Heads Of CSTO Member States Emphasize The Importance Of Peaceful Set

HEADS OF CSTO MEMBER STATES EMPHASIZE THE IMPORTANCE OF PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT OF THE KARABAKH CONFLICT

17:06, 23 Dec 2014

The leaders of the Collective Security Treaty Organization countries
— Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan —
have adopted 22 documents following the summit meeting in the Kremlin
on Tuesday. The CSTO heads of state approved a joint statement,
19 resolutions and two protocols.

In their joint statement the CSTO heads of state voiced concern
over the growing danger of terrorism and the spread of extremism in
Central Asia, including the Afghan factor, and emphasized the need
for restoring peace in Ukraine and achieving a peace settlement of
the Nagorno-Karabakh problem.

The Heads of State stressed the importance of exceptionally
peaceful resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, underlining
the significance of the soonest settlement of the conflict with the
mediation of the OSCE Minsk Group on the basis of the principles and
norms of international law, the UN Charter, the Helsinki Final Act,
particularly the principles of territorial integrity, the right of
peoples to self-determination and non-use of force or the threat
of force.

Other documents included the CSTO Council’s decision on checking the
readiness of the CSTO collective rapid reaction force for coping with
their routine tasks and missions, the CSTO Council’s resolutions on
the collective air force, anti-drug strategy and plans for measures
to implement guidelines for collective response to emergencies.

The CSTO Council adopted a resolution on the consultative and
coordinating centre of the CSTO for response to computer incidents.

One of the protocols concerns “resistance to criminal activities in
the information sphere.” There are plans for carrying out the CSTO’s
operation for resistance to crime in the sphere of information.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/12/23/heads-of-csto-member-states-emphasize-the-importance-of-peaceful-settlement-of-the-karabakh-conflict/

BAKU: Turkey: Time To Say Goodbye To EU

TURKEY: TIME TO SAY GOODBYE TO EU

Trend, Azerbaijan
Dec 22 2014

22 December 2014, 22:14 (GMT+04:00)

By Rufiz Hafizoglu – Trend:

The foreign and domestic policies of Turkey have changed dramatically
with the coming of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) to power
in Turkey.

Although the opposition forces in Turkey (nationalist and conservative
Islamist) didn’t very highly value AKP’s successes, eventually they
had to put up with the party’s victory.

After strengthening in power, the AKP made policy changes, which
were differently valued in Turkish society, and this strengthened
the Turkish society’s polarization.

There is no doubt that the AKP had conducted many reforms for Turkey
to become a full member of the EU.

Since the start of official negotiations in 2005, until now Ankara
has conducted 160 reforms.

But Turkey’s accession to the EU has been always postponed.

The EU has repeatedly stated that the main reasons for this are the
Kurdish problem, Turkey’s non-compliance with the demand to open
its border with Armenia, and its non-recognition of the “Armenian
genocide”.

But despite this, Ankara continued carrying out reforms.

It was believed that in spite of all the obstacles of the EU, Ankara’s
reforms in different areas are aimed at making the country a full
member of the EU.

Although the reforms continued and Europe extended negotiations on
Turkey’s accession to the EU, the Turkish authorities made it clear
that EU membership has lost significance for Ankara.

“If the EU decides not to accept Turkey, this will not cause the
country’s concern,” Minister for EU Affairs Volkan Bozkır said. “This
statement shows that Ankara has not been interested in joining the
EU for a long time.”

Moreover, Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus made a statement
December 21 testifying to the revival of ambitions of the Ottoman
Empire.

“Turkey has woken up from a 150-year sleep,” Kurtulmus said. “The
collapse of the Ottoman Empire is associated with the loss of ambitions
and culture, rather than with loss of territory.”

“Turkey has woken up from a deep sleep and it will revive its culture
and power,” Kurtulmus said.

The Turkish authorities are well aware that no matter how Ankara
would try to become an EU full member, these efforts will not bring
significant results.

The reason is that even if Turkey fulfills all obligations, the
EU will call it for recognizing the so-called “Armenian genocide”,
which is the red line for Ankara.

Taking into account that the Armenian lobby intends to mark the
anniversary of the so-called “Armenian genocide” in 2015, which is a
long-standing lie, and that the West will use this against Turkey, one
can say that Turkey’s relations with the EU will be greatly changed.

From: Baghdasarian

http://en.trend.az/world/turkey/2346570.html

Jews Are "Leaving [Turkey] Due To Safety Concerns

TURKEY: JEWS ARE “LEAVING DUE TO SAFETY CONCERNS”, NEWSPAPER

ANSA English Media Service, Italy
December 17, 2014 Wednesday 12:10 PM CET

(ANSAmed) – ISTANBUL, DECEMBER 17 – Many people from Turkey’s Jewish
community are leaving the country after increased threats and attacks,
a prominent businessman from the community has written in an article
for the Istanbul-based Jewish newspaper Salom. “We face threats,
attacks and harassment every day. Hope is fading. Is it necessary
for a ‘Hrant among us’ to be shot in order for the government, the
opposition, civil society, our neighbours and jurists to see this?”

