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Five More Years: On The Challenges Facing Azerbaijan's President

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  • Five More Years: On The Challenges Facing Azerbaijan's President

    FIVE MORE YEARS: ON THE CHALLENGES FACING AZERBAIJAN'S PRESIDENT

    ISN, Zurich
    Oct 22 2013

    What major challenges will Ilham Aliyev confront in his third term
    as President of Azerbaijan? According to Sabine Freizer, it's an
    increasingly familiar set of problems - declining oil revenues,
    a poor track record on human rights and the possibility of renewed
    conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.

    By Sabine Freizer for Atlantic Council

    President Ilham Aliyev is about to start his third mandate in
    Azerbaijan. Despite some hefty criticism by the main European
    elections observation mission, the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the elections on 9 October were the
    easy part. Azerbaijan has made impressive economic progress in recent
    years, Baku's sparking skyline standing as vivid proof. But the
    country has a host of challenges to overcome. Economic growth has
    already begun to slow and during his next mandate Aliyev will have
    to manage a transition from mega-oil producer to a more diversified
    and democratized country.

    Over the past ten years high oil revenues brought Azerbaijan stunning
    GDP growth, impressive poverty reduction, some development in non-oil
    sectors and allowed it to become a major international investor in
    its neighborhood.

    The country's role on the international stage has noticeably increased,
    after Eurovision 2012 it will host the European Games in 2015. More
    importantly it gained a seat on the United Nations Security Council as
    a non-permanent member and has succeeded in maintaining an independent
    multi-vector foreign policy where it is beholden to none of its bigger
    regional neighbors - neither Russia nor the European Union and the
    United States. Late last year it even marshaled the closure of Russia's
    last military outpost on its territory at the Gabala satellite station.

    Trouble, however, lurks on the horizon. Gone are the days of double
    digit growth rates, in 2012 the economy expanded by 2.2 percent and may
    reach 6 percent this year. The country's oil revenue has started to
    decline and is predicted to decrease quickly after 2015. New natural
    gas fields coming on line are unlikely to compensate fully the lost
    oil revenues. Azerbaijan is also not the only gas provider in the
    area, with Iraq, Iran, Israel and even tiny Cyprus as potential new
    European suppliers, and new extraction technics being developed.

    Diversification of the economy has begun but in 2012 92% of exports
    were still oil or oil products. Substantial more investment and human
    capital is needed to offer goods and services that can be competitive
    in an already saturated region soon to be divided up by rivaling
    trading groups led by the EU or Russia's custom union.

    While it was easy for a small group of individuals and companies to
    manage oil extraction and export, with the vast majority of profits
    going to a limited few, this will no longer be possible under a more
    diversified economy and as growth rates drop.

    Already there were public protests in 2012 and 2013, indicating
    growing discontent with social inequality, corruption, lack of
    opportunities in the regions and hazing in the military. Even though
    the demonstrations quickly ended in mass detentions, the whole idea
    of street action was striking for officials and the population with
    both sides testing the boundaries of the allowed and possible -
    often employing the new tools of social media.

    The most common way to respond to public expressions of criticism has
    been repression including the jailing of activists, political arty
    representatives and journalists. But the President also fired several
    regional executive authorities who had too clearly flaunted their
    wealth and privileges. While it may be hard to dismiss close long
    term allies in government in Baku, some who are from Ilham Aliyev's
    father's generation, more anti-corruption efforts at the municipal and
    regional level could already diminish some of the current unhappiness
    not so far from Baku's bustling Fountain Square.

    Another less vivid, but nevertheless serious challenge for the current
    government, is the growing influence of more conservative forms
    of Islam - either sunni or shiite. Positioning itself as a secular
    country, Azerbaijan with its predominantly Muslim population has a
    new generation of believers who are very active. The government is
    worried that they may be manipulated by a hyper active Shiite state
    on its Southern border and a Salafi insurgency ragging on its Northern
    flank with the North Caucasus.

    To counter this, the government introduced strict and restrictive
    religion laws in November 2011, an informal Hijab ban and the closure
    of a number of mosques. These in turn have angered many and are
    unlikely to encourage people to more moderate religious practice.

