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  • BAKU: U.S. Congressmen, analysts urge Aliyev government to release p

    Turan Information Agency, Azerbaijan
    February 13, 2015 Friday



    U.S. Congressmen, analysts urge Aliyev government to release political
    prisoners, reopen RFE/RL office


    Top members of a key U.S. Congressional committee on Thursday
    condemned Azerbaijan's crackdown onmedia and civil society
    members,urging for immediate steps "in the right direction" as a sign
    of Baku's positive intentions, TURAN's Washington correspondent
    reports.

    Azerbaijan's location in a difficult neighborhood and being sandwiched
    by Russia and Iran "shouldn't be an excuse for ignoring right
    volitions," said Dana Rohrabacher, Chairman of House Foreign Affairs
    Subcommittee on Europe, Eurasia, and Emerging Threats, during a
    hearing about U.S. interests in Azerbaijan.

    "The recent closure of RFE/RL in Baku is unacceptable," he said,
    adding that an official raid to the RadioAzadliq office, as well as
    arrests of local journalists are among a series of steps by the
    Azerbaijani government to limit free media and public discourse.

    "I'm deeply troubled by recent efforts by the government to crack down
    on civil society groups and independent media...Democracy does not exist
    without the citizens who freely exercise their voices,"added New
    Jersey Congressmen Albio Sires.

    Gregory W. Meeks, a Democrat from New York, said, President
    IlhamAliyev and his team "should know that we're concerned about their
    attitude towards some members of the civil society."

    The Azeri government officials, including ambassador to the U.S.,
    weren't part of the hearing, however, the embassy employees and
    pro-government media were observing the event from the audience.

    In his speech Massachusetts Congressmen William Keating also
    highlighted the arrest of journalists in Baku, as well as ongoing
    anti-US campaign, saying that these all "raise serious questions and
    concerns over the intentions of Azerbaijani leadership and desire to
    partner with U.S."

    The [Obama] Administration, he said, "should prioritize those concerns
    while their communication with the Aliyev government."

    Congressmen Rohrabacher also criticized U.S. diplomats in Baku for
    allegedly declining to assist to activist EminHuseynov, who is married
    to a U.S. citizen, who is currently being sheltered by Swiss diplomats
    in Azerbaijan's capital. Huseynov's wife Sarah Paulsworth, was present
    at the hearing.

    Crackdown is counterproductive and dangerous

    In her testimony Dr. Audrey Altstadt from Kennan Institute, said that
    Azerbaijan today "is not a democracy" thus the government has been
    moving away from, not closer to, pluralism and democratic elections.

    And the US and its representatives, she said, "must be unapologetic
    about our commitment to human rights and democracy.""The US owes this
    much to the pro - democracy movements and groups in Azerbaijan. "

    Critics of the Aliyevregime are "harassed or go to jail,"she said. The
    trend accelerated in 2014. There are about 100 political prisoners in
    Azerbaijani jails including human rights defenders, journalists and
    lawyers. Altstadt called the crackdown "counterproductive and
    dangerous."

    "The pressure on opposition groups and critics, especially youth, both
    in and outside political parties, and on NGOs, has gradually increased
    since the 2003 accession to the presidency of IlhamAliyev, son of the
    previous president and former KGB general HeydarAliyev. Since early
    2013 the instances of such repressions have increased in number and
    intensity reaching unprecedented levels since the spring of 2014."

    Altstadt also draw attention to Azeri government officials' recently
    increased anti - American rhetoric."The president's chief of staff
    RamizMehtiyev accused the U.S. of trying to "destabilize" the Aliyev
    government under the guise of protecting human rights. U.S. - funded
    NGOs are under attack and Radio Liberty was closed in late December."

    End of the HeydarAliyev era...

    In his speech Richard Kauzlarich, former U.S. Ambassador to
    Azerbaijan, said the Mehdiyev attack on the U.S."represents the end of
    the HeydarAliyevera - an almost two decade long effort by both the
    U.S. and Azerbaijan to improve relations despite differences,"

    During that period, he said, there was a public profession from the
    Azerbaijani s ide of cooperation with the US and support for
    internationally recognized standards for democracy and observance of
    human rights.

