Armenian FM denies Azeri report on peace talks in London

Armenian Foreign Ministry denies Azeri report on peace talks in London

Arminfo
1 Apr 05

YEREVAN

Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan is to meet the co-chairmen
of the OSCE Minsk Group in London on 15 April, while there is no
agreement yet on meeting Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov. The Armenian Foreign Ministry press secretary, Gamlet
Gasparyan, has said this in a conversation with an Arminfo
correspondent when commenting on Mammadyarov ‘s statement. An
invitation to attend the meeting in London has come from the
co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group, Gasparyan said.

We should recall that RIA-Novosti news agency quoted the Azerbaijani
foreign minister as saying in Warsaw yesterday [31 March] that the
next meeting between the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers
would be held in London on 15 April. The meeting will be held with the
co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group (Russia, the USA and France) in
attendance, the agency said. Mammadyarov added that during the meeting
between the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers, the date would
be set for a possible meeting between the two countries’ presidents,
Robert Kocharyan [of Armenia] and Ilham Aliyev [of Azerbaijan].

Armenian Genocide commemoration events

Watertown TAB & Press, MA

Armenian Genocide commemoration events
Friday, April 1, 2005

The Greater Boston Committee for the Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide,
an umbrella organization of all area churches and major civic groups,
announces the following community-wide commemoration events for the 90th
anniversary of the Genocide. All events are free and open to the public,
unless otherwise noted. For more information, and periodic updates, log on
to

“Genocide and Mass Killing: Origins, Prevention, Healing and
Reconciliation”- Tuesday, April 12, 7:30 p.m., at Goddard Chapel at Tufts
University in Medford. Presented by Ervin Staub.

“Victims of 1915 and We Today”- Sunday, April 17, 10 a.m., at Holy
Cross Armenian Catholic Church, 200 Lexington St., Belmont. A memorial
service and evocation.

“Remembrance and Commemoration through Armenian Culture and Music”-
Sunday, April 17, 5 p.m., at St. James Armenian Apostolic Church, 465 Mount
Auburn St., Watertown. Featuring Sayat Nova Dance Company and Zulal Armenian
Folk Trio.

“The Road to Redemption: Memories of the 1915 Armenian Genocide”-
Thursday, April 21, 7:30 p.m., at Boston University’s Morse Auditorium, 602
Commonwealth Ave., Boston. Presented by the Greater Boston Committee for the
Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.

Massachusetts State House Commemoration – Friday, April 22, 11 a.m.
Details to follow.

Ecumenical Service and Memorial Service – Saturday, April 23, 6:45
p.m., at Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church, 145 Brattle St., Cambridge.
A service for 250 Armenian intellectuals who perished on April 24, 1915.
Presented by the Honorable Clergy of Boston Armenian Churches.

Requiem and Memorial Concert for the 90th Anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide – Saturday, April 23, 7:30 p.m., at Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic
Church. Presented by Erevan Choral Society, under the direction of the Very
Rev. Oshagan Minassian.

Rally to Commemorate the Armenian Genocide in New York – Sunday, April
24. Busses depart from St. James and St. Stephens Armenian Churches in
Watertown to Times Square, for those wishing to take part in the rally to
commemorate the Genocide and denounce the denial of the Turkish government.
For more information, log on to

The Films of J. Michael Hagopian – Friday, April 29 and May 6, various
times, at Kendall Square Cinema, 1 Kendall Square, Cambridge. Screenings of
“Germany and the Secret Genocide” and “Voices from the Lake.” Presented by
the Greater Boston Committee for the Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide,
with cooperation of Kendall Square Cinema. Tickets are $5.

www.weremember1915.org.
www.weremember1915.org.

