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The Economist reveals Azerbaijan-CoE corruption-based relations

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  • The Economist reveals Azerbaijan-CoE corruption-based relations

    The Economist reveals Azerbaijan-CoE corruption-based relations

    16:23, 23 March, 2013

    YEREVAN, MARCH 23, ARMENPRESS: The Economist daily has published an
    analytical article, revealing specifics of Azerbaijani policy, mainly
    regarding the relations with Council of Europe. As reports Armenpress
    it is mainly noted in the article:

    `Azerbaijan is not really a democracy according to Freedom House, a
    watchdog. Since the early 1990s, it says, elections have been deeply
    flawed. Parliament is rubber-stamping the government's decisions.
    Corruption is widespread.

    In theory only democratic countries can join the Council of Europe
    (CoE), which promotes human rights. Yet Azerbaijan has been a member
    since 2001. Back then, council members hoped that membership would
    accelerate Azerbaijan's democratic transition. That has not happened.
    Indeed, political manipulation of elections may have increased over
    the past decade: in a blistering report published last year, the
    European Stability Initiative, a think-tank, called Azerbaijan's 2010
    parliamentary elections the most flawed ever in the CoE's member
    states.

    Since joining the council, the ESI argues, Azerbaijan has used `caviar
    diplomacy', including gifts, free trips and money, to create a group
    of apologists within PACE who consistently act in its interests and
    render the assembly impotent.

    Following the deeply flawed 2005 parliamentary elections, some council
    members argued that PACE should suspend the Azerbaijani delegation's
    voting rights. The majority in the assembly disagreed, and issued a
    strongly critical statement instead. Five years later, it couldn't
    even manage that: despite widespread violations in the 2010
    parliamentary elections, PACE election monitors found far more
    positives in that year's parliamentary elections than observers from
    the Office of Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR).

    By far the most divisive issue is political prisoners. In December
    2009, PACE asked Christoph Straesser, a German member, to define the
    term officially. The definition he presented in October 2012 was one
    that the Council had used since 2001. Several delegates then argued
    that PACE did not have the authority to assess such human rights
    violations; that belonged to the European Court of Human Rights. Their
    attempt to block the definition was defeated by the narrowest of
    margins. It followed lobbying by Azerbaijan that one delegate
    described as `unmatched in its brazenness'.

    Worse was to come. Despite being refused a visa to visit Azerbaijan
    three times, Mr Straesser wrote a monitoring report on the situation
    of political prisoners in Azerbaijan, which PACE debated on January
    23rd. Arguments were polarized: some delegates called Azerbaijan's
    refusal to let Mr Straesser visit unacceptable; others claimed his
    report therefore lacked credibility. Several members highlighted a
    `prisoner carousel', in which people are arrested, released and
    re-arrested. Indeed, shortly after the co-rapporteurs published their
    report in December, a presidential amnesty led to the release of 13
    out of the 14 prisoners mentioned.

    According to Amnesty International, the government is cracking down on
    dissent in the run up to presidential elections in October this year.
    In February, it locked up Illgar Mammadov, a presidential candidate,
    for `organizing' apparently spontaneous riots in the town of Ismayili
    in January. Last week, the authorities jailed an independent
    journalist for nine years. Azerbaijan is due to assume the
    chairmanship of the council's Committee of Ministers in May 2014. The
    Council of Europe's credibility is on the line,' The Economist wrote.

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