    "Many observers have noticed deterioration in the tone and, in some
    respects, the substance of US - Azerbaijan relations, especially since
    the flawed Azerbaijani presidential elections in the fall of 2013.
    Part of this reflects fundamental shifts in the global and regional
    political and economic environment," he said.

    For the Ambassador, today U.S. and Azerbaijan are in a different place
    than just five years ago. There are new global and regional
    geopolitical realities. The global energy picture in particular has
    changed making Azerbaijan and the Caspian region less critical to U.S.
    energy security needs.

    Rather than trying to construct an abstract "strategic partnership,"
    Washington, he said, needs to establish a limited set of attainable
    goals: "Progress on these goals would determine whether a strategic
    partnership between the US and Azerbaijan is realistic."

    These could be:

    - Serious engagement between Armenia and Azerbaijan by a specific date
    leading to a peaceful settlement of the dispute regarding
    Nagorno-Karabakh, and resumed Track - II unofficial contacts;

    - Support for stability in Azerbaijan based on Baku's movement toward
    greater democracy and observance of internationally recognized human
    rights standards;

    - Freedom for the over 90 political prisoners;

    - Further internal suppression of the remaining liberal democratic
    elements in the run - up to the 2015 Parliamentary elections in
    Azerbaijan.

    On the human rights front, he said, there are more political prisoners
    in Azerbaijan than in Belarus and Russia combined. Years of diplomatic
    engagement have not improved the situation.

    "Recently it has become markedly worse than anything I have observed
    in my experience with Azerbaijan. If there is no progress toward
    release of all these prisoners then the USG should consider imposing
    travel and other sanctions on those officials responsible for the
    arrest and continued detention of NGO activists and journalists," he
    said.

    For Altstadt the year 2015 will be pivotal for the coming 5 years in
    Azerbaijan and in US - Azerbaijani relations.

    "Azerbaijan must maintain friendly relations with its neighbors and
    commercial partners. Recent signs suggest that the regime, or at least
    some people among the power elite, is trying to bring the country
    closer Russia in foreign policy and in the handling of domestic
    criticism," she said.

    "Many historical examples show that without official governance
    mechanisms for the redress of grievances or civil society space for
    discussion of problems and debate over solutions, people turn to
    radical actions and sometimes also to radical leaders. Demonstrations
    become likely and if the police crack down on them, people will become
    more belligerent and a " Baku Maidan" can begin."

    Another speaker,Svante Cornell from Johns Hopkins University's Central
    Asia-Caucasus Institute, said, a decade ago, the Azerbaijani
    government was considerably more responsive to U.S. criticism and
    advice concerning its domestic political system, management of
    elections, and human rights record.

    Speaking to TURAN after the event, Cornell said the hearing was"an
    indication that there is a growing understanding of the difficulties
    in the U.S.-Azerbaijani relationship and a need to work with the
    Azerbaijani government and with other forces in Azerbaijani society to
    improve this relationship."

    "There have to be steps from the both countries, but in the end of the
    day, the US is the superpower and it has to take a step," he said.

    In an interview with TURAN Ambassador Richard Kauzlarich said, it's
    not that something has changed on the U.S. side, it's the steps that
    Azerbaijan "unfortunately has taken in recent months."

    "There have been a number of specific actions that the government has
    taken recently, unfortunately on the negative side brought attention
    to Azerbaijan..." he said, reminding of the large number of political
    prisoners,as well as shut down of RFE/RL and other actions.

    Richard Kauclarich: "Ali Hasanov needs to read the paper that
    RamizMehdiyev wrote"

    Commenting on Azeri officials'--most recently Ali Hasanov's--
    statements that there was no problem between the two countries,
    Kuazlarich said below:

    "I always follow very carefully what Ali Hasanov says; but in this
    case I think he needs to read the paper that RamizMehdiyev wrote...
    Because that is a definite problem: I cannot recall - in my experience
    on the ground or since coming back here - that a senior Azeri
    political figure has attacked the U.S. in writing, accusing us of
    formatting a color revolution and creating 5thcolumn in Azerbaijan,"
    he said.


    A.Raufoglu
    Washington, DC



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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