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Editorials

Note About One Photo - by Turkhan Karimov
Seven Years Ago, On This Day - by Babek Bakir
Reset There, Retreat Here – America’s Unconvincing Democracy Agenda-by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
Radio Silence - by Vugar Gojayev
What Causes Armenian Opposition to Madrid Principles? - by Murad Gassanly
What Do Madrid Principles Say On Karabakh? - by Murad Gassanly
Azerbaijan: Democracy Matters - By Gorkhmaz Asgarov
Terms of Engagement: Secretary Clinton's Visit to Azerbaijan - by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
US-Azeri Relations - Aliyev's Dangerous Game - by Murad Gassanly
Robert Gates Goes to Baku, Portent Things to Come? - Karl Rahder
Azerbaijan Belongs On Obama's List Of Violators Of Press Freedom - by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
Azeri Government Thwarts 'Remembrance Day' Rally - by Vugar Gojayev
Playing Baseball on a Chessboard - by Vahid Gazi
Will the U,S, Stand Up for Democracy In Azerbaijan? - by Ali Karimli
Armenia and Turkey: Troubled Borders With Bitter Realities - by Ramin Shafagatov
Azerbaijan's Extravagant Olive Trees - by Arifa Kazimova
Azerbaijan Remembers a Brave Journalist - by Vugar Gojayev
Khojalylized Azerbaijan - by Adil Asgarov
Bananyar Updates - by Vugar Gojayev
What is Happening in Bananyar? - by Vugar Gojayev
From Dolma and Eurovision to Da Vinci Wars - by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
Battle for Democracy Fought Through Internet - by Vugar Gojayev
Blood, Oil, and Borat in Azerbaijan - by Alexander Zaitchik
Historic Breakthrough Controversies: Will Azerbaijani Lands Be Free Soon - By Leyla Aliyeva
Contract of the Century: Myths and Realities - By Dr. Gubad Ibadoglu
Speech at the University of Richmond on Adnan and Emin - by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
Open Letter To A Judge - by Leyla Yunus
Plight of Bloggers Gains International Support - by Vugar Gojayev
Azerbaijan's Steady Descent Into Authoritarianism - by Elmar Chakhtakhtinski
Matter Matters, Existence Exists - by Erkin Gadirli
F For Freedom - by Tahsin Ashurov
U.S. Leaves South Caucasus to Russia... By Doing Nothing - by Gorkhmaz Asgarov
New NGO Law Might Cripple Civic Organizations In Azerbaijan - by Vugar Gojayev
"We Had It Once..." - by Gorkhmaz Asgarov
"West Should Withdraw Support For Regime In Baku" - By Bart Wood
History Overshadows Hope On Turkey's Armenain Border - by Daren Butler
Council of Europe: Sleeping Beauty - By Andres Herkel
In Memory of Elmar Huseynov - By Vugar Gojayev
In the Name Of Holy Pipeline - by Leyla Aliyeva
When Balance Policy Blows Up In Your Face - by Gorkhmaz Asgarov

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Azerbaijan-Turkmenistan of the Caucasus - by Gorkhmaz Asgarov PDF Print E-mail

In 1993, the government of Azerbaijan began an ominous tradition. That year, following an election in which they smashed their political opponents, the authorities felt strong enough to crack down on political freedom throughout the country.

This sort of "victory celebration" followed the 1995 parliamentary elections and the 1998 presidential poll. We saw it again after the 2000 and 2003 election cycles and following the 2005 parliamentary elections.

In each case, the government's actions were methodical and effective. Either a major political party was evicted from its offices or some independent newspapers ended up being slapped with heavy fines as a result of petty legal complaints from government officials.


 

Ilham Aliyev and Gurbangulu Berdymuhamedov visit Heydar Aliyev Foundation in Baku

After the 2000 and 2003 elections, the nonstate ANS-TV went through the state's grinder and, when it emerged, it was more pro-government than the formally state-controlled television channels. In some cases, prominent journalists were arrested or worse.


The tactics varied to some extent, but the lesson was simple: Civil society in Azerbaijan -- political parties, independent media, NGOs, etc. -- can expect an onslaught after each manipulated election in which the Aliyev regime (first, Heydar Aliyev and, now, his son, Ilham) emerges predictably victorious.


Weak, Divided, Marginalized


This year, the confident regime has begun targeting foreign broadcasters -- RFE/RL, the Voice of America, and the BBC have been shut down in the country -- and the Azerbaijani Constitution. The government is in the process of amending the constitution in order to remove the current two-term limit for the president. The goal is to enable the 47-year-old Ilham Aliyev to seek a third term. And then, no doubt, a fourth and so on until he dies. Or until some other "glorious leader" deposes him.


This is what Azerbaijani democracy has been brought to.


