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Inside The Court Of Azerbaijan's Ilham Aliyev

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  • Inside The Court Of Azerbaijan's Ilham Aliyev

    INSIDE THE COURT OF AZERBAIJAN'S ILHAM ALIYEV

    Malta Today
    December 18, 2014 Thursday

    Other western governments have courted the Azeri dictatorship despite
    its abysmal human rights record. But has Joseph Muscat chosen the
    worst moment to meet Ilham Aliyev in Baku amidst a brutal crackdown
    on dissidents which is causing unease in other western capitals,
    JAMES DEBONO asks?

    Following Russia's annexation of Crimea, the oil and gas rich Caucasian
    republic has been touted as an alternative energy source to Putin's
    Russia.

    Lately Azerbaijan has also embarked on a marketing campaign in its
    bid to project itself as a prosperous forward looking nation, despite
    its notoriety for corruption which earned President Ilham Aliyev the
    "corruption person of the year" award (granted by the Organized Crime
    and Corruption Reporting Project) in 2012.

    In April Muscat was in synch with the thinking of other EU nations
    when hinting that recent political developments in Russia had
    strengthened Europe's resolve to diversify energy sources and go for
    new interconnections. He said the EU's position in favour of Azerbaijan
    would benefit Malta's own position, given that state-owned Azerbaijani
    company Socar forms part of the ElectroGas consortium supplying LNG
    to the new power station.

    But the PM's visit to Azerbaijan coincides with a crackdown on human
    rights activists which is increasing pressure on western countries
    to distance themselves from the Aliyev regime.

    Deals in Baku

    What is sure is that Malta's fortunes are now tied to Socar. The
    company not only owns 20% of Electrogas, which will provide Malta
    with gas for the next 18 years, but will be the consortium's sole
    energy supplier for the same time span.

    In October Konrad Mizzi declared that Socar, which is also a trading
    company apart from a gas producer, will be buying its gas from Shell,
    the oil and gas multinational.

    But according to the Prime Minister the aim of his visit to Azerbaijan
    is to "secure a long-term gas supply for the new power station".

    Moreover the visit underlines the key role of Azerbaijan in Malta's
    energy supply. For while so far the impression given was that the
    agreement with Electrogas is one between the Maltese government
    and a private company, the agreements signed in Baku indicate that
    underlying this deal is an understanding between two governments.

    Turning a blind eye?

    Although Malta will be supplied by gas through tankers berthed along a
    jetty in Delimara, by 2019 Azeri gas could be reaching Italy's shores
    through a pipeline.

    This is because Azerbaijan has embarked on the TANAP project, which
    involves the construction of a gas pipeline from Azerbaijan's Shah
    Deniz field through Georgia, Turkey, Greece, and Albania to the
    south of Italy. It is planned to supply six billion cubic metres of
    gas to Turkey and 10 billion cubic metres to Europe. In the future,
    capacity of the pipeline can be increased to 31 billion cubic metres.

    The so-called southern corridor could help provide Europe with an
    alternative to Russian gas.

    It has been described as Europe's new "energy silk road" by Turkish
    Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, whose increasingly authoritarian
    government is poised to transit Azeri gas to Europe.

    In view of Azerbaijan's strategic importance, western governments
    have taken an ambivalent attitude towards the country's abysmal human
    rights record and massive corruption. In December 2013 Global Witness,
    an NGO which investigates corporate corruption, accused Socar itself of
    "opaque trading practices" in a report exposing the role of mysterious
    private businessmen in the organisational structure of the supposedly
    state owned company.

    The country currently ranks in 126th place out of 175 in Transparency
    International's Corruption Perception Index, scoring only 29 points
    out of a maximum 100.

    Speaking truth to power?

    Surely Muscat is not the only EU leader to court Aliyev's dictatorship,
    but other western leaders have at least used these encounters to
    publically express concern on human rights abuses in the country.

    In 2013 former EC president Manuel Barroso had met Aliyev. But Barroso
    also used his visit to express concern on human rights in meetings
    with representatives of Azeri civil society and human rights activists.

    Meetings with Aliyev also come at a risk of being used for internal
    propaganda purposes.

    In July 2014 Italian Premier Matteo Renzi was seriously embarrassed
    when Aliyev tweeted that he was ready to declare war on Armenia and
    Italy would support him.

    Israel is another country which has built a strategic alliance with
    Muslim Azerbaijan.

    Israeli newspaper Haaretz reports that Israel has conducted
    intelligence operations against Iran from neighbouring Azerbaijan,
    to whom it sold weapons systems, including drones and radar.

    Talks on a pipeline linking Israel's own massive gas deposits to the
    TANAP pipeline have been stalled by a prolonged diplomatic crisis
    between Israel and Ankara.

    In its bid to seek international respectability, Azerbaijan has spent
    millions on lobbying and public relations, including sponsorship of
    Spanish soccer side Atletico Madrid (last season's Champions League
    finalist).

    Controversially Azerbaijan was allowed to assume the six-month
    rotating chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers of the Council
    of Europe (CoE) last May, despite years of suppression of criticism
    and failure to adhere to the commitments it undertook when joining
    the organisation.

    The turning point

    It was a clampdown on the Azeri opposition last Summer which
    resulted in firm condemnation by both US President Barack Obama and
    the European Parliament. This may represent a turning point in the
    West's relationship with the Aliyev regime.

    Both the United States and the European Union are now taking a stronger
    stance against Azerbaijan.

    In a September 23 speech in New York City, for the first time ever
    President Obama included Azerbaijan in a list of the world's worst
    human rights violators, citing, in particular, "laws [that] make it
    incredibly difficult for NGOs even to operate."

