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Azerbaijan - Internal Political Affairs

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  • Re: Azerbaijan - Internal Political Affairs

    Azerbaijan Runs Out Of Oil-Then What? By: Garen Yegparian. From Asbarez.com. . War. With the Republics of Mountainous Karabakh and Armenia. That’s what!
    Here’s how and why.
    By all accounts, Azerbaijan’s oil will run out, practically speaking, in a little more than a decade (most comprehensively explained in Alec Rasizadeh’s “Azerbaijan’s Chances in the Karabakh Conflict.” This doesn’t mean there won’t be any oil left underground. It means that given how much oil remains, where it is, the equipment installed to extract it, the expense of upgrading that equipment to be able to retrieve more of it, it will not be cost effective get what remains. Of course new finds might be made, possibly some that are retrievable through fracking. Newer, better technology might come on line. The price of oil could go up making it economical to invest more and go for hard to reach deposits. Regardless, the end of Azerbaijani oil is near. And the decline in production (which peaked in 2010) has begun. Take a look at the accompanying graph and table, which is not comprehensive, but shows various indicators of reduced oil production.
    Azerbaijan also has natural gas reserves. Baku is now negotiating with the big, international, companies to determine which one(s) will get the contracts. As part of these upcoming deals, the Azeris will also try to wangle improvements to the oil infrastructure they now have in place so more of the remaining oil can be extracted. In all this Aliyev might overplay his hand (explained in an October 12, 2012 Forbes article titled “Is BP On Borrowed Time In Azerbaijan? Yes, But So Is Baku.” This will buy the thieving leaders of the country a few more years.

    Azerbaijan's oil productiion and consumption
    Eventually, the fossil fuels will run out. The billions of dollars pouring into the country will stop. Along with that, so will the crooked leadership’s ability to pacify the populace through money. Then what will they do? Of course, like all petty tyrants, forceful repression will ensue. Riots, beatings, civilian deaths will ratchet up the tension. What do leaders anywhere do in such cases? They will find or create a distraction. War with an external enemy tends to mute internal dissent. So Aliyev will attack Armenian positions, or try to provoke an Armenian assault so he has an excuse to “retaliate” and start the war he desperately needs.
    There’s also another reason that Azerbaijan would start a war at such a point in its oil/gas history. Already, Azerbaijan’s budget deficit is set to increase from $880 million in 2012 to $2140 million in 2013. With the flood of money drying up, its ability to continue its weaponry-purchasing binge will end. Arms and munitions get old, replaced by better technology. So, Azerbaijan would have an incentive to use what it already has before obsolescence takes its toll.

    Azerbaijan oil decline indicators
    The trick for Armenians will be to prevent that war from starting for a decade beyond when Aliyev would want to start it. By then, Azerbaijan will be in shambles, and Aliyev booted out, or in such dire straits that he could not afford to use his military resources against Armenians because they would be tied up protecting the crooks in Baku by repressing the population at large.
    How this can be achieved, through which diplomatic tricks or military muscle flexing, what carrot-and-stick inducements from the international community, I know not. But I do know that it behooves the appropriate government ministries in Yerevan, and Armenian advocacy groups in the Diaspora, to start figuring out how to achieve this goal. Otherwise, we’ll be paying in blood for our lack of foresighted preparation and planning.
    Last edited by Hakob; 12-23-2013, 01:31 PM.

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    • Re: Azerbaijan - Internal Political Affairs

      having Aliyev in power would be the best for Armenia.....any other baboon leader would do better than him so lets not complain.
      B0zkurt Hunter

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      • Re: Azerbaijan - Internal Political Affairs

        Garahanly on ‘‘golden era’’ of Azerbaijan: millions of emigrants, unemployment, riots of populations, poverty, lost war

        "How can the current period be assumed as the "golden era" of Azerbaijan, if several millions of citizens have to live and wander in different countries in search of money, work and a better life," writes Ziad Garahanly commenting on the statements of deputy chairman of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party, the Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic Ali Ahmedov who had noted that the current period is the "golden era" for the Azerbaijani people.

        In an article published by the Azerbaijani portal "Minval.az", the author wonders how the public riots in Guba, Ismayilli and numerous protests of disgruntled citizens coincide with the statement of "golden" noted by Ali Ahmedov, why in the current "golden era" shocking price growth occurs in Azerbaijan, the life goes up rapidly and a significant part of the population has to solve problems of basic survival in the current difficult social conditions.

