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  • Caucasian Enemies Engage In Unofficial Trade

    CAUCASIAN ENEMIES ENGAGE IN UNOFFICIAL TRADE
    By Sabuhi Mammedli in Baku, Lusine Musaelian in Stepanakert and Naira Melkumian in Yerevan

    A1+
    [05:27 pm] 15 June, 2007

    Karabakh conflict doesn't stop Armenians and Azeris buying each
    others' goods.

    Armenia and Azerbaijan have no official ties but goods from the two
    neighbours manage to slip round the closed borders and into each
    others' shops despite official efforts to keep them out.

    Even shops in Nagorno-Karabakh, where ethnic Armenians broke free of
    Azeri control in a war that ended in 1994 but still poisons relations
    between Baku and Yerevan, stock Azeri tea. It is, residents say,
    too good to miss out on.

    "I have Azeri tea in my shop, and it is much in demand here," said
    shop assistant Ashot Hayrapetian.

    "We buy this tea in Yerevan and sell it in great quantities. The tea
    is very popular with old people, who say that once you've tasted it,
    you will want no other tea."

    Across the border, which is still patrolled by troops and bristling
    with weapons, Azeri shops occasionally stock Armenian brandy, the
    country's most famous export.

    Azerbaijani Salekh Mamedov, 52, who is a lover of wine and port,
    told IWPR he didn't mind drinking good cognac, even if it was Armenian.

    "I still remember how Ararat tasted," he said, referring to the most
    famous Armenian brand of brandy.

    "Of course, we can't forget about the lost lands, but goods don't
    matter, do they?"

    But many people on both sides of the border think they do matter,
    saying buying such products amounts to giving support to the enemy.

    "Armenian goods are mostly smuggled in through markets on the border
    between Georgia and Armenia," said Eyub Husseinov, chairman of
    Azerbaijan's Free Consumers Association.

    "Trains for Baku and Yerevan depart from the railway station in
    Tbilisi every 40 minutes. In that time, many Azerbaijanis and Armenians
    communicate and even trade with each other. I have seen this with my
    own eyes more than once."

    Azerbaijan's state customs department said such unofficial trade was
    the only real source of Armenian goods in Azerbaijan.

    "The few Armenian goods that emerge on the local counters now and then
    are mainly brought in from Georgia by individuals and in allowable
    quantities," said a spokesman.

    "These may be confined to two or three boxes of cigarettes or a couple
    of bottles of cognac. What can the customs do in such cases? Citizens
    themselves should have enough patriotic spirit to stop them buying
    goods made in the enemy country."

    Occasionally, shops are found selling Armenian goods.

    A shop in Baku was caught selling Armenian coffee wholesale last
    year. The whole stock was confiscated and destroyed.

    "Just the other day, our agents found napkins made by a 'Markarian
    AE' on the shelves of a shop in the Khachmaz district," said
    Husseinov. Markarian is a typical Armenian name.

    "The owner of the shop said he had brought them from Georgia, that
    when buying them he did not pay attention to the label."

    He said Jubilee brandy, Areni wines and Cigarone cigarettes were
    among the most popular Armenian goods in Azerbaijan.

    "The bottle of the Areni wine bears a label that shows a map of
    Armenia embracing Nagorny Karabakh - our lands! - as part of it," he
    said angrily. "How dare citizens of Azerbaijan buy these goods and -
    what's worse - bring them into the country?"

    One 47-year-old owner of a wine shop in the centre of Baku said that
    Armenian brandy did appear in his shop now and then.

    "My partner in Georgia sends the brandy to me every three or four
    months," he said. "Sometimes it is ten bottles a time. I must admit
    that Armenian cognac has always been in demand here because of its
    good quality and taste. I have regular clients who favour this cognac."

    Tea is nowadays the only Azeri product to be seen in Karabakh's shops
    and markets, although over the years chocolate, sweets and flour have
    also been sold there.

    Valery Simonian, chief of quality control at Nagorny Karabakh's
    ministry for territorial management and infrastructure development,
    said goods that had no Armenian information on their packaging were
    banned from sale in Karabakh.

    "We are entitled to deliver a written warning or ban this or that
    product from sale," said Simonian. "But goods are imported by private
    traders and we are not in a position to control every one of them."

    A saleswoman called Anahit in Stepanakert told IWPR that customers
    could choose between Azerbaijan's Azerchai tea and tea imported
    from Turkey.

    "But Azerchai sells better, as it is cheaper and of a higher quality,"
    said Anahit. "Besides, it is Azeri tea, not Turkish tea that is famous
    all over the world for its taste and properties."

    Azerchai is also popular in Armenia, especially among Armenians who
    fled Azerbaijan during the armed conflict.

    "I always buy this tea, because its brew is so strong and wonderful,"
    said Yerevan resident Tatiana Babaian, 55, who used to live in
    Baku. "Baku Armenians are famous tea-drinkers."

    "Most probably, this is contraband, which should not be allowed into
    trade outlets, but the market is difficult to control," said Anahit
    Voskanian, spokesman for Armenia's economy and trade ministry.

    "Even if there were many officers, they wouldn't be able to monitor
    the whole of Armenia and Karabakh. The same applies to the trade in
    Armenian cognac in Azerbaijan."

    Armenian customs officials say no large quantities of Azeri goods
    had entered the country for three years, and the trade was conducted
    by individuals.

    "Armenia's laws don't forbid importation of commodities from a
    country with which we have no diplomatic ties," Gagik Kocharian,
    head of the trade and services department at the trade and economy
    ministry, told IWPR.

    "There's no avoiding the fact we are neighbours with Armenia," Novruz
    Mamedov, chief of the international relations department of the Azeri
    presidential administration, told the APA news agency.

    "Of course, political, economic and cultural relations between our
    countries will be restored one day.

    However, so long as our lands remain occupied by Armenia, it's wrong
    to bring their goods into our country and thus help them earn money."

    And some residents refuse to even countenance buying goods that
    originate over the border.

    Ashraf Aliev, a 39-year-old resident of Baku, said he could not
    understand people who sold Armenian goods in Azerbaijan nor those
    who bought them.

    "We have no shortage of any sort of commodities. So why should we
    use Armenian goods? They would not mind poisoning us and doing harm
    to us once more," he said.

    Karabakh resident Marina, 42, is equally wary of Azeri products.

    "Even in the starving war years, we never used the flour that was
    brought in from Baku for free, and, all the more, I won't buy goods
    from Azerbaijan now," she said.

    "They would profit from my buying their goods.

    Besides, there's the risk factor - you never know what these products
    might contain."

    Sabuhi Mammadli is a correspondent of the newspaper Yeni Musavat,
    Baku. Lusine Musaelian is a correspondent of the newspaper Demo,
    Stepanakert.

    Naira Melkumian is a correspondent of the news agency Arka, Yerevan

    This article is a product of IWPR's Cross Caucasus Journalism Network
    funded by the European Union and other donors. Institute for War and
    Peace Reporting's Caucasus Reporting Service
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