02uzbek
WSJ.com - East of the Oder
February 8, 2002
EAST OF THE ODER
Karimov's War on Islam
Could Destabilize Central Asia
By IGOR ROTAR and LAWRENCE UZZELL
TASHKENT, Uzbekistan -- Although they have been driven from power in
Afghanistan, Islamic extremists still have fair chances of seizing power
in several neighboring states. One is the country that has shifted most
dramatically toward the West during the recent crisis. Uzbekistan's
ferocious policies designed to crush Islamic militants could end up having
just the opposite effect.
Uzbekistan is the strategic kingpin of ex-Soviet Central Asia, an ancient
center of Islamic learning, and a beacon to ethnic Uzbek minorities in
neighboring countries. If a wave of religious fanaticism should sweep out
Uzbekistan's President Islam Karimov, it would surge right through the
artificial state boundaries inherited from the Soviet era.
In the wake of the September 11 atrocities, such threats naturally took
second place in America's calculations. Washington urgently needed access
to air bases near the Afghan border, and Mr. Karimov responded boldly with
an offer of cooperation. Commercial airliners landing at Tashkent's main
civilian airport last month taxied right past a U.S. Air Force transport
plane; neither partner tried to conceal the American presence.
Sound policy, however, looks beyond immediate tactical needs. The most
serious long-term threat to stability and freedom in Uzbekistan comes from
Mr. Karimov himself. In a country where more than 80% of the populace is
of Islamic heritage, his government is pursuing the most aggressively
anti-Islamic policies anywhere in the former Soviet Union. An Uzbek emigre
in Moscow has more freedom to practice his faith than his cousins in their
ancestral homeland.
Speaking in Tashkent to visitors from the Keston Institute, an
Oxford-based research center specializing in international religious
freedom, a local barber said that he had forgotten how to trim a beard,
because, as he put it: "In our country beards are forbidden." Though there
is no such formal law, other sources confirmed that beards are risky.
Unless he is elderly, a man with this traditional sign of Muslim piety is
likely to be detained and taken to a police station for interrogation as a
"suspicious" character. Women with traditional Muslim head coverings also
face discrimination.
Uzbekistan's criminal code includes a vaguely worded ban on the use of
religion to "undermine social harmony." A 1998 law stipulates that only
organizations formally registered by the Ministry of Justice -- which
imposes high hurdles for such registration -- may conduct any kind of
religious activity. One can see in Uzbekistan many buildings formerly used
as mosques but now closed by the authorities.
Mr. Karimov, who led Uzbekistan's Communist Party during the Soviet years,
has revived Soviet practices of minutely regulating religious life. Muslim
institutions are controlled by the Spiritual Directorate of Uzbekistan, in
effect a state agency -- in a country with no tradition whatsoever of
political freedom. An adviser to the directorate's head told us that he
fully supports Mr. Karimov's policies.
In August, Human Rights Watch published a detailed memorandum on religious
persecution in Uzbekistan, based on hundreds of interviews. Its
conclusion: Thousands of Uzbek Muslims have been "detained, harassed,
tortured, and imprisoned" even though "only very few have been charged
with specific violent acts" and "even more rarely have the authorities
produced credible evidence to support charges of the use or advocacy of
violence." Instead, the government has targeted "people who pray in
mosques not run by the government, who belong to Islamic groups not
registered with the government, who possess Islamic literature not
generated by the government, or who meet privately for prayer or Islamic
study, singling them out for nothing more than the peaceful expression of
their religious beliefs."
Keston asked our sources if there had been any cases of such religious
believers charged under the criminal code but then found innocent. They
could not remember one. Conditions within prisons are brutal, with many
instances of torture, and, we have been told, deaths while in custody. One
recently released prisoner told us that his jailers had beaten him simply
for saying his Muslim prayers. The Soviet-style crackdown has also
included harassment of prisoners' relatives, thus swelling the numbers of
embittered citizens.
