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House committee examines human rights in Azerbaijan, Egypt, Cuba

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  • House committee examines human rights in Azerbaijan, Egypt, Cuba

    Saturday, 14 July 2007
    House committee examines human rights in Azerbaijan, Egypt, Cuba

    By Olesya Vartanyan


    (AXcess News) Washington - The name of Azerbaijani journalist Elmar
    Huseinov is on the Freedom Forum Journalists Memorial near
    Washington. He is among more than 1,500 journalists from all over the
    world who have been killed in the line of duty since the middle of the
    19th century. Huseinov was an editor of the leading opposition
    newspaper in Azerbaijan and was gunned down in his apartment in 2005.

    Huseinov's death became one of the first in the range of events in
    2005 after which Azerbaijan's news media was labeled as "not free,"
    according to a report by Freedom House, an international human rights
    organization.

    This situation was discussed Thursday at a hearing of a House Foreign
    Affairs subcommittee. Azerbaijan was discussed along with Cuba and
    Egypt.

    Rep. William Delahunt, D-Mass., the subcommittee chair, said these
    three countries are examples of regimes from different parts of the
    world that lack freedom. He pointed out that in all these countries
    power is inherited within families.

    Azerbaijan is ruled by Ilham Aliyev, a son of Heydar Aliyev, who ruled
    Azerbaijan for about 10 years. Although Ilham Aliyev won the 2003
    presidential elections with more than 70 percent of the vote, local
    representatives of the civil society and small opposition parties said
    it looked like the son inheriting power from his father.

    Ilham Aliyev became the president of one of the Caucasus region's
    fastest growing economies, due to its oil and gas industry.

    But for the last 20 years it has had a conflict with neighboring
    Armenia.

    Both claim land that amounts to about 20 percent of what Azerbaijan
    recognizes at its territory.

    After Ilham Aliyev became Azerbaijan's ruler, several events happened
    that international organizations claimed were human rights violations.

    In October 2005, before the November parliamentary elections, a number
    of former and current senior officials were detained in response to
    what the regime claimed was a coup attempt. Some experts say it helped
    Aliyev to consolidate his position among the country's ruling elite.

    During the same period, police beat people who were participating in a
    peaceful demonstration opposing the government. No officers were
    punished.

    Aliyev's party won a majority in the Azerbaijani parliament, known as
    the Mejlis. After these events, Aliyev met with President Bush in the
    White House.

    Some in Azerbaijan and at the hearing interpreted this as the
    U.S. protecting the ruling regime.

    The photo of this meeting was shown during the hearing, along with
    other photos of Bush's meetings with other controversial rulers,
    including those of Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

    Delahunt said he keeps a collection of such photos in a cabinet. He
    said they help him to remember how the White House supports such
    "authoritarian regimes" because of their oil and their support for
    U.S. policies.

    Freedom House pointed to some of the same type of problems.

    Its report said Egypt recently held its "most democratic and
    transparent presidential and legislative elections in more than half a
    century." But when "real political competition" emerged, President
    Hosni Mubarak's government adopted new measures to suppress opposition
    and imprisoned an opposition presidential candidate.

    The U.S. has "retreated" from pushing Egypt toward "its forward
    leaning policy" because of fears of terrorism, the report says.

    Calling Cuba "one of the most repressive regimes in the world," the
    report says that human rights activists deserve support from the
    international community as power is transferred "in a post-Fidel
    environment."

    Azerbaijan is one of the main partners of the U.S. in energy
    politics. It sends oil that ends up all over the world through the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Jeihan pipeline that the U.S. supported politically and
    with financial guarantees. A future project will deliver gas from
    Azerbaijan to Europe.

    Azerbajan is important as it has a common boarder with Iran. This
    Muslim country is considered as an important ally for the
    anti-terrorism politics of the U.S.

    Morton H. Halperin, a senior fellow of the Center for American
    Progress and former Clinton administration official, said during the
    hearing that human rights activists in all three countries want the
    U.S. to support them.

    But he said U.S. support can encourage repressive governments in such
    countries as Iran and Cuba to take measures against the activists.

    In addition, he said the U.S. should support countries that have good
    human rights records.

    "In Azerbaijan, we should say that if you improve the situation with
    human rights, you will get more economic donations," he said.

    In each of the last five years, Azerbaijan has gotten an average of
    about $73 million from the U.S. government, according to the
    Congressional Research Service. About 16 percent of this supports
    democracy assistance.

    "We are interested in improving the situation with human rights in our
    country, and it is the principal position of the top leadership and
    politicians," said Araz Azimov, the Azerbaijan deputy minister of
    foreign affairs, during a lecture at the Woodrow Wilson Center the day
    before the hearing.

    "The progress in the human rights is the evolutionary process. It
    takes many components - economic development, stability in the
    country, stability of the government, responsibility of the
    government. All these issues are interrelated."

    Azimov said the situation will improve with the passing years.

    Source: Scripps Howard Foundation Wire
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