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20,000 March in Azerbaijan

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  • 20,000 March in Azerbaijan

    Moscow Times
    June 20 2005

    20,000 March in Azerbaijan

    Jeyhun Abdulla / Reuters
    By Aida Sultanova /AP


    Azeri police below a billboard of late President Heidar Aliyev on
    Saturday.


    BAKU, Azerbaijan -- About 20,000 opposition protesters chanting
    "Freedom!" marched across Azerbaijan's capital on Saturday, pushing
    for free parliamentary elections this year and urging the government
    to step down in the biggest protest in years.

    The demonstration, the second such rally in as many weeks, was
    organized by three leading opposition parties, which formed the
    Azadlig, or Freedom, bloc to run for parliamentary elections set for
    November.

    Tension has been building steadily in this oil-rich nation in advance
    of the elections, leading some observers to predict that Azerbaijan
    could see a massive uprising similar to those that toppled unpopular
    regimes in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan during the past 18 months.

    Supporters of the Musavat party, the People's Front of Azerbaijan and
    the Democratic Party of Azerbaijan chanted "Freedom!" and "Free
    Elections!" and carried pictures of U.S. President George W. Bush
    with the words: "We want freedom!"

    The opposition bloc has chosen orange as its campaign color, the
    color used by the Ukrainian opposition during the so-called Orange
    Revolution. Many participants in Saturday's rally wore orange
    T-shirts and baseball caps and carried orange flags.


    Several hundred followers of Ilgar Ibragimoglu, a dissident imam who
    was evicted by the authorities from a mosque in Baku, joined in the
    protest on Saturday after reading a prayer.

    The opposition demands election law reforms and access to
    state-controlled television.

    "People won't tolerate election fraud," Ali Kerimli, the leader of
    the People's Front of Azerbaijan, told the rally.

    He and other speakers said a change in government was necessary to
    win back control over Nagorny Karabakh, a disputed enclave that has
    been under the control of Armenian separatists since the early 1990s.
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