Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Azerbaijan - Utopian Rhetoric, Dystopian Reality

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Azerbaijan - Utopian Rhetoric, Dystopian Reality

    AZERBAIJAN - UTOPIAN RHETORIC, DYSTOPIAN REALITY

    The Hill, DC
    Feb 4 2015

    By Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte

    If one lived within the confines of the Azerbaijani president's
    official Twitter account, one might think Azerbaijan is situated
    within Utopia.

    "Azerbaijan is a country that successfully goes down the path of
    democracy, freedom, independence, progress and development," President
    Aliyev declared on January 7, 2015.

    ADVERTISEMENT If you follow his tweets, you will find these daily
    exaggerations thrown around lightly. What appears to be a discrepancy
    with reality in Aliyev's universe-through-Twitter exclamations,
    are the independent reports of rigged elections and human rights
    violations against journalists, civil societies and activists. Spanning
    decades, they recently appeared on the international radar, thanks to
    Azerbaijan's emergence on the world stage, financed by its healthy,
    albeit declining, oil and gas production.

    What Aliyev forgets to include in his Twitter monologues are
    the recently raised concerns by U.S. Secretary of State Kerry of
    Azerbaijan's human rights abuses. Once these concerns were raised,
    Azerbaijani authorities raided and closed Radio Free Europe - Radio
    Liberty's Baku bureau, interrogated its employees while denying them
    access to legal representation. According to RFE/RL, the bureau, funded
    by the U.S. government, was taken over by Azerbaijani prosecutor's
    office, which confiscated documents and equipment before sealing
    off the premises. The criticism that triggered such a response
    focused on treatment of journalists, specifically the imprisonment
    of investigative journalists and rights activists Leyla Yunus, her
    husband Arif, and Khadija Ismayilova.

    In his op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, David J. Kramer of Human
    Rights and Democracy at the McCain Institute, called the raid "a direct
    challenge to the U.S.," and called for U.S. to "impose consequences
    on" Aliyev's "thuggish" regime. Kramer correctly pointed out that
    some responded to the dictator's capricious actions, as did the
    Council of Europe's human-rights chief, Nils Muiznieks, and several
    U.N. envoys. The war of words erupted when the U.S.

    Ambassador to OSCE, Daniel Baer, tweeted that the raid was a "behavior
    of weak, insecure corrupt governments and leaders." Words are not
    enough.

    "Why does the Aliyev regime think it can get away with its abuses?"

    Kramer asks, before answering, "Because so far it has."

    With the unfolding of the tragic events in Paris, the Azerbaijani
    crackdown is alarming to the observers. But this reality always
    simmered under the glittery disguise of Baku's downtown, with promises
    of a progressive nation, eager to receive its investors.

    Azerbaijan's abuses have been swept under the rug not only with its
    internal crackdowns on freedom, but also with its blatant disregard
    to international law over the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) conflict.

    Specifically, the 2014 downing of the NKR military helicopter did
    not trigger any strong OSCE, or world, reactions. Three Armenian
    crew members died performing a training flight over their territory,
    shot down by Azerbaijan. This was the first such incident since a
    ceasefire was agreed upon in 1994, yet nothing happened.

    "Armenia does not want peace, while the Minsk Group, unfortunately
    can't achieve any result in this matter," Aliyev tweets this January
    Yet this Universe-through-Twitter logic does not jive with reality.

    As far as NKR and Armenia are concerned, peace is the only thing that
    is advantageous for the continued development of the two Armenian
    nations. Since 1994 NKR enjoyed rebuilding of its nation, free of
    Azerbaijani aggression. Why, then, would NKR disturb the peace it has
    won, and the roads and buildings it has built in the last 21 years, by
    agitating a war-mongering neighbor next door that threatens war daily?

    It wouldn't.

    Aliyev is right that OSCE cannot achieve anything, but only if it
    sits on the sidelines of hundreds of deliberate violations (from
    the helicopter, to murder of Armenian civilians, to illegal border
    infiltrations) with meek expressions of "concern."

    So it will continue. And every time Aliyev gets bored, expect a tweet
    from him describing his fictitious Utopia.

    "Armenia does not want peace," he states, yet on the 25th anniversary
    of Baku pogroms when innocent Armenian population of Azerbaijan was
    killed, violated and exiled from their homes, one of his 43 tweets
    that day declares: "Armenia is a powerless and poor country."

    It really is time for the Obama administration to enforce consequences
    on Azerbaijan's disregard for human rights and international agreements
    by which it must abide.

    Turcotte, the a uthor of "Nowhere, a Story of Exile," is a lecturer
    and a refugee from Baku, Azerbaijan.

    http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/foreign-policy/231605-azerbaijan-utopian-rhetoric-dystopian-reality

Working...
X