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  • After The Music Stops In Azerbaijan

    AFTER THE MUSIC STOPS IN AZERBAIJAN

    Business News
    http://www.bne.eu/story3839/After_the_music_stops_in_Azerbaijan
    Aug 2 2012
    Europe

    Jahan Hoggarth, Clare Nuttall and Nicholas Watson

    Azerbaijan is an infuriating country for investors. The economy of this
    energy-rich, mainly Muslim nation managed to grow 9.3% even during
    the depths of the global economic crisis in 2009, though it's ruled
    over by an authoritarian regime that stamps down on any dissent and
    the drumbeats of war with Armenia continually rumble in the distance.

    Certainly, hosting this year's Eurovision Song Contest in May helped
    give the country a boost to its international profile. Costing the
    organisers over $800m and creating a 5% "hole" in country's budget,
    according to a report from the Public Association for Assistance to
    Free Economy (PAAFE), this year's Eurovision was the most expensive
    in the contest's history.

    Now that the stage lights are off and the last plane with Eurovision
    fans has departed, what's left behind? "There is a certain element
    of disillusionment in people. The euphoria around the Eurovision
    soon wore off and people saw it for what it is - a music festival
    with an international crowd," says Rasul Jafarov, a coordinator for
    Human Rights Club.

    The event also put an uncomfortable spotlight on the country's
    pretty dreadful record on human rights and freedom of speech. There
    was some much publicised forced evictions of Baku residents to make
    way for the $134m Baku Crystal Hall where the Eurovision was held
    (the construction of which, according to an investigation by the
    Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and RFE/RL,
    personally profited the family of President Ilham Aliyev. Forced out
    of their homes by property developers, evicted residents claim that
    the compensation they were offered for their properties was 30% below
    the market value. Plucked out of their communities, jobs and schools,
    many had to move in with relatives or go abroad while waiting for
    their court appeals. Others could only afford to buy houses on and
    beyond the outskirts of Baku.

    Meanwhile, attacks on journalists and opposition groups, which had
    subsided during the run-up to the event, resumed soon after. On July 4,
    police charged a prominent Azeri journalist and human rights activist,
    Khilal Mamedov, who is from the Talysh region that borders Iran and
    is home to several hundred thousand ethnic Talysh who speak their own
    language, with treason and "fomenting national strife", adding the
    charges to a previous one of drug possession in a case his lawyers
    say is politically motivated. "Mamedov was involved in cooperation
    with Iranian special services since 1992... He was giving information
    that could be used against Azerbaijan to Iranian intelligence," the
    Interior Ministry and Prosecutor-General's office said in a statement.

    Mamedov faces life imprisonment if found guilty of all charges.

    Mamedov's lawyers call the case "absurd."

    Tourists with benefits

    Beyond the politics of the event, local businesses, such as taxi
    companies and restaurants, thrived on the sudden influx of foreign
    visitors to the capital. Frequented mostly by business travellers,
    Baku's hotels had their chance to learn what it is like to manage
    large crowds of tourists.

    Over 30,000 credit card terminals were introduced around the country,
    93% of those in Baku. "Many [local banks and businesses] knew that
    foreign visitors were unlikely to carry wads of cash with them,"
    says Zohrab Ismail, director of PAAFE. "As a result, banks are now
    competing on transaction charges."

    However, visa regulations, loosened during the Eurovision, were
    tightened soon after the event. "This cannot be helpful for our
    tourism industry. The sky-high visa fees and tight regulations are
    deterring potential tourists from coming to Azerbaijan. We need to
    work towards a sustainable, rather than one-off tourism," says Zohrab.

    The economy certainly needs a boost. The oil and gas-rich country
    held up well during the economic crisis that hit in 2008, though has
    struggled as oil prices fall and European demand for its for exports
    decline due to the crisis there. According to the latest figures
    from the Azerbaijani State Statistics Committee, the country's GDP
    in the first half of 2012 increased by 1.5% on year, a pick-up from
    the first-quarter growth of 0.5%.

    The non-oil part of the economy on the whole saw its total production
    grow by 11.3% on year in the first half of the year, whereas decreasing
    oil production contributed to a fall of 3% on year in total industrial
    output. Oil and gas condensate output in the first half of 2012 fell
    by 7.1% on year, while natural gas output increased by 3.1%.

    "The cautious upward trend [in GDP growth] is likely to continue.

    However, it still does not look likely that the official GDP growth
    projection of 5.7% for this year will be achieved. Base effects will
    provide some support for annual growth in the second half of the year,
    while at least the growth of gas production is relatively encouraging,"
    IHS Global Insight notes.

    Jaw-jaw better than war-war

    A constant backdrop to all this is Azerbaijan's fraught relations
    with the ethnic Armenian breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh and
    its backer Armenia.

    Tensions mounted again in July as Nagorno-Karabakh held presidential
    elections that were slammed by Azerbaijan as a "provocation". As
    voters in the tiny unrecognised republic voted for sitting President
    Bako Sahakian over his challenger Vitaly Balsanian, the wider outcome
    of the election was a further increase in tensions in the volatile
    South Caucasus region.

    The day before Nagorno-Karabakh's 98,772 registered voters went to
    the polls, Azeri Foreign Ministry spokesman Elman Abdullayev issued
    a statement saying that the election "is completely contrary to the
    efforts of Azerbaijan and international organizations for peaceful
    resolution of the conflict."

    Under international law, Nagorno-Karabakh remains part of Azerbaijan,
    although it has been de facto independent since the early 1990s, when
    forces backed by the Armenian army fought off an attempt to bring the
    enclave back under Baku's control. Although a ceasefire agreement ended
    the bloody war in May 1994, Armenia and Azerbaijan have never signed
    a peace settlement, and there is a continued threat that small-scale
    border skirmishes could escalate into a full-blown conflict once more.

    The EU High Representative Catherine Ashton also criticised the poll.

    "I would like to reiterate that the European Union does not recognise
    the constitutional and legal framework in which they will be held,"
    she said in a July 18 statement. "These 'elections' should not
    prejudice the determination of the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh
    in the negotiated general framework of the peaceful settlement of
    the conflict.

    Fears of a new outbreak of war increased in the build-up to the vote.

    Nine soldiers were shot dead in a series of border clashes between
    Armenian and Azeri soldiers on June 4-5. Although there have been no
    further shootings since then, a higher-than-usual level of activity
    was reported along the line dividing Nagorno-Karabakh from Azerbaijan
    proper. On July 11, Azerbaijan started a week of military exercises
    near Nagorno-Karabakh. Speaking to APA on July 17, a spokesperson
    for the Azerbaijani State Civil Aviation Administration reiterated
    a threat to shoot down any planes violating Azeri airspace by flying
    to the republic's newly reconstructed Stepanakert airport.

    That is a clear warning against any wider recognition of the July 19
    election. Cautioning against engagement with the separatist republic,
    Abdullayev said that anyone visiting Nagorno-Karabakh to monitor the
    elections would be added to the Foreign Ministry's blacklist.

    That list of enemies, both domestic and foreign, grows longer by
    the day.




    From: A. Papazian
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