        "If Azerbaijan is experiencing a "golden era", then is there any need to arrest, judge and condemn journalists, politicians, youth activists, religious and community leaders for dissent or actions? Why not show mercy towards the already wrongfully convicted? After all, it is the mercifulness that is a sign of strong leadership. From where did all these beggars, unemployed, homeless, alcoholics, drug addicts, prostitutes, criminals who experience their "golden age" appear in the country? Why such a sharp social polarization and a clear social contrast exists in the country?" the material states.

        The article reminds that the golden era in Spain, England and other countries is considered to be the period of greatest prosperity and military victories. Azerbaijan has lost the war. "The examples of all countries show that their "golden age" comes at a time of victories and conquests of lands and not after losses and defeats," the article reads.

        The author wonders whether the current period can be called a "golden era" in the life of Azerbaijan, when there is seen a significant degradation in science, culture, education and public morality. Is this the "golden era", when people, as well as the Karabakh veterans, losing hope from the existing bureaucratic tyranny, douse gasoline and set themselves on fire publicly?

        "These questions perhaps are not important for Mr. Ali Ahmedov. For him and for many other privileged functionaries this really seems to be a "golden era", because they are spared the problems that all the society lives with. So he is kind of right, this is a "golden era" for the Azerbaijani privileged functionaries," the author writes, noting that the stress should be put not on the second but on the first word.

        "Both the black gold and the gold of the periodic table has turned the heads of our representatives of the ruling elite so much that they have decided to extrapolate their own "golden destiny" of the Azerbaijani people. It’s just funny!" the author writes.
        As noted in the article Ali Ahmedov hastened to bestow his discovery to the Azerbaijani people at the ruling party conference "Azerbaijan 2013-2018: Towards new goals."

        "Though, in the light of Ali Akhmedov’s epochal statement, the title of the conference causes bewilderment: if Azerbaijan has already reached its "golden era", then what "new goals" it can have for the next five years? Perhaps they strive for a "diamond age"?" the author wonders.

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        • Re: Azerbaijan - Internal Political Affairs

          magic age is next

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          • Re: Azerbaijan - Internal Political Affairs

            Azerbaijani Watchdog Chief Charged With Tax Evasion, Election Fraud

            By RFE/RL's Azerbaijani Service

            December 18, 2013
            BAKU -- The head of an election watchdog in Azerbaijan, Anar Mammadli, has officially been charged with tax evasion, illegal entrepreneurship, and using his office to falsify election results.

            The Azerbaijani Prosecutor-General's Office announced the charges in a statement on December 18, while also noting that Mammadli, the chairman of the Election Monitoring and Democracy Studies Center, had received a grant from the U.S. National Democratic Institute.

            The U.S. Embassy in Baku and the OSCE's Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights expressed concern on December 16 over news that Mammadli would be held for three months in pretrial detention.

            Mammadli's organization monitored elections in Azerbaijan this past autumn and exposed widespread irregularities and fraud during balloting and vote counting.

            Mammadli's supporters say the authorities have been trying for years to silence him and his election watchdog.


            Greece's privatization agency says Azerbaijan's state gas operator SOCAR has finalized an agreement to buy 66 percent of Greek gas distributor DESFA.

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            • Re: Azerbaijan - Internal Political Affairs

              PACE rapporteurs condemn pre-trial detention of Chairman of EMDSC in Azerbaijan

              Pedro Agramunt (Spain, EPP/CD) and Joseph Debono Grech (Malta, SOC), Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) rapporteurs for monitoring of Azerbaijan, have expressed their deep concern at the Nasimi District Court’s decision to place Anar Mammadli, Chairman of the Election Monitoring and Democracy Studies Center, in pre-trial detention, reads the statement on the official site of PACE.

              The statement notes that Mammadli's organization co-operates with international human rights organizations including the Council of Europe. The rapporteurs have met him on several occasions during their fact-finding visits to Baku and at the Parliamentary Assembly in Strasbourg.

              “This decision on pre-trial detention may raise suspicions about politically motivated justice,” said the co-rapporteurs.

              According to them the fairness of judicial procedure and the lack of independence of justice, are serious concerns in Azerbaijan.

              “We call on the Azerbaijan authorities to ensure that the legal proceedings are conducted transparently and in full compliance with Azerbaijan’s obligations under Articles 5 and 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights. That includes a possible revision of the decision on pre-trial detention. We will follow very closely the whole procedure and will raise this question with the authorities during our planned visit early next year,” the statement reads.

