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The Azeri Edge: With Oil, Questionable Elections,And A Rising Islami

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  • The Azeri Edge: With Oil, Questionable Elections,And A Rising Islami

    THE AZERI EDGE: WITH OIL, QUESTIONABLE ELECTIONS, AND A RISING ISLAMIC PRESENCE, AZERBAIJAN MAY BE AT CROSSROADS
    by Peter Church
    04/05/2006 12:00:00 AM

    The Weekly Standard
    April 5 2006

    IN NOVEMBER 2005, Azerbaijan held parliamentary elections. Voter
    participation was down 20 percent from the 2000 elections, and
    President Ilham Aliev's party won overwhelmingly in what was regarded
    by international observers as a questionable, if not fraudulent,
    election. The small but increasingly visible Islamic Party of
    Azerbaijan was again barred from running, as in past elections. The
    opposition bloc lost again, as it has in every election over the past
    12 years.

    Dodgy elections in an impoverished, oil-rich, quasi-dictatorial
    former-Soviet republic isn't exactly big news. But seen against a
    backdrop of the recently opened BTC oil pipeline, an almost 20 year
    conflict with neighboring Armenia, an antagonistic southern neighbor
    in Iran, an unsettled dispute to the north in Chechnya, and a rising
    Islamic revival, Azerbaijan is actually standing in the middle of
    some powerful geopolitical tectonic plates. The West would do well
    to pay more attention to the goings on there.

    I ARRIVED IN AZERBAIJAN at the end of last November, just in
    time to take measure of post-election claims of fraud, opposition
    demonstrations, and the mounting frustration with the political system
    that is fueling an Islamic revival. I was surprised when the customs
    agent in Baku asked me if I was a terrorist. I'd arrived from Kabul
    wearing a beard and learned later that Azeris often refer to Salafis
    as sakkaliar, or "bearded people." As an ultra-strict sect of Sunni
    Islam, Salafism in Azerbaijan is on the rise.

    After 70 years of Soviet rule, when religious practice was driven
    underground, Islam

    is experiencing a revival in Azerbaijan. Almost 94 percent of
    Azerbaijan's 8 million inhabitants are culturally Muslim, with about
    70 percent of those being Shia. If religious practice waned under
    Soviet-enforced secularization, today, according to a 2004 survey
    sponsored by the U.S. National Endowment for Democracy, almost 97
    percent of Azeri Muslims call themselves "believers." Nearly a quarter
    of Azeris support governance by sharia (with higher proportions
    reported along the borders in the north and south) and nearly 30
    percent apply Islamic codes to their family lives.

    Even in Baku, where secularization imposed by Soviet fiat has been
    replaced by the secularizing effect of attracting foreign investment,
    Salafis are gaining in-roads. Amidst the city's new five-star hotels,
    downtown shops displaying designer Italian suits, bars catering to the
    oil men, and the $40-a-night girls, the Salafis count up to 20,000
    adherents. Mosques in Baku typically attract about 300 worshipers
    for Friday prayers. But Abu Bakr Mosque, the town's Salafi mosque,
    attracts some 5,000 worshipers.

    THIS RISE OF A VISIBLE SALAFI PRESENCE in Azeri society are
    complicated, but they are explained in part by a combination of
    geographical and historical forces. And it has been pushed along
    by the fighting between Azeris and Armenians that erupted over the
    disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region when the Soviet empire began to
    buckle in 1987, along with the persistent conflict in Chechnya.

    (The fact that Nagorno-Karabakh was home to a concentration of
    Armenians in Azeri territory is the vestige of the 1828 Treaty of
    Turkmenchay between Iran and Russia, which historically, along with
    Turkey, have had the greatest influence over Azeri fortunes.

    Azerbaijan's first attempt at independence was short-lived, lasting two
    years between the 1917 collapse of czarist Russia and the invasion
    of the Red Army in 1920. Also a result of the 1828 treaty, today
    some 16 million Azeris live in northern Iran--almost a quarter of
    Iran's population.)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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