Mois Gabay wrote as reported by Cypriot daily Famagusta Gazette
online. He was referring to the murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist
Hrant Dink in 2007. Gabay, a professional in the tourism industry,
added that increasing numbers of Turkish Jews are making plans to
move abroad with their families, feeling unsafe and under pressure
in the country. “Around 37% of high school graduates from the Jewish
community in Turkey prefer to go abroad for higher education … This
number doubled this year compared to the previous years,” he wrote. It
is not only students, who have begun to think about building a life
abroad for their families and children, but also young businesspeople
according to Gabay. In a recent interview with Radikal, Gabay also
said changes in the law and the recognition of hate crimes in the
Turkish penal code are not sufficient for the protection of Turkey’s
Jewish community.

From: Baghdasarian

BAKU: Crimean Armenians Receive National Cultural Autonomy

BRIEF: CRIMEAN ARMENIANS RECEIVE NATIONAL CULTURAL AUTONOMY

Trend News Agency (Baku, Azerbaijan)
December 20, 2014 Saturday

Dec. 20–Russia’s Justice Ministry ratified Dec. 13 the creation of
an Armenian regional national cultural autonomy in Ukraine’s breakaway
region of Crimea, the head of Armenian community of Crimea, Vagharshak
Melkonian, said, the 1in.am news website reported Dec. 19.

The Crimean Armenian community appealed in October to the Foreign
Ministry of Armenia to open a consulate in the territory of the
separatist Crimea.

Some 15,000 to 20,000 Armenians live in the Crimea.

It should be noted that the Armenians living in the territories of
Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey, insisting on their own autonomy,
have many times moved on to make separation and independence claims.

From: Baghdasarian

BAKU: Sabine Freizer To Give Lecture On Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict At

SABINE FREIZER TO GIVE LECTURE ON NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT AT COLLEGE OF EUROPE

Azeri-Press news agency (APA), Azerbaijan
December 19, 2014 Friday

On 15 January 2015, Dr Sabine Freizer will give a lecture entitled
“The NagornoKarabakh Conflict Revisited?” at the Natolin (Warsaw)
campus of the College of Europe as part of the European Neighbourhood
Policy Chair Lecture Series, APA reports.

Sabine Freizer is a nonresident Senior fellow with the Dinu Patriciu
Eurasia Center and the Program on Transatlantic Relations. A graduate
of Dartmouth College, Dr FREIZER has a PhD from the London School of
Economics and a Master’s degree from the College of Europe (Bruges),
which she gained as a Fulbright scholar. She has been a board member
of the Eurasia Partnership Foundation since 2009 and is based in
Istanbul, Turkey.

From: Baghdasarian

UMass Students Tour United Nations With Amb. Baibourtian

UMASS STUDENTS TOUR UNITED NATIONS WITH AMB. BAIBOURTIAN

Monday, December 22nd, 2014

UMass Amherst students with Ambassador Armen Baibourtian at the United
Nations headquarters in New York. (Photo: University of Massachusetts)

AMHERST, Mass.–For the second year in a row, University of
Massachusetts Amherst Professor and Ambassador Armen Baibourtian
hosted a group of students at the United Nations Headquarters in New
York City, the school’s political science department reports.

“For many of us this was the first time visiting the United Nations,”
says Shea Kelly. “With Professor Baibourtian’s first-hand experience
working in the UN alongside meetings we were offered an insider’s
perspective.”

Students started their day with a tour through the outside garden of
the UN, where gifts from various members of the United Nations are
displayed. “We saw fascinating pieces, including part of the fallen
Berlin Wall, a sculpture gifted by The Soviet Union, and a Japanese
Peace Bell,” reports Kelly.

Professor Baibourtian arranged meetings with Ambassador Zohrab
Mnatsakanian, the permanent Representative of Armenia to the UN and
with John Ericson, from the Office of Human Resources Management.

Ambassador Mnatsakanian spoke of some of the most prioritized
initiatives of the General Assembly in the coming years such as
disarmament, peace and security, and development and human rights. He
also discussed the unique and difficult position the UN holds, as they
have 193 member states that must work to structure a common solution
to global events.

Ericson explained the many career paths and employment options in
the UN.

The last meeting of the day was with Ambassador Movses Abelian, who
is Director of the UN Security Council Affairs Division. He discussed
the importance of the Security Council in regards to sanctions and
addressing threats to international peace and security and gave
students his perspective on debates to make the composition of the
Security Council more inclusive, a much deliberated topic within
the UN.

Students also toured the UN General Assembly Hall and the UN Security
Council Military Staff Committee room.

“Throughout this visit, we were shown the diverse challenges facing
the global community and the multi-faceted approach the UN takes to
combat these challenges,” says Kelly. “In talking with the Ambassadors,
we were also able to gain a sense of how everyday affairs work in the
UN. This trip was a great opportunity for us to see the dynamic nature
of the UN and inspired those of us who hope to work in international
relations.”