BAKU: Austrian-Azerbiajan Academic association addresses to UNESCO

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
March 30 2005

AUSTRIAN-AZERBAIJAN ACADEMIC ASSOCIATION ADDRESSES TO UNESCO
[March 30, 2005, 17:51:27]

Members of Austria-Azerbaijan Academic Association functioning in
Vienna on behalf of the Azerbaijan communities in this country have
adopted an Address to UNESCO in connection with attempt of the
Armenians to carry out in the Azerbaijani city Shusha “archeological
excavations”.

In the document, it is marked that it is senselessly to search for
“the Armenian trace’ around Shusha. It is also underlined the fact
that Shusha and also all territory of Karabakh historically belongs
to Azerbaijanis, has found reflection in works of the European and
Russian researchers. The carried out researches of a jaw of
azihkantrop (Azikh human) also have confirmed that Azerbaijanis are
natives of this territory. Statements of the Armenians that in
territory the monuments concerning by the period of the neolith while
in all researches the fact of presence of monuments in territory of
Karabakh proves to be true will be found, concerning to Last Bronze
Period, – are ridiculous and rather far from a reality. This is
simply next fabrication of the Armenians, trying to prove that they
ostensibly are `the native population’ of Nagorno Karabakh.

Being based on historic facts, the Association calls on the
international organizations, including UNESCO, to protest against
attempt of the Armenian “researchers” to forge history. Similar
researches completely contradict positions of the Hague Convention of
UNESCO `On protection of cultural values during confrontations’.

BAKU: Russia’s Azeris appeal to Putin over assassination attempt

Russia’s Azeris appeal to Putin over assassination attempt

MPA news agency
24 Mar 05

Baku, 24 March: The management board of the federal national and
cultural autonomy of the Azerbaijanis, Azerros, has appealed to
Russian President Vladimir Putin over an attempt on the life of the
president of this organization and the head of the international
charity foundation Karabakh, Soyun Sadiqov.

The head of the autonomy is making efforts to develop and maintain
stable relations between Russia and Azerbaijan and takes an active
part in helping Russia’s Azerbaijanis resolve their problems, the
appeal said. As head of the Karabakh charity foundation, Sadiqov
is also actively involved in attempts on all levels to resolve the
Karabakh conflict.

The Azerbaijanis urged President Putin to instruct the appropriate
authorities to punish the culprits. “We are confident that the
authorities will not allow the repetition of such provocation that
could shatter the balance in inter-ethnic relations,” the appeal said.

Russia’s Putin says CIS political “club”, not economic union

Russia’s Putin says CIS political “club”, not economic union

Mediamax news agency
25 Mar 05

Yerevan, 25 March: The Russian and Armenian presidents, Vladimir Putin
and Robert Kocharyan, today said that the Commonwealth of Independent
States [CIS] should not be compared with the EU. The presidents made
this statement when answering a question from a Mediamax correspondent
at a press conference dedicated to the outcome of talks in Yerevan.

“The reason for all serious disappointments is too much expectations,”
the Russian president said. He recalled that the CIS was established
mainly to carry out “the process of the break-up of the Soviet Union”
in a more civilized way. “The CIS managed to do this,” Putin said.

“Expectations of special achievements in the area of economy, political
and military cooperation in the CIS were naturally in vain because
there could not be any,” the Russian president said. “The CIS has
never had extra tasks related to economic integration,” he stressed.

The CIS is a comfortable “club” and “platform” for CIS leaders to
have regular meetings, discuss and resolve issues of public concern,
he said.

“I believe that it is necessary to preserve the CIS. Every country
is interested in this irrespective of what domestic political forces
come to power or leave it. Problems remain and people expect them to
be resolved,” Putin said.

As for “actual economic integration”, Putin believes that more
suitable organizations for this purpose are the Eurasian Economic
Community [EAEC, comprises Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia
and Tajikistan] and a common economic space.

Armenian President Kocharyan also said that the CIS is a suitable
format for meeting counterparts and discussing serious issues.

“At every CIS summit I meet at least three of my counterparts and it
yields results,” he stressed. At the same time, Kocharyan said that
the CIS should not be compared with the EU.

