EURASIA INSIGHT
Maarif Akbarli
3/29/08
A EurasiaNet Partner Post from RFE/RL
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Entering the Masalli sports facility on an ordinary afternoon, one would expect to hear the sound of exercise emanating from every room -- a volleyball game in progress, laps being swum, or a vigorous match under way on the handball court.
Instead, the complex in Masalli, about 250 kilometers south of Baku, is strangely quiet. In fact, throughout the echoing building, only a single person can be found taking advantage of the facilities.
Emin Aliyev, practicing bench presses in the weight room, offers one suggestion for the empty rooms, saying that membership at the Masalli complex costs 25 manats a month -- a small fortune in a country where the average wage is just 240 manats ($290).
Another inconvenience is the fact that the new facility, which cost an estimated 17 million manats ($20 million) to build, is located several kilometers from the center of Masalli, and beyond the reach of existing bus lines.
Asked how he travels to the sports center, Aliyev shrugs. "Sometimes I use a taxi," he said. "But I dont live too far away, so sometimes I just jog."
Thinking Big
The Masalli complex is one of 13 new sporting complexes that have been built to bolster Bakus 2016 Olympic bid. Twenty-three other buildings are currently under construction.
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has already shown an appetite for architectural grandeur, using his countrys massive energy profits to bankroll a series of ambitious theaters and business-center designs.
Beating out six rival cities -- Madrid, Prague, Rio de Janeiro, Chicago, Tokyo, and Doha, Qatar -- for the 2016 Olympics would be a crowning achievement for Aliyev, who was serving as chairman of Azerbaijans Olympic Committee when he succeeded his father as head of state in 2003.
Azerbaijans political elite has long maintained a tight grip on the countrys Olympic Committee and other sporting organizations, which are seen as a rich source of potential profit and international prestige.
Aliyevs wife, Mehriban Aliyeva, chairs the national gymnastics association. Rovnag Abdullayev, the president of the state oil company, SOCAR, heads Azerbaijans soccer federation; Emergency Situations Minister Kamaladdin Heydarov controls the national tae kwon do association.
Unaffordable Luxury
For many Azerbaijanis, however, the presidents Olympic dreams are far from universal. The countrys oil riches have had little impact in towns like Masalli, where unemployment is rampant and the local soccer club, once a source of feverish local pride, was forced to move to a different town after its stadium nearly collapsed from disrepair.
Men gathered at a local tea house seemed bemused by the fuss over the Olympic bid and the behemoth sporting facilities it has spawned.
"The people of Masalli are suffering from depression," says one. "We dont think about sports. You think were thinking about exercise? Why cant they just build a swimming pool where our kids can go? This complex isnt free of charge. I would have to have money to be able to send my kids there. But I dont have any money, so Im not even interested in how much it costs."
Its not only money thats keeping people out of the pool at the Masalli complex. Its also water. The swimming pool is bone dry, and has been since the buildings completion; facility staff say there hasnt been enough client demand to justify filling the pool.
Also off-limits are the handball courts, which have been closed "for repairs" despite being barely a year old. A special room for chess had a large crack running across one wall. (The Masalli administration refused to allow RFE/RL to photograph either the pool or the handball facilities.)
Forgetting The Basics
Local authorities in Masalli say the construction and operation of the Olympic facility is handled exclusively at the federal level, and that its funding remains largely opaque. But the generous price of the Masalli complexs construction has angered residents like Zahid Emenov, the editor of "Southern News," a local newspaper, who argues there were better ways to spend the money.
"There are 35 districts in the Masalli region. If you divide this 17 million manats between the 35 districts, you would get about 500,000 manats per district for sporting facilities," Emenov says.
Despite Ilham Aliyevs Olympic fixation and Azerbaijans long tradition of nurturing star-class wrestlers and weightlifters, physical fitness has become a low priority for the nations young people; obesity and diabetes are on the rise.
Elmira Akhundova, a legislator in the Azerbaijani parliament and a member of the Social Policy Committee representing the Masalli region, says Baku is failing to take even modest measures to ensure that all young people have access to exercise.
"Imagine, there are 40 schools in my district, and 25 or 30 of them either dont have a gym, or have gyms that are in terrible condition," she says. "Ive been a deputy for three years, and when I visited these schools, I was shocked. Kids dont even have balls or nets to play football or volleyball."
For now, however, Baku is focused on October 2, 2009, when Olympic officials will announce the host of the 2016 Summer Games in Copenhagen. Chinqiz Huseynzade, the vice president of Azerbaijans Olympic Committee, is bullish on Bakus chances.
"Yes, right now were not ready, but by 2016 itll be possible. Azerbaijans economic situation and its potential will make it possible," he said.
Posted March 29, 2008 © Eurasianet
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