1991 Azerbaijani independence referendum

An independence referendum was held in Azerbaijan on 29 December 1991, three days after the collapse of the Soviet Union.[1] The result was 99.8% in favour, with turnout reported to be 95%.[2]This Azerbaijani elections-related article is a stub.You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Politics of AzerbaijanConstitutionConstitutional courtHuman rightsHead of statePresidentIlham AliyevVice PresidentMehriban AliyevaOffice of the PresidentExecutivePrime MinisterAli AsadovCabinet of MinistersNational AssemblySpeakerSahiba GafarovaAdministrative divisionsElectionsPolitical partiesForeign relationsMinistry of Foreign AffairsJeyhun BayramovDiplomatic missions ofin AzerbaijanNationality lawPassportVisa requirementsVisa policyAzerbaijan–European Union relationsAzerbaijan–NATO relationsArmenia–Azerbaijan relationsAzerbaijan–China relationsAzerbaijan–France relationsAzerbaijan–Georgia relationsAzerbaijan–Germany relationsAzerbaijan–Iran relationsAzerbaijan–Israel relationsAzerbaijan–Italy relationsAzerbaijan–Netherlands relationsAzerbaijan–Poland relationsAzerbaijan–Russia relationsAzerbaijan–Spain relationsAzerbaijan–Turkey relationsAzerbaijan–Ukraine relationsAzerbaijan–United Kingdom relationsAzerbaijan–United States relationsindependence referendumAzerbaijancollapseSoviet UnionDieter NohlenElections and referendums in AzerbaijanPresidential electionsParliamentary elections1995–962000–01Supreme Assembly of NakhchivanRevolutions of 1989Era of StagnationCommunismAnti-communismCriticism of communist party ruleEastern BlocEastern Bloc politicsEastern Bloc media and propagandaEmigration from the Eastern BlocNomenklaturaShortage economyTotalitarianismAnti-communist insurgencies in Central and Eastern EuropeActive measuresCold WarList of socialist statesPeople Power RevolutionPredictions of the collapse of the Soviet UnionReagan DoctrineSoviet EmpireTerrorism and the Soviet UnionVatican OppositionWarsaw Pact invasion of CzechoslovakiaUskoreniePerestroikaDemokratizatsiyaKhozraschyot500 Days ProgramNew political thinkingSinatra DoctrineGlasnostChinese economic reformSocialism with Chinese characteristicsĐổi MớiRamiz AliaNicolae CeaușescuMikhail GorbachevKároly GrószErich HoneckerMiloš JakešEgon KrenzWojciech JaruzelskiSlobodan MiloševićMathieu KérékouMengistu Haile MariamNe WinDenis Sassou NguessoHeng SamrinDeng XiaopingZhao ZiyangTodor ZhivkovSiad BarreCivil resistanceHuman chainsMagnitizdatPolish underground pressPolitical demonstrationProtestsSamizdatStrike actionLech WałęsaVáclav HavelAlexander DubčekIon IliescuLiu GangWu'erkaixiChai LingWang DanFeng CongdeTank ManJoachim GauckSali BerishaSanjaasürengiin ZorigVladimir BukovskyBoris YeltsinViacheslav ChornovilVytautas LandsbergisZianon PazniakZhelyu ZhelevAung San Suu KyiMeles ZenawiIsaias AfwerkiRonald ReaganGeorge H. W. BushPope John Paul IIBeijing Students' Autonomous FederationCharter 77New ForumCivic ForumDemocratic Party of AlbaniaDemocratic RussiaInitiative for Peace and Human RightsSąjūdisPeople's Movement of UkraineSolidarityPopular Front of LatviaPopular Front of EstoniaPublic Against ViolenceBelarusian Popular FrontRastokhezNational League for DemocracyNational Salvation FrontUnion of Democratic ForcesInter-regional Deputies GroupAlliance of Free DemocratsHungarian Democratic ForumAlbaniaCzechoslovakiaEast GermanyHungaryRomaniaYugoslaviaArmeniaBelarusChechnyaEstoniaGeorgiaLatviaLithuaniaKazakhstanMoldovaRussiaTajikistanTurkmenistanUkraineUzbekistanAfghanistanAngolaCambodiaEthiopiaMongoliaSomaliaSouth YemenJeltoqsan1987–1989 Tibetan unrestWars in the Caucasus1988 Polish strikesPolish Round Table AgreementApril 9 tragedyRemoval of Hungary's border fence with AustriaHungarian Round Table TalksPan-European PicnicBaltic WayMonday DemonstrationsAlexanderplatz demonstrationFall of the Berlin WallFall of the inner German borderMalta SummitBlack January1990s post-Soviet aliyahHelsinki SummitRevolution on GraniteReunification of GermanyJanuary Events in LithuaniaJanuary Events in LatviaTransnistria War1991 protests in Belgrade1991 Belarusian strikesAugust CoupDissolution of the Soviet UnionTajikistani Civil WarDissolution of CzechoslovakiaColour revolutionDecommunizationLustrationDemocratizationEconomic liberalizationPost-Soviet conflictsNeo-SovietismNeo-StalinismPost-communismYugoslav WarsPink tideHuman rights in the Soviet UnionTransnistriaNagorno-KarabakhSouth OssetiaTatarstanTransnistria (1989–1990)Soviet Union (1991)Ingushetia (1991)Narva and Sillamäe (1993)Azerbaijani elections