“Any comparison with the EU will not be in the CIS’s favour, of
course,” the Armenian president said.

Putin noted in this regard that “the EU countries were working together
to unite, while the CIS was established for a civilized break-up”.

“Everything else is a political nonsense and gossip,” the Russian
president said.

ANKARA: Turkish FM Gul blames imperialist circles for the Armenianis

Turkish FM Gul blames imperialist circles for the Armenian issue

Hurriyet, Turkey
March 23 2005

Turkish Foreign Minister & Deputy Prime Minister Abdullah Gul spoke
openly about the so-called Armenian genocide, Tuesday, stating,
“Genocide is to eradicate traces of any ethnic or religious group.
Why then do Armenian churches still exist in Turkey? And why then do
we have Armenians here?”

Gul said that it was the minority of Armenians living in Europe and the
U.S. who were causing the issue to escalate. “It is the imperialist
circles and chauvinist Armenian nationalists who have created this
problem. They do it to hold onto their power.”

Gul also said that the Armenians living abroad have very good
lifestyles and don’t go home to Armenia to help their brothers.

The Turkish government have called for a historical study of what
happened, requesting that all documents and archives be examined by
experts, to find some closure on the issue. ” The archives in Lenin,
Britain, Paris and Armenia should be opened,” Gul added.

The Turkish government stands by its convictions that the genocide
happened on both sides, to both Armenians and Turks: “Armenians and
Turkish people lived together for thousands of years, contributing
to each others’ culture and security.”

(Hurriyet)

Thwarting Base Ambitions

Thwarting Base Ambitions
By Pavel Felgenhauer

Moscow Times
Tuesday, March 22, 2005. Issue 3129. Page 11.

In the early 1990s, as the Soviet Union collapsed, the remnant of
the Soviet Army in the Transcaucasus region was harassed and its
weapons stolen or expropriated. The Defense Ministry in Moscow was
mostly preoccupied with removing essential equipment like tactical
nuclear warheads and secret satellite communication stations before
they were taken over by the locals.

Everything changed in the mid-1990s as a string of ethnic wars,
accompanied by ethnic cleansing, crippled the three Transcaucasus
republics of Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan. Armenia defeated the
Azeris in Nagorny Karabakh but was then blockaded by Turkey. Weak
and defeated Azerbaijan was seeking Russian help in an acute conflict
with Iran over drilling rights in the oil-rich Caspian Sea. By 1995,
the Russian military dominated most of the Transcaucasus. There were
some 15,000 Russian soldiers on Georgian territory, outnumbering
the ragtag local military that was devastated by civil wars and
the defeat in Abkhazia. Russian border guards fully controlled the
Turkish border. By 1995, the Georgian and Armenian governments signed
agreements to allow Russia to keep military bases on their territory
for as many as 25 more years.

While recruiting Armenia as an ally, Russia also extended substantial
influence into Azerbaijan. Both rival nations were seeking favor in
Moscow and the Azeri government authorized the Russian military to
continue to operate a large early warning radar in Gabala, west of
Baku. This radar allows the Defense Ministry to monitor things like
U.S. military air activity over Iraq and Iranian ballistic missile
tests.

The Georgians hoped that in exchange for military bases, Moscow would
press separatists in South Ossetia and Abkhazia to reach a settlement
with the central government in Tbilisi. Moscow did attempt to mediate
but halfheartedly and with zero effect. During the last decade,
the Kremlin has not proposed a single workable solution to any of
the long-lasting conflicts in the region.

The restoration of Russia’s influence in the region was facilitated by
ethnic wars in which Moscow intermittently aided both sides, sending
arms and military specialists first to help Armenia, then the Azeris
and then back again. The same pattern was repeated in Georgia, and
Russian aid always equaled battlefield success for the favored side.