    Instead some Islamist groups have joined opposition rallies or
    mobilized people, like in October 2012 to protest the hijab ban.

    Instead the government should make the work of the State Committee for
    Work with Religious Organizations (SCWRO) and the Caucasus Board of
    Muslims (CBM) more transparent and enter into a dialogue with peaceful
    practitioners and representatives of non-official Islamic communities.

    Systematic human rights abuses and absence of progress in the
    democratization has been reported extensively on by groups like Human
    Rights Watch and Amnesty International. The just completed presidential
    elections were more harshly criticized than the last two presidential
    polls which Aliyev won. According to the OSCE the election were
    "undermined by limitations on the freedoms of expression, assembly,
    and association that did not guarantee a level playing field for
    candidates."

    In the past human rights concerns have done little to taint most
    western countries' relations with Baku. Even during this election the
    European Parliament and Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
    (PACE) came out with much more encouraging statements on the holding
    of the poll. But Azerbaijan's ties with its western allies are on
    less solid ground than before. Baku is not planning to sign a trade
    agreement with Brussels in Vilnus (because it is not a World Trade
    Organization member) nor move forward in the association process as
    Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine expect to do. As the country is les needed
    as a corridor for the US supplying or withdrawing from Afghanistan,
    Washington's interest in the region is likely to keep decreasing.

    As President Aliyev likes to repeat, the biggest challenge facing the
    country is the non-resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The
    current status quo is deeply damaging: 586,000 Azeri remain internally
    displaced (IDPs) from Nagorno-Karabakh and adjacent areas, and some
    14 per cent of the country's territory is occupied. In response
    Baku has been accumulating military assets at an increasing rate:
    the military budget rising to $3.7 billion in 2013, from $3 billion
    in 2012. Public opinion in Azerbaijan and Armenia, encouraged by the
    arm race and provoked regularly by official and unofficial propaganda,
    is turning increasingly against any compromise.

    An open war, however, would have disastrous consequences for both
    countries and the region. Now that Armenia has agreed to join the
    Eurasia customs union it is more apparent than ever that Russia would
    have much difficulty to let its partner's territory be attacked from
    the Azerbaijani side.

    The chance of war increases as long as negotiations between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan remain stalled. For twenty years the Organization for
    Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)'s Minsk Group has tried
    to mediate a resolution of the conflict. Since 2005 it attempted to
    get the sides to at least agree on six basic principles to guide a
    comprehensive agreement. The effort has now virtually collapsed and
    the best the mediators appear able to do is engage the parties on
    confidence building measures like the pulling back of snipers or the
    setting up of communication lines to inform about incidents along the
    line of contact. Azerbaijan has refused to sign on to them claiming
    that they strengthen the status quo.

    But Aliyev has shown some courage in the past by calling for progress,
    saying that he could contemplate a vote on the future status of
    Nagorno-Karabakh and urging for discussion on a comprehensive
    settlement to begin. He could demonstrate real commitment to these
    proposals by agreeing to the confidence building measures being
    suggested by Minsk Group negotiators. Already he has toned down some
    of his most belligerent rhetoric. The resolution of the conflict is
    deeply dependent on confidence building and the next needed step is
    a beginning of withdrawal of occupied territories by Armenian forces
    but they are not willing to do this until they see strong security
    guarantees being implemented.

    Nobody seriously doubted Aliyev's electoral victory but the situation
    is different from previous elections because of the seriousness of
    the challenges ahead. Luckily Azerbaijan has a large number of young,
    foreign educated, and patriotic youth to help in the transition
    process if they are encouraged, rather than imprisoned or harassed
    for any expression of dissent.

    The President has declared an ambition for Azerbaijan in 2020 -
    and he's not the only regional leader who has aspirations for his
    country's next decade - but if he wants to get there, it's not too
    early to start reforms which his western partners will support, rather
    than to isolate further, keeping the economy based on a handful of
    commodities and the business of running the country in a few hands.

    Sabine Freizer is a senior fellow with the Atlantic Council's Dinu
    Patriciu Eurasia Center.

    http://www.isn.ethz.ch/Digital-Library/Articles/Detail/?lng=en&id=171560

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