Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Will The U.S. Stand Up For Democracy In Azerbaijan?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Will The U.S. Stand Up For Democracy In Azerbaijan?

    WILL THE U.S. STAND UP FOR DEMOCRACY IN AZERBAIJAN?
    by Ali Karimli

    The Washington Post
    April 2, 2010 Friday

    Many Americans may know my country, Azerbaijan, for its oil wealth or
    for its conflict with Armenia over the territory of Nagorno Karabakh.

    A March 5 article in The Post portrayed a nation whose ruling family
    appears to own $75 million worth of luxury villas in Dubai. Few of
    us in Azerbaijan were surprised by a report that President Ilham
    Aliyev's family apparently invests assets abroad. What else should
    be expected from a leader who inherited power from his father through
    fraudulent elections?

    Aliyev's brutal crackdown on the opposition and independent media began
    with his election in October 2003. Thousands of Azeris protesting
    the transfer of power -- more succession than an election -- were
    arrested and beaten. As opposition supporters languished in jail,
    then-deputy U.S. Secretary of State Richard Armitage phoned Aliyev
    to congratulate him on his "landslide" victory. Democratic voices of
    protest were stifled by the blows of police batons. Western powers were
    eager to work with a new leader they viewed as young and progressive.

    Nearly two years later, on the eve of the 2005 parliamentary elections,
    Azeri democrats inspired by the support Western nations had given
    to the Rose and Orange democratic revolutions in Georgia and Ukraine
    decided to again challenge Aliyev's authoritarian regime.

    Events unfortunately played out along now-familiar lines: The
    government falsified election results; opposition protests were
    crushed; yet Washington praised the work of Azerbaijan's Constitutional
    Court, which had just approved false election results.

    Aliyev apparently interpreted the international community's silence
    as carte blanche to turn a country with long-standing democratic
    traditions into a fiefdom. The government evicted major opposition
    parties from their centrally located headquarters. Independent media
    also felt the wrath. One outspoken editor of an opposition magazine
    was fatally shot in March 2005; several others received harsh prison
    sentences on trumped-up charges.

    There was a time when Azerbaijan's future looked promising. In the
    1980s, Azerbaijan was at the forefront of the democratic movements
    that led to the collapse of the Soviet Union. In 1992, we held our
    first democratic elections. Abulfaz Elchibey, leader of the Popular
    Front, won 59 percent of the vote. Elchibey viewed himself as a
    political heir to the founders of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic
    in 1918. Azerbaijan was the first nation in the Muslim world to
    establish a parliamentary democracy that granted universal suffrage,
    preceding many Western countries.

    But these days, the only vote that counts is that of Ilham Aliyev.

    After "winning" his second presidential term last year, in an election
    with no viable opposition alternative, Aliyev and his rubber-stamp
    parliament conspired to change the constitution, through a referendum,
    to lift term limits on the presidency.

    The next parliamentary elections are to be held in November. The
    democratic opposition is once again preparing to challenge the regime.

    While there are no indications that the government's behavior will
    differ from that of years past, we have decided to participate in
    the election process because we recognize that this is our chance to
    fight for our ideals.

    Our platform is simple: We intend to establish a functional democracy
    in our country. Azerbaijan has a resourceful populace, and we can
    and must decrease our nation's dependence on oil. We must break the
    economic monopolies controlled by corrupt officials. Our goal is
    to establish a free, market-based economy. We want Azerbaijan to
    integrate into the Euro-Atlantic community of nations, ending its
    status as a satellite of autocratic Russia.

    As we continue our struggle for freedom, it is vital that the United
    States pursue appropriate action with regard to the largest nation
    in the South Caucasus. Bilateral relations have long been based on
    cooperation on energy, security and democratic development. Sadly,
    many Azeris see U.S. policy as driven by energy interests and the
    global war against terrorism. To us, it seems that democracy gets
    short shrift. We hope the Obama administration will make clear to
    Azerbaijan's leader that democratic reforms and human rights are a
    priority in U.S.-Azeri relations.

    American policymakers should have learned from countries in the Middle
    East and other areas that authoritarian, corrupt regimes do not make
    reliable allies. Nor is their "stability" based on the consent of
    the governed. The democratic opposition in Azerbaijan does not seek
    intervention or financial assistance from the United States. What we
    need is the moral support of an America that stands by its own values.

    Ali Karimli is chairman of the Popular Front Party of Azerbaijan and
    co-founder of Azadlig (Freedom) Political Bloc of Opposition Parties.
Working...
X