Many in Moscow believed that keeping conflicts in the Transcaucasus
frozen but unresolved would preserve Russia’s newly gained
influence. The Georgian parliament did not ratify the agreement to keep
Russian military bases because there was no progress in resolving the
Abkhazia problem or, most important for the Georgians, in negotiating
the return of refugees to Abkhazia. Now this treaty has been abandoned,
and this month the Georgian parliament demanded the immediate removal
of the bases, threatening sanctions and a moratorium on visas to
Russian officers sent to serve in Georgia.

As the military got mired down in Chechnya and all battle-ready
resources were sent to the North Caucasus, its presence in the
Transcaucasus region dwindled. Today there are only around 4,000
soldiers left at Russian bases in Georgia, and they are not fully
battle-ready.

The $100 a month earned by regular contract solders was a lot of
money in the 1990s. Armenians, Georgians and Abkhazians paid bribes to
get papers to prove they had the right to Russian citizenship, which
allowed them to serve under the Russian flag. At the Russian base in
Batumi, Georgia, on the Turkish border, most of the rank and file are
local Georgians. Armenians staff another base on Georgian territory
in Akhalkalaki, as the Meskheti Turks that once lived in the region
were expelled by Josef Stalin in the 1940s and replaced by Armenian
settlers. If the Georgians decide to blockade the Russian bases, the
garrisons staffed with locals would likely offer only token resistance.

Instead of forming alliances with the Transcaucasus nations based
on long-term interests and aspirations, the Kremlin has kept various
factions and ethnic groups at each other’s throats. Since 2002, under
orders from the Kremlin, Russian passports have been freely distributed
in South Ossetia and Abkhazia in an obvious prelude to annexation.

The Georgians could either agree to become a Russian dependency along
with South Ossetia and Abkhazia, or lose these areas entirely. However,
when push came to shove over military bases, it became apparent that
President Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin has no spare capacity to support
its ambitions with force. And Soviet-style policies do not work
without Soviet might.

Pavel Felgenhauer is an independent defense analyst based in Moscow.

It is critically important for US to recognize Armenian Genocide,US

PanArmenian News
March 21 2005

IT IS CRITICALLY IMPORTANT FOR US TO RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE, US
CONGRESSMAN CONSIDERS

21.03.2005 03:52

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Representative James Langevin, a well-known champion
of Armenian issues, is urging President Bush to follow the example
of other leading US public officials and formally recognize the
Armenian Genocide in his statement of remembrance next month, the
Armenian Assembly of America reported. Langevin, in a statement issued
yesterday to Congress, urged Bush to properly label the atrocities
as U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans so candidly did during his
meetings with Armenian-Americans throughout the U.S. last month. During
those public exchanges, Evans declared that “the Armenian Genocide
was the first genocide of the twentieth century.” “Therefore,
it is critically important that the United States speak with one
voice in condemning the horrors committed against the Armenians,”
he concluded. In other news, Langevin this week signed his support to
a congressional letter to President Bush, asking that he acknowledge
this crime against humanity.

ANKARA: Gul: Genocide allegations have nothing to do with Turkey’s E

Turkish Press
March 21 2005

Press Review

Turkiye:

GUL: “GENOCIDE ALLEGATIONS HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH TURKEY’S EU MEMBERSHIP”

Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said yesterday that there was no
direct or indirect linkage between the Armenian so-called genocide
allegations and Turkey’s European Union membership bid. Speaking
in Parliament, Gul said that Ankara had fulfilled the Copenhagen
criteria as confirmed by both last October’s EU Commission report
and December’s EU summit. Stressing that a History Research Group had
been formed to investigate the allegations, Gul said that in the near
future their findings on the issue would be released for the benefit
of Turkey and the international community. /Turkiye/