From: Baghdasarian

http://asbarez.com/130122/umass-students-tour-united-nations-with-amb-baibourtian/

Internal Crisis In IS? Four Azerbaijanis Arrested By IS In Raqqa App

INTERNAL CRISIS IN IS? FOUR AZERBAIJANIS ARRESTED BY IS IN RAQQA APPEAR IN NEW VIDEO

Big News Network.com
Dec 22 2014

— Joanna Paraszczuk

The Islamic State group has released a new video showing four
Azerbaijani men it says were arrested as part of a “cell of extremists”
who had been plotting an armed rebellion in Raqqa, Islamic State’s
de facto capital in Syria.

The men, two of whom speak in Azeri and two in accented Russian,
look frightened and give what appear to be forced “confessions” —
possibly read from a script — about their part in the alleged plot.

In the video, shared on social media on December 21, the first
Russian-speaking man, named as Abu Maryam, says that he and others
considered “this nation” (a reference to local Syrians) “mushriks”
(polytheists). Abu Maryam said that he and his fellow conspirators
wanted to kill them and appropriate their property.

“We also considered [Islamic State] to be infidels because they
didn’t make takfir (the practice of a Muslim declaring another Muslim
an apostate) with the people but considered them brothers. And we
considered [IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi] a mushrik because he
collected zakat (a mandatory duty payable by Muslims) from the local
mushriks,” Abu Maryam says.

The same message is given by the second Russian-speaker, an older man,
who says that he and his comrades “started to fight IS and the locals
because we considered them to be mushriks.”

“I also want to add that we also found Sheikhs Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
and Adnani mushriks because they addressed the Syrian and Iraqi people
as their brothers,” the man, named as Abu Yakub, says.

Abu Yakub says that he and others plotted with their leader, who told
them to fight IS and take their weapons.

The video ends by quoting a verse from the Koran that talks about
execution as a punishment for those who “wage war against God.”

It is not known exactly how many Azerbaijanis are fighting in Syria,
but estimates in news reports have ranged from 200 to 300. The largest
group of Azerbaijani militants in Syria is likely fighting for the
Islamic State (IS) group. In May, Muhammad al-Azeri, the leader of
an Azerbaijani IS faction in Raqqa, said in a video message that IS
was on the “correct path of jihad” in Syria.

Though Abu Yakub, the older man shown in the Islamic State video, does
not appear to fit the profile of other militants from Azerbaijan and
other former Soviet states fighting in Syria, a Washington D.C.-based
analyst who blogs under the name told RFE/RL that there are several
examples of older Azerbaijani foreign fighters in Syria.

These include two members of the group known as the Karabakh Partisans
— Rustem Askerov, who was killed in January and who had fought in
Chechnya, and Rovshan Badalov, who was killled in Kobani in October.

Members of the so-called Karabakh Partisans were arrested in Azerbaijan
in 2004 on suspicion of planning a paramilitary jihad to liberate
the Karabakh region from Armenia.

“The bottom line is that there was/is a cadre of older Azerbaijani
jihadis in Syria — many arrived early on in the conflict and were
veterans of other conflicts, mainly in the North Caucasus. Chechnya
had a high participation for Azerbaijanis. No one has good numbers,
but it was likely in the hundreds,” told RFE/RL.

The video showing the four Azerbaijani men comes after reports via
activists that Islamic State militants executed as many as 100 of
their own members, most if not all foreign fighters, in Raqqa. Other
activists in Raqqa denied that a mass execution had taken place.

However, the Islamic State video of the four Azeri men’s “confessions”
does suggest that there is some sort of internal crisis with infighting
within the ranks of Islamic State militants in Raqqa, and that the
infighting involves foreign fighters.

The reports of the mass execution of foreign fighters originated in
the newspaper, which on December 19 quoted an activist from Deir Ezzor
in eastern Syria as saying there had been a mass killing of up to 100
foreign militants who had tried to leave the Islamic State group and
flee Raqqa.

However, the Raqqa-based activist group Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered
Silently said on December 20 that the reports of 100 fighters being
killed by Islamic State were false. The activist group said that
Islamic State’s military police had conducted arrests targeting
militants who were not on any official mission.

The details from Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently does match up
with other information given by the activists in the report, however.

The activists told the “Financial Times’ that Islamic State had
created a military police to crack down on militants.

“Local fighters are frustrated — they feel they’re doing most of
the work and the dying..foreign fighters who thought they were on an
adventure are now exhausted,” the activist told the “Financial Times.”

The activist said that Islamic State had created a “military police”
to crack down on those who were frustrated with the group.

The report said that morale in Raqqa was dropping as Islamic State
casualties grew, and that activists said dozens of militants’ homes
have been raided by the “military police.”

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.bignewsnetwork.com/index.php/sid/228784703

Turning Black Gold Into Sporting Glitter: What Azerbaijan Tells Us A

TURNING BLACK GOLD INTO SPORTING GLITTER: WHAT AZERBAIJAN TELLS US ABOUT MODERN SPORT

Special report: Qatar is not the only oil-rich nation spending billions
to burnish its image by buying up major events from athletics to
football * Video: Why is Azerbaijan buying up sporting events?

