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Azeris pave way for president-for-life

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  • Azeris pave way for president-for-life

    http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/129107b8-1494-11de-8cd1- 0000779fd2ac.html

    Azeris pave way for president-for-life

    By Isabel Gorst in Moscow

    Published: March 19 2009 15:39

    The opposition in oil-rich Azerbaijan on Thursday vowed to overturn a
    referendum that paves the way for Ilham Aliyev to become
    president-for-life .

    The Azerbaijani central election commission said voters in the
    ex-Soviet state had approved constitutional amendments lifting a
    two-term limit on the presidency after a referendum on Wednesday.

    The opposition said the referendum was illegal and had been unfairly
    conducted.

    Mazakhir Panakhov, chairman of the central election commission, said
    92 per cent of voters had approved the abolition of current limits
    preventing presidents from holding more than two consecutive terms in
    office.

    Other proposed constitutional changes, including a ban on presidential
    and parliamentary elections in war time and rules governing benefits
    for retired presidents, also won overwhelming voter support.

    Mr Aliyev, the son of Heydar Aliyev, the former president who died in
    2003, won a second term in office at an election last October that was
    boycotted by leading opposition parties.

    Mr Aliyev's rule has coincided with a spectacular economic boom in
    Azerbaijan where foreign companies are tapping huge oil and gas
    reserves in the Caspian Sea. Political analysts said Azerbaijan had
    rushed through the referendum in anticipation of a surge in social
    discontent in the coming months as the economy contracts. Gross
    Domestic Product growth in Azerbaijan reached a record 25 per cent in
    2007 but sank to 11 per cent last year as world oil prices fell and is
    expected to drop more sharply this year.

    Opposition leaders have accused western governments of turning a blind
    eye to Azerbaijan's political shortcomings in the interests of energy
    security. The country hosts pipelines carrying Caspian exports across
    the Caucasus to Europe that provide the west with a crucial source of
    non-Russian, non Opec oil.

    Changes to the constitution proposed by Yeni Azerbaijan, the ruling
    party, were approved by the constitutional court in December in a
    ruling the opposition claimed was illegal.

    Azerbaijan's leading opposition parties said turnout at the referendum
    had fallen below the 25 per cent threshold required to validate the
    referendum.

    Ali Keramli, the head of the Peoples Front party, said, `The
    referendum did not reflect the will of the people because the people
    did not vote.'

    Isa Gambar, the president of the Musavat party, said the observers
    deployed at polling stations had noted `colossal violations of
    electoral laws'. `As always the authorities falsified the results of
    the vote,' he said.

    Mr Gambar said the opposition planned legal action to contest the
    referendum result, but has not yet decided whether to stage street
    protests.

    However, opposition leaders added that political apathy would prevent
    unrest in Azerbaijan. Many Azerbaijanis are afraid to protest
    remembering the violent police crackdown on demonstrations that
    erupted after a disputed presidential election in 2003 brought Mr
    Aliyev to power.
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