Monday 26 March 2012

The Baku Crystal Hall is nearly complete!


The venue for the 2012 Eurovision Song Contest, The Crystal Hall, is nearly finished!



The brand new arena, built specifically for Eurovision, is a testament to how seriously Azerbaijan are viewing the contest. It certainly looks impressive so far!

Thursday 22 March 2012

The Russians are winning the publicity war...

The Buranovskiye Babushki are certainly capturing the attention of the mainstream UK press. Could it be that they're gaining momentum?

The Golden Girls

Wednesday 14 March 2012

Baltic Conference in London April 20th

I'm presenting at a conference on the Baltic States in London on April 20th. If you'd like to attend here is the registration link: http://balticsymposium2012.eventbrite.co.uk/

Here's the provisional programme:


BALTIC SYMPOSIUM 2012
Economics, Security, Culture

UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies

Institute of Archaeology Lecture Theatre, 31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY


Friday 20th April 2012

The sixth symposium in a series sponsored by:
Embassy of the Republic of Estonia, Embassy of the Republic of Latvia,
Embassy of the Republic of Lithuania, Baltic Council in Great Britain,
UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies

08.30-09.15     Registration

09.15-09.30       Introduction – housekeeping information
                                                                    
09.30-10.00          KEYNOTE SPEAKER

Chair:                    HE Ms Aino Lepik von Wirén, Estonian Ambassador        to London
Keynote Speaker:   Prof Andres Kasekamp, Tartu University
                                    Director, Estonian Foreign Policy Institute, Tallinn                                                                                         
10.00-11.30     BALTIC TIGERS?

Chair:   Prof Slavo Radosevic, UCL-SSEES
Panel:   Prof Petras Baršauskas, Dean, Kaunas University of Technology
Universities’ of Technology role in creating innovation driven economies
            Dr Richard Connolly, Lecturer, Birmingham University                     
                        High technology exports from the Baltic economies
            Kalle Killar, Executive Alternate Director,
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, London
Baltic Tigers are back but are they ready for the challenges ahead?
Daniels Pavluts, Minister, Ministry for Economics, Riga        
           
           
11.30-11.45                      Tea/coffee

11.45-13.15     SECURITY CHALLENGES

Chair:   Dr Peter Duncan, UCL-SSEES
Panel:   Andis Kudors, Executive Director, Centre for East European Policy Studies, Riga                             Securitization of culture: Russian foreign policy toward Latvia
            Dr Margarita Šešelgytė, Studies Director,
Institute of International Relations and Political Science, Vilnius University
                        Strategic cultures of the Baltic States              
            Romas Švedas, Security Consultant, Vilnius
                        Energy security           

           
13.15-14.30          Buffet lunch in SSEES Masaryk Senior Common Room
16 Taviton Street, 4th floor


14.30-16.00     CONTEMPORARY CULTURAL PROCESSES

Chair:   Dr Robin Aizlewood, Director, UCL-SSEES
Panel:   Dr Paul Jordan, Research Assistant, Cardiff University
The Eurovision Song Contest: Nation branding and nation building in Estonia 
            Dr Mindaugas Kvietkauskas, Director, Lithuanian Literature and Folklore Institute, Vilnius               Literature and Lithuania’s social transformations since the 1990s
Rolands Lappuķe, Ambassador at Large, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Riga   
            The Latvian diaspora – past and future
                                   

16.00-16.15          Tea/coffee

                                   
16.15-17.45          NEW DIRECTIONS

Chair:   Dr Allan Sikk, UCL-SSEES                
Panel:   Tadas Jucikas, Cambridge University
Creating healthcare, biotech and pharmaceutical translational research and enterprise opportunities in the Baltics
            Kärg Kama, St Catherine’s College, Oxford
                           Energy governance in Estonia
            Tauri Tuvikene, University College London
Post-socialism and state-phobia: the challenges of regulating car parking in Tallinn

Monday 12 March 2012

Adios Armenia


The politics of Eurovision is heating up after Armenia’s withdrawal from the 2012 contest. After initially confirming their participation in the event, the country has decided not to send a delegation to Baku after all. Not a huge surprise. Armenia and Azerbaijan have had a difficult relationship in Eurovision not to mention on the world stage. Azeri law forbids citizens of Armenia to enter the country so an Armenian delegation was never going to be a particularly welcome one in some circles. Even if they had been given extra security there would have still been an element of risk involved. Was this decision entirely pragmatic though? Why did they initially apply to take part in the first place? Could it be a case of Armenia trying to "get one over" on Azerbaijan?

