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TOL: Where Oil and Democracy Clash

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  • TOL: Where Oil and Democracy Clash

    Transitions on Line, Czech Republic
    May 25 2005

    Where Oil and Democracy Clash


    by Khadija Ismailova and Shahin Abbasov
    25 May 2005

    Azerbaijan's political temperature rises as the parliamentary
    election campaign looms.

    Two principles seem to guide foreign policy of the administration of
    U.S. President George Bush - an intent to open up international
    energy markets and a desire to promote democratic values around the
    globe. These two notions appear to be on a collision course in
    Azerbaijan, an oil-rich state in the Caucasus where the risk of risk
    of political violence is growing.

    The last half of this year promises to be eventful in Baku. The main
    pillar of the country's long-range economic development effort - the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline - is expected to become operational in
    late 2005, around the same time parliamentary elections are held in
    November. Already, there are indications that the election could
    prove tumultuous. Political uncertainty, in turn, could cloud the
    pipeline's prospects for a smooth launch.

    Opposition parties have become increasingly active in 2005, clearly
    emboldened by the revolutionary trend in the former Soviet Union that
    has produced regime change in Georgia, Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan over
    the past 18 months. On 21 May, an opposition coalition sponsored a
    demonstration, calling for guarantees of a free-and-fair legislative
    vote. The Azeri government refused to sanction the rally, and police
    used force to break it up. Dozens were injured in the confrontation,
    including several journalists covering the event who were wearing
    special vests designed to identify them as members of the press and
    thus protect them from harassment. Estimates of the number of arrests
    ranged from 45 to 149.

    Before being set upon by club-wielding riot police, some opposition
    demonstrators could be seen holding portraits of President Bush.
    During a 10 May speech in the capital of neighboring Georgia, Bush
    indicated that the United States would back democratic change in all
    former Soviet states. "Across the Caucasus, in Central Asia and the
    broader Middle East, we see the same desire for liberty burning in
    the hearts of young people. They are demanding their freedom - and
    they will have it," Bush told the crowd assembled on Tbilisi's
    Freedom Square. "We are living in historic times when freedom is
    advancing, from the Black Sea to the Caspian." In organizing the Baku
    rally for fair elections, opposition leaders seemed to be acting on
    Bush's Tbilisi's comments.

    One of the explanations given by local authorities in refusing to
    grant the opposition permission to assemble was a desire to maintain
    stability in the capital in advance of the opening ceremony for the
    BTC pipeline, scheduled for 25 May. The event is expected to draw
    dignitaries, including U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, from
    around the world. The extent of force used by police, however, puts
    foreign diplomats and corporate representatives in a difficult spot
    for the BTC ceremony. Some may end up staying away from the event out
    of concern that an appearance would be seen as an endorsement of the
    suppression of the right to freedom of assembly.

    The incident puts the Bush administration in an especially awkward
    position. As a key backer of the BTC project, Washington has
    developed a close strategic relationship with Azeri President Ilham
    Aliev's administration. U.S. officials have energetically promoted
    stabilization initiatives in recent months, including a diplomatic
    push to break the stalemate in the talks between Azerbaijan and
    Armenia on a Nagorno-Karabakh settlement. A stable political
    environment is needed to help BTC realize its economic potential,
    many observers say.

    The aggressive tactics adopted by Azerbaijan's opposition seem sure
    to raise the country's political temperature, running counter to the
    U.S. desire for regional tranquility surrounding the BTC launch. Yet,
    given the Bush White House's messianic advocacy of democratic values,
    U.S. officials cannot appear to discourage the Azeri opposition's
    quest for a free-and-fair vote. A U.S. embassy statement, issued
    after the rally was suppressed, expressed regret over the police use
    of force in Baku, adding that American officials will closely monitor
    events. "We urge the Azeri government to respect the democratic
    freedoms of the people," the statement said.

    In comments made prior to the 21 May rally, Ali Hasanov, an advisor
    to Aliev, insisted that the Azeri government is committed to
    democratization. "We think this [democratization] is normal," Hasanov
    said in comments broadcast on 21 May by Space TV. "Azerbaijan has
    chosen the way of evolution. Some states have chosen the way of
    revolution, and that is their own business."

