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Camil Hasanli taking part in a electoral TV "debate"Aliyev's campaign was barely visible. There were no rallies, no advertising, not much of anything that would even tell you that an election was taking place. He ran against nine candidates, eight of whom were basically puppets who were there to create the illusion of a democracy and to heckle the one genuinely alternative candidate, Hasanli, during TV debates that Aliyev didn't even bother turning up to.I visited Hasanli in his threadbare campaign headquarters miles from the centre of Baku. Suited men milled about smoking as Hasanli sat calmly at his desk, levelling the kind of allegations of corruption at the ruling family that would normally land you in jail. Aliyev has been accused by critics of owning multimillion-dollar properties in Dubai and London and keeping offshore bank accounts in Panama – all of which must have necessitated some creative saving and nifty investment, considering his official salary is £140,000. In comparison, the average salary of his fellow citizens remains stalled at around £4,800.
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