Meet the New Boss in Azerbaijan
A look at Azerbaijan’s rampant corruption, unfair elections, and flimsy institutions

Reason's December special issue marks the 30th anniversary of the collapse of the Soviet Union. This story is part of our exploration of the global legacy of that evil empire, and our effort to be certain that the dire consequences of communism are not forgotten.
During its two years of independence before it was absorbed by the Soviet Union in 1920, Azerbaijan distinguished itself as the first Muslim-majority state with a parliamentary government and equal political rights for women. After Azerbaijan broke away from the Soviet Union in 1991, it initially looked like it might reprise its brief history as a liberal democracy.
That promising start also came to a swift end. A 1993 military coup installed as president Heydar Aliyev, the former leader of Soviet Azerbaijan, and the country has not had a fair and free election since then. Today, Azerbaijan—which is essentially an autocracy controlled by Ilham Aliyev, Heydar's son, and his extended family—retains the forms of constitutional government without the substance.
Freedom House classifies Azerbaijan as decidedly "not free," giving the country two out of 40 points for political rights and eight out of 60 points for civil rights in its 2021 survey. "Corruption is rampant, and the formal political opposition has been weakened by years of persecution," the report notes. "The authorities have carried out an extensive crackdown on civil liberties in recent years, leaving little room for independent expression or activism."
International observers note that opposition candidates need the government's permission to hold rallies or appear on television and that political interference prevents courts from properly investigating electoral irregularities. Aliyev won a fourth term in 2018, when he supposedly received 86 percent of the vote. The main opposition parties boycotted the election because they did not want to validate a process they viewed as fundamentally unfair and corrupt.
Journalists in Azerbaijan frequently face harassment, including arrest and imprisonment on trumped-up charges. The government unilaterally blocks websites it considers a threat to public order or national security, and the COVID-19 pandemic provided another excuse for widespread censorship.
Religious activity is tightly controlled by the state, which is especially hostile toward Jehovah's Witnesses and independent Muslim groups. Warrantless surveillance of telephone calls and online communication is commonplace. Freedom of assembly is limited to gatherings deemed consistent with "public order and morals," and the government restricts travel.
Freedom House describes Azerbaijan's judiciary as "corrupt and subservient to the executive." Due process guarantees, including the right to counsel and protections against arbitrary arrest and torture, are routinely violated, especially in cases involving activists and journalists.
These repressive practices are inconsistent with Azerbaijan's constitution, which shows promises on paper are worth nothing without the institutions required to enforce them. Lacking those institutions, Azerbaijan has replaced one set of dictators with another.
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*crosses Azerbaijan off the list of places to visit*
It does have a city named Ganja.
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International observers note that opposition candidates need the government's permission to hold rallies...
That's not so outrageous. Government officials never know if all the attendees are fully vaccinated unless they verify for approval first.
Or if they have insurrectional tendencies. A western government was almost overthrown by a peaceful protest when an invisible fire extinguisher murdered a guard several days after the event.
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Does Azerbaijan at least have open borders? We Koch / Reason libertarians know that's the most important policy for any country (except Israel, of course) to implement.
#OpenBordersWillFixEverything
#ImmigrationAboveAll
Not with Armenia.
Had an acquaintance that grew up there pre and post Soviet. He liked to indulge in things and wasn’t interested in going back.
They kicked the crap out of Armenia a couple of years ago. They took a few hundred low cost drones they bought from Turkey and ran all over a very large Russian supplied Armenian army. It is being seen as a paradigm changing conflict.
Very few places are covering this.
The turks came in other side of the Azerbaijani‘s
Sent them a few of the latest drones, and it’s completely revolutionized conflict.
Anti-aircraft systems, artillery pieces, tanks and troop concentrations even in trenches are all extremely vulnerable to loitering drone attack.
Right now drone defenses are not well developed, and the side with the best Jones will win pretty much any modern conflict.
President Biden proved that even children not involved in a conflict can be murdered using drones. With humility.
Since this article is implicitly about communism, I’ll just say I’m bored already with the simplistic cares of the common lumpenproletariat.
As if your mood matters. Back to the grindstone with you.
Why is reason now spelling "United States" "Azerbaijan"? Is this some term of art you learn at cocktail parties or something?
România. A mysterious land hidden in Eastern Europe.
The Romanian people date back to Roman times, when Emperor Trajan invaded the Carpathian mountains to conquer portions of Dacia. This struggle is depicted on the famous column with his namesake. The blending of these two cultures birthed the Romanians.
During the centuries that followed, Romanian lands changed hands between various neighboring powers. Romanians eventually found themselves ruled over by the Ottomans. It was during the 15th Century that a Wallachian prince named Vlad Tepeș rose up against the sultans. He is better known as Vlad the Impaler and was the inspiration for Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Vlad was a feared opponent of the Ottomans. So much so that modern day Turks can recite his successful campaigns against their ancestors. Vlad eventually was defeated and it was not until the latter part of the 1800s when Romania gained its independence.
During the Russo-Turkish War, Romanians joined their fellow Eastern Orthodox Christians on the battlefield. This culminated with victory at the Battle of Plevna. Western historians refer to this as a pyrrhic victory for Russia, who failed to deal a more substantial blow to the sick man of Europe. For others, this was the birth of their nation: the Kingdom of Romania.
Though neutral for much of The Great War, Romania eventually joined the Triple Entente. Following the defeat of the Central Powers and the break-up of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Transilvania and its significant Romanian population joined the kingdom. That region still remains in Romania while retaining some Hungarian and Austrian influences.