    Opposition leaders characterized the 21 May rally as a success, and
    gave every indication that the use of confrontational tactics would
    continue. "Although hundreds of people were arrested and injured,
    these people brought the victory of democracy even closer," said Isa
    Gambar, leader of the opposition Musavat Party was quoted as saying
    in the 22 May edition of the Yeni Musavat newspaper.

    Another opposition leader, the Popular Front reformist wing's Ali
    Karimli, said the demonstration was "more effective than we had
    planned." He added that the rally offered confirmation that "Azeri
    authorities are ready to rig the elections and that they have no
    respect for human rights," Yeni Musavat reported.

    The Azeri government's image has taken a beating since the October
    2003 presidential election, and the ensuing crackdown on the Aliev
    administration's political opponents. International monitors found
    numerous flaws in the conduct and the results of the 2003 vote, in
    which Aliev secured his own political mandate, succeeding his father,
    Heidar, who died in December of the same year.

    On 11 May, the younger Aliev took action designed to improve the
    country's electoral image, issuing a decree to make the
    ballot-counting process more transparent. A week later, government
    officials and opposition representatives agreed to a code of conduct
    governing the upcoming campaign. In the so-called "Consensus of
    Behavior" document, both sides pledged to observe democratic norms.

    Prior to the 21 May incident, officials had sought to persuade
    opposition leaders to postpone the demonstration until mid-June.
    Opposition leaders dismissed the proposal, saying that such a
    postponement would greatly reduce their ability to influence the
    debate on possible amendments to the country's election code.
    Parliament is expected to take up the issue in early June.

    In the aftermath of the 21 May incident, both sides' commitment to
    the code of conduct seems in doubt. Officials and opposition leaders
    have traded accusations that the other side was the first to violate
    the agreement. "The ink on the Consensus of Behavior agreement ...
    was hardly dry when the police wielded their truncheons [to break up]
    a peaceful manifestation," complained Fuad Mustafayev, the Popular
    Front's deputy chairman. Mustafayev maintained that the opposition
    was determined to promote changes to the electoral code.

    A spokesman for the governing Yeni Azerbaijan party, Husein Pashayev,
    seemed equally determined not to give in to opposition pressure. "The
    government of Azerbaijan is not that weak so that it should [alter]
    its position just because of rally of some radical groups," Pashayev
    said.

    "After the acts of violence performed by opposition in October of
    2003 we had no confidence that they [the opposition activists] will
    not destroy public order in the city," Pashayev said. "The fact that
    the opposition parties did not agree ... to postpone their rally
    until late June shows that they are keen to create trouble."

    Pashayev hinted ominously that international organizations played a
    role in organizing the opposition rally. However, he declined to
    identify any foreign entity under suspicion of assisting anti-Aliev
    forces. Meanwhile, Mustafayev dismissed the notion that opposition
    parties received assistance from foreign "donors." At the same time,
    he indicated that opposition leaders had contacts and shared
    information with foreign organizations, noting that all such
    interaction was driven by a common interest in "freedom of speech,
    freedom of assembly and fair elections, which are the basis of any
    democracy."

    In addition to the U.S. embassy statement on the 21 May clash, the
    European Union and the OSCE office in Baku also criticized the
    behavior of Baku police. Andreas Herkel, the co-raporteur of the
    Monitoring Committee of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
    Europe, said the "practice of banning mass actions must be
    abolished."

    The U.S. and EU commitment to democratic reforms is sure to be put to
    the test in Azerbaijan in the coming months. The Azeri opposition
    appears determined to push the government on the election issue.
    Aliev administration officials seem to view the opposition activists
    more as rabble rousers than democracy advocates. The stage is thus
    set for fresh, and potentially more violent confrontation as the
    election campaign progresses.

    Some political analysts in Baku believe the government is committed
    to retaining power at any cost, describing as "just words" the Aliev
    administration's rhetoric on the need for free elections. "The
    government possesses the tools to ban demonstrations, and change
    election statistics," said Rasim Musabekov, a skeptical political
    analyst.

    There is a good chance that the Azeri government's behavior in the
    coming months could force the Bush administration, along with
    European governments, to choose between the desire for stability and
    a smooth launch for BTC, and the desire to promote democratic
    reforms.
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