BAKU: Azeri paper suggests restoring proportional representation vot

Azeri paper suggests restoring proportional representation vote to avoid crisis

Zerkalo web site, Baku
19 Mar 05

The recent developments in Azerbaijan prove that there is a need for
“revolutionary” reforms in the country before the situation gets out
of control, the Azerbaijani newspaper Zerkalo has said. Warring
clans, rampant corruption, weakness of democratic institutions and
lack of the “systemic opposition” stand to destabilize the country.
This is why the authorities themselves should introduce
constitutional amendments that will restore the proportional
representation system and make it easier both to curb the ambitions
of different groups within the authorities and to ensure that strong
opposition factions appear in the parliament. The following is an
excerpt from R. Mirqadirov’s report by Azerbaijani newspaper Zerkalo
web site on 19 March headlined “Revolutionary reforms” and subheaded
“There might not be another chance to make a choice”; subheading as
published:

The developments of the recent months have much more conclusively
proven the need for major reforms in all spheres of social, political
and economic life of the country, including the state government
system. Now it is time to admit that the country is facing a dilemma:
either the authorities effectively initiate reforms that would be
revolutionary by nature themselves, or else…[ellipsis as published]

Let us remind our readers of the most “notable” events of the last
month. The riot in penitentiaries – the head of state said that he
could not even imagine that horrible crimes that contravened
elementary humanitarian norms were taking place in penal colonies. It
emerged that top officials from the Justice Ministry were implicated
in these crimes.

The abduction of the wife of the International Bank [of Azerbaijan]
was the crime that effectively constituted a challenge to the
country’s leadership. It emerged that the criminal group has operated
in the top echelons of the Interior Ministry since as early as 1996,
in other words, for almost 10 years. In terms of extent and
inhumanity of their actions, they rivalled even those
dyed-in-the-wool criminals whom [Azerbaijani President] Ilham Aliyev
spoke about in his speech.

An act of provocation has been carried out against the editor of the
opposition newspaper Azadliq, which was “gladly seized on” by all the
pro-government media, who urged to cook his goose. Then we have all
become witnesses to almost public execution of well-known journalist
[editor-in-chief of Monitor magazine] Elmar Huseynov. Aliyev said
that this crime was the “black spot” on the whole of Azerbaijan.

Then the prices of energy carriers increased several times, which
naturally caused irritation in almost everyone. All this happened in
one month’s time. Is it not too much? Overall, however, this is not
all.

It would suffice to remember the recent “diplomatic exile” of
top-level Defence Ministry officers, followed by scandalous arrests
at that department. To this one could add an almost open war which
different groups within the ruling elite declared on one another.
Finally, it transpired that former National Security Minister Namiq
Abbasov knew about many of the crimes by Haci Mammadov [former top
Interior Ministry official arrested over involvement in high-profile
crimes], but did nothing. In general, our National Security Ministry
does not work effectively even in the Armenia direction.

After all of the abovementioned facts, it is possible to say with
certainty that stability which we all brag about so much is as
minimum under a serious threat. Some people tend to think, though,
that only mass protest actions that the opposition is trying to stage
are manifestations of upset stability.

It is worth noting, though, that unfolding of the situation precisely
in this direction was quite predictable.

Let us try, nonetheless, to find out what is going on and outwardly
manifestations of what profound processes the aforementioned events
are.

[Passage omitted: absence of the real opposition in the country]

What has to be done?

If one answers this question with one sentence, the whole thing is
very simple. To avoid a revolutionary coup, reforms are required that
would be in essence revolutionary – in the economy, political system
etc.

This is precisely why many people expected – and international
organizations made almost open-text demands for – fundamental reforms
in the country in all the spheres, including personnel purges. The
wait has become long. In these conditions, those groups within the
ruling elite who were under a cloud would sooner or later start to
act.

However, the latest events have shown that the force that is capable
of starting to act any time is the extra systemic “opposition force”
that exists in the power-wielding structures. After the presidential
election [in 2003], effectively all power-wielding structures,
including the defence, national security and interior ministries –
were subjected to a forced purge, were they not?

