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Tony Blair will advise on controversial gas pipeline from Azerbaijan

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  • Tony Blair will advise on controversial gas pipeline from Azerbaijan

    Tony Blair will advise on controversial gas pipeline from Azerbaijan to Italy

    The project was initiated by the autocratic Azeri president, Ilham Aliyev


    Jamie Doward
    The Observer, Saturday 2 August 2014 11.09 BST
    http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/aug/02/tony-blair-gas-pipeline-italy

    Farm workers harvest olives in Puglia. Photograph: Alamy

    On one side are Tony Blair, a powerful consortium of energy interests,
    including BP, and the autocratic ruler of a former Soviet bloc
    country. On the other are the olive growers of Puglia and a comedian
    turned political maverick.

    News that Britain's former prime minister is to advise the consortium
    behind the Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP), the final leg of a
    2,000-mile gaspipeline that will run from Azerbaijan across much of
    central easternEurope, has sparked uproar among people living close to
    its ultimate destination in the heel of southern Italy.

    Anger towards the pipeline - the pet project of Azerbaijan's
    controversial president, Ilham Aliyev - has been building up in Puglia
    for several years, with thousands attending public meetings and
    demonstrations opposing the project, which is due to start in 2016.
    Plans for the pipeline to come onshore in Brindisi were ditched
    following local opposition. The new route will strike land in the less
    populated municipality of Melendugno.

    However, environmentalists claim that Puglia, which boasts two Unesco
    world heritage sites, will still suffer as a result of the pipeline's
    rollout. There are fears - which are rejected by the consortium - that
    the pipeline will contaminate fresh water supplies.

    Other critics warn that the beach where the pipeline is due to come
    ashore will be turned into a building site, while the habitat of the
    local Mediterranean monk seals - one of the most endangered mammals in
    the world - will be threatened.

    But TAP says it will not work on the beach in the summer months and
    that construction work will cease during the seals' mating season. It
    has also pledged to replant the olive groves belonging to some 150
    families in the region. But because some of the trees are up to 2,000
    years old, the olive-growers fear the groves will not survive
    replanting.

    "The plan to build such a pipeline in one of the most pristine areas
    of the Mediterranean is absurd," said Elena Gerebizza from Re:common -
    an Italian organisation opposing the pipeline. "Tony Blair is standing
    against communities that want to protect their land, sea, natural
    resources, and leave a future to their children."

    "This idea is crazy, it makes no sense," said Maria Mancini, a
    resident of Melendugno. "It is going to ruin the landscape. The people
    who live here don't want this. We will get dumped with it because we
    are not rich enough to get listened to when we say no."

    Blair, who is keen on holidaying in Italy, may have to think twice
    before visiting parts of Puglia, it appears. "I was there in January
    and people are very angry," said Emma Hughes, energy policy officer
    with the campaign group Platform. "Some people told me they would
    drive stakes into the rocks and chain themselves there if the company
    tries to build the pipeline."

    The decision to bring in Blair as an adviser on the "reputational,
    political and societal challenges" associated with the pipeline -
    along with the former German foreign minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher
    and Peter Sutherland, a former BP chairman - puts the ex-Labour leader
    on a collision course with the Italian comedian Beppe Grillo, whose
    Five Star Movement (M5S) has been largely responsible for mobilising
    opposition to the project.

    TAP's supporters claim that Grillo's movement ignores the views of the
    silent majority of people in Puglia. They point to a recent opinion
    poll commissioned by TAP that found the vast majority of people in the
    region do not believe the pipeline will have a harmful impact on their
    landscape. Many also believe it will help to drive down gas prices in
    Italy, where there is little competition in the energy market.

    But the prospect of a David and Goliath battle with the olive growers
    in one of Italy's poorest regions threatens to be a PR headache for
    the consortium. Last December, senior TAP employees had to be escorted
    by 50 Italian military police when they addressed a packed meeting of
    angry people. Anti-TAP graffiti has appeared on walls in the region.

    In a bid to enhance its image, this summer TAP sought to sponsor
    several festivals in Puglia's coastal region of Salento. "The company
    spent EURO 365,000 sponsoring these festivals over many weeks," Hughes
    said. "People were furious when they realised what was happening and
    many artists - including famous names in the region like Roi Paci, a
    trumpet player - pulled out saying they would not play an event with
    TAP's name attached to it."

    Building the pipeline is a key ambition for Aliyev. Analysts say he
    needs to start exporting Azeri gas to replace his country's rapidly
    declining oil income. Europe, in turn, will benefit by being less
    dependent on Russia for its energy supplies.

    "This project is critical for Europe's energy diversity," said a
    spokesman for the consortium.

    Blair's decision to take up the position has also proved controversial
    with human rights groups, who claim the pipeline will help to entrench
    the position of the Aliyev family, who treat Azerbaijan as their
    personal fiefdom.

    The US State Department's human rights report for Azerbaijan last year
    noted that there have been "increased restrictions on freedoms of
    expression, assembly and association, including intimidation, arrest
    and use of force against journalists and human rights and democracy
    activists online and offline".

    Requests for comment from Blair's office went unanswered.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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