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Azerbaijan Stretches Towards Democracy

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  • Azerbaijan Stretches Towards Democracy

    AZERBAIJAN STRETCHES TOWARDS DEMOCRACY

    Cafe Babel, France
    April 18 2007

    Between April 16-20, the European Council discusses the fulfilment
    of the Caucasian republic's human rights obligations

    Photo: Shushi church in Nagorno Karabaj, Azerbaijan (Photo:
    Sputnikmania/ Flickr)

    The European Council has not been the only institution to address
    the issue of the Caucasian republic. The United Nations Human Rights
    Council's session in Geneva last March also held debates on the
    internally displaced population in the Azeri territory. The population
    is displaced due to a conflict with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh,
    a region occupied by Armenians that declared its independence from
    Azerbaijan in 1991, but that no international state has recognised. At
    the start of 2007, Amnesty International published an explicit report
    warning of the lack of freedom of expression and threats suffered by
    local informants in Azerbaijan.

    The protagonism that this ex-Soviet republic has acquired in the
    last few months is not accidental. After the 'information blackout'
    that followed the turbulent legislative elections in November 2005,
    the Azeri society is stretching and preparing itself to take on what
    they see as a 'political challenge.' That is to say, the presidential
    elections of 2008. The government will have to demonstrate that the
    'little gestures' that Iiham Aliyev's executive council has carried
    out in the last few months - amnesty to political prisoners, the
    remodelling of some government portfolios, the liberalisation of
    foreign policy - have not been merely an image clean up to avoid
    criticism from the international community, but a convinced and
    convincing step towards a mature, definitive democracy.

    Electoral ghosts

    The election will be a real golden opportunity for the opposition.

    During the 2003 presidential and 2005 legislative elections, the
    opposition united its forces in a unique opposing platform against
    the 'electoral ghost' created by Aliyev's government. This was a
    field of entertainment perfect for some elections: those of 2008,
    in which the loss of breath of the opposition parties' union - that
    still hasn't decided on what terms it will compete - can recover with
    an announcement that respects international standards of cleanness
    and transparency.

    For Razi Nurullayev, Azeri activist and founder of the Yox youth
    movement, the main challenge for the opposition is to 'mobilise and
    get society involved,' especially the youngest sectors. 'The young are
    caught up above all in their routines and their problems getting ahead
    in life,' explains Nurullayev, who now works in the consolidation of
    the 'Coalition of Civil Society,' a network of local and international
    non-governmental organisations, civil associations and influential
    persons, created in order to favour social debate and build bridges
    between political life and society. 'Citizen passivity is the base
    for some bad elections.' He is convinced that true democracy will
    never exist in Azerbaijan until the Azeris get fully involved in the
    day-to-day politics of the country.

    Euroasiatic chessboard pawn

    For the moment, the Azeri government has consented to put into
    action some of the recommendations made by the European Councils
    Venice Commission and organisms of the Organisation for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), with respect to introducing amendments
    in the electoral law. Now, for example, electoral committee members
    will be made up of an equal number of representatives from both the
    government and the opposition.

    However, in its April session, it is probable that the European
    Council will insist on a change of course in other areas, including
    judicial system reform, the fight against corruption and organised
    crime, the situation of human rights defence NGOs in the country,
    and freedom of expression and meetings. Premises that, according to
    the Azeri government, the European Council should make extendible to
    other countries that make up the institution.

    Azerbaijan is a vital piece on the Euroasiatic chessboard. It shares
    a border with Iran - where 35% of the population is Azeri. That's
    30 million against the 9 million that reside in Azerbaijan. Its
    rich energy resources place it in the centre of growing Caucasian
    importance in the international geopolitical situation. Azerbaijan,
    however, looks at Europe knowing that its outside credibility depends
    to a large extent on the democratic advances that it is capable of
    stamping on its political life during the months to come.

    In-text photos: Aliyevs Sr and Jr, the dynasty ruling Azerbaijan
    (Ippy/ Flickr), European Council (Codl/ Flickr)

    http://www.cafebabel.com/en/article.asp?T =T&Id=10707
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