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Azerbaijan's Whims And Fancies

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  • Azerbaijan's Whims And Fancies

    AZERBAIJAN'S WHIMS AND FANCIES

    http://times.am/?p=22995&l=en
    By Vilen Khlgatyan

    In late March a conference was held in Baku with the covert support
    of the Aliyev regime, titled 'Tomorrow of the Contemporary Southern
    Azerbaijan'. The conference was organized by the so called South
    Azerbaijan National Liberation Front (SANLF), a rag-tag group of
    Iranian Azerbaijanis who are adherents to the ideology of Pan-Turkism.

    The participants made irredentist claims against Iran. Specifically
    they claimed that the dire political and economic situation
    inside Iran caused by Western sanctions will inevitably lead to
    destabilization, at which point, the SANLF would be ready to take
    control of 'South Azerbaijan'. Attendees to the conference included
    Pan-Turkism activists, academics, and former Azerbaijani government
    officials. The conference also served to highlight the hypocritical
    foreign policy of Azerbaijan, where on the one hand Baku claims Armenia
    is an irredentist state, yet via proxy organizations like the SANLF,
    makes territorial claims on Iran.

    Expectedly, the Iranian government reacted harshly to Baku's
    provocations, which indeed are just another segment in a long series
    of tense exchanges between the two states. Disputes over the Caspian
    Sea have been ongoing for two decades now, while just last year news
    broke that claimed Azerbaijan had agreed to allow Israel the use of
    Azerbaijani airbases to land and refuel Israeli bombers in the event
    of an attack against Iran. Also indicative of the worsening relations
    are the continued oppression of Muslim activists within Azerbaijan.

    The well known Azerbaijani cleric, Taleh Bagirzadeh, was arrested
    in March on trumped up charges of heroin possession. This was a
    political decision made by the Aliyev regime in order to tamper the
    growing popularity of Islam among its citizenry, particularly the
    young. For example, in a 2010 poll conducted among the youth, 48%
    of young Azerbaijanis expressed support for Sharia law. Naturally,
    Iran being a theocratic Muslim state, seeks to encourage the spread
    of Islam.

    Aliyev and his cohorts are seen as apostates in the eyes of official
    Tehran.

    Bagirzadeh's arrest caused several hundred protestors to take to the
    streets in his hometown of Nardaran and demand his immediate release as
    well as other 'prisoners of the hijab' who have similarly been targeted
    for their religious convictions. Azerbaijan has seen a wave of protests
    over the past few months, beginning with the incidents that occurred
    in the Ismayilli region in January, as well as the anti-solider abuse
    movement, running from January through March, coinciding with both
    the Ismayilli, and Nardaran protests over the arrest of Bagirzadeh.

    While clamping down on domestic opposition both of the secular as
    well as the religious sort, Aliyev's regime has also targeted Western
    pro-democracy outlets. Late last week the operations of the Azad Fikir
    University (AFU) were suspended with no official explanation given.

    The University had been supported by the American and British embassies
    in Baku, USAID, and other international organizations. This should
    come as no surprise given that Aliyev has another election to steal
    this year, therefore he must stifle all sources of discontent.

    More importantly, Baku is rapidly coming to the conclusion that the
    West considers Azerbaijan primarily in terms of its broader strategic
    interests in the region, which are shifting due to the up-coming
    pull out from Afghanistan, as well as Azerbaijan's ever declining
    oil reserves. Therefore, Azerbaijan is a dispensable 'ally' whose
    importance is likely to decrease.

    Baku's irredentist and anti-democracy schemes coincided with the first
    radio broadcast of the Voice of Talyshstan from Shushi. The show is
    designed for ethnic Talyshes residing in Azerbaijan as well as in
    other former Soviet republics. While the program was not initiated by
    the Armenian government, it nonetheless should be incorporated into
    a wider public diplomacy campaign that ought to be driven by the
    Armenian MFA, and include not only Azerbaijan's ethnic minorities,
    but all Azerbaijani citizens. So long as Azerbaijan lacks a free
    and fair press that can present accurate descriptions of Armenia and
    Armenians, public diplomacy and strategic communication will serve as
    useful instruments to present Armenia's position to the Azerbaijani
    public in an accurate manner.

    Vilen Khlgatyan is the Vice-Chairman of the Political Developments
    Research Center (PDRC)

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