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  • Political trouble brewing

    The New Nation, Bangladesh
    June 20 2005

    Political trouble brewing
    By Dr. A.H. Jaffor Ullah
    Jun 20, 2005, 12:25

    In the last two years, the world heard earful of news of political
    dissensions in several of the ex-Soviet republics. Some of these
    nations are located near Euro-Asian border in Caucasus region while
    one is in Europe. The protesters wore different colored scarves in
    different dissenting nations thus engendering new and catchy names
    for each of the revolution.

    Take the case of Georgia (Rose Revolution) where in late November
    2003 a pro-West politician by the name Mikhail Saakashvili ousted a
    tyrannical president Eduard Shevarnadze, an aging ex-communist who
    was the foreign minister under Mikhail Gorbachev.

    The second revolution took place in Ukraine in December 2004 to
    protest a rigged election in which a pro-Russian presidential
    hopeful, Viktor Yanukovych, was declared a winner by a slim margin.
    For weeks, protesters jammed the central city square wearing orange
    scarf. The end result was the declaration of the rigged election null
    and void. Within weeks, a new election put the dissident politician,
    Viktor Yushchenko, into power and christening the term the `Orange
    Revolution.'

    In late March 2005, trouble brewed in Kyrgyzstan, a tranquil central
    Asian ex-Soviet republic, where the despotic president, Askar Akayev,
    who enforced an iron clad rule since the summer of 1991 when Soviet
    union imploded due to President Mikhail Gorbachev's implementation of
    perestroika and glasnost. Ordinary citizens and political dissidents
    stormed the presidential palace and government offices in capital
    city of Bishkek. During the tumult, the deposed president Askar
    Akayev fled the country to neighboring nation of Kazakhstan. The
    country is now under the control of pro-west politicians.

    On May 13, 2005, a political trouble escalated in Ferghana valley,
    which is politically controlled by Uzbekistan. In the eastern-most
    city of Andijan (in Ferghana), the government troop fired
    indiscriminately killing more than 600 protesters and bystanders.
    Uzbekistan is ruled iron-fistedly by a dictator named Islam Karomov
    who is supported by Kremlin and tolerated by American Administration.
    Many Uzbek dissenters moved into neighboring Kyrgyzstan in the
    aftermath of May 13 carnage. After the putsch, life seems to be
    returning to normalcy in eastern Uzbekistan. Only time will tell if
    the seed of political discontent sowed in spring 2005 will amount to
    anything in the future.

    A month could hardly pass when we read in the news that a new trouble
    brewed up in the oil-rich nation of Azerbaijan, which is located to
    the west of Caspian Sea, and which is also considered an eastern
    Transcaucasian nation. The geo-political significance of Azerbaijan
    cannot be underestimated. It sits at the far end of the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil and Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum gas pipelines,
    situated between the Black and Caspian seas, containing two, possibly
    three breakaway provinces, and borders Iran, Georgia, Armenia, and
    Russia.

    Some background information should come handy to better appreciate
    what ails this oil-rich nation inhabited by nearly 8 million people
    living in a land about half the size of Bangladesh. Azerbaijanis are
    essentially Turkic and Muslim whose nation regained independence
    after the collapse of the Soviet Union in summer of 1991. Trouble
    brewed in 1994 with the neighboring nation, Armenia, over disputed
    region of Nagorno-Karabakh enclave where Armenian people live.
    Despite a 1994 cease-fire, Azerbaijan has yet to resolve its conflict
    with Armenia. The country has lost 16% of its territory in the
    conflict and must support some 571,000 internally displaced persons
    because of the conflict. The sad part of Azerbaijan story is that
    corruption is ubiquitous and the promise of nation building from oil
    revenues remains largely unfulfilled. One parenthetical note about
    Azerbaijanis is that most of them are Shiites. Culturally, they are
    similar to people who live in Azerbaijan province of Iran whose
    capital city is Tabriz.

    A personal anecdote about Azerbaijani people and their devotion to
    religion Islam. In early 1960s when I was a high school student in
    Tejgaon, Dhaka, the Soviet Union sent a soccer team to Pakistan for
    friendly matches. The Soviet team happened to be the Baku Oil Mill,
    which was one of the best team in the communist paradise. A couple of
    my friend befriended a team member who had a Perso-Arabic name. He
    told us that he is an Azeri. We wanted to give him a gift as a token
    of our friendship. He asked for a prayer mat and a copy of Koran for
    his elderly parents. I now gather that during Soviet rule, the
    Azerbaijanis were not allowed to practice their religion in public;
    however, in private people maintained their faith. The response from
    the visiting team member asking for a copy of Koran and prayer mat
    speaks in volume for a thriving religion in private.

