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ANALYSIS-Friction In Azeri Ruling Elite On Election Eve

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  • ANALYSIS-Friction In Azeri Ruling Elite On Election Eve

    ANALYSIS-FRICTION IN AZERI RULING ELITE ON ELECTION EVE
    By Lada Yevgrashina

    Reuters
    10/06/05 07:11 ET

    BAKU, Oct 6 (Reuters) - Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev faces
    the fiercest challenge to his power not from the opposition at
    parliamentary elections in a month's time but from warring factions
    inside his own ruling elite, analysts say.

    The Nov. 6 vote is under close international scrutiny after rigged
    elections in ex-Soviet Georgia and Ukraine led to revolutions -- a
    scenario Aliyev's opponents say could be repeated in the energy-rich
    Caspian Sea state.

    Though ruling officials deny a split, analysts say Aliyev, 43, is
    caught in a power struggle between young modernisers in his team who
    want a fair election and older hawks prepared to use force to put
    down opposition protests after the vote.

    "The 'velvet' revolutions in Ukraine and Georgia only happened
    because there was a clear split in the ruling clan," said analyst
    Zardusht Alizade.

    If Azerbaijan's government snubs international pressure for a fair
    vote, "it can expect a schism, and part of the ruling elite will join
    the opposition camp," he said.

    Even Aliyev's opposition challengers say they are less of a threat
    than the enemies in his own camp.

    "A real split can be observed inside Ilham Aliyev's team," Ali Kerimli,
    one of two leaders of Azerbaijan's main opposition bloc, told Reuters
    in an interview.

    "And more than that, the struggle between the factions is even more
    bitter than that between the authorities and the opposition," said
    Kerimli, whose National Front, with four seats, is the only opposition
    party in parliament.

    Next month's election has laid bare the infighting, with candidates
    from rival factions running against each other for the same seat in
    parliament on the ruling New Azerbaijan Party ticket, Kerimli said.

    Aliyev, elected president in 2003 to replace his father Haydar,
    who had ruled since Soviet times, is popular with voters and governs
    almost unchallenged by the weak opposition.

    SPLIT DISMISSED

    All members of his administration say they are united in their loyalty
    to the president.

    "There is no split. All this talk of divisions is without foundation,"
    said Siyavush Novruzov, deputy head of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party.

    But analysts name Ramiz Mehtiyev, head of the presidential
    administration who served for many years under Haydar Aliyev, as
    the key figure in the faction that favours authoritarian methods to
    preserve power.

    On the other side is a group of younger politicians led by Azerbaijan's
    representative to the Council of Europe, Samed Seidov, who are pushing
    for political reform, analysts say.

    Local newspaper reports said Seidov and his allies -- who include
    some of Aliyev's personal friends -- complained this summer that the
    old guard in the administration was frustrating reform.

    Soon after, tax police raided a university run by Seidov, the
    reports said.

    Azerbaijan's ruling elite is a patchwork of clans from the Aliyev
    family's native region of Nakhichevan, ethnic Azeris from neighbouring
    Armenia and family friends and relatives.

    Analysts say Aliyev shares the reformist leanings of his younger
    aides but is not strong enough to take on the old guard.

    Offshore oil and gas fields operated by BP are ramping up production,
    promising Azerbaijan a windfall of billions of dollars over the next
    20 years. Some observers say the clans are fighting for a share of
    these spoils.

    "The struggle inside the governing elite has intensified with the
    election, but also as a result of the growing flow of financial
    resources," said analyst Leila Aliyeva.

    Newspaper reports say the latest feud is between Economic Development
    Minister Farhad Aliyev and Kemalatdin Haydarov, the customs chief
    and an old favourite of the ruling family.

    Farhad Aliyev has been stripped of some official powers and has
    complained to reporters of a death threat, though he did not give
    the source of the threat.

    President Aliyev has promised that the Nov. 6 election will be fair
    and says accusations of ballot-rigging and official repression are
    empty opposition rhetoric.

    Police at the weekend used truncheons to break up an opposition
    rally in the centre of the capital, saying the protesters did not
    have official permission. The opposition had turned down the offer
    of a venue on the outskirts of Baku.

    (Additional reporting by Rufat Abbassov)
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