* Azerbaijan and the sporting map: from F1 venue to Euro 2020
host The Crystal Hall, built to stage boxing and volleyball events
during the inaugural 2015 European Games in Baku. Photograph: Tofik
Babaye/AFP/Getty Images

Owen Gibson in Baku

Friday 19 December 2014 13.22 GMT

As soon as you step out of the terminal at Heidar Aliyev airport
and into one of a queue of Baku 2015 branded London-style taxis,
touching down in the Azerbaijani capital feels like arriving in a
vaguely dystopian Truman Show sequel.

The feeling intensifies as you travel past endless digital clocks
counting down to the tournament and speed along a highway flanked
by the almost finished 65,000 capacity football stadium lit up like
the Allianz Arena on one side and a state-of-the art new gymnastics
arena on the other. All this for the inaugural European Games in
June next year, when more than 6,000 athletes from across Europe
(up to 175 from Britain among them) will compete in 20 sports from
gymnastics to beach soccer.

Outside Azerbaijan it elicits confused shrugs. Inside, you would
think it the biggest sporting event in the world. Ilham Aliyev –
who succeeded his father as president in 2003 and was already the
head of the national Olympic committee when he did so – sees it as an
opportunity to put his country on the sporting map. Until recently,
the country’s biggest sporting claim to fame was as the birthplace
of Tofiq Bahramov, the linesman who ruled that Geoff Hurst’s second
goal in the 1966 World Cup final goal was over the line.

The tumbledown venue named after him will be replaced as the national
stadium by the towering new structure being built by the state oil
company, Socar, with its 124 executive boxes and obligatory VVIP
sections. It is a hive of activity, with staff working round the
clock to finish it.

Men working inside the National Stadium in Baku.Photograph: Tofik
Babayev/AFP/Getty Images

Azad Rahimov, the longstanding minister for youth and sport, is blunt
about the reasons for turning black gold into sporting glitter. “The
main important thing is to position our country on the map of the world
and our country on the map of Europe. The best instrument to do that
is sport and culture. Sport has a bigger potential for reaching the
most people.” The first lady, Mehriban Aliyeva, is also keen. She has
her own suite at that impressive 6,800 capacity National Gymnastics
Arena, in which a live-in army of hopeful, young athletes work on
their routines day after day.

To its critics the European Games is a huge vanity project for both its
organisers and its hosts; to others it is merely the latest signpost
towards where global sport is headed. The operational budget is more
than £400m and estimates have put the infrastructure spend at £6.5bn,
although the government denies the figure is that high.

However, the European Games are only the start. The first Baku Formula
One race, the latest stage in Bernie Ecclestone’s continuing attempts
to tilt his circus towards those countries that will pay handsomely
for the kudos it affords them, will roar through the wide streets
outside the presidential palace in 2016.

Baku’s new stadium will also play host to four matches at Euro 2020
as part of Michel Platini’s scheme to spread the tournament across
the continent. Then there is a Uefa European Under-17s football
championship and, almost certainly, a revived Olympic bid to follow
ambitious but failed attempts to reach the shortlisting stage in
2016 and 2020. When Atletico Madrid stormed to the La Liga title last
year their shirts bore the legend “Azerbaijan: Land of Fire”. Socar,
meanwhile, has signed one of Uefa’s biggest sponsorship deals.

Baku is not a grey post-Soviet cityscape. “If oil is king, Baku is its
throne,” wrote the British author JD Henry as long ago as 1905. Its
people are hospitable and its wide streets full of history. However,
beneath the glitz and sporting glamour, a vicious crackdown on freedom
of expression has led to more than 90 arrests on what human rights
groups consider to be trumped-up charges. A comprehensive list compiled
by activists put the number at 98 in August. Though four have since
been released, more have been arrested.

This month, the journalist Khadija Ismayilova, a longstanding
thorn in the side of the establishment thanks to her reporting on
corruption and human rights abuses, was sentenced to two months’
pre-trial detention on heavily disputed charges of “inciting suicide”
in a former colleague. Her arrest has sparked a new wave of outrage.

Amnesty International said that it considered the charge to be
politically motivated and “the latest attempt to silence her
journalistic work in a long history of persecution”.

In Baku two days before her arrest, Ismayilova said she had been
routinely harassed by the authorities. She was banned from travelling
and said the authorities had rigged up a camera in her bedroom and
blackmailed her. Incredulity at such stories soon fades as others
tell similar tales of being falsely accused of being Armenian spies
and of the harassment or arrest of family and friends.

The Baku 2015 branded London-style taxis.Photograph: Owen Gibson

Lawyers who take human rights cases find themselves at risk of
being struck off and struggling for other clients. Ismayilova has a
mischievous theory as to the motivation behind the dash for sporting
events. “We are a kind of a loser nation. We failed in a lot of things
in our recent history. These games, the Eurovision song contest,
bring us an illusion of victory.” There are also more prosaic reasons,
though. “It’s also an opportunity to earn a lot of money. The contracts
to build venues, hotels, concert halls, roads are all being given to
the president’s families and oligarch’s families.”

