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  • F18News: Azerbaijan's democracy "is being sold for oil"

    FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway
    http://www.forum18.org/

    The right to believe, to worship and witness
    The right to change one's belief or religion
    The right to join together and express one's belief

    ================================================
    Wednesday 5 January 2005
    COMMENTARY: AZERBAIJAN'S DEMOCRACY "IS BEING SOLD FOR OIL"

    In this personal commentary for Forum 18 News Service
    http://www.forum18.org , an Azerbaijani Protestant, anonymous to avoid
    state persecution, pleads for the international community to promote
    religious freedom for all, as "it seems to us that our democracy is
    being sold for oil. Foreigners are afraid to call things by their real
    name. They are afraid to tell our government bluntly that human rights
    violations must end." He argues that "religious freedom cannot
    exist without other freedoms, such as freedom of expression and
    association, as well as press and literature freedom. Because of this,
    religious freedom is a litmus test for freedom and democracy in any
    society, including Azerbaijan." He concludes by proposing practical
    steps for effective dialogue with Azerbaijan's leaders, leading to real
    religious freedom, and how religious minorities can be involved in this
    process.

    COMMENTARY: AZERBAIJAN'S DEMOCRACY "IS BEING SOLD FOR OIL"

    By an Azerbaijani Protestant

    In the nearly fifteen years since my country, Azerbaijan, regained its
    independence, we Christians have faced all kinds of obstacles and problems
    functioning freely. Although Azerbaijan gained a new constitution that
    unambiguously recognises the independence of religious communities from the
    state, freedom of conscience for all and the equality of citizens
    regardless of their religious adherence, gender or political views, in
    practice the opposite is the case.

    While religious communities in Azerbaijan theoretically largely have the
    right to function freely (with some exceptions), in practice they do not
    have freedom. Restrictions and obstacles abound.

    When churches and other minority religious communities try to register with
    the government and gain legal status it can be very difficult - at
    times even impossible. Obstruction comes from the State Committee for Work
    with Religious Organisations - the government agency with the duty of
    registering religious communities that wish to do so. But not just from the
    Committee. Local administration officials up and down the country -
    who also have to approve registration applications - often
    deliberately and arbitrarily obstruct them.

    In principle a community collects the required documents and sends them in,
    but what happens if the state notary refuses to certify the signatures? The
    application stalls - and there is little redress. Communities can
    wait for years as applications languish on this or that official's desk
    - and believers do not know what they can do to gain the registration
    they are entitled to.

    The same difficulty faces Christian parents if they want to give their
    children Christian names. That's no problem in most countries of the world,
    but in some parts of Azerbaijan officials often refuse to register the
    birth of a child with a Christian name - the child then cannot go to
    kindergarten or school, get treatment in a hospital or travel to other
    countries. (See eg. F18News 1 December 2004
    http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=466.)

    And when religious communities seek to meet for worship - with or
    without registration, as is their right under the constitution and in
    international law - the police or secret police can raid them. Those
    without registration are told (wrongly) that registration is compulsory
    before a community can meet for worship.

    Worse still, believers are at times detained, intimidated and fined, simply
    for practising their faith in the way they see fit. Religious literature
    remains censored, a Soviet-era practice long overdue for abolition.

    Even defending religious freedom for all is obstructed. Two years ago local
    believers of a variety of faiths founded a local affiliate of the
    International Religious Liberty Association (IRLA). Officials from the
    United States, Russian and Turkish embassies were present at the official
    launch at Baku's Irshad Hotel, along with parliamentarians from Kyrgyzstan
    and other international representatives, among them Denton Lotz, general
    secretary of the Baptist World Alliance. Local officials were led by Rafik
    Aliev, head of the State Committee.

    Yet two years on, the IRLA affiliate still cannot register. So many of us
    are asking this simple question: why not?

    Many representatives from international bodies - such as the Council
    of Europe, the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
    and the United Nations (UN) - come to examine the human rights
    situation here. So too do officials of foreign governments and parliaments,
    as well as human rights organisations. But we see no practical changes.

    Speaking frankly, it seems to us that our democracy is being sold for oil.
    Foreigners are afraid to call things by their real name. They are afraid to
    tell our government bluntly that human rights violations must end.