In general, however, that these people had to lose what they had
already “earned” is not the main point. We have to keep in mind that
the large-scale oil export starts virtually next year. This means
that billions of dollars will start flowing into the country, in
other words, we are witnesses to the struggle for these billions.

So, today there is a need for action for reforms in all sectors which
would be revolutionary in essence. First, it is impossible to fight
against corruption without destroying the corrupt state government
system itself. International organizations say that almost 1.5bn
dollars are illegally shunted out of Azerbaijan every year. How much
money is transferred out of the country in an almost “legal” way?! It
is possible, of course, to naively think that it is manageable to
sooner or later imprison all the corrupt officials. But even if so,
it will do us little good. Because we will be able to confiscate only
the minor part of what has been stolen, which remains in the country
in the form of real estate.

We will not be able to catch a glimpse of the property and capital
that are stored abroad. There are plenty of examples. Few people can
remember Filipino ruler [Ferdinand] Marcos these days. He has been
ousted long ago [in 1986]. However billions of dollars that he stole
from the people of Philippines still remain in the Western banks.
Milosevic is currently tried in by the international tribunal.
However there is not a mention of returning his billions to the
country and its people either.

This is why it would be much more expedient to legalize all the
illegal income and property of everyone. Simultaneously with
legalization, constitutional guarantees of safety of these incomes
and properties, even in case of change of government. Naturally, the
corrupt system itself has to be destroyed. This implies reforming the
whole system of state government, including the system of control
over the economy. These reforms might in a short time lead not only
to the boom in economic development, but also to a dramatic rise in
budget revenues if a sensible tax policy is implemented.

Further, urgent measures are required to improve the social and
political atmosphere in the country. It is inadmissible to declare
the opposition an enemy, even if only a minor part of the population
supports it, as representatives of the ruling party claim. The
authorities and the opposition should be rivalling political
opponents, not enemies, as in our country.

Journalists are assassinated not only in Azerbaijan, but everywhere
in the world, even in the most democratic countries. However, in
those democratic countries the assassination of a well-known
opposition journalist does not bring society to the verge of a
political crisis. This is an indicator of abnormality of the existing
system of political relations in the country. Precisely in the
atmosphere of enmity should be sought the causes of lack of trust
that the authorities are actually interested in solving Huseynov’s
assassination. It is no accident that only the assassination of
Huseynov could force the feuding sides to sit down at the negotiating
table.

In short, the authorities themselves should be interested in
accelerating the process of coming into being of the systemic
opposition, which has disappeared from the political arena. But quite
a logical question arises: how can this be achieved?

In light of the recent events and upcoming parliamentary elections
[in November], there is a need to proceed without delay with
reforming the political system, first and foremost, the electoral
legislation. A fundamental reform of the electoral system should be
carried out, which requires amending the constitution. First of all,
it would be worthwhile to increase the number of deputies to
somewhere around 200 and restore the proportional representation
system. But this is not all yet. The ratio of the deputies elected by
the proportional representation and first-past-the-post system should
be 150 to 50. Overall, the abolition in the past of the proportional
representation system of voting was a mistake that was not in the
interests of even the ruling elite.

However, these sorts of fundamental reforms of the electoral system
require introducing changes to the constitution because the
qualitative and quantitative composition of the parliament is
determined by the constitution. The president himself should come up
with the initiative to carry out reforms. But time is running out. If
the head of state intends to come up with the initiative to conduct a
referendum on constitutional amendments, it is time already to take
this step. After all, public discussion of the proposed
constitutional amendments should take place. So, the head of state
himself will kill two birds with one stone.

First, these constitutional amendments will have full support from
international organizations, first and foremost, from the Council of
Europe. The president will prove that his statement at the Council of
Europe that international community will soon see an unprecedented
level of democracy in Azerbaijan are not just words. Aliyev will
prove that he is really willing to do his best to establish a
European-type multi-party system in Azerbaijan.

