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Tory MP On Intelligence Committee Is Paid By Azerbaijan Lobby Group

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  • Tory MP On Intelligence Committee Is Paid By Azerbaijan Lobby Group

    TORY MP ON INTELLIGENCE COMMITTEE IS PAID BY AZERBAIJAN LOBBY GROUP
    Rajeev Syal and Solomon Hughes

    guardian.co.uk
    Wednesday 5 October 2011 16.55 BST

    Mark Field denies conflict of interest over his links to a country
    whose human rights record is criticised by the Foreign Office

    MPs expenses published online The intelligence and security
    committee, to which Mark Field belongs, reports directly to the prime
    minister. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

    A Conservative MP who sits on the committee that scrutinises the
    security services is being paid £6,000 a year by a pro-Azerbaijan
    lobby group.

    Mark Field, MP for the Cities of London and Westminster, has joined
    the advisory board of the European Azerbaijan Society. Azerbaijan's
    government has been criticised this year by the Foreign Office
    and Amnesty International for torturing protesters campaigning for
    political reforms. Labour MPs have questioned whether Field's new
    job is appropriate given the sensitive nature of the work of the
    intelligence committee.

    Field, 46, is the youngest ever MP to serve on the committee,
    which reports directly to 10 Downing Street and oversees the UK's
    intelligence and security services.

    The committee is unique because it consists of nine parliamentarians
    appointed by, and reporting directly to, the prime minister. It has
    greater powers than a select committee of parliament, being able to
    demand papers from former governments and official advice to ministers,
    both of which are not open to select committees. His new advisory
    role began in June. He is also the chairman of the all-party group
    for Azerbaijan.

    Field flew to Azerbaijan to meet senior Azeri politicians in May on
    a five-day trip that cost around £3,500 and in July 2010 he spoke in
    the country's capital, Baku, at a Nato conference.

    In March Prince Andrew met Field at Buckingham Palace and asked
    for support in parliament and Whitehall for British investment in
    Azerbaijan.

    The European Azerbaijan Society was launched in November 2008 to
    promote Azerbaijan to international audiences, according to its
    website.

    The country is the size of the island of Ireland and sits on the edges
    of eastern Europe and west Asia. It is attracting increasing interest
    from foreign powers because of an abundance of gas and oil reserves.

    Tale Heydarov, a 26-year-old businessman whose father is one of
    Azerbaijan's ministers, is the society's main funder and director.

    A former student at the London School of Economics, he has been
    described as the "Abramovich of Azerbaijan" after pouring millions of
    pounds into his local football team - including £1m a year in wages
    to recruit the former England captain Tony Adams as manager.

    Azerbaijan is ruled by the authoritarian president Ilham Aliyev and,
    according to the Foreign Office, the country's human rights record
    is poor. Journalists in the country have been harassed and jailed,
    opposition candidates disqualified and voters intimidated.

    In March Amnesty International called upon Azerbaijan's authorities to
    end their crackdown on activists preparing for a protest inspired by
    recent events in the Middle East and north Africa. Detainees said they
    had been waterboarded and threatened with rape while in police custody.

    A spokesman for the Foreign Office said human rights remained a
    crucial issue in the country. "We and the EU have raised our concern
    over the slow progress in improving human rights in Azerbaijan on
    many occasions. These concerns still exist."

    The society has increased its profile in Westminster over the past
    year. It provides secretarial services for the all-party parliamentary
    group on Azerbaijan, which has 20 members.

    It has organised high-profile meetings and receptions at all three
    of the main party conferences.

    The society also founded "Conservative Friends of Azerbaijan" this
    year, which has 25 Tory parliamentarians as members. Robert Halfon
    MP is vice-chair and Chris Pincher MP is treasurer. Other members
    include the deputy speaker Nigel Evans and the 1922 Committee chairman,
    Graham Brady.

    Approached this week, Field said it was "absurd" to claim that he
    should not have taken up his new position. He said he had met Tale
    Heydarov on a couple of occasions.

    "The reason that I have been out there [to Azerbaijan] on two occasions
    is because the country is trying to develop its financial services
    sector. There is no question of a conflict of interest," he said.

    "I have signed the Official Secrets Act and I will not be divulging
    any secrets to the Azerbaijan government or anyone else connected to
    any of the other organisations or all-party committees I am involved
    with. It would be absurd and would be quite improper to think that
    anyone on the security and intelligence committee could not have any
    other outside interests," he said.

    A spokesman for the society said the Heydarovs were not its only
    funders and it was an independent organisation, entirely separate
    from the Azerbaijan government.

    John Mann, the Labour MP for Bassetlaw, said: "This shows how wrong
    it can go when an MP takes a second job. It is an obvious conflict
    of interest."

    Lisa Nandy, the Labour MP for Wigan who chairs the all-party
    group on corporate responsibility, said: "As one of a small number
    of parliamentarians who have the power to influence the British
    intelligence services and access to highly sensitive information, it
    is inappropriate that he is paid by a company promoting a government
    that is willing to torture those who question the status quo."

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