Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev won his fifth term in power earlier this month after he called a snap general election that was held amid some controversy.
The 7 February vote followed the 2009 referendum on constitutional reform, which abolished term limits, opening the way for Aliyev to stand again. While he has his critics, the president was re-elected in a landslide victory.
But there was additional significance to the vote.
It was the first since the country’s independence in 1991 to include Karabakh, the disputed territory which Azerbaijan reclaimed from Armenians after the 44-day war in September 2020 and a subsequent military operation in September 2023.
Clinching a peace treaty with Armenia will be one of Aliyev's most pressing issues now that he has been returned to office. He will also have to further strengthen the economy and deal with a host of other international issues in a fast-changing world.
Doing so could put the region on course for deeper ties and an established peace. But wider international issues must also be dealt with, as the South Caucasus stand at a geopolitical crossroads.
Relations with the West
Aliyev is also likely to continue to face criticism from the West over what it sees as his totalitarian rule, even as countries remain keen on keeping relations warm enough to get a share of Azerbaijan’s natural resources.
In late January in Strasbourg, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe voted not to ratify the credentials of Azerbaijan’s national delegation, preventing the country from participating in this year's meetings.
It said Azerbaijan had “not fulfilled major commitments” after joining the Council of Europe 20 years ago. It also cited a "lack of cooperation” with the assembly over a number of issues, including over free and fair elections and the situation in Karabakh, angering the government in Baku.
Azerbaijan feels that the criticism it faces over Armenia is hypocritical, given the West’s silence when the country’s territory was occupied for 30 years and its people there suffered.
Strengthened relations with Turkey
Aliyev's first foreign visit after his election was to Turkey and its President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. The choice was both symbolic and significant.
Ankara's military support during the war for Karabakh and other Azerbaijani territories has strengthened relations between the two countries, linked by ethnic bonds and historical ties.