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Azerbaijan Plants Flag In DC Lobbying Scene

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  • Azerbaijan Plants Flag In DC Lobbying Scene

    AZERBAIJAN PLANTS FLAG IN DC LOBBYING SCENE
    By Kevin Bogardus

    The Hill
    http://thehill.com/business-a-lobbying/197681-azerbaijan-plants-flag-in-dc-lobbying-scene
    Dec 6 2011
    DC

    A new nonprofit supporting Azerbaijan is setting up shop in Washington
    to provide a counterbalance to the Armenian-American lobby.

    Azerbaijan and Armenia have clashed off and on since the 1990s over
    Nagorno-Karabakh, an unrecognized territory in western Azerbaijan that
    claims to be independent. The neighboring countries blame each other
    for the conflict over the territory, and the U.S. has been pushing
    for a peaceful resolution to the dispute.

    Now the Azerbaijan America Alliance is coming to Washington in a bid
    to make some influential friends.

    The group hosted its coming-out party Tuesday night at the Reserve
    Officers Association on Capitol Hill, holding a reception meant
    to serve as an introduction to power players on Capitol Hill and
    Embassy Row. Several lawmakers were expected to attend, along with
    the ambassador for Azerbaijan to the United States.

    Founded by Anar Mammadov, a young Azerbaijani businessman and son
    of the country's transportation minister, the Alliance hopes to
    highlight the ties between Azerbaijan and the United States, whether
    it's through energy or national-security interests.

    Mammadov told The Hill he loves his country and wants to do his duty
    to help it.

    "I think [the Alliance] can bring these two countries together,"
    Mammadov said. "I think America is one of the biggest friends of
    Azerbaijan."

    The one other individual listed in the leadership of the Alliance
    is Khayal Sharifzade, the group's chairman. Sharifzade is the former
    CEO and chairman of the Bank of Azerbaijan.

    Sharifzade is also a member of the board of directors of ZQAN
    Holdings. Mammadov is founder, president and chairman of that company,
    which is based in Baku, Azerbaijan, and has interests in oil and gas,
    construction and telecommunications.

    According to Justice Department records filed in May, the Alliance
    signed a $2.4 million, yearlong contract with the lobby firm Fabiani &
    Co. to conduct outreach in the United States. Jim Fabiani, a longtime
    GOP lobbyist and former chairman and CEO of Cassidy & Associates,
    is leading the effort.

    The Azerbaijan group is playing catch-up with Armenia, which has had
    a lobbying presence in Washington for decades.

    Lobbyists for the Alliance will likely highlight that Azerbaijan is now
    a member of the United Nations' Security Council and is contributing
    troops to NATO forces in Afghanistan. The nation, which is in the
    Caucasus region on the Europe-Asia border, has a wealth of energy
    resources, helping to provide oil and natural gas to Europe.

    The country's poor human-rights record could prevent the group from
    gaining much traction, however. The State Department's 2010 Human
    Rights Report on Azerbaijan said the country has flawed elections,
    allows arbitrary arrests for political reasons and restricts the press.

    "Once again we're seeing millions being spent by a foreign government
    entity - in this case, the son of billionaire Azerbaijani Transport
    Minister Ziya Mammadov - to whitewash his country's abysmal
    human-rights record and aggression against Karabakh and Armenia,"
    said Aram Hamparian, executive director of the Armenian National
    Committee of America, in a statement.

    Here in Washington, the Alliance will have an agenda to push.

    One item will be lobbying on the Freedom Support Act, a 1992 law passed
    by Congress to aid former Soviet provinces in their transition to
    democracy. One provision of that law bans direct aid to the Azerbaijani
    government, which the Alliance will work to reverse.

    The Alliance is looking to expand and is advertising to hire
    an executive director for the group. But once it settles down
    in Washington, the group can expect a rough reception from its
    Armenian-American counterparts.

    "It doesn't change the fact that the Azeri government continues to make
    threats against the people of Nagorno-Karabakh," said Bryan Ardouny,
    executive director of the Armenian Assembly of America.

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