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Azerbaijan Wavers Between East And West: The Washington Post

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  • Azerbaijan Wavers Between East And West: The Washington Post

    AZERBAIJAN WAVERS BETWEEN EAST AND WEST: THE WASHINGTON POST

    Tert.am
    15.06.11

    This article is republished from The Washington Post

    Last month, this authoritarian nation tucked between Russia and
    Iran won the slightly wacky "American Idol"-meets-Model UN pop song
    contest called Eurovision, and now Azerbaijanis are asking themselves
    a question:

    Can rock-and-roll - the lingua franca of dissent - make them free?

    Not only did the Eurovision victory leave this country - which
    feels deeply under-appreciated - dizzy with pride, but it also
    makes Baku host of the 43-nation event in May, opening it up to a
    madcap extravaganza that requires tolerance for high camp - think
    spiked orange hair and green sequined sunglasses - and unfettered
    self-expression.

    This year's contest in Dusseldorf, Germany, brought a live audience
    of 36,000, hordes of exuberant tourists and 120 million viewers
    on television and on the Web, more than the number that watch the
    Super Bowl.

    Government critics are seizing on Europe's sudden attention and the
    leadership's desire for respect and friendship from it to press for
    democratic reforms. The government has a long record of arresting
    journalists and other outspoken opponents, and in March and April,
    unnerved by the popular uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, it cracked
    down hard on youthful demonstrators.

    "As you know, rock is the music of free people," more than 30 civic
    leaders said in a May 26 letter to President Ilham Aliyev, asking
    him to release journalists and activists before the Eurovision Song
    Contest arrives.

    U.S. Ambassador Matthew J. Bryza also made the connection. "I hope
    this is the opening sign of a new era, a new era for Azerbaijan as it
    deepens its reforms," he said, commenting on the president's pardon
    and release of an opposition newspaper's editor jailed for four years.

    "And what a wonderful way to begin this year of preparation for
    Eurovision 2012."

    Strategic importance

    Azerbaijan, a secular Muslim nation that is mostly Shiite but wary of
    neighboring Iran, has one hand firmly extended toward Europe and the
    West - while the other keeps a tight fist on power and wealth at home.

    Energy security and strategic location make Azerbaijan - which is
    perched on the heights of the Caucasus mountains and curves along the
    low Caspian shores - important to the United States. A 1,100-mile oil
    pipeline operated by BP in partnership with U.S. and other companies
    pumps a million barrels a day from Baku, the capital, through the
    Georgian capital, Tbilisi, to the Turkish port of Ceyhan, helping
    diversify supplies and cut dependence on energy from the Middle East.

    There's money to be made here, and it washes fetchingly over Baku,
    which in the past decade has transformed from a slightly seedy Soviet
    capital into a moneyed city with well-landscaped parks, five-star
    hotels and the requisite Kenzo, Armani and Escada stores.

    Families stroll along the oil-perfumed Caspian shore, eating popcorn,
    drinking Coke and stopping to sip tea in outdoor cafes.

    Twelfth-century walls enclose a tidily preserved old city where
    14th-century caravan stops have been turned into restaurants. Art
    nouveau buildings from the last oil boom - the Swedish Nobel
    brothers made their fortunes after setting up here in 1879 - offer
    cosmopolitan elegance. And now, Soviet-era buildings are giving
    way to statement-making architecture, including three flame-shaped
    skyscrapers under construction at a cost of $350 million.

    Beyond the charms of Baku - you have to love a city with a Pizza Hat
    - a struggle is going on between the free-speaking Facebook set and
    their controlling elders, between the desire to embrace the West and
    old suspicion of it.

    The young have numbers and time on their side. The median age in
    this country of nearly 9 million is less than 30, and Facebook users
    have increased 20 percent in the past three months, to 400,000. The
    government, however, has the power.

    Emin Huseynov, chairman of the Institute for Reporters' Freedom and
    Safety, has a list of nearly 50 activists who are being investigated
    or held in prison.

    "After the revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt," Huseynov said, "the
    situation here changed dramatically."

    First, the government tried to tune into the people, launching an
    anti-corruption campaign, he said, but then Syria started clamping
    down ruthlessly on protesters and Egyptians forced out their longtime
    president and arrested him.

    "Now Azerbaijan thinks imprisonment is not such a bad option,"
    Huseynov said.

    In May, Bakhtiyar Hajiyev, a 29-year-old activist who returned
    here after earning a master's degree at Harvard Kennedy School,
    was sentenced to two years in prison on charges of evading the
    draft. His defenders say his real crime was organizing anti-government
    demonstrations via Facebook.

    Another social media activist, 20-year-old Jabbar Savalanli, was
    sentenced to 2â~@~J1/2 years on what Human Rights Watch called bogus
    drug possession charges.

    Isa Gambar, chairman of the opposition Musavat party, which was
    founded in 1911 and has five members in jail, said huge disparities
    have developed between those in power, who have access to privilege
    and wealth, and the vast majority of people - the average monthly
    income is $400.

    "The whole country is monopolized by one family," Gambar said. "We
    not only lack freedom of assembly, we lack economic freedom."

    'It will change everything'

    Heydar Aliyev, who took over leadership of the Azerbaijani KGB in
    1967 and became the republic's Communist Party chief in 1969, won
    the presidency in 1993 after a couple of years of traumatic chaos
    as Azerbaijan gained independence after the collapse of the Soviet
    Union in 1991. He died in 2003, just after making son Ilham his prime
    minister and successor.

    All public buildings display portraits of Heydar, which must be bought
    from an official vendor, and his image gazes serenely from many a
    billboard. His birthday is marked with a flower festival costing
    millions of dollars, and on holidays, television broadcasts include
    a small picture of him in a corner of the screen.

    Leila Aliyeva, an independent political analyst, said government
    suggestions of reform threaten a large and comfortable bureaucracy.

    "Many people have high stakes in preserving the status quo," she said.

    The country has made a serious effort to spread the oil money around,
    sending students to study abroad, all expenses paid, and developing
    technology to create jobs - Azerbaijan has a contract with Orbital
    Sciences of Dulles to launch a satellite to expand Internet access.

    Officials are proud of these efforts and deeply resentful of a world
    that they say plays favorites. "Deputies in Armenia go to prison,"
    said Samad I. Seyidov, a member of parliament, "and no one says
    they have political prisoners. But we, we're told we have political
    prisoners. It's not fair."

    All countries have their shortcomings, said Novruz I. Mammadov,
    head of the president's foreign relations department, "but please,
    don't close your eyes to the other things."

    And now comes Eurovision, a contest dating to 1956, in which countries
    in the European Broadcasting Union vote, but not for themselves,
    leaving regional loyalties to prevail - the Model United Nations part.

    Eldar Gasimov, a gel-tousled graduate student who turns 22 this year -
    he's Ell for the contest - and Nigar Jamal, a 30-year-old blond and
    beautiful housewife with an economics degree and two small children -
    she's Nikki - met when they won the Baku finals. Azerbaijan paired
    them up and hired a Swedish team to write them a song, heavy on the
    ooh-ooh-oohs.

    Both looked startled when told that the nation's hopes for freedom
    and democracy rested on them. "It will change everything," said Elnur
    Baimov, editor in chief of the News.Az online agency: Taxi drivers
    are enrolling in English classes. The police are next. Azerbaijan
    will open up to the world.

    Maybe it's only rock-and-roll, but they like it.

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