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BAKU: Official Baku altering pro-West orientation to embrace Russia

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  • BAKU: Official Baku altering pro-West orientation to embrace Russia

    Official Baku altering pro-Western orientation to embrace Russia - Azeri
    daily

    Azadliq, Baku
    17 Aug 04


    Azerbaijani authorities are altering the country's pro-Western
    orientation to embrace Russia in order to protect themselves from
    growing pressure from international organizations, the opposition
    Azadliq daily reports. Azerbaijani officials' recent statements urging
    the country "to join the free economic zone of the CIS countries" and
    the growing trade between Azerbaijan and Russia as compared with the
    USA are to prove it, the paper says. Azerbaijan is favouring a
    rapprochement with Russia to get rid of demands from the international
    organizations to honour commitments to improve human rights situation
    and reform the country. The following is the text of Q. Ibrahimli
    report entitled "Goodbye, West!", and subheaded "Official Baku is
    again trying to embrace Russia. Russian capital is entering the
    Azerbaijani market speedily" published by Azerbaijani newspaper
    Azadliq on 17 August, with subheadings inserted editorially:

    It is obvious that after the 2003 presidential election, official Baku
    has an inclination to the Russian sphere of influence, and the
    government's mouthpiece has already kicked off a campaign to this
    effect.

    Immediately after the presidential election, the former foreign
    minister [now the Azeri ambassador to Poland], Vilayat Quliyev, said
    that "it is time to set our watches by Russian time", hinting at a
    change in the government's foreign policy orientation. Subsequently,
    specific steps have been taken in the wake of this.

    The Lider TV channel was the first to kick off a campaign to this
    effect. The channel specializes in anti-West and US programmes. Now
    another government-controlled TV channel, which a short while ago was
    disseminating Western values, has joined the anti-US campaign.

    Quoting Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, the channel reported that
    Azerbaijan wanted to join the CIS [Commonwealth of Independent States]
    free economic zone and Russia would make compromises to Azerbaijan in
    the Karabakh problem. Mammadyarov said that the government was
    compelled to reconcile with Russia due to failure to obtain a desired
    outcome in talks with Russia.

    Mammadyarov's statement officially proves abandonment of pro-Western
    orientation

    Mammadyarov's statement is actually an official recognition of the
    government's decision to abandon the pro-Western policy
    course. Actually, this was expected. It is not surprising that Ilham
    Aliyev's government, corrupt from head to toe and ready to violate
    human rights at any time, is trying a rapprochement with Russia, which
    is close to itself in essence. For Aliyev, integration into Russia,
    which pursues merely its political and business interests unlike the
    West which demands reforms in line with Western standards, is better.

    Incidentally, the Western media have recently published a series of
    articles on Baku's inclination to Russia.

    We should also highlight that when pro-Aliyev television channels were
    engaged in an anti-Western campaign, Russia's grey eminence from
    political and business elite started paying visits to Baku, namely
    Yevgeniy Primakov, head of the Russian Chamber of Commerce and
    Industry, former Russian prime minister and one of the co-authors of
    the 20 January tragedy [in Baku, in 1990]; Viktor Chernomyrdin, former
    Russian prime minister and current Russian ambassador to Ukraine;
    Moscow mayor Yuriy Luzhkov; Kalmyk President [Kirsan] Ilyumzhinov; the
    executive secretary of the CIS, Vladimir Rushaylo. Incidentally,
    Rushaylo, who stayed in Baku during the [presidential] election, was
    doing his best to ensure that the successor is elected.

    Trade between Azerbaijan and Russia outstrips the USA

    The said men were here to get Ilham Aliyev's consent to major projects
    in Baku and obviously they managed to get it. Mammadyarov's statement
    that "Azerbaijan is planning to join the CIS free economic zone"
    proves this. Incidentally, the dynamic of foreign economic relations
    between Russia and Azerbaijan shows that the Russian business is
    speedily entering the Azerbaijani economy. For example, in 2002 trade
    between Azerbaijan and Russia was 375m dollars, in 2003, it rose to
    532m dollars, and in the first half of the 2004, it amounted to 317m
    dollars.

    Now let us compare it to the trade between the USA and Azerbaijan in
    the same period: in 2002, it amounted to 150.5m dollars, in 2003 - to
    195.4m dollars, and in the first half of this year, the figure was 74m
    dollars.

    Apparently, the Russian rouble is taking over the Azerbaijani market
    more quickly that Western capital. Azerbaijan's inclination to
    Russia's sphere of influence will not merely cause serious changes in
    the country's foreign policy but also in its domestic
    life. Misappropriating a fantastic amount of riches, the clan is
    planning to create a more oppressive regime able to guarantee their
    properties in Azerbaijan. At present Ilham Aliyev and his entourage
    are interested in establishing the Belarus model in Azerbaijan. That
    is equal to a refusal from integration into the West and to
    unambiguously sidelining oneself from the civil world, in a nutshell,
    to a typical despotic regime.

    The arrival of the rapporteur of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
    Council of Europe (PACE) Monitoring Committee, Andreas Gross, and
    other Europeans who are poking their noses into everything in Baku,
    like "unwelcome guests", irritates official Baku. But Rushaylo's visit
    does not annoy the ruling clan. Because Rushaylo does not talk about
    "irrelevant topics" like human rights but comes with specific business
    projects, gets I. Aliyev's consent and goes away.

    Russia will not help Azerbaijan in resolution of Karabakh problem

    As for official Baku's hopes that Russia will make concessions to
    Azerbaijan over the Karabakh settlement, it is common knowledge that
    Russia "laboured" more than Armenia in the occupation of Karabakh and
    the disintegration of 20 per cent of Azerbaijani land from under
    control of the central authorities. Recently when the OSCE Minsk
    Group co-chairs began to call on the Azerbaijani public to reconcile
    themselves to a capitulatory peace, the Russian representative was
    bending over backwards more than others.

    What is official Baku hoping for now? Have ideologists of the
    authorities lost the sense of reality and common sense?

    Incidentally, at a meeting with US Deputy Secretary of State Richard
    Armitage, Ilham Aliyev undertook commitments to introduce radical
    changes before September. With one month to go to September, no
    positive changes have taken place in the country. On the contrary,
    corruption is rife everywhere and violations of human rights have
    further intensified. Apparently, to protect himself against similar
    "unpleasant" commitments, Ilham Aliyev is pushing the country into
    Russia's embrace again.
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