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International criticism appears to have prompted authorities
in Azerbaijan to moderate their tactics for handling opposition demonstrations
during the run-up to the country’s parliamentary election.
For the fourth time in a month, city police on October 23 prevented
supporters of the main opposition bloc – known as the Azadlig (Freedom)
coalition, comprising the Popular Front Party of Azerbaijan, the Musavat Party
and Democratic Party of Azerbaijan – from holding an unauthorized demonstration
in the center of the Azerbaijani capital.
About 200 opposition activists, most carrying carnations, tried
to gather near the Nariman Narimanov Cinema, not far from a busy weekend shopping
area, but were blocked by a police cordon carrying riot shields and truncheons.
The number of opposition supporters who turned out was significantly lower than
for earlier protests.
Striking their truncheons against the shields, more than 60
security troops pushed the protesters across a park to the Nariman Narimanov
subway station, and eventually dispersed the crowd into small groups. During
the action, demonstrators, chanting "Freedom" and "Free elections"
in Azeri, surrounded Popular Front Party Chairman Ali Kerimli to prevent his
arrest. Police responded with blows to the legs and arms of dozens of demonstrators,
according to observers.
Opposition protestors noted what some described as a departure
from previous tactics. "Earlier, the police did not use force, but after
his [Kerimli’s] arrival, they started to beat us," said Magam youth
movement coordinator Emin Huseynov, showing a knee swollen by police pushing
demonstrators gathered around Kerimli. "The difference [this time] is that
they did not beat our heads."
Dozens of opposition members had also tried to gather on Nizami
Street, known popularly as Torgovaya Street, in downtown Baku. Police, however,
detained protesters and placed them in mini-buses upon arrival. Hours after
the demonstration was disbanded, police officers could be seen scattered throughout
Fountain Square, a popular Baku meeting place.
Deputy Baku Police Chief Yashar Aliyev said that the opposition
was responsible for stirring up trouble, adding that on October 22 the police
had warned opposition supporters against staging a rally in central Baku without
permission. "There was no violence [used against protestors]," Aliyev
said, stressing that "the police improve their methods at every rally."
Aliyev claimed that law enforcement agents had "behaved
correctly, asking people to go away, and detained those who resisted the police
and violated law and order."
Fifteen people were detained during the demonstration, according
to Aliyev. In a statement following the protest, however, Kerimli claimed that
up to 100 opposition members were arrested, including two of his advisers and
four parliamentary candidates, Panah Huseynov, Fuad Gahramanli, Bahatdin Aziyev
and Isak Huseinli. Aliyev denied that any candidate had been arrested.
On October 22, representatives from Azadlig and the Baku police
department met to discuss the rally planned for the next day. The meeting did
not secure official authorization for the protest, according to a report broadcast
on ANS television. "The good news is that they [the police] promised not
to beat protesters’ heads," Deputy Popular Front Chairman Hasan Kerimov
was reported as saying.
Some experts associated the change in police tactics with harsh
statements by international observers that urged Azerbaijani authorities to
halt police violence against opposition activists. The statements were made
following an October 9 demonstration in Baku and the arrests of dozens of citizens
and opposition members on the eve of exiled opposition leader Rasul Guliyev’s
attempted October 17 return to Azerbaijan. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive].
On October 19, Maurizio Pavesi, chief of the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe’s mission in Baku, expressed "serious
concern" about the deterioration of the political situation in Azerbaijan
and its possible impact on the upcoming parliamentary election. "We are
very concerned about an increase of violence, the use of excessive and groundless
force against demonstrators, and dubious detentions and arrests," Pavesi
said.
"With two weeks to go before the parliamentary election,
we call on the authorities to immediately explain the need for the operations
carried out by the security forces to avoid [a] further worsening of the political
situation in Azerbaijan which is tense as it is," Pavesi said.
On October 22, the New York-based human rights organization
Freedom House distributed a statement that warned that restrictions imposed
by authorities "cast serious doubt on the ability of average Azeri citizens
to enjoy a free and fair vote on November 6."
"Political demonstrations, which have been taking place
weekly in the run-up to the elections, have been marred by police brutality,
intimidation and arbitrary arrests of opposition members," Freedom House
Executive Director Jennifer Windsor said. "The Azeri authorities are demonstrating
a troubling pattern of denial of rights, which suggests that there is insufficient
political will to carry out fair and representative elections." Windsor
urged the Azerbaijani government to cease "trying to silence opposition
members, candidates, and journalists."
On October 21, Assistant US Secretary of State for Europe and
Eurasia Daniel Fried echoed those statements with the message that Washington
is concerned about the election situation in Azerbaijan, as well as worried
about the developments of the past week concerning the return of former Parliamentary
Speaker Rasul Guliyev and the arrests of government officials in connection
with an alleged coup attempt engineered by Guliyev. Among the detained are former
Economic Development Minister Farhad Aliyev and Health Minister Ali Insanov.
"Further relations between Azerbaijan and the United States will depend
on [the] forthcoming elections," Fried told reporters.
US President George W. Bush was similarly forthright in a message
to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev commemorating Azerbaijan’s October
18 Independence Day. In his letter, Bush called the November election an opportunity
to raise US-Azerbaijani relations to "a new strategic level" and emphasized
that the US leadership is looking forward to continuing its cooperation with
Aliyev after the election campaign.
Meanwhile, opposition leaders say that in the 13 days that
remain until election day, they plan to keep organizing rallies in central Baku,
as well as in the regions. The next rally in Baku is scheduled for October 30.
"We will continue to demonstrate to the Azerbaijani public and the world
that there are alternative forces in Azerbaijan to the present government,"
said Kerimli.
Source:
EurasiaNet Civil Society
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