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ANKARA: Azeri President Rules out Possibility of Popular Uprisings

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  • ANKARA: Azeri President Rules out Possibility of Popular Uprisings

    Azeri President Rules out Possibility of Popular Uprisings

    The New Anatolian
    June 29 2005

    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev on Tuesday ruled out the
    possibility of popular uprisings in his country similar to those that
    toppled unpopular regimes in other former Soviet nations.

    Opposition activists have held three rallies in as many weeks in
    Azerbaijan's capital, Baku, demanding free and fair elections in
    November. The mounting pressure on authorities has led some observers
    to predict the Caspian Sea nation could see a massive uprising
    similar to those in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan.

    Asked in a live interview with Turkey's CNN-Turk television if the
    same could happen in Azerbaijan, Aliev replied: "Absolutely not."

    "Some parallels havebeen drawn, but every country has its own
    history, its own process," Aliev said in the interview in Baku. "I
    don't see the fundamentals for it to happen."

    "In those countries there was no faith between the government and the
    people. ... The people did not accept their actions... They wanted
    change," Aliev said.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan travels to Azerbaijan on
    Wednesday for a two-day visit in which he is expected to urge greater
    democracy in the country. Turkey and Azerbaijan share close cultural
    and linguistic ties and are close allies. Turkey closed its border
    with Armenia in 1993 in a show of support for Azerbaijan's six-year
    war with Armenia.

    The November election is key for Azerbaijan, the starting point of a
    pipeline that Washington says will reduce world dependence on Middle
    Eastern oil.

    The opposition has accused authorities of rigging the October 2003
    presidential election, which allowed Aliev to succeed his late
    father, Geidar Aliev.

    That vote triggered clashes between police and opposition
    demonstrators who alleged the vote had been rigged. One person died
    in the violence, and nearly 200 were injured.

    Aliev's government denied the allegations of vote-rigging and ignored
    the opposition demands to change electoral law.

    "There will be no problem," Aliev told CNN-Turk in reference to the
    November election. "The necessary decrees have been issued. It will
    be bright, democratic and transparent."

    Source: The New Anatolian, 29 June 2005

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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