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  • Azerbaijan: Ex-Minister's Trial Creates Political Sensation

    Tuesday, March 6, 2007
    CIVIL SOCIETY

    AZERBAIJAN: EX-MINISTER'S TRIAL CREATES POLITICAL SENSATION
    Rovshan Ismayilov 3/06/07


    The trial of former Azerbaijani Health Minister Ali Insanov, one of the
    founders of the country's ruling Yeni Azerbaijan Party, is promising to
    disrupt the political calm that has prevailed in this energy-rich South
    Caucasus state since its 2005 parliamentary elections.

    >From its start on February 15, Insanov's trial has magnetized the
    public, and made daily headlines. The 61-year-old former minister played
    an active role in the 1993 return to power of the late President Heydar
    Aliyev, father of Azerbaijan's current leader, Ilham Aliyev, and was
    once considered one of Azerbaijan's most influential cabinet members. He
    was arrested on the eve of the 2005 parliamentary vote, and, along with
    former Economic Development Minister Farhad Aliyev and a few other
    high-level officials, charged with corruption and a coup attempt against
    President Aliyev. [For details, see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    At the time, many ordinary Azerbaijanis welcomed the arrest. During 12
    years as minister of health, Insanov's name had become largely
    synonymous with pervasive corruption in the country's healthcare
    system.

    Yet in putting Insanov on trial, prosecutors may end up getting more
    than they bargained for. In a string of enraged statements, the former
    minister has announced that he is joining the opposition, and threatened
    to reveal details about government corruption.

    "All charges against me are faked. Ali Insanov is a political prisoner
    and nobody can deny it," he fumed at his opening trial, local media
    reported. Insanov claims that his criticism of government policy, and
    speeches about low living standards that he allegedly delivered at YAP
    meetings alone prompted his arrest. Prosecution charges that he is
    guilty of misappropriating some $3.5 billion from healthcare system
    privatizations are "nonsense," he contends.

    "How is it possible to steal $3.5 billion only in the healthcare system
    while the entire privatization [process] in Azerbaijan, according to
    official data, amounts to about $500 million?" Insanov quizzed
    prosecutors on February 21. The former minister did not deny that his
    relatives had enjoyed a "green light" for such privatization tenders,
    but asserted that all members of the government had acted similarly.
    "Each minister had his own sector where their relatives had all the
    benefits," he said. "I am accused of misappropriation, but I have no
    yachts, private airplanes, industrial facilities and big farms as other
    government members do."

    In response, Insanov, who has compared his prison term with the 27 years
    spent in jail by Nobel Prize-winning anti-apartheid activist and former
    South African President Nelson Mandela, has announced that he is setting
    up his own opposition party, and threatened the court with "more
    personal" exposés of official corruption.

    "The authorities said they want to have a real opposition in the
    country," he raged on February 28. "Now they have it!"

    For now, though, the ruling Yeni Azerbaijan Party and government are
    giving little public sign of unease with Insanov's threats.

    "What has the opposition achieved so far? I do not think that Insanov's
    transfer to the opposition would change anything," commented YAP Deputy
    Executive Secretary and parliamentarian Mubariz Gurbanly in an interview
    with EurasiaNet. Gurbanly denied that Insanov had ever once criticized
    YAP policies during ten years of high-level party meetings. A February
    16 press statement from YAP dismissed Insanov's statements as "political
    blackmail and slander."

    Opposition media and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty correspondents,
    however, were blocked from several of Insanov's trial sessions, although
    the ban was later lifted. Both the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe and the United States embassy in Baku are daily
    monitoring the trial.

    Meanwhile, leaders of Azerbaijan's main oppsition parties have stated
    that they accept apologies from Insanov issued to opposition Musavat
    Party Chairman Isa Gambar, former Democratic Party of Azerbaijan
    Chairman Rasul Guliyev and opposition Yeni Musavat newspaper
    editor-in-chief Rauf Arifoglu, and say that they are ready to cooperate
    with him.

    But some analysts question the benefits Insanov could bring to
    Azerbaijan's relatively weak opposition. "Why should we believe that Ali
    Insanov will be more successful than, for example, [former parliamentary
    speaker and current exiled head] of the opposition Democratic Party of
    Azerbaijan] Rasul Guliyev?" asked Baku-based independent political
    analyst Rasim Musabeyov. "Everybody knows about his [Insanov's]
    involvement in corruption."

    One former high-level official disagrees, however. By denouncing the
    government so publicly, Insanov has given a signal to officials who,
    like the former minister, come from Armenia, and may still look on him
    as the regional group's "unofficial leader", argued Eldar Namazov, a
    former aide to the late President Heydar Aliyev and former head of the
    opposition election alliance YeS.

    "Regionalism is a serious factor in Azerbaijani politics," Namazov said.
    "If people originally from Armenia will be active in [Insanov's] party
    at the [presidential] elections in 2008, for the first time since 1993
    we will have a situation when this regional group [from Armenia] will
    support the opposition." Azerbaijanis from Armenia, known as Yez-Ar, are
    among the most active groups in the country's political life. Among
    their number are Parliamentary Speaker Ogtay Asadov and Prime Minister
    Artur Rasizade.

    Analyst Musabeyov and Zafar Guliyev, an analyst with the pro-opposition
    Turan Analytical Group, disagree with Namazov, however.

    "The regional factor is important in Azerbaijani politics, but we should
    not exaggerate the consolidation of this regional group," said
    Musabeyov. "We cannot say that the entire group is centered around Ali
    Insanov."

    Basing Insanov's planned opposition party around a regional association
    would be "a mistake," added Guliyev. "It will be very difficult to
    change power in Azerbaijan only by using the support of a regional
    clan," he said. "The factor of social discontent in Azerbaijan is much
    more important. But it is still a question whether the ex-minister will
    be able to use this factor properly."

    So far, public displays of support for Insanov have been relatively
    limited.

    At a February 19 press conference in Baku, Rizvan Talibov, leader of the
    Movement for Return to Western Azerbaijan, a group of Yer-Az, demanded
    the minister's release and pledged to start demonstrations "as soon as
    Insanov gives us the signal." A group of doctors who call themselves the
    ex-minister's "followers" and former colleagues have also appealed to
    President Aliyev to release Insanov.

    The muted public response, however, is unlikely to faze or quiet the
    embittered ex-health minister. As he warned prosecutors at his February
    28 trial: "[I]t is not a good idea to make Insanov angry."

    Editor's Note: Rovshan Ismayilov is a freelance reporter based in Baku.

    Posted March 6, 2007 © Eurasianet
    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insight/art icles/eav030607b.shtml
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