    For its part our government is carefully playing a game to pretend that
    religious freedom and respect for minority faiths exist. Each time a
    religious delegation goes abroad or when foreigners interested in religion
    wish to meet local believers the government brings together a
    representative of the state-sanctioned Caucasian Muslim Board, the Russian
    Orthodox Church and the community of Mountain Jews. Doesn't anyone ask
    where are the Protestant Christians? We are now a sizable community and
    have been here for more than a century. And what about independent Muslims
    or representatives of other faiths?

    It is right and proper for us Protestants to be included, but no-one hears
    our voice. Of all the Christians, visitors hear only the voice of the
    Orthodox. Independent Muslims are not heard - only Sheikh-ul-Islam
    Allahshukur Pashazade, the head of the Muslim Board, is presented to
    foreign visitors. The state deceives its visitors - who themselves
    should also know better. This is a return to the Soviet system. The state
    wants to control everything.

    Instead of just meeting those the government wants them to meet, visitors
    themselves should seek out and meet Protestants, independent Muslims and
    others and hear their views. They should then pass on these views back to
    our government. Given that the government in some way acknowledges that
    foreigners have a role to play, they could be a bridge between us and the
    state. We have tried to build this bridge ourselves, but we do not have the
    power to do so: the state sends the police and secret police against us.

    It would be good if visitors ask our country's leaders why religious
    communities cannot freely register, meet for worship, publish or import
    religious literature. They should ask why we cannot print or import as many
    Bibles as we want - the Bible is not banned literature. How much
    pornography is allowed here, yet we are not allowed to provide Christian
    literature.

    Our previous president, Heidar Aliev, was educated by the KGB secret police
    and was a KGB man through and through, but since 2003 we have a new
    president, Ilham Aliev (Heidar's son). He has been educated properly, not
    by the KGB. He is young, knows several foreign languages, including
    English, and looks to the future.

    Azerbaijan is considered an Eastern country. In the Eastern mentality it is
    the president who decides everything. Politicians, business leaders and
    other visitors from the West could tell our president - whether in
    public or in private - what needs to be changed and improved in the
    area of religious freedom. Such visitors could also invite representatives
    of all faiths to such discussions, including Protestants.

    Sad though it is to say, I believe the Council of Europe, the OSCE and the
    US and other Western governments are not telling our leaders the truth. If
    they spoke about the violations of religious freedom in Azerbaijan to our
    president in private over a cup of tea, such problems could be resolved.

    Western claims of "quiet diplomacy" with unjust regimes can be a
    cloak for inaction - a useful excuse for the West to avoid telling
    the truth. But the diplomats usually know what they are doing. Our
    obligation as members of Azerbaijan's religious minorities is to explain
    our point of view clearly and allow the diplomats to do their job
    effectively to make such diplomacy work. At the same time, we need to be
    wise to make sure we are not being used in any "cup of tea"
    diplomacy that is not effective.

    If independent representatives of all faiths, including Protestants, were
    ever invited to genuine discussions with visitors and the president, we
    would say that we want our constitution to be obeyed. We are not calling
    for laws to be changed but for our rights to be defended. The State
    Committee for Work with Religious Organisations gets funds from our taxes
    to be the liaison between the state and religious communities, but instead
    is using taxpayers' money to obstruct religious communities' work. This
    needs to change. Indeed, the State Committee should be abolished - we
    do not need such a body.

    We Protestants are Azerbaijani citizens, but no-one listens to us. An
    unwritten law says that as Muslims represent 95 per cent of the population
    all other faiths, including Protestants, should be ignored. The media, the
    police and the secret police regard Christianity as an enemy of the people,
    working for Russia, Armenia or some other "enemy". Fear abounds.
    Although we are trying to fight for our rights, we cannot do so alone. We
    need the West. Normally citizens of a country should resolve their problems
    themselves, but we cannot. Let the state give us the rights we have in the
    constitution. The constitution is good, but the practice is bad.

    Why is the West not doing anything? We do not understand what they are
    waiting for. We think oil and gas are closing their eyes to democracy
    here.

    Each year Western governments give several million dollars to promote
    democracy, but where is this democracy? Are these funds being used to
    promote democracy or the opposite? No-one asks why there is a need for so
    many police and secret police. Why are there so many? What do we need them
    for? How are they fed?