Article 19, a London-based human rights organisation, calls Aliyev’s an
“oppressive regime, which launched a vicious attack on civil society
in Azerbaijan, and in particular those speaking out about political
prisoners”. In modern sport, though, money tends to talk and, as with
the Beijing Olympics, the$51bn (£32.5bn) Sochi Winter Games or the
World Cup in Qatar, part of the rationale employed by the industry
that surrounds global sport is that by opening these countries up to
the world, it will help spark change.

The argument runs that major sporting events should be seen as an
incentive and catalyst for change rather than dangled as a reward
for conforming to the west’s view of progress. Simon Clegg, the
former head of the British Olympic Association who is now Baku 2015’s
chief operating officer, says: “It’s a young country. It’s only 23
years old. What has taken place in 23 years is remarkable really in
comparison to other countries.”

This becomes a familiar refrain: this is a young country in an
unpredictable part of the world so it is only natural that stability
comes before human rights. Give them time. Clegg argues: “Look where
they’ve come from – decades of Soviet rule and oppression. You don’t
go from there to there overnight. If you do, you end up with chaos
and civil disorder.”

Although Azerbaijan has held several elections since regaining its
independence,it remains classified as “not free” by Freedom House.

Internet access is classified as partly free and its press as not free.

In a swish office block on one side of a sweeping square, a youthful,
multinational organising committee staff that will soon number 1,200
busy themselves with the minutiae of hosting a sporting event of this
magnitude. Away from the brightly lit offices, however, with their
grand chandelier and jolly depictions of the mascots – a pomegranate
and a gazelle – there are those who feel very differently.

Why is Azerbaijan buying up sporting events?

Natig Jafarli, an economist and the co-founder of the Real opposition
party, says: “The institutions of civil society are under oppression
in Azerbaijan. The instruments of government passed from father
to son. There are more than 90 political prisoners from different
spheres. There are no fair elections in Azerbaijan. Our aim is not
to get rid of one person, we want systematic change.”

The party’s co-chairman, Ilgar Mammadov, has been in prison for more
than 20 months after he was arrested following a critical blog and his
detention has been criticised by the European court of human rights.

Jafarli adds: “I am not against holding major sporting events in
Azerbaijan but our government’s approach is flawed. The Azerbaijan
government wants to host such competitions but at the same time
doesn’t want the country’s problems to surface.”

Back in Clegg’s office various large flags are propped up in the corner
and his coffee table is scattered with glossy brochures produced to
promote the games internationally. “Sky’s the limit as Azerbaijan
builds for the future” reads one typically breathless headline on an
interview with President Aliyev. “I always say seeing is believing,
it really is,” enthuses Clegg, waxing lyrical about the charms of
Baku. “We’re making it up as we go along. We’re trying to create
something unique.”

It is a long way from East Anglia, where Clegg was once Ipswich Town’s
chief executive, to the very eastern fringes of Europe. “This is the
big bang moment of the European Games. If you are going to have a
big bang moment, you’d want the biggest bang possible. Believe me,
this is going to be a seriously big bang.”

It is hard not to be sceptical but Clegg and his colleagues have the
zeal of true believers. He says: “Look here, there is no national
football stadium here at the moment. There is no 50m pool in the
whole of Azerbaijan. This is about using the games to fast-track a
lot of the infrastructure investment the country needs.”

Around the corner in a hotel lobby, the head of the Azerbaijani Popular
Front party, Ali Karimli, paints a grim picture of the frustrations
involved in trying to maintain political opposition since the father of
the current president came to power in 1993. In that time, he estimates
there have been more than 2,000 political prisoners. Karimli has been
the subject of a travel ban for nine years, ever since he criticised
the current regime at the European parliament, and says the party now
has no headquarters after being drummed out of a series of premises.

“They want to build a new image of Azerbaijan as a modern, developed
country,” he says. “They want their European guests to be impressed and
think they can park all other political problems. But they also want to
cancel all opposition and crack down on mass media ahead of the games.”

Thomas de Waal, in his book The Caucasus, writes that when Alyiev came
to power in 1993, he “preferred not to experiment with democracy and
began to build a strong semi-authoritarian state. The country’s nascent
democratic institutions were brought under suffocating control.” If
anything, his son has intensified that control.

Baku is a city of surprises, mixing historic ruins with striking
modern architecture and the remnants of the utilitarian Soviet era.

The oil boom has led to an influx of luxury brands and gleaming Rolls
Royce showrooms and upmarket shopping malls studded with Gucci,
Lacoste and Prada stores line the streets of downtown Baku. The
children of the elite are funded to go to Harvard or Oxbridge. The
country is predominantly Muslim but secular in its government. The
McDonald’s in the main square blares out Wham’s Last Christmas,
the dress code is relaxed.

The streets of Baku. Photograph: Owen Gibson

Yet for those who challenge authority through their words or actions,
retribution is swift. Turgut Gambar is a member of the Nida youth
group and has seen his friends steadily imprisoned over recent months.

Nida was established in 2011 to seek democratisation through nonviolent
means; at least nine of its members have been arrested on what they
insist are trumped-up charges using planted evidence since a peaceful
protest in central Baku drew up to 6,000 people in March.