Even prior to the kingdom’s existence, oil had been discovered nearby and north of Bucharest. This was an economic blessing but later became a curse. As dark clouds covered Europe at the end of the 1930s, Hitler’s war machines needed fuel. The ruling aristocracy was replaced by a German backed government that sided with the Axis. Late in the Second World War, when the fascist government was overthrown, Romania switched sides. As it was Soviets that entered the Balkans at the conclusion of the war, they instituted communist governments in the lands their armies occupied.
By the mid 1960s, an ambitious communist named Nicolae Ceaușescu rose to power. Like other communist dictators, he ruled with a firm hand looking to control the people and enhance his cult of personality. The Romanian state special police, the Securitate, were more prolific and numerous in Romania than the Stasi were in East Germany. This oppressive period did have some silver linings. During the 1968 Prague Spring, Romania refused to assist fellow Warsaw Pact members in the eventual suppression. Interestingly, Ceaușescu feared that a similar invasion could happen in Romania. To facilitate quickly moving their armed forces around the country, they constructed a highway through the Transfagaraș mountains. It exists to this day and was voted by tv show Top Gear as the best road on the planet to drive. At the time of the revolution, Romania had no outstanding foreign debt. A poll taken within the past decade revealed that almost half of Romanians would vote for Ceaușescu. And greater than half held a favorable view of him. A friend that grew up during the communist period said, “Everyone always had enough on their plate.”
Like with the other European communist regimes, Romanians revolted in 1989. The shift in power was abrupt and occurred during a Ceaușescu speech in Bucharest. The television broadcast is available online and worth a view for those wanting a deeper experience. The end of the speech culminated in the Ceaușescus fleeing the capital via helicopter. They soon were captured by the military, who sided with the people. A short trial was held where the dictator and his wife were found guilty of crimes against the Romanian people. They were sentenced to death. While some including myself may concur with Sic Semper Tyranis, this is not the prevailing sentiment there.
A story about Romania is incomplete without discussing the Roma (pejorative gypsies). A people that originally came to Europe from India hundreds of years ago. They are buskers. Farmers. Laborers. And some are famous musicians in the Manele subculture (see Florin Salam’s San Tropez and Adrian Copilul’s Of, Viata Mea for picks of the litter). The Roma are indeed there and at least begrudgingly accepted. It is better than similar situations elsewhere.
The end of communism did not change the Romanian love for sports. Eyes are glued to tennis matches of Simona Halep the way they did decades before with Nadia Comăneci in gymnastics. Football is still passionately followed with 1980s and 1990s midfielder Gheorghe Hagi their patron saint of that sport.
Romania was blessed with natural resources such as oil, gas and many trees. Some had referred to the nation as the lungs of Europe. But these resources have been the victims of post communist exploitation. The man on the Bucharest streets says it is the Austrians to blame. This is partially true. A blend of Western European economic colonialism and corrupt Romanians pillaged these resources. The Ceaușescu apparatchiks have been replaced by quislings. The locals have been left with little. Oil production is lower today and many of the forests have been logged. Future resource development, including offshore gas reserves, is now slowed by bureaucracy. An acquaintance in the oil and gas industry there managed a project for two new oil wells. The wells were at the same location yet the second permit could not even be submitted until the first well was completed.
It has been more than 30 years since the end of communism. There remains a strong dislike of their former Russian allies. This has influenced the shift to the west. Russian is no longer a compulsory school subject. Many Romanian students now learn English. The people have more freedoms including the ability to move elsewhere for work. The diaspora has grown with millions of Romanians now living abroad in western Europe and North America. But are the people remaining any happier? This is unclear.
If you dare, visit Romania and experience that mysterious land. The dollar and Euro both go far there. The best sausage is in Romania. There are other culinary delights such as sarmale and mici cu mustar, their version of hamburgers. For desert, papanași is a must. Fortunate visitors will get into passionate discussions that can last a shared meal or longer. One can learn a lot by listening.
Romania’s past and present have been decided with neither being ideal. For the descendants of Stefan cel Mare, hopefully, the future follows a better path. Dragii mei prieteni, bafta.
Meet the New Boss in Azerbaijan
Will this too be blamed on the deKulakization programs enacted by Josef Stalin 90 years ago? Boy, it’s almost as if backwards countries with poor institutional controls tend to be places with bad governments.
Those poor bastards. It shows how lucky we are to live in America where a 1963 military assassination installed as president Lyndon Johnson, followed by former Vice president Richard Nignew, and the country has not had a fair and free election since then.
Richard Nignew was one of the best presidents we’ve ever had!
Sullum failed to provide any solutions to the complex problems facing Azerbaijan, a small oil rich country located between Russia, Iran and Turkey.
Back in 1982, I visited Baku, took a local bus south to near the Iranian border on the Caspian Sea, and then the Soviet government changed our tour's schedule to get us out of Baku a day early because Brezhnev was coming to town.
When I asked locals in Baku if they liked Soviet communism, they told me that at least Brezhnev protected them from the crazy Iranians.
They eat well
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zV5b5SpnqAQ
Nice! I enjoy watching the Bearded Butchers videos, mostly because they are my sister's neighbors. (Or used to be, my sister and her husband moved down here to Georgia a couple of years ago when they retired since a couple of their daughters moved down here.)
syk inhibitor
https://www.bocsci.com/tag/syk-350.html
Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) is a cytoplasmic protein tyrosine kinase well known for its ability to couple immune cell receptors to intracellular signaling pathways that regulate
I am more interested in the USA's rampant corruption, unfair elections, and flimsy institutions.
Still better than Biden. At least he knows how to win a war.