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Azerbaijan's Leaders Yield After a Rare Public Protest

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  • Azerbaijan's Leaders Yield After a Rare Public Protest

    Azerbaijan's Leaders Yield After a Rare Public Protest

    The New Yrok Times
    By ANDREW E. KRAMER
    March 1, 2012

    MOSCOW - In a rare outbreak of civil unrest in Azerbaijan a crowd of
    angry protesters massed outside the home of a provincial governor on
    Thursday, demanding his ouster as the house was consumed in flames,
    apparently the result of an arson attack. The national government
    responded by dismissing the governor.
    ,

    Azerbaijanis took to Quba's streets on Thursday. By day's end, the governor
    had been dismissed.

    Street protests are closely watched in Azerbaijan, as in other former
    Soviet republics, out of concern that the unrest that swept through
    countries in the Middle East could spread.

    The trouble started when the governor, Rauf Gabibov, said in a televised
    interview that residents of the Quba district in northern Azerbaijan were
    `sell-outs,' in reference to sales of houses in a mountain resort area.
    Local media reports said the insult touched off the protest.

    Observers of Azerbaijani politics said, though, that the insult was little
    more than a pretext for residents to vent the anger they already felt over
    corruption and their resentment of some personalities in the local
    leadership, who are appointed, not elected.

    Street protests are closely watched in Azerbaijan, as in other former
    Soviet republics, out of concern that the unrest that swept through
    authoritarian countries in the Middle East could spread. Azerbaijan is one
    of the six former Soviet states with a predominantly Muslim population.

    The country has been led since 1993 by Heydar Aliyev, a former Soviet
    Politburo member, and later by his son Ilham Aliyev. It is a major oil
    producer on the Caspian Sea and has good relations with the United States,
    acting as a way station for military supplies bound for Afghanistan.

    Rasim Musabayov, an independent member of the Azerbaijan Parliament, said
    in a telephone interview from Baku, the capital, that the unrest on
    Thursday was local in nature and unlikely to spread. Protesters demanded
    only that Mr. Gabibov be dismissed, he said; they did not criticize Mr.
    Aliyev.

    Mr. Musabayov said that resentment had been building against Mr. Gabibov,
    and that the insulting remark was merely a spark. In Azerbaijan, he said,
    `not every careless word leads to a riot.'

    The country is worried about any unrest taking hold. The police routinely
    disperse even small street demonstrations, and the last major public show
    of dissent was seen in 2003, when the younger Mr. Aliyev succeeded his
    father, and in a subsequent parliamentary election.

    Moving quickly to head off trouble this time, the central government
    announced the dismissal of Mr. Gabibov on Thursday evening, and several
    demonstrators detained earlier in the day were quickly released.

    Videos posted online appear to show about a thousand men milling outside
    the burning governor's mansion in Quba, which borders the Dagestan district
    of Russia. Dagestan has been beset with a low-level Islamic insurgency and
    ethnic conflict for some time.

    The government sent armored vehicles to the area of the mansion on
    Thursday, according to news reports, and by late in the day the crowd was
    said to have mostly dispersed.

    In December, protests and strikes in Zhanaozen, an oil town in western
    Kazakhstan, across the Caspian Sea from Azerbaijan, ended with at least 17
    deaths and scores of injuries after the police opened fire on a crowd.
    Protesters there burned down the City Hall and the headquarters of a
    subsidiary of the Kazakh national oil company.

    A version of this article appeared in print on March 2, 2012, on
    page A8 of the New York edition with the headline: Azerbaijan's
    Leaders Yield After a Rare Public Protest.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/02/world/asia/azerbaijan-protests-force-governors-dismissal.html?ref=world

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