Gambar says that one positive from the sudden drive to host sporting
events is the fact that it shines a light on dark corners. “It is an
opportunity for us to highlight the human rights problems and what
is happening here. But on the other hand, it’s our money and it’s
such a dubious way to spend it. We have a fund that is supposed to
collect the oil money and invest it for future generations. But they
are just frittering it away on Flame Towers and Eurovision and the
European Games.”

If the Olympics and the World Cup are the top targets for ambitious
rulers looking to make their mark, then beneath them sit cascading
tiers of other sporting events that are increasingly sold either as an
opportunity to put a country on the map or a stepping stone to landing
one of the bigger fish. Enter Pat Hickey, the Irish International
Olympic Committee member and head of the European Olympic Committee,
who was working up the concept of the European Games, an idea had
been mooted since the 1970s but had never taken off for a variety
of reasons.

“Two years ago, the European Games didn’t exist. Bit by bit, people
are noticing. It’s like a new business – you’re starting from scratch,
there’s no history, no tradition,” says Pierce O’Callaghan, who sat
on the panel that conducted a European Olympic Committee feasibility
study and has ended up moving out to Baku with his family as director
of sport. “There’s no point in fooling ourselves, the general public
aren’t aware of it. It’s taking time but bit by bit we’ll get there.”

O’Callaghan, whose background is in athletics, says the new games –
which will include sports such as three-on-three basketball alongside
more traditional disciplines – will also benefit athletes by allowing
them to experience a multisport games. Hickey came calling at just the
right time for Baku and a marriage of convenience was quickly sealed.

The IOC president, Thomas Bach, is also keen for the games to work,
calling them the “missing ring” of the movement.

In the belly of the building boom at the aquatics centre, workers are
feverishly constructing two 50m pools and a diving tower, flanked by
6,000 seats and housed in a glass palace. An expanse of wasteland
beyond the aquatics centre will be preened and sculpted by June
into a temporary home for beach volleyball and beach soccer, and yet
another structure will host water polo. Outside the aquatics centre,
the nodding donkeys are reminders of the source of Azerbaijan’s wealth,
dotting the landscape as they do, pulling the oil up from wells.

Yet all of this building activity is for a swimming competition that
will feature only junior athletes. The track and field competition will
also be suboptimal. Both sports have their own European Championships
and could not change their calendar at short notice.

O’Callaghan is convinced, however, that they will soon come fully
on board: “2019 gives them more time and they’ve both said they want
to be part of it In athletics, Azerbaijan will have someone in every
race,” he says.

“It works from a local point of view. Does it make a huge impact in
the European athletics world? Of course not. In 2019, you’d expect
the top seniors in swimming and athletics. For sure.”

When those four Euro 2020 matches – three group-stage games and a
quarter-final – were awarded to Azerbaijan in September, the first
question faced by Platini was over the human rights situation in the
country. The Azerbaijan FA’s general secretary, Elkhan Mammadov, who
has just recruited Robert Prosinecki to try to build a team that can
qualify for 2020, argues that through sport Azerbaijan can become a
more open country.

Mammadov says: “This is something politicians should deal with. If
there is a case involving human rights I’m sure the country is ready
to improve and to develop. In any place in the world, if you look
carefully, there could be some problems and some issues. That is why
we need this kind of event to improve things. I don’t think it’s a
big issue for us.”

Thousands of people attend the rally demanding the release of political
prisoners. Photograph: Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

It is not a sentiment with which Necmin Kamilsoy, a softly spoken
19-year-old, would agree. His father, Intigam Aliyev, a prominent
human rights lawyer, was arrested and imprisoned this year after
taking more than 300 cases to the European courts. His health is
deteriorating and Kamilsoy cannot disguise his deep concern. “It’s
getting worse every day,” he says. “He has serious diseases in his
leg and some thrombosis. He has to have treatment, if he doesn’t he
could lose his legs. He was charged with tax evasion, abuse of power
and illegal entrepreneurship. It’s ridiculous.”

Nor Gunay Ismayilova, the co-chairperson of the Institute for
Reporters’ Freedom and Safety, whose founder, Emin Huseynov, has been
missing since August and may be hiding in a foreign embassy.

Ismayilova says: “They have searched our offices and sealed them. They
have taken all the equipment, all the documents. Our bank account
is frozen. This is the worst it has been since 2006. I have a
travel ban too. The government doesn’t want anyone to go anywhere
and talk about these issues.”According to the Committee to Protect
Journalists, standards of press freedom have deteriorated in recent
years. “Despite [the] Azerbaijani authorities’ declared commitments to
uphold press freedom, they have jailed and harassed critics, adopted
laws restricting the press, and imposed draconian restrictions on
nongovernmental organizations,” it said.

Nor Gunay Ismayilova’s best friend, Rasul Jafarov, who organised a
protest to coincide with the Eurovision song contest in 2012 and was
planning a Sport for Democracy movement to coincide with the European
Games. He has been in prison for four months without charge.

Nor Leyla Yunus, the longstanding director of the Institute for Peace
and Democracy, a well-respected NGO, who was jailed along with her
husband, Arif, in July this year in circumstances that are regarded
as highly dubious. She is also suffering with ill health.