After years of being pushed back and abused by the authorities, the country's democratic opposition is now weak, divided, and marginalized. The government has scheduled a referendum on abolishing term limits for March 18, and the opposition is simply not strong enough to stimulate an adequate public discussion of this issue and its implications for the country's future.


Musavat and the Azerbaijan Popular Front Party, together with a few smaller allies, have joined forces to campaign in defense of the current constitution, but the matter has been eclipsed in the country by a seemingly irrelevant tragedy, the conflict in Gaza.


The state-dominated media in Azerbaijan have focused society's attention on the anti-U.S. and anti-Israel rallies in the Baku suburb of Nardaran and on a campaign organized by the Association of Azerbaijani Doctors to collect blood donations for the people of Palestine. The opposition has argued that the government is intentionally diverting attention from a discussion of the future of the country. And it seems to be working.


Only a handful of media outlets in Azerbaijan today are willing to stray from the government's line: the newspapers "Azadliq" and "Yeni Musavat," which are associated with opposition political parties; the independent Turan news agency; and the independent daily "Zerkalo." This is all that remains of a once influential and pluralistic camp of opposition and nonstate media.


If the present pattern continues, even these remnants and the remaining political parties may disappear by the 2010 legislative elections, and if that happens, it will be hard to distinguish Azerbaijan from neighboring Turkmenistan. This may seem like dire speculation, but such a turn of events seems increasingly probable these days.


Feckless International Community


The government's willingness to crush the opposition and civil rights has been well established, and its ability to do so, in the face of a weakened opposition and a downtrodden public, is unparalleled in the recent history of the country. And to these circumstances, we must add another -- the fecklessness of the international community's efforts to keep the country's democratic institutions alive.


Kicking international broadcasters out of the country may have been the government's final test of the levels of global reaction to its actions. And if any lesson has been learned in Baku, it is that the authorities need not be overly concerned with even pretending to adhere to internationally accepted democratic norms.


Azerbaijan's transformation into the new Turkmenistan has significant implications.


 

Ilham Aliyev receives honorary doctorate degree from Turkmenistan State University

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, a clear political division has fallen across the former Soviet republics. Some countries -- the Baltic states, Ukraine, and Georgia -- oriented themselves toward the West, accepted its political norms, and pursued Euro-Atlantic integration. Others -- Belarus, Armenia, and the Central Asian countries -- opted to remain under the heavy influence of Russia, maintained their Soviet-style autocratic systems, and have become increasingly authoritarian.


For most of the post-Soviet period, Azerbaijan teetered on the fault line between these two worlds. It was a pioneer of independent energy projects in the Caspian region and reached out to the West in an attempt to develop its energy sector independently of Russia. Moscow, on the other hand, has resisted these efforts and continued to try build a monopoly over Caspian energy exports. Azerbaijan needed the West's protection from Russian pressure. Former President Heydar Aliyev sought to maintain a balance between Russia and the West, a balance that was reflected in his handling of the country's domestic political dynamic.


Central Asia-Style Dictatorship


Unlike Belarus and the countries of Central Asia, Azerbaijan in the 1990s had viable opposition parties and media that were independent of the state. Political competition was rigged and heavily managed, but it existed nonetheless. However, over the last five years, Baku has moved steadily and rapidly toward a Central Asia-style dictatorship -- the kind of regime that most easily finds accommodation with Moscow.


In the wake of Russia's military intervention in Georgia last August, the authorities in Baku have been thinking more and more about the dangers of allying with the West, which is far away and has proven ineffective in defending its friends from Russian aggression. Russia, on the other hand, is close and strong and willing to accept the government in Azerbaijan just as it is.


It is easy to see how Aliyev is calculating.


As a result, 2008 saw significant shifts in Azerbaijan's international orientation, and it seems that this year will be a key turning point. Russia has now placed on the table a proposal to purchase all of Azerbaijan's natural gas and sell it on international markets. Moscow already has such a pact with Turkmenistan, the country that is seemingly Aliyev's role model.


So far, Baku has hesitated to commit to Moscow's offer. But it doesn't seem likely the authorities will continue to straddle the fence between Russia and the West for much longer. With the closure of international broadcasters in the country and the ongoing assault against the constitution, it looks as if Aliyev has already made up his mind.

