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  • Azerbaijani revolution imminent?

    The Messenger, Georgia
    June 24 2005

    Azerbaijani revolution imminent?

    The Messenger, Tbilisi, 24.06.2005 -- There is increased speculation
    that another velvet revolution may be looming following the recent
    demonstrations in Baku, especially if the government fails to hold
    parliamentary elections scheduled for November, or the elections are
    believed to have been rigged. Can Ilham Aliev's administration
    placate the Azeri people quickly enough or will they fall foul of a
    wave of revolutions sweeping across the CIS sphere?

    Perhaps realizing the dangers of further destabilization in the
    region, Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili, after openly
    supporting the Orange revolution in Ukraine, has remained
    conspicuously quiet on the possibilities of revolution in Georgia's
    eastern neighbor. Regime change in Baku could not only potentially
    destabilize Azerbaijan, it could potentially lead to renewed
    hostilities between Azerbaijan and Armenia as well.

    Nevertheless, with or without the Georgian president's intervention,
    a velvet revolution in Azerbaijan is certainly a possibility. The
    current situation is reminiscent of that in Georgia in the run-up to
    the November 2, 2003 elections - with an increasingly united
    opposition tapping into the growing discontent among ordinary
    Azerbaijanis.

    The situation also resembles that of Azerbaijan in the run-up to its
    2003 elections, just one month before those in Georgia. But in
    contrast to Shevardnadze's government, the Azerbaijani authorities
    were able at that time to prevent sporadic demonstrations from
    developing into fully-fledged revolution. This year may be different,
    not least because of the precedents set in Tbilisi, Kiev and Bishkek,
    which have demonstrated to people across the whole post-Soviet space
    that corrupt governments that hold onto power through conducting
    fraudulent elections can in fact be removed without resort to
    bloodshed.

    With scheduled elections still six months away, however, Ilham Aliev
    is in a position to prevent a velvet revolution from taking place -
    the question is how to achieve this. Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan offer
    two plausible alternatives. While in Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev
    is seeking to introduce a number of reforms in an effort to prevent
    the sort of revolutionary change seen in neighboring Kyrgyzstan, in
    Uzbekistan police reportedly massacred hundreds of protesters in
    Andijan last month.

    The first sanctioned opposition demonstration in a number of months,
    which took place in Baku on June 5, hints that the Azeri
    administration may be contemplating pursuing the Kazakh model. It is
    uncertain how many people attended the rally - the government claims
    that only 3,000 were present while the opposition declared a turnout
    of 75,000 - but the fact that the protest took place at all is
    encouraging. Then earlier this week a reported 20,000 people, many
    wearing orange, held a rally in Baku to call for free and fair
    elections. The demonstration was organized by Azadligi, a union of
    the People's Front Reformist Wing, Musavat and Democratic opposition
    parties.

    The Azeri opposition have laid down an ultimatum that if the murder
    of Elham Huseinov, the editor of a local oppositional magazine
    Monitoring, is not investigated objectively, if no independent
    television channel is created, and if significant changes are not
    made to the Electoral Code, then there will be a democratic
    revolution in Baku. "We are not fighting for parliamentary seats, but
    to return the parliament to the people. If they do not create the
    appropriate conditions for fair elections then all of society will
    come out and remove this regime," states Ali Kerimli, the head of the
    People's Front, as quoted by Rezonansi.

    The government has so far downplayed the possibility of a revolution
    taking place, Chair of the ruling faction Mamed Alizade stating that
    there will be no revolution because "about 80-85% of Azerbaijan's
    population supports Ilham Aliev." If this is indeed the case, then
    Aliev obviously has little to worry about. But if opposition support
    is in fact stronger, then the administration would do well to begin
    introducing reforms quickly. The last elections in Azerbaijan, in
    2003, were widely condemned as fraudulent: if the November elections
    this year are also perceived to have been rigged by the government,
    there is every chance that Azeris will take to the streets to demand
    that the president step-down.

    Should that happen, it can only be hoped that neither side will
    resort to violence, and that events in Baku do not spark region-wide
    instability.
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