    Coming back to the main story, on June 4, 2005, about 10,000
    opposition Azerbaijanis chanted `Freedom!' and carried pictures of
    President Bush as they marched across nation's capital (Baku), urging
    the government of this U.S. ally to step down and allow free
    parliamentary elections this year.

    The spontaneous rally in Baku was the largest of its kind in which
    opposition demonstrators shouted `Freedom.' The last time Azeri
    people came out to demonstrate against the government was in October
    2003 when one person died and nearly 200 were injured in clashes
    between police and demonstrators protesting vote rigging in the
    presidential election.

    Tensions have been building ever since October 2003 demonstration in
    this oil-rich Caspian Sea nation in the run-up to parliamentary
    elections set for November 2005. Experts from the region predict that
    Azerbaijan could see a massive uprising similar to the ones that
    toppled unpopular and autocratic regimes in other ex-Soviet nations
    of Georgia, Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan during the past 18 months.

    According to news report, supporters of several opposition parties
    shouted `Freedom!' and `Free Elections!' while holding placards with
    such slogans as `Down with robber government!' Some even carried a
    picture of Bush with the inscription: `We want freedom!' Azerbaijanis
    know that America has its eye fixed on this oil-rich nation.
    Therefore, carrying Bush's photo while protesting against the
    repressive regime meant asking America's help to topple the present
    government.

    The U.S. Department of State has given a statement in which it
    welcomed granting by the Azerbaijan Government of permit to the
    meeting of opposition on June 4, 2005, last Saturday in Baku. State
    Department spokesperson, Mr. Sean McCormack, underlined that the
    political rally ended peacefully. On behalf of the Bush
    Administration, he called on the government of Azerbaijan to grant
    permit to further demonstrations of opposition so that the
    forthcoming fall parliament elections met international standards.

    Why should America have interest in seeing a pro-West government
    installed in Baku a la Georgia, Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan? The answer
    lies in the fact that Azerbaijan sits on a massive oil reserve. Oil
    output from Azerbaijan is expected to balloon to more than 20 million
    tones in 2005. Furthermore, according to President Ilham Aliyev,
    Azerbaijan, which inaugurated the four-billion-dollar
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline in May 2005, is expected to see
    output grow further to 50 million tons per year in 2006 Aliyev said
    at an oil and gas conference.

    It should be noted here that America had backed the BTC project -- an
    infrastructure initiative that will allow Caspian Sea producers to
    get their oil to Western markets without going through Russia - that
    is expected to handle the excess output from the oilfield located on
    the Caspian Sea. America is hoping that the BTC pipeline when fully
    functional would allow the West to depend less on OPEC nation to
    fulfill their energy demand. After 2010 when Azerbaijan will produce
    less oil, then Kazakhstan would commit their crude to the BTC
    pipeline. These are the reasons why America and the West would like
    to see a pro-West government installed in Baku. The present
    president, Ilham Aliyev, while maintains good terms with both Kremlin
    and Washington but fellow Azeris considers him an authoritarian ruler
    because he has the virtual monopoly to power in Azerbaijan.

    Some experts in Baku say that the opening of BTC marked the
    unofficial start of the parliamentary election campaign. President
    Aliyev and other top officials have offered assurances that the
    parliamentary vote will be fair. Opposition leaders, however, voiced
    their concerns about such exaggerated claims, and expressed a desire
    to intensify the pressure on the government. Opposition protesters on
    June 4, 2005, milled on the streets for electoral amendments designed
    to dilute the Aliyev administration's influence over election
    commissions on all levels.

    In summary, opposition politicians and their supporters took to the
    streets in Baku to demonstrate against the present regime on June 4,
    2005. The good thing is that Aliyev regime allowed the demonstration
    to go through. The parliamentary election is nearing; therefore, the
    restive opposition politicians are agitating on the streets of the
    capital. The Aliyev Administration hailed the opening of BTC pipeline
    as a monumental achievement; however, the opposition politicians are
    using the same venue to tell the world that all is not well in this
    oil-rich Muslim nation as far as democracy and free election is
    concerned. Stay tuned for more development in the political front. My
    take is that Aliyev is a seasoned politician who would be difficult
    to remove in the near term. In addition, the Bush Administration is
    in good term with him. Therefore, there is no urgency in toppling
    Aliyev. We maybe entering a New World Order but America still calls
    the shots.

    -SAN-Feature Service
    [Dr. A.H. Jaffor Ullah, a researcher and columnist, writes from New
    Orleans, USA.]
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