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Oil Money To Fund NGOs And Opposition Parties In Azerbaijan

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  • Oil Money To Fund NGOs And Opposition Parties In Azerbaijan

    OIL MONEY TO FUND NGOS AND OPPOSITION PARTIES IN AZERBAIJAN
    By Fariz Ismailzade

    Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
    Tuesday, September 11, 2007

    Different groups in Azerbaijan are clamoring for their share of
    the massive flow of oil revenue generated by the completion of the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline.

    Lobbying from the ministries for additional financial resources to
    complete new, massive projects is leading to a new era in Azerbaijani
    politics. Among the public works projects under consideration are
    refugee settlements, bridges and underpasses in Baku, subways and
    railways, roads, and schools.

    Political parties and NGOs alike have entered the competition for oil
    revenues. Until only recently the more hard-line opposition parties and
    NGOs refused to sit down with the authorities at the government-owned
    negotiating table, preferring a neutral forum instead.

    Now they have openly expressed a desire to claim their part of the pie.

    The government has responded positively, as funding NGOs and political
    parties will create additional tools to control them, especially prior
    to the presidential elections next year. On July 27 President Ilham
    Aliyev issued a decree calling on the government to "adopt a concept of
    state support for the non-governmental organization" (AzTV, July 27).

    According to the decree, the president's office has two months to
    prepare suggestions regarding the establishment of a Fund to Support
    NGOs and to formulate procedures for the state to work with NGOs
    (Trend News Agency, July 27).

    The decree established priority areas for NGO projects, such as
    advancing Azerbaijani positions regarding the Karabakh conflict in the
    international arena, protecting the rights of internally displaced
    persons and refugees, assisting disabled citizens and war veterans,
    encouraging the idea of "Azerbaijanism," cooperating with foreign NGOs,
    encouraging human rights, and promoting the rights and freedoms of
    individuals, including the right to free speech and expression (Echo,
    August 2).

    NGO leaders welcomed the government's long-awaited decision. In recent
    years, NGOs have largely relied on international donors and foundations
    for project funds, but as the foundation monies have dried up, many
    local NGOs have found themselves on the brink of bankruptcy.

    Azay Guliyev, president of the Azerbaijani NGO Forum and a member
    of parliament, assessed the decree positively. "It will contribute
    to the development of national NGOs and serve as a new stage in
    the dialogue between the state and civil society," Guliyev to Echo
    newspaper on August 2. The Azerbaijani NGO Forum has also initiated a
    roundtable discussion with dozens of local NGOs to give feedback on the
    presidential decree and develop suggestions on concrete ways to support
    the third sector. Arastun Orujov, director of the presidential staff,
    hinted that the NGOs will be provided the "financial, informational
    and other kinds of assistance, as well as conditions to hold events,
    conferences, forums, and trainings" (Echo, August 2).

    Speaking to Azertaj news agency, Parliamentary Speaker Bahar Muradova
    indicated that the law on political parties would be amended during
    the fall session of the parliament (Zerkalo, September 4). Muradova
    did not specify which aspects of the law will be discussed, but
    noted that the current law, adopted in 1992, is not suitable for the
    contemporary political environment and that the relations between
    the parties and society, as well as political party funding, will
    be re-worked, taking into consideration the representation of the
    political parties in parliament and the geographic scope of their
    activities in the country. The issue of state financial support is
    of special interest to the political parties, as they have long been
    accused of being sponsored from abroad.

    Although these amendments to the law on political parties have
    been on the table for nearly two years, there has been no formal
    document presented to members of parliament. Opposition MP Panah
    Huseyn told media representatives on September 3 that he had not seen
    any such draft and that perhaps it was still under development in
    the president's office. Huseyn added that the experience of other
    countries should be taken into account when developing financial
    and other conditions for Azerbaijan's political parties, including
    such acts as simplifying the registration process for parties and
    establishing financial quotas for them.

    Fazil Gazanfaroglu, chairman of the "Great Revival" opposition
    party and a member of parliament, also welcomed the idea of the new
    amendments, noting the need to support secular parties. Indeed, in
    the past several years, secular parties have stagnated, leading to
    the growth of Islamic tendencies in the country.

    According to Gazanfaroglu and other experts, it is exactly this factor
    that drives the government to support political parties.

    Although both initiatives are positive in nature, they are likely
    to provide extra financial resources for the leaders of NGOs and
    parties, but they are unlikely to change the democratic atmosphere
    in the country significantly.
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