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Azerbaijani Security Forces Arrest Suspected Islamist Militants Foll

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  • Azerbaijani Security Forces Arrest Suspected Islamist Militants Foll

    AZERBAIJANI SECURITY FORCES ARREST SUSPECTED ISLAMIST MILITANTS FOLLOWING DEADLY CLASHES
    Lilit Gevorgyan

    Global Insight
    April 10, 2012

    On 6 April, Azerbaijan's National Security Ministry reported that
    17 suspected Islamist militants had been arrested in a raid. In a
    statement the Ministry said that during the nationwide operation,
    an agent from the ministry's special operations department, Elshad
    Guliyev, was killed while three others were wounded in the town
    of Ganja. The operation also covered the capital Baku and Sumgait,
    north of the capital and home to most of Azerbaijan's petrochemical
    industry. The state security services stated that the suspects were
    members of "an illegal armed group which were planning subversive
    and terrorist acts aimed at undermining political stability in the
    country." Meanwhile, local news in Ganja reported that the detained
    people were "Wahhabist-influenced", followers of particular Sunni
    branch in Islam.

    Significance:Azerbaijan is a largely Shi'a Muslim republic, and
    has seen a rise in the activities of Islamist militants. Given the
    country's poor human rights record, it is hard to verify if the
    reported arrest of suspected militants are indeed to do with a true
    security risk or is a way of suppressing the already weakened and
    beleaguered opposition in Azerbaijan. Its national security agency,
    which has increased significantly in size in recent years under the
    presidency of Ilham Aliyev, has claimed in the past to have thwarted
    attacks on foreign embassies by Islamists with links to neighbouring
    Iran, which is also a largely Shi'a Muslim state. However, there have
    been fewer reports of Wahhabi militants' presence in Azerbaijan in
    recent years. These groups are prevalent in Russia's North Caucasus,
    which shares Azerbaijan's northern border. During Azerbaijan's war
    against its mainly Armenian-populated Nagorno-Karabakh autonomous
    region from 1988 to 1993, there were numerous reports of the
    presence of Chechen brigades fighting against Armenians in support
    of Azerbaijan. However, since the return of precarious peace in the
    region it is difficult to establish if these North Caucasian groups
    operate in Azerbaijan or if the recently arrested suspects have
    any links with them. Nonetheless, the growing reports of arrests of
    militants raise concerns over the security situation in the country.




    From: A. Papazian
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