Nils Muiznieks, the Council of Europe’s commissioner for human rights,
says: “If you’re not a political activist or a critical journalist,
you can live well enough there. But anyone who is not happy or
challenges the regime? No.”

If the rhetoric behind Azerbaijan’s sporting land grab sounds familiar,
that is because it is similar to that employed by the Gulf states to
justify their spectacular trolley dash for sporting baubles.

Like them, Azerbaijan hopes that by investing in sport it will build
political, economic and diplomatic capital in the eyes of the rest
of the world and prepare for a future beyond gas and oil.

Yet Baku is not Qatar’s Doha, for all the superficial similarities in
the modern structures springing out of the ground and the profusion
of luxury brands. The mix of pressures in this complex country of
9.4 million people is unique. Rahimov says: “The city is really very
beautiful and a fantastic mixture of the old city and the new modern
buildings.” That is true, although the contrast between the old,
the new and the ramshackle suburbs can jar but not as much as the
contrast between the feelgood rhetoric around the games and a human
rights record that has made Azerbaijan the target of serious criticism.

Index on Censorship has accused the Aliyev regime of using sport
to whitewash its intolerance of free speech. Article 19 responded
to the arrest of Ismayilova by calling on the Council of Europe to
suspend Azerbaijan.

Yet Rahimov sounds perplexed by the focus on human rights. “Sometimes
it’s strange because all the eyes are on Azerbaijan and never on
other countries in the world. Maybe the oil and gas makes these
organisations blind and focused only on Azerbaijan. We can’t only
use one model of democracy in the Middle East, in the west and in
different countries. Sometimes the experts on democracy created the
problems we have now in Syria, Libya and Iraq. We don’t want to be
one of these countries.”

In a world where the CIA’s torture techniques have been roundly
condemned and the fallout from the “war on terror” is still
unravelling, the moral high ground is hard to identify. Rahimov says
human rights organisations and western commentators should “beware of
double of standards”. Yet for basic human rights to be disregarded
entirely by those bestowing sporting events that espouse values of
peace and freedom on host nations seems perverse.

Countries using major sport to burnish their image is not new but the
latest trend towards countries using sporting events as an instrument
of soft power and investing huge sums in using them as giant billboards
to project an airbrushed image to the world feels different. The Fifa
general secretary, Jerôme Valcke,nailed his colours to the mast when
he said less democracy was “sometimes better” when it came to putting
on a World Cup.

The IOC, meanwhile, is wrestling with issues that arose most visibly
around Sochi, when protesters against Russia’s new anti-gay laws made
life difficult. When countries are so transparently using major events
for political ends, it takes a particular kind of myopia to deny the
link between sport and politics.

During the 1980s, western companies led by BP sparked a first influx of
contractors to make the most of the “Land of Fire”. Now it is stadium
architects, PR firms, consultants and the cadre of international
citizens who keep the ever expanding calendar of global sporting
events on the road who are engaged in a new gold rush.

A London-based agency created the branding that adorns hundreds
of taxis and billboards around Baku. The organisers even put out a
press release boasting of the involvement of London 2012 veterans in
Azerbaijan.Muiznieks says: “I’m not a big fan of boycotts. But I am a
big fan of drawing attention to what the country is trying to do and
what it is using these events for. Athletes, the media and organisers
should look at these issues. Would anybody organise an event in North
Korea? I don’t want to compare Azerbaijan to North Korea but it shows
you can’t ignore the political and social context of the country in
which you’re holding an event.

The country has to be prepared for this kind of scrutiny. If they
want to put on their best face, they should put on their best face
not only in terms of infrastructure and hospitality but in terms of
what is going on in the country.”

Another protester demanding the release of political prisoners.

Photograph: Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

Before her arrest, Khadija Ismayilova said she had no choice but to
keep going. “Me and my fellow journalists have been investigating
incidents of corruption. But by harassing me personally, putting my
life at risk and putting people I train at risk they force me to deal
with human rights issues. I’m not comfortable in the shoes of being
a human rights activist. I’m being dragged into it.”

For Gunay Ismayilova, 25, giving up is not an option either. “My
best friends are in prison. If I stop, I will have betrayed my
friends. It is important because if I stop then the government will
think that their pressure is working.” As with the other activists,
she is hopeful that something good will come of the decision to spend
billions of dollars on a sporting event no one has heard of. “If
foreign journalists, athletes and other people come here and see the
situation and speak about it, that’s better for us.”

Meanwhile, Clegg is convinced the inaugural European Games will be
a success. It is easy to see why Baku wants to host it, easy to see
why those involved would talk it up and easy to see why the so-called
Olympic movement wants to add another event to its ever mushrooming
portfolio.

Whether the sporting public will remotely care is very much more open
to question. The EOC claims it already has six cities interested in
hosting the 2019 edition, though it will not say who they are. “It will
become the pre-eminent multisport senior event in the world. It’s bold
but having set a target of fourth place in the medal table six days
after getting back from Singapore, I’m not afraid of bold statements,”
says Clegg, referring to London winning the Olympic bid in 2005 and
their eventual place in the rankings at London 2012.