 

Gorkhmaz Asgarov, RFE/RL

 
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Azerbaijan in International Media

"Is Armenia Russia's Partner or Pawn?" by Richard Giragosian, RFE/RL, Sept. 3, 2010

"Azeri Defense Ministry Rejects 'Laughable' Armenian Statement," RFE/RL, Aug. 27, 2010

"In One Azeri Village Carrying Water is Women's Work," by Saadat Akifgizi, RFE/RL, Aug. 27, 2010

"Armenia Warns Azerbaijan Over New UN Resolution," RFE/RL, Aug. 26, 2010

"Armenian Group Responds to Burns OpEd," by Mark Tapscott, The Washington Examiner, August 25, 2010,

"Senator Conrad Burns Supports Matthew Brayza's Nomination," The Washington Examiner, August 23, 2010

"Ex-Soviet Leaders Gather In Yerevan," RFE/RL, Aug. 20, 2010

"Deal Signed on Russian Military Base In Armenia," RFE/RL, Aug. 20, 2010

"Big Problems In Baku, And the Man to Deal With Them," by David Kramer, Foreign Policy, Aug. 17, 2010

"Aliyev's Azerbajani Empire Grows...," by Ulviyye Asadzade and Khadija Ismailova, RFE/RL, Aug. 13, 2010

"Azerbaijani Plane Crew Criticized Over Evacuation Delay," RFE/RL, Aug. 12, 2010

"Julliard & Le Coz: Emissary Entanglements," Washington Times, August 11, 2010

"Georgia Needs U.S. Help," by John McCain, Washington Post, August 8, 2010

"Senate Panel Delays Nominee for U.S. Ambassador to Azerbaijan," by Richard Solash, RFE/RL, August 4, 2010

"Amazing Azerbaijan," by Dom Joly, Mailonline, July 25, 2010

"Russia's Empty Empire," The Economist, July 24, 2010

"Propaganda On Demand," by Corey Pein, Santa Fe Reporter, July 14, 2010

"Azerbaijan's Donkey Bloggers Are Just the Beginning," by Luke Alnutt, RFE/RL, July 8, 2010

"US Slams Azerbaijan Over Jailed Journalist," World News Australia, July 8, 2010

"Hillary Clinton Mends Fences In Central Europe and Caucasus," Washington Post, July 7, 2010

"Jailed Azerbaijani Editor Convicted On New Charges." Washington Post, July 6, 2010

"U.S. Tries to Calm Georgia's Fears," by Mary Beth Sheridan, Washington Post, July 6, 2010

"Clinton Presses Azerbaijan for Nagorno Karabakh," RFE/RL, July 5, 2010

"Clinton Visits Authoritarian Ruler in Azerbaijan," Dallas News, July 5, 2010

"Clinton Reassured Azerbaijan," Boston Globe, July 5, 2010

"Clinton Walks Tightrope On Democracy In Azerbaijan," by Mary Beth Sheridan, Washington Post, July 5, 2010

"How to Prevent Another War In South Caucasus," by Ronald Asmus, Washington Post, July 3, 2010

"Clinton On E. Europe, Caucasus Tour," by Heather Maher, RFE/RL, July 1, 2010

"How to Deal With Azerbaijan?" articles of Amanda Paul and Gorkhmaz Asgarov, GMF "On Wider Europe," June 2010

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Linked Info

"More Troubles In Baku, Local Press Reports On "Magic Tree"," by Karl Rahder, FPB, June 20, 2010

"Azerbaijan Grapples With New Media Freedom," by Karl Rahder, ISN, June 7, 2010

"A Journalism (r)evolution in Azerbaijan," by Mark Briggs, Lost Remote, May 24, 2010

"IMF: The Party Is Over For Azerbaijan," by Shahin Abbasov, Eurasianet. org, May 24, 2010

"Alienating Azerbaijan?" by Karl Rahder, International Relations and Security Network, Apr. 27, 2010

"Colors and Flowers... and Soviet Spoils," by Ben Tanosborn, April 27, 2010

"The U.S. and the Persecution of Azerbaijan's Bloggers," by Joshua Kucera, trueslant.comm Nov. 11, 2009

"Story of a Father and Son," Frontline Club, Sep 28, 2009

"Hooligans?," RSF about arrested youth activists in Azerbaijan, July 11, 2009

"I Rule Here and Blind Democrats in Europe," by Ilgar Mammadov, REAL, June 27, 2009

Azerbaijan Marks Anniversary Of Its First Republic - Frontline Club, May 29, 2009

Absolute Power Corrupts Absolutely - by Farid Guliyev, ResetDoc.org, April 16, 2009

So Much For Azerbaijani Democracy - by Michael J. Totten, Commentary Magazine, Oct. 21, 2008

Azerbaijan: Election Day Proves A Snooze - by Mina Muradova, Eurasia Insight, Oct. 15, 2008

Finding Elmar's Killers. Azerbaijan Special Report - by Nina Ognianova, CPJ, Sep. 16, 2008

Azerbaijani Opposition Mulls Presidential Election Boycott - by Liz Fuller

Naxcivan: More Tales From Azerbaijan's North Korea

It's National Press Day in Azerbaijan, But There's Little Cause For Celebration

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