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Azerbaijan: Terror Attack Foiled in Baku

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  • Azerbaijan: Terror Attack Foiled in Baku

    http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insight/arti cles/eav102907a.shtml

    Eurasia Insight:
    AZERBAIJAN: TERROR ATTACK FOILED IN BAKU
    10/29/07

    In what some experts have called the most dangerous case of Islamic
    radicalism yet in Azerbaijan, authorities in the energy-rich South
    Caucasus announced October 29 that they have foiled a terrorist attack
    in Baku. The incident raises the possibility that religious radicalism
    has gained a foothold within the Azerbaijani military.

    According to a statement issued by the Ministry of National Security
    (MNS), "several people" characterized as members of a "Wahabbi group"
    have been taken into custody. A first lieutenant in the Azerbaijani
    Army, identified as Kamran Asadov, was identified as a key participant
    in the conspiracy, according to MNS statement. Ministry spokesman Arif
    Babayev said that Asadov is suspected of having supplied the
    terrorists with arms, including four machine guns, a mortar and 20
    hand grenades. Wahabbism is a puritanical form of Islam with roots in
    Saudi Arabia. In many former Soviet states the term "Wahabbi" is used
    as a synonym for Islamic militant.

    As a precaution, the US and British embassies in Baku suspended
    consular operations. Offices of several Western oil companies,
    including British Petroleum and Norway's StatOilHydro ASA, were
    closed. Babayev, the security spokesman, indicated that the alleged
    conspiracy targeted several Azerbaijani government buildings and the
    US Embassy. A US Embassy statement cautioned Americans in Azerbaijan
    to "maintain a high level of vigilance."

    The plot crumbled on October 27, when Azerbaijani Special Forces
    raided a home in Mashtaga, a suburb of Baku, taking suspected
    terrorists into custody and recovering a cache of weapons and
    ammunition, the ministry statement said. One suspect offered
    resistance and was shot and killed.

    "The incident is being investigated and measures are being taken to
    neutralize other members of the group," said the ministry statement.
    "The situation is under control. The public will be notified of
    developments."

    According to ANS television, Asadov went AWOL from his military base
    and remains at large. The channel also reported that roughly 10
    officers and cadets at Azerbaijan's Higher Military School are
    suspected of harboring Wahabbi beliefs and are being questioned in
    connection with the incident.

    The Defense Ministry press service downplayed the possibility of a
    connection between Asadov and the Higher Military School suspects.
    However, law enforcement agencies indicated that Asadov had links to
    the detained Higher Military School officers and cadets.

    Hidayat Orujev, the head of Azerbaijan's State Committee for Religious
    Affairs, indicated that the involvement of at least one military
    officer in the conspiracy was a source of concern. "I share the view
    that reports of Wahabbism being widespread in the Azerbaijani army are
    groundless. However, observations show that if there is one [Islamic
    radical in the army], there may be many others," the APA news agency
    quoted Orujev as saying.

    Since the initial October 27 raid, Azerbaijani authorities have been
    carrying out a security sweep in and around Baku, resulting in at
    least 17 individuals being detained. In the Devichi Region, roughly
    140 kilometers from Baku, a suspected radical activist, Mirza
    Alibekov, was taken into custody after authorities discovered radical
    religious literature in his home.

    Reflecting a heightened sense of skittishness in the wake of the
    raids, APA reported that two Azerbaijani nationals - identified as
    Chingiz Rafibeyli and Mobil Jabrailov - were detained briefly outside
    the US Embassy during the afternoon of October 29. The two were
    reportedly acting suspiciously outside of the embassy grounds, and US
    officials requested that Azerbaijani security officials take action.

    Ilgar Mamedov, a Baku-based political scientist, suggested that the
    United States may have provided the intelligence that led to the
    security sweep. "Most likely, information about these [radical] groups
    was given to Azerbaijani special services during the recent visit to
    Baku by CIA Director Gen. Michael Hayden," Mamedov said. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

    Other experts said the incident sheds light on the growth of
    ultra-conservative religious beliefs in Azerbaijan, adding that the
    issue of containing Islamic radicalism is rapidly becoming a major
    challenge for the government.
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