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Third Term a Given. Ilham Aliyev Becomes President of Azerbaijan for

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  • Third Term a Given. Ilham Aliyev Becomes President of Azerbaijan for

    Gazeta.ru , Russia
    Oct 9 2013


    Third Term a Given. Ilham Aliyev Becomes President of Azerbaijan for Third Time

    by Aleksandr Braterskiy


    Ilham Aliyev has been reelected to the post of president of Azerbaijan
    for the third time. According to experts, Aliyev will continue his
    previous political course, although external and domestic factors may
    force him to make changes inside the country. According to the
    opposition, the election took place in conditions of "total
    falsification."

    As expected, Ilham Aliyev - the son of Heydar Aliyev, former TsK CPSU
    [Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union] member
    and late president of Azerbaijan - won a landslide victory in the
    election with 83 per cent of the vote according to exit polls
    conducted by the pro-government polling organization Prognoz.
    According to the same data, his closest opponent, oppositionist Jamil
    Hasanli representing the National Council of Democratic Forces (NCDF),
    received 8.2 per cent. Another candidate, Iqbal Aghazade, garnered 2
    per cent. The remaining six candidates were unable to garner more than
    1 per cent of the vote. According to data from the Independent
    Research Centre ELS, Ilham Aliyev collected 80.8 per cent of the vote,
    Jamil Hasanli - 10.5 per cent. Azerbaijan does not have a threshold
    for voter turnout - elections are considered valid regardless of the
    number of voters.

    According to Vagif Guseynov, director of the Centre for Strategic
    Assessment and Analysis and the former head of the Azerbaijani KGB,
    "significant changes" in the country's foreign policy should not be
    expected from the newly elected president: "For global and regional
    powers, the country's current President Ilham Aliyev is a guarantor of
    stability in Azerbaijan, and they do not need anything more," Guseynov
    told Gazeta.ru.

    For his part, Khikmet Gadzhizade, former Azerbaijani ambassador to
    Russia and a political expert and publicist, noted that the
    Azerbaijani president has found a golden mean in relations with Russia
    and the West: "Relations with Russia are fine, although there is no
    rapprochement, there is also no rapprochement with the West, although
    they do keep their money there," the expert describes the mood of
    Azerbaijan's elite.

    Monitoring Through "Friendly Eyes"

    Russia - which in the post-Soviet space maintains relations of
    alliance with Armenia, Azerbaijan's opponent - is interested in Aliyev
    continuing to be in power as a compromise figure, Konstantin Zatulin,
    director of the Institute of CIS countries, told Gazeta.ru.

    "Aliyev is not our closest ally, however, he is accommodating and
    takes Moscow's interests into account," Zatulin noted.

    In August, Russian President Putin visited Azerbaijan. "Regardless of
    the Russian president's recent visit to Azerbaijan, relations between
    the two countries are built around energy security and relations with
    Armenia, and these two problems are not easily solved," Theodore
    Karasik, leading analyst at the INEGMA military and political analysis
    centre in Dubai, told Gazeta.ru. According to the expert, the two
    sides may fail to "reach an understanding" on these two issues.

    Regardless of the fact that Azerbaijan and Russia are distancing
    themselves from each other politically, this summer Russia began
    large-scale arms supplies to Azerbaijan worth almost USD 1 billion,
    which drew a negative reaction from Armenia, where a Russian army base
    is located.

    For its part, Moscow, which has a significant Azeri diaspora, is
    demonstrating a friendly attitude towards Aliyev at election time. On
    Tuesday [8 October], Leyla Aliyeva, Aliyev's daughter and deputy head
    of the Heydar Aliyev Foundation, received an award from the Russian
    Orthodox Church for strengthening the friendship between the two
    countries, ITAR TASS reports. Aliyeva is permanently resident in
    Moscow.

    Sergey Lebedev, head of the CIS observer mission, noted in an
    interview with the agency that his colleagues are looking at the
    election in Azerbaijan through "friendly eyes," in contrast to
    representatives of the West.

    "He Suppressed and Stifled Everyone"

    Members of the Azerbaijani opposition have already called the
    country's presidential election "the dirtiest" in the history of an
    independent Azerbaijan.

    In a statement published on the Turan agency's website, Isa Gambar,
    leader of the opposition Musavat movement, said that the presidential
    election had taken place in conditions of "total falsification." Among
    the most typical violations the oppositionists noted the use of
    "carousels," ballot stuffing, as well as administrative resources.

    Experts note that the tough pressure on members of the opposition by
    the authorities does not allow an opportunity for the emergence of a
    prominent opposition figure in Azerbaijan who would be able to take on
    the country's president.

    Former Ambassador Gadzhizade characterizes Aliyev's actions as "he
    suppressed everyone, he stifled everyone," and believes that the main
    source of all of the country's problems is "the pyramid of
    corruption."

    "Reforms are needed, and in order to carry them out you need to either
    be Deng Xiaoping or Peter the Great - I do not see such qualities in
    our president," believes Gadzhizade. In his opinion, the authorities
    have a chance to begin political reforms by allowing the opposition to
    take part in the parliamentary election, which is scheduled to take
    place in two years' time.

    Zatulin, head of the Institute of CIS Countries, says that alongside
    the tough authoritarian policies, the authorities are also using the
    patriotic feelings of many Azeris who support the authorities' actions
    in relation to ownership of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    "So far, Aliyev has not made a single mistake," Zatulin notes; he
    believes that the Azerbaijani regime can be replaced either as a
    result of large-scale destabilization, or tough pressure from the
    outside, which external players, including the United States, are not
    interested in at the moment.

    "The United States supports Azerbaijan's independence but not
    democracy in Azerbaijan," says former diplomat Gadzhizade.

    According to him, the United States could reconsider its relations
    with Azerbaijan if an American rapprochement with Iran begins and
    Azerbaijan loses its significance in the region as an ally of the
    United States, Gadzhizade thinks.

    For Guseynov, director of the Centre for Strategic Assessment and
    Analysis, an internal destabilization of the situation in the country
    seems more realistic because of the authorities' pressure on the legal
    opposition, which "could in the end lead to the activation of marginal
    forces, including Islamists": "Ideologies of this kind are very hardy
    and take over the minds of destitute Muslims in a short space of
    time."


    [Translated from Russian]

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