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Canadian Paper Dubs Azerbaijan "Oil Giant With Democratic Deficit"

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  • Canadian Paper Dubs Azerbaijan "Oil Giant With Democratic Deficit"

    CANADIAN PAPER DUBS AZERBAIJAN "OIL GIANT WITH DEMOCRATIC DEFICIT"

    February 21, 2013 - 18:21 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - In the 1990s, the aftershocks of the Soviet Union's
    collapse kept on coming in the fractious southern Caucasus, with
    Nagorno Karabakh exploding into conflict, an article published in
    The Star Canadian news source said.

    "In the 21st century, Georgia and Chechnya went back to war. And this
    week - on the 25th anniversary of a vote that launched two decades
    of unresolved ethnic strife in Nagorno Karabakh, a leading expert on
    the region says it could be next," the article said.

    "The risk may seem relatively low," said Thomas de Waal of the Carnegie
    Endowment, "but the only thing that is stopping a war is the leaders'
    own calculation."

    "Nagorno-Karabakh was shared for centuries by Muslim Azeris and
    Christian Armenians. But after the First World War, the newly-formed
    Soviet Union created a largely Armenian autonomous region of Nagorno
    Karabakh within the republic of Azerbaijan. In February 1988, the
    local Soviet parliament for Karabakh voted to join Armenia, touching
    off an inter-ethnic explosion.

    Some 30,000 people died in conflicts that left ethnic Armenians as
    victors. Karabakh was declared an independent - but unrecognized -
    republic. A Russian-brokered ceasefire ended the fighting in 1994. But
    more than 1 million ethnic Azeris and Armenians still cannot return
    home," the article said.

    Meanwhile, said de Waal, Azerbaijan has become an economic oil giant
    in the region, but with a democratic deficit. President Ilham Aliyev's
    regime is using its new-found wealth to equip and expand the army. It
    is also ratcheting up tensions with anti-Armenian rhetoric.

    "In one of the most extreme cases, 75-year-old writer Akram Aylisli
    was burnt in effigy for a book he wrote to heal relations between
    ethnic Azerbaijanis and Armenians, and a pro-government party offered
    a $13,000 bounty for cutting off his ear. "Azerbaijan doesn't want a
    compromise," de Waal said last week at University of Toronto's Munk
    Centre. "It spends $4 billion a year on its army."

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