              On 9 of October Election Monitoring and Democracy Studies Center (EMDSC) implemented a monitoring of Azerbaijani presidential elections and recorded numerous law violations. In late October, the Azerbaijani Prosecutor General’s Office opened a criminal case and started investigations on EMDSC. In regard to this an alliance organization “European Platform for Democratic Elections” (EPDE) issued a statement which says that EPDE protests against the arbitrary and illegal prosecutions on EMDSC head Anar Mammadli. The alliance regrets for the measures the Azerbaijani government deploys against “independent, honest position of this organization in assessing the presidential elections in the country.”

              On 9 October presidential elections took place in Azerbaijan in which the incumbent president Ilham Aliyev won the elections with almost 85% of the vote, thereby taking the post for the third time. The head of National Council of Democratic Forces Jamil Hasanli was second after Aliyev with 5.5% of vote. The opposition declared that it wouldn’t accept the election results because the elections were totally violated by ballot-box staffing, “carousel” etc. OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, U.S Department of State, The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Britain and European Parliament called the elections undemocratic and inconsistent with OSCE standards.

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              • Re: Azerbaijan - Internal Political Affairs

                Family of Azerbaijani National Hero will complain to MNS on offenders from Facebook

                Family of Azerbaijani National Hero Albert Agarunov living in the Israeli town of Acco, is deeply offended by the words of some users of social network Facebook, who wrote that a jw cannot be announced a martyr, writes Azerbaijani news agency "Vesti.az."

                "What shaheed of a jw? Only a Muslim can be a shaheed. And this one should burn in hell," reads one of the coments.

                As noted in the article, the brother of National Hero Rantik Agarunov expressed his outrage with similar publications.

                "Quite accidently I found out that the social network site Facebook was spreading offensive comments about Albert. It's just outrageous! We are intended to appeal to the Azerbaijani authorities and the Ministry of National Security with a request to prosecute those who spread offensive statements addressed to Albert. In addition, we have already turned to International Charitable Foundation of Preservation of Culture and Traditions of the Mountain jw with a request to find out what is going on," told Rantik Agarunov.

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                • Re: Azerbaijan - Internal Political Affairs

                  Another act of self-immolation in Azerbaijan -- the fourth in a month -- has left a 21-year-old woman in grave condition.


                  By RFE/RL's Azerbaijani Service
                  January 30, 2014

                  BAKU -- Another act of self-immolation in Azerbaijan -- the fourth in a month -- has left a 21-year-old woman in grave condition.

                  A woman poured gasoline on herself and set herself on fire in the capital, Baku, on January 30.

                  The woman suffered severe burns over 75 percent of her body. Her motives are unclear.

                  The incident took place two days after a veteran of the 1990s Nagorno-Karabakh war set himself alight in central Barda district to protest against local authorities who refused to allocated him a parcel of land to build a house. He is also in hospital.

                  In another instance, a man set himself alight for unknown reasons in the central Yevlax district earlier this month for unknown reasons.

                  The death of a Karabakh war veteran, Zaur Hasanov, who self-immolated late last month in Baku caused a public outcry.

                  He was protesting perceived injustices by a senior pro-government official.
                  General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”

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                  • Re: Azerbaijan - Internal Political Affairs

                    Aliyev Slams Opposition Groups As 'Venal'

                    By RFE/RL's Azerbaijani Service

                    February 06, 2014
                    BAKU -- Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has described the political opposition in his country as "venal groups who sold their conscience for money from abroad."

                    Talking at an economic conference in Baku on February 5, Aliyev said that the last presidential election in October spelled "the end of the opposition, the top of its shame."

                    He also said that "those who receive grants from abroad have no place in Azerbaijani politics." The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) condemned the October polls as "seriously flawed," saying they were marred by a "restrictive media environment" and allegations of intimidation.

                    Presidential candidate Ilqar Mammadov and independent election observer Anar Mammadli were incarcerated and are awaiting trial.

                    At least two opposition journalists were sentenced to lengthy jail terms on what the opposition calls trumped-up charges after the election.


                    Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has described the political opposition in his country as "venal groups who sold their conscience for money from abroad."

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                    • Re: Azerbaijan - Internal Political Affairs

                      Azerbaijani Riot Police mistakenly detain man who was demonstrating in favour of the Aliyev regime

                      In an unexpected reversal, Azerbaijani police on December 10 arrested a man who was staging a solo progovernment protest amid a larger antigovernment rally. The protester told the crowd that if it weren't for former President Heydar Aliyev and his son, current President Ilham Aliyev, there would be


                      lmaoo es martik esh kan oo kmnan

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