reported to be $700m (£450m).

    Lorries, emerging through thick soupy puddles that have collected at
    the border, carry Iranian produce, destined for local markets, the
    Azeri capital, Baku - and beyond.

    The trade continues, but the stark differences between these two
    neighbours remain.
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