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  • The view from Azerbaijan

    The view from Azerbaijan
    By Tony Barber
    Feb 12 12:09

    Should you find yourself in Baku, skip the Versace store and Emporio
    Armani. Go instead to the grand edifice with the Grecian columns that
    stands between them, overlooking the Caspian Sea with its fabulous oil
    and gas riches.

    This building was constructed in 1960, when Azerbaijan was part of the
    Soviet Union, to mark Vladimir Lenin's 90th birthday. It is a vastly
    different place these days, hosting the Museum of Azerbaijani
    Independence. If you're in luck, as I was this morning, you will be
    the only visitor.

    The museum's narrative framework is summed up in a pamphlet handed to
    you in exchange for the 5 manat entrance fee (about $6.30).
    `Azerbaijan has been occupied by other countries for many centuries,'
    it says. `Azerbaijan attracted these countries with its natural
    resources and profitable geographical position. Azerbaijan has many
    heroes.'

    The visitor is left in no doubt that National Enemy No. 1 is Armenia,
    which is depicted as committing atrocities against Azerbaijanis in
    1918, as well as in the war of the early 1990s that left Armenia in
    control of part of western Azerbaijan, including the territory of
    Nagorno-Karabakh.

    But the museum also has a disapproving message for Iran: `Thirty
    million of our compatriots live on the territory of south Azerbaijan
    in Iran up to the present day.'

    The 70-year era of Soviet rule is briskly dealt with as an experience
    that suppressed the 1918-1920 Azerbaijani Democratic Republic--`the
    first democratic, parliamentary and secular republic in the Muslim
    world'--and inflicted great suffering in the 1930s in the form of
    Josef Stalin's purges.

    However, all this is a prelude to the exhibits in the museum's sixth
    and final hall, which celebrate the life of Heydar Aliyev, a man whose
    career is indelibly painted on the past seven decades of Azerbaijani
    history, not least because his son, Ilham Aliyev, succeeded him as
    president in 2003.

    Aliyev père joined the Soviet KGB secret police as a young man in the
    1940s, rising up its ranks until he took over as head of the agency's
    Azerbaijani branch in 1967. Two years later he became Azerbaijan's
    communist party chief, lasting 18 years and joining the Politburo in
    Moscow until Mikhail Gorbachev sacked him for resisting perestroika.
    The museum says nothing about these phases of his career.

    Instead it hails his return to public life on June 15, 1993--two years
    after Azerbaijan won independence from the Soviet Union, but was
    reeling in chaos--as a day that `entered our history as the Day of
    National Salvation'.

    Aliyev was no democrat, to put it mildly, but it is easy to see why he
    is officially revered as the father of the nation. He ended the
    disastrous war with Armenia. He is identified with the early era of
    Azerbaijan's newly discovered energy wealth. He put national
    independence on a more secure basis.

    As it says on a commemorative coin minted in 2004 to honour his
    memory: `The independence of Azerbaijan is permanent, eternal,
    irreversible.'

    The museum's Aliyev hall is adorned with photographs showing him with
    statesmen such as Bill Clinton and Jacques Chirac, the former US and
    French presidents. Quotations from his speeches are on wall panels.

    But the hall's pièce de résistance is on the floor--a diorama of the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline that pumps Azerbaijani oil to Europe,
    bringing billions of dollars to the nation and explaining why Baku's
    seafront bursts with flashy stores selling luxury foreign cars,
    jewellery and clothes.

    `The most outstanding event in the economic life and overall history
    of independent Azerbaijan was the signing of the first international
    oil contract [in 1994],' says the pamphlet.

    Oil wealth, and the festering Nagorno-Karabakh sore, are as much part
    of modern Azerbaijani reality as the closed political atmosphere and
    the personality cult that surrounds the late Aliyev.

    However, even in a nation whose leaders are as cautious about change
    as in Azerbaijan, things will not stay the same forever.

    http://blogs.ft.com/the-world/2015/02/the-view-from-azerbaijan/

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