BAKU: Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev’s party has won snap parliamentary elections, the electoral commission said Monday, as the opposition denounced widespread violations including multiple voting.
Aliyev called Sunday’s vote ahead of schedule to avoid the poll coinciding with the COP29 climate conference that Baku is to host from November 11 to 22.
None of the elections held in the oil and gas-rich country under Aliyev’s two-decade rule have been recognized as free and fair by international observers.
The electoral commission said Aliyev’s Yeni Azerbaijan party won 68 seats in the 125-member legislature.
Another 45 seats were won by independent candidates as well as 12 seats by candidates from nine political parties — all of them widely believed to be pro-government.
Only one opposition candidate from the Republican Alternative Party made it to parliament.
The opposition Musavat party said there were “mass violations” of the rules, including multiple voting.
International observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said the elections “did not offer voters genuine political alternatives and took place within a legal framework overly restrictive of fundamental freedoms and the media.”
The observers said Monday they were concerned about “intimidation of voters and their ability to cast their vote without fearing retribution.”
The “increase in arrests and detentions of journalists and civil society activists, combined with the restrictive media legal framework, resulted in widespread self-censorship and severely limited the scope for independent journalism,” their statement added.
Baku has faced strong Western criticism for persecuting political opponents and suffocating independent media.
Aliyev, 62, has ruled the ex-Soviet republic with an iron fist since 2003 after the death of his father, Azerbaijan’s Soviet-era Communist leader and former KGB general Heydar Aliyev.
He enjoys widespread popularity due to Azerbaijan’s military victory over Armenian separatist forces that had controlled the Armenian-populated Nagorno-Karabakh region for three decades.
Last year, Baku’s troops recaptured the mountainous enclave in a lightning offensive, after which its entire ethnic Armenian population — more than 100,000 people — fled to Armenia.
With power concentrated in the presidency, Azerbaijan’s parliament has a limited role in shaping affairs in the Caspian Sea nation.
Azerbaijan ruling party wins vote as opposition cries foul
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https://arab.news/2znv2
Azerbaijan ruling party wins vote as opposition cries foul
- Only one opposition candidate from the Republican Alternative Party made it to parliament
- The opposition Musavat party said there were “mass violations” of the rules, including multiple voting
Australian warship transits Taiwan Strait, tracked by China’s navy
- The Toowoomba ‘conducted a routine transit through the Taiwan Strait’
- ‘All interactions with foreign ships and aircraft were safe and professional’
SYDNEY: An Australian warship sailed through the Taiwan Strait, a government source said on Sunday in the latest transit of the sensitive waterway by a US ally, which Chinese state-backed media said was tracked and monitored by the nation’s military.
In addition to claiming sovereignty over democratically governed Taiwan, Beijing views the narrow, highly strategic strait as Chinese territorial waters and has responded aggressively on occasion to foreign navies sailing there.
The Toowoomba, an Anzac-class frigate of the Royal Australian Navy, “conducted a routine transit through the Taiwan Strait” on Friday and Saturday as part of a “Regional Presence Deployment in the Indo-Pacific region,” the source said.
“All interactions with foreign ships and aircraft were safe and professional,” the source said.
China’s state-backed Global Times newspaper, citing an unnamed Chinese military source, reported late on Saturday that “the Chinese People’s Liberation Army carried out full-process tracking, monitoring, and alert operations throughout the transit.”
US warships traverse the strait every few months, enraging Beijing, and some US allies, such as France, Australia, Britain and Canada, have also made occasional transits.
China has ramped up its military presence around Taiwan and staged its latest war games around the island in late December.
Taiwan’s government rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims, saying only the island’s people can decide their future.
In addition to claiming sovereignty over democratically governed Taiwan, Beijing views the narrow, highly strategic strait as Chinese territorial waters and has responded aggressively on occasion to foreign navies sailing there.
The Toowoomba, an Anzac-class frigate of the Royal Australian Navy, “conducted a routine transit through the Taiwan Strait” on Friday and Saturday as part of a “Regional Presence Deployment in the Indo-Pacific region,” the source said.
“All interactions with foreign ships and aircraft were safe and professional,” the source said.
China’s state-backed Global Times newspaper, citing an unnamed Chinese military source, reported late on Saturday that “the Chinese People’s Liberation Army carried out full-process tracking, monitoring, and alert operations throughout the transit.”
US warships traverse the strait every few months, enraging Beijing, and some US allies, such as France, Australia, Britain and Canada, have also made occasional transits.
China has ramped up its military presence around Taiwan and staged its latest war games around the island in late December.
Taiwan’s government rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims, saying only the island’s people can decide their future.
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