Lord Moynihan, the former BOA chairman and Tory sports minister who
competed in the 1980 Moscow Olympics despite pressure to boycott but
refused to take part in the opening and closing ceremonies, says the
mantra that sport and politics should remain like oil and water could
not hold. “It’s going to have to stop,” he says. “It can’t continue.

When you’ve got reporters and human rights campaigners being locked
up left, right and centre there are serious questions for sport to
answer. Sport can too easily be corrupted to provide a perfect tool for
political leaders bent on delivering international recognition through
sporting competition. That must be resisted by the multibillion-pound
sports industry.”

Scanning the list of approaching events – from Azerbaijan’s vault on
to the world stage to World Cups in Russia and Qatar plus a two-horse
2022 Winter Olympics bid race between Almaty and Beijing – resistance
is the last thing on its mind.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2014/dec/19/black-gold-sporting-glitter-azerbaijan-modern-sport

Eurasian Development Bank Lowers Its Forecast For Economic Growth In

EURASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK LOWERS ITS FORECAST FOR ECONOMIC GROWTH IN ARMENIA FOR 2014 FROM 4% TO 3.3%

Eurasian Development Bank lowers its forecast for economic growth in
Armenia for 2014 from 4% to 3.3%

YEREVAN, December 22. / ARKA /. The Eurasian Development Bank (EDB)
has lowered its forecast of economic growth in Armenia for 2014 from 4%
to 3.3%. According to an EDB study, the downward revision of Armenia’s
economic expansion forecast results from the weakening domestic
demand, caused in part by the depreciation of the national currency,
the dram, as well as from the negative impact of external factors,
primarily the economic slowdown in Russia and a weak growth in Europe.

The study reminds that in October 2014 Armenia’s economic activity grew
only by 3.7% from the year earlier, while the nine-month grow was 4.2%.

“Armenia’s economy appeared to be more sensitive to the economic
slowdown in Russia and the increased geopolitical uncertainty. This
resulted in declined investment activity, a cut in remittances sent
home by Armenian labor migrants in Russia and weakening exports,”
the study says.

The study says also that in 2015 Armenia’s economic growth will
develop under the influence of two opposing factors. On the one hand,
a possible slowdown in the Russian economy will be having a negative
impact, while on the other hand, Armenia’s membership in the Eurasian
Economic Union (EEU) is supposed to have a favorable impact on its
exports of agricultural products to EEU member countries, especially
in the context of ongoing Western sanctions against Russia.

The study says that Armenia can also count on lower energy prices,
partly because of their decrease in international markets, as well as
on potential increase in foreign investment. In general, according to
the study, next year’s economic growth will not differ much from that
in 2013 and 2014 and will fall to 3.8% from the previous projection
of 4.2%.

The study also says that due to increased spending Armenia may close
this year with a budget deficit (possibly lower than the planned 2.3%
of GDP). However, the budget is tightly controlled by the government,
partly thanks to the ongoing IMF program. The 2015 budget reconciled
with IMF looks pretty conservative with moderate expansion of budget
deficit to 2.34% of GDP with a very moderate pace of growth in revenue
and spending.

Eurasian Development Bank (EDB) is an international financial
organization established by Russia and Kazakhstan in 2006 to help
develop market economies and boost mutual trade ties in member states.

The member-states are Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Russia and Tajikistan. -0–

From: Baghdasarian

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/eurasian_development_bank_lowers_its_forecast_for_economic_growth_in_armenia_for_2014_from_4_to_3_3/#sthash.OJBbdhi1.dpuf

Armenia To Join World Free Zones Organization

ARMENIA TO JOIN WORLD FREE ZONES ORGANIZATION

YEREVAN, December 22. / ARKA /. Armenia will join soon the World Free
Zones Organization (FZO), Armenian Meridian free economic zone said
in a press release today.

It said the first deputy head of Meridian, Nika Manukova, was in
the United Arab Emirates on December 11-15 at the invitation of
FZO executive director Samir Hamrun to discuss Armenia’s upcoming
membership in the organization and look into the opportunities it
will open for the country.

Meridian said in the UAE Ms. Manukova had a meeting with the deputy
CEO of Dubai Airport free economic zone Nasser Al Madani to discuss
a set of legislation, infrastructure, security and organizational
issues, concerning Armenia’s future membership in the organization.

The Armenian delegation also visited the Dubai airport, the Dubai Mall,
and a jewelery and diamond cutting free economic zone to discuss the
possibility of establishing partnerships and to study exchange of
experience and information between free economic zones of UAE’s and
other countries.

Earlier, during a Lithuanian-Armenian business conference in Vilnius
on November 27-28 Meridian signed 9 memorandums with Lithuanian free
economic zones.

Established in Geneva, Switzerland and headquartered in the Dubai
Airport Freezone, World FZO is a non-profit organization enhancing
public and general knowledge and the perception of free zones helping
to increase awareness of the advantages of free zones in terms of
economic and social development, foreign and direct investments.-0-

From: Baghdasarian

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/armenia_to_join_world_free_zones_organization/#sthash.V9yxGhyH.dpuf