    The criticism was Obama's first such public remark on Azerbaijan, which
    coincided with the European Parliament's earlier call to the European
    Council, to apply "targeted sanctions against those responsible for
    human rights violations" in Azerbaijan if such abuses persist.

    The September 18 resolution demands that the Azerbaijani government
    correct its ways and "immediately and unconditionally" release all
    political prisoners; a list that, according to local human rights
    activists, included 81 people.

    According to regional political analyst Eldar Mamedov, the
    "increasingly acrimonious exchanges" between the EU and Azerbaijan
    are driven by differing ideas in Brussels and Baku about the nature
    of the relationship.

    A decade ago, when the EU launched its European Neighbourhood Policy,
    Brussels expected participants, including Azerbaijan, to gradually
    embrace EU standards covering basic individual rights. Azerbaijan, on
    the other hand, believes that it can export energy to the EU without
    having to adopt western standards of democracy and human rights.

    The plight of Leyla Yunus

    Muscat's visit has coincided with growing concern on the fate of
    human rights activist Leyla Yunus and investigative journalist
    Khadija Ismayilova.

    On December 9 lawyer Ramiz Mammadov said the health of Leyla Yunus -
    a prominent Azerbaijani human rights activist who has been imprisoned
    since last July - is deteriorating rapidly. Yunus, who has diabetes
    and hepatitis C, is not receiving any medication for her condition and
    as a result, has trouble breathing and can barely walk, says Mammadov.

    Leyla Yunus and her husband Arif were arrested on 30 July 2014,
    a day after Leyla wrote an open letter to President Aliyev in which
    she criticised his regime for targeting human rights activists and
    bloggers, urging him "not to go down in history as a 'tyrant and
    a dictator'."

    They are currently being held separately in pre-trial detention. Leyla
    has been charged with, among others, treason and tax evasion, her
    husband with treason and fraud. They claim the charges levelled
    against them are unfounded and politically motivated and Amnesty
    International labelled them "prisoners of conscience".

    On November 26 the President of the European Parliament Martin Schulz
    said, "the terms of Leyla Yunus' custody threaten her life seriously.

    The European Parliament calls for her immediate release. The European
    Parliament recognises her courage and commitment to democratic values
    and expresses its support."

    The Azeri state-owned media replied by demonising the European
    Socialist leader, writing him down as "a reformed alcoholic" who
    "has never managed to control emotions".

    Senior EU and Council of Europe officials likewise expressed concern on
    December 9 over the detention of Azerbaijani investigative journalist
    Khadija Ismayilova.

    Ismayilova worked for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, which is funded
    by the US State Department. This gave her a level of immunity that
    other journalists in Azerbaijan don't enjoy. Her arrest signals a
    turning point in relations between the US and the Aliyev regime.

    In the past the regime had resorted to intimidation in a bid to
    silence her. In 2012 Aliyev's police planted hidden cameras in her
    apartment and filmed her having sex with her boyfriend.

    Now she is to be charged with pressuring her ex-boyfriend and driving
    him to suicide, and is facing a seven-year prison term.

    A spokesperson for European Union foreign policy chief Federica
    Mogherini called Ismayilova's detention "a step against the freedom of
    expression" that is "key to any democratic society." Muscat's visit
    comes a week after this arrest and as Prime Minister of an EU member
    he is expected to voice his concern on these human rights violations.

    The spectre of Nagorno Karabakh

    Until very recently, Azerbaijan saw President Vladimir Putin's
    Russia as a hostile force trying to undermine its pro-Western
    policy and supporting neighbouring Armenia in the conflict over the
    Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.

    Nagorno-Karabakh, which once formed part of Azerbaijan, became an
    independent enclave run by its Armenian majority, following a bloody
    war which preceded the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

    After the most serious military confrontation between the two countries
    since 1991 Russian President Vladimir Putin intervened by hosting
    the two rival Presidents in a meeting in Sochi in August.

    The meeting underlined Russia's role in maintaining stability in
    the region.

    Aliyev is now praising Moscow and saying, "Azerbaijan and Russia are
    two neighbouring friendly countries which are developing together
    and are ready to face world challenges".

    He has recently blamed the west for the rise of ISIS by opposing
    the Assad regime in Syria. After annexing Crimea and destabilising
    Ukraine, Putin has been able to use the Nagorno Karabakh crisis to
    remind Azerbaijan of the risks it faces if it drifts further away
    from Russian hegemony.

    With the west becoming increasingly uneasy over the treatment of Azeri
    dissidents, Aliyev may ultimately choose Russia as his political
    ally, while still using gas pipelines as leverage on energy hungry
    western nations.

    According to analyst Mamedov ultimately, the EU could settle for a
    purely transactional relationship with Azerbaijan, cooperating in
    selected areas of mutual interest, especially in the energy sector,
    but eschewing any pretence of shared values.

    "It would be the type of relationship that the EU has with Saudi
    Arabia." But in the absence of solid ties with the West, the country
    could be left defenceless "if Russia were to become aggressive again
    in the South Caucasus."

    In fact the escalation in the conflict with Armenia over the
    disputed Nagorno Karabakh region may have ultimately strengthened
    Vladimir Putin's hand in the Caucasus, thus undermining the claim
    that gas from Azerbaijan could provide an alternative to Russian
    gas. Ultimately Putin may end up controlling both energy sources
    (his own and indirectly Azerbaijan's) as the Aliyev regime becomes
    politically dependent on Moscow for its survival.

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