As the Soviet Union crumbled an explosion of national questions emerged from Vilnius to Vladivostok. Campaigns for independence emerged in the Baltic States whilst internal divisions came to the fore within the Russian Federation itself. Nagorno-Karabakh was an autonomous oblast within the Azeri Soviet Socialist Republic with a majority Armenian population. By the end of the 1980s there were movements from within the territory to secede from Azerbaijan and unite with Armenia. A referendum in favour of this was returned, of which the Azeri population boycotted the vote. By 1991 the conflict had escalated into a full-scale war which saw thousands killed, wounded and displaced. An uneasy ceasefire was declared in 1994 leaving the territory in the hands of Armenian forces although with neither side officially backing down, Nagorno-Karabakh remains de jure part of the Republic of Azerbaijan.

This conflict has been reflected in the Eurovision Song Contest since Armenia first entered in 2006 and Azerbaijan in 2008. In 2006 the Armenian singer, Andre, had his place of birth listed as “Nagorno-Karabakh” on his profile. After complaints from the Azeri media this section of the singer’s biography was removed. In 2009 a series of disputes between Armenia and Azerbaijan unfolded throughout the live broadcasts of the semi-finals and final. During the semi-finals, an introductory “postcard” leading into the Armenian performance depicted, amongst other monuments, a statue located in Stepanakert, capital city of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic. The delegation from Azerbaijan complained to the EBU that the video clip was unacceptable based on the fact that Nagorno-Karabakh is officially a part of Azerbaijan, and it was subsequently edited out for the broadcast of the final. In retaliation, the presenter of the Armenian votes held up a clipboard with the monument’s picture on it multiple times as she read off the votes. In the background a screen in the capital’s main square could also be seen to display the disputed monument.


In August 2009 the BBC reported that several people had been questioned in Azerbaijan after their votes for Armenia were traced by mobile phone service providers. According to the BBC “one man was accused of being unpatriotic and a “potential security threat” after he sent a text backing Armenia’s song […] the Azerbaijani authorities said people had merely been invited to explain why they voted for Armenia” (BBC News, 18 August 2009). The issue was investigated by the EBU and whilst they found no evidence to pursue the affair, a clause preventing telecom communication providers from disclosing personal information was added to the rules of the contest.
Armenia and Azerbaijan are not the only countries to have had political disputes via the Eurovision Song Contest. Georgia initially refused to take part in Eurovision in Moscow in 2009 as a result of the war with Russia in South Ossetia in August 2008. Other countries including the Baltic States tentatively considered boycotting the event as a protest at what they saw as Russian aggression. However by early 2009 Georgia confirmed their participation in the event. However the song, “We Don’t Wanna Put In”, was largely seen as a swipe at Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and deemed to the “too political” by the EBU. The Georgian broadcasting authorities were asked to change the lyrics of the song or submit a different entry. The Georgian Public Broadcaster declined to do this and Georgia therefore did not take part that year. 



Groups such as Amnesty International allege that there are widespread human rights abuses occurring in Azerbaijan. Yesterday The Observer reported that Iceland is considering pulling out of the competition and that there have been similar calls in other countries too. However not everyone is so dogmatic, others such as Emin Milli, an Azeri blogger see Eurovision as an opportunity for Azerbaijan’s civil society. The spotlight is going to be on Azerbaijan as it prepares to host one of the biggest live events in the world. According to the EBU, the national broadcaster of Azerbaijan, İctimai Television has stated that freedom of the press and freedom of expression will be upheld in the country. With this come opportunities for dialogue which is surely a good thing?

All things considered, I didn’t really expect Armenia to sing in Baku. I did however think that they might “do a Georgia” and enter a song which could perhaps be read as a political jibe. They haven’t done that, instead they have quietly walked away. The EBU have expressed their regret over this decision and it’s an unfortunate one for many reasons. Eurovision was created to unite fractured European nations through song. It seems that in this case, Joy Fleming’s 1975 mantra is not true; a song can’t always build a bridge.