Second, this initiative by the head of state will gain support of
effectively all of the opposition, which did not hide its negative
attitude towards the abolition of the proportional representation
system. This step will earn the head of state yet greater authority
even among the part of the population that has opposition sentiments.

Third, the return to the proportional representation system might
prove conducive to appearance in the country of the truly new
systemic opposition, the need for which is voiced by everyone
although effectively no-one does anything to create it. After all,
there are quite a few well know politicians and public figures in the
country who, although they have pro-opposition attitudes, are not
represented for one reason or another in the “traditional” leading
parties. The possibility cannot be ruled out that this group will
found some electoral bloc, which will become a “prototype” of the new
systemic opposition.

Fourth, electing the overwhelming majority of the deputies under the
proportional representation system will make both the election
campaign and the future behaviour of the Milli Maclis [parliament]
rather predictable because in this case the rules of the game will
have to be agreed with just a few players who will represent the
systemic opposition – and there are not going to be many of these.

It has to be taken into account that should the entirely
first-past-the-post system be preserved, neither the authorities, nor
the opposition will be able to influence in any way the campaign of
nomination of candidates for deputy, right? Under the current law, to
be nominated, candidates for deputy have to collect the minimal
number of voter signatures or deposit a relatively small amount of
money. So, effectively any home-bred Mafioso can nominate his
candidature if he wants to. In other words, the election campaign
stands to get out of control.

Furthermore, the outcome of the elections will be just as
unpredictable because in that case the struggle will take place not
between the authorities and the opposition, but first and foremost
between different groups within the ruling elite itself. Each of
these groups will try to use its financial resources and executive
bodies of local self-governments under its control to bring as many
of its people as possible to the parliament.

On the other hand, it has to be taken into account that already at
the current stage the struggle among these groups often transcends
the “bounds of decency”. It suffices to skim through the newspapers
and watch the TV news bulletins to notice that different groups from
the government, presidential administration, parliament and even
pro-government media are involved in this struggle. Leaders of these
groups openly issue threats to one another. In short, there is
“democracy galore” within the ruling elite. Because these “supporters
of democracy”, who possess huge resources, will certainly try to take
advantage of at least relatively democratic situation that will have
to be created during the upcoming parliamentary elections.

Law and order within the ruling team can be restored in two ways.
First, it is possible to clear the team of all the odious old-style
figures and deprive them of resources of influence, including
financial ones. This would be a very painful process. Meanwhile, not
too much time remains till the parliamentary elections to start and
complete this painful process which stands to cause major negative
consequences. Most probably, some partial measures will be taken in
this direction. Incidentally, as it emerged from informed sources in
the ruling elite, the head of state was going to announce a major
government reshuffle before the assassination of Huseynov. One of the
persons from the inner circle of the head of state even compared this
reshuffle to a “tsunami”.

Second, it is possible to create a situation in which no-one will
even think about dictating terms to the head of state. For now, this
is possible if one looks at the parliamentary elections from this
point of view, though. That is to say, he has to take into account
the interests of his entourage when compiling the list of the
deputies. This is difficult, though. But even if this happens, there
are no guarantees that no-one will try to “play his own game” in the
regions. When numerous interests collide, a totally different
situation will take shape. In that case, Aliyev will personally
compile his party’s [New Azerbaijan Party] electoral list for the
proportional representation vote. It is unlikely that anyone will
dare at the party conference to go against the party list proposed by
the head of state. In other words, his entourage will entirely depend
on the leader. In addition, it will be much easier to achieve the
required result under the proportional representation sys! tem.

Finally, decreasing the number of single-seat constituencies to 50
will also bring the potential of local Mafioso to next to nothing and
eliminate unpredictability of the election outcome. So, if the partly
democratic election is held, which is what international
organizations, and first and foremost the Council of Europe, demand
from Baku, we will get a rather predictable parliament with a few
large party factions.

So, we have to make choice…[ellipsis as published].