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Parliamentarians Consider Renaming Azerbaijan

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  • Parliamentarians Consider Renaming Azerbaijan

    PARLIAMENTARIANS CONSIDER RENAMING AZERBAIJAN
    Lilit Gevorgyan

    Global Insight
    February 8, 2012

    The Azerbaijani Press Agency (APA) reports that at the first plenary
    session of parliament, the chairman of the pro-government Azerbaijan
    Popular Front Party (BAXCP), Gudrat Hasanguliyev, proposed renaming
    the country to the "Republic of Northern Azerbaijan". His proposal
    was backed by Fazail Aghamali, chairman of another parliamentary
    pro-government party, Motherland, as well as Gudrat Gasanguliyev,
    a parliamentary deputy from the minority Azerbaijan National Unity
    Party, and deputies from the ruling Yeni (New) Azerbaijan Party (YAP).

    Siyavush Novruzov, the deputy executive secretary of YAP said, "It
    is quite a significant issue. The world is full of examples, such as
    North Korea, South Korea, Northern and Southern Cyprus." Gasanguliyev
    justified the motion by saying that "two-thirds of Azerbaijani
    territories are currently included into the composition of the
    modern-day Iran, therefore we need to rename the Republic of
    Azerbaijan into the Republic of Northern Azerbaijan." Some deputies
    went further, proposing a referendum on the issue and amending Article
    11 of the Azerbaijani Constitution to read that the entity consists
    of Northern, Southern and Western Azerbaijan. They did not explain
    if Western Azerbaijan would not be included in the current borders
    of the Republic. They also suggested considering joining sanctions
    against Iran.

    Significance:There is a small likelihood that parliament will actually
    change the name of the country or indeed hold a referendum. Should
    this happen, it will be a direct challenge to Iran's territorial
    integrity and will escalate tensions with Iran even further. The fact
    that there is a parliamentary-level debate in Azerbaijan is indicative
    of one of the key problems in relations between the two counties.

    Azerbaijan is mainly a Shi'a Muslim country but is ethnically of
    Turkic extraction, hence its very close relations with mainly Sunni
    Turkey. Despite sharing religious similarities with Iran, the two
    countries have had strained relations since Azerbaijan gained
    independence in 1991, partially because of Baku's territorial
    ambitions. The country was formed at the beginning of the 20th
    century and its people gained the name Azerbaijanis at the same time,
    losing the previous label of Caucasian Tatars. Azerbaijan is the name
    of a region in northern Iran which has around 25 million population
    including Turkmens and other ethnic groups, some of whom have affinity
    with the modern-day Azerbaijani people, but in limited numbers. For
    Iran this is a geographic name which they believe Azerbaijan wants
    to exploit for political reasons, depending on the geopolitical
    situation. One such situation emerged in the 1940s. Then part of
    the Soviet Union, Josef Stalin had planned expansion into Iran and
    Soviet troops occupied northern Iran in 1941, going on to create a very
    short-lived Soviet republic there. Interestingly, even then the region
    was not fully under Soviet Azerbaijani control as it was shared by
    Soviet Armenia. The region returned to Iranian control after the war.

    The expansionist discourse in Azerbaijani parliament is only likely
    to unnerve Tehran.


    From: Baghdasarian
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