    Religious freedom is an inseparable part of the other human rights which
    need to be observed here - and these other rights must also be
    raised. Freedom of conscience cannot exist without other freedoms, such as
    freedom of expression and association, as well as press and literature
    freedom. Because of this, religious freedom is a litmus test for freedom
    and democracy in any society, including Azerbaijan. Democracy is power. If
    people have no power, the regime presides over nothing other than a police
    state.

    One problem is that officials here are given no training on what democracy
    means. The constitution is only a formal document. We find it difficult to
    explain to officials our constitutional rights - they do not
    understand them. Officials at the State Committee for Work with Religious
    Organisations may be a little bit smarter. They know the rights that
    believers should have but carry out different instructions - those
    come from the KGB secret police.

    It is also crucial that international pressure is exerted on the government
    to stop regarding religious activity as criminal activity. In contrast to
    the government's current attitude, criminal activity as understood by
    international organisations is just that - not religious activity. Criminal
    activity is just criminal activity - the religious faith of the
    criminal does not matter.

    Some media here are very quick to react to any religious events, working
    hand in glove with the State Committee and the KGB in fulfilling their
    commands. Pro-government television companies like Azerbaijan News Service
    ANS, Space and Lider often work with officials to slander believers -
    they are a weapon in the authorities' hands (eg. See F18News 22 November
    2004 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=458). These media
    outlets violate the rights of religious believers, manipulating interviews
    and cutting segments together to make the believers look bad. They make
    believers out to be enemies of the people. As a result, ordinary people are
    afraid to visit places of worship.

    We hear many promises from the international community, but these promises
    are not followed through. If I send my son out with money to buy bread and
    he does not get it, I no longer give him money. Western donors should
    follow this principle. As Azerbaijan has signed international agreements
    guaranteeing rights to religious freedom, such donors must demand that it
    fulfils these agreements. Otherwise they should tell our government to stop
    its violations and if it continues its abuses they should go further,
    isolating the country's leaders. Officials and pro-government media workers
    responsible for violating believers' rights should be blacklisted for entry
    to Western democracies. This should include the police and secret police
    leadership, as well as the top five or six leaders of the State Committee
    for Work with Religious Organisations, an agency that depends on the
    president.

    International bodies of which Azerbaijan is a member must be tougher. The
    Council of Europe and the OSCE should issue warnings over violations of
    believers' rights then, if the situation does not improve, suspend
    Azerbaijan's membership. This would give a positive signal for change.
    Knowing our mentality, it is better for these organisations to start off
    exerting pressure in a quiet, friendly way. But the pressure must be
    followed through, with a series of steps which do not exclude harsher
    measures.

    When representatives of such international organisations meet our president
    to press these demands, it is important that the heads of the KGB secret
    police, the Interior Ministry and the State Committee are present also
    - so that they hear the answers our president gives. Such demands are
    best made first of all in private, the second time in the open, so that
    everyone can see what the West is demanding.

    It would be very helpful for international organisations to be guided by
    local believers, who should be involved as partners in devising suitable
    approaches. It is of course difficult for religious minorities to know
    whether such approaches are sincere efforts to promote religious freedom or
    merely excuses for inaction. This makes it all the more important for
    religious minorities to watch the process carefully to ensure that their
    views are listened to - and to be prepared to keep up the pressure
    until the approaches bring success.

    Religious believers in Azerbaijan are hoping that it is not true that our
    democracy is being sold for oil. The test of whether or not this is true is
    the West's concrete actions.

    (END)

    Commentaries are personal views and do not necessarily represent the views
    of F18News or Forum 18.

    The F18News report on Azerbaijan before this commentary was 17 December
    2004 "We want freedom - freedom in society, freedom of faith and
    freedom to worship" http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=479
    .
    For more background information see Forum 18's Azerbaijan religious freedom
    survey at http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id'

    A printer-friendly map of Azerbaijan is available at
    http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atlas/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=azerba

    an Azerbaijani Protestant, contributed this comment to Forum 18 News
    Service. Commentaries are personal views and do not necessarily represent
    the views of F18News or Forum 18.

    (END)

    © Forum 18 News Service. All rights reserved.

    You may reproduce or quote this article provided that credit is given to
    F18News http://www.forum18.org/

    Past and current Forum 18 information can be found at
    http://www.forum18.org/
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