Certain forces stand ready to exploit such bitterness. The Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan is explicitly committed to the violent overthrow of
the current regime and its replacement by an Islamic state. It has
launched armed attacks on Uzbekistan from bases abroad. Less extreme is
the Uzbek branch of the international Hizb-ut-Tahrir (Party of
Liberation), which advocates the unification of all Muslims in the world
into a single caliphate. Although in the past this party has publicly
rejected armed methods, its rhetoric has taken a violently anti-Western
turn since Sept. 11. Hizb-ut-Tahrir shares the IMU's hostility to Western
civilization and also that group's anti-Semitism. Its underground
activists have told representatives from Keston Institute that countries
such as the U.S. and Great Britain are offspring of Satan.
So the question is not whether Uzbekistan faces a threat from religious
extremists. It does. The issue is whether the current regime's
heavy-handed methods are likely to quench or inflame that threat. As
Mikhail Ardzinov of the Independent Society for Human Rights in Uzbekistan
told us: "The problem is that Mr. Karimov is waging war not only on
extremists but simply on all serious Muslim believers."
That war affects religious minorities as well. A Baptist pastor in
Tashkent told Keston that he was unable to get official registration for
his congregation because it would be politically awkward for the
authorities to authorize more Christian churches after closing so many
mosques. The regime enforces harsh limits on the importation of Bibles and
other religious literature. Unfortunately, the U.S. State Department has
failed to respond with even the elementary step of classifying Uzbekistan
as a "country of particular concern" under America's 1998 International
Religious Freedom Act.
The post-Sept. 11 alliance with Mr. Karimov puts the U.S. into an
ambiguous position, supporting a regime that has in essence declared war
on Islam as a religion. It gives the extremists evidence for their claim
that the U.S. is fighting not terrorism but Islam as a whole. Washington
should not forget the results of its policies in the 1970s, when it closed
its eyes to the persecution of Muslims by another secularizing,
authoritarian but "pro-American" ruler: the Shah of Iran.
Mr. Rotar is Central Asia representative and Mr. Uzzell is director of
Keston Institute (www.keston.org1).
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Updated February 8, 2002 12:01 a.m. EST
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New U.S. Allies, the Uzbeks: Mired in the Past
May 31, 2002
New U.S. Allies, the Uzbeks: Mired in the Past
By EDMUND L. ANDREWS
ASHKENT, Uzbekistan — Two years ago, Poul Jahn employed 140 people as an
importer of products like candy from Germany and Legos from Denmark.
Today, he is all but out of business, because the government stopped
allowing him to convert his sales revenue from Uzbek som into dollars.
His difficulties are just one example of how hard it is to foster economic
or other development in Uzbekistan and other Central Asian states that
have become the newest United States allies because of their proximity to
Afghanistan and the usefulness of their bases to American troops.
Under President Islam Karimov, a Soviet-era ruler here who has just
extended his term until 2007, Uzbekistan has displayed little appetite for
either democracy or open markets. Political repression is intense,
corruption is widespread and economic policy owes more to Stalin than
George W. Bush.
American leaders are eager to pump economic and military aid into Central
Asian states, but the sort of bureaucratic thicket and isolationism
encountered by Mr. Jahn makes it difficult to see how the World Bank will
dispense the $1 billion earmarked for the region over the next three
years.
Yet without economic reform to improve the prospects for people here, the
attraction of radical Islamic movements to the poor and disaffected may
continue to grow. Mr. Karimov has used the existence of such movements as
the pretext for an often brutal clampdown on any expression of Islam,
jailing thousands of people in sweeps across the country that have been
repeatedly criticized by rights groups.
Every economy in Central Asia is smaller today than it was before the
collapse of the Soviet Union in 1990. Poverty is intense, with average
annual income of about $610 here and less than half that in neighboring
Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.
Although leaders like President Karimov have vowed to support economic and
administrative reform, the progress is at best uneven.
"Leaders are finding that they are getting a very different reception now
than they got on Sept. 10," said James D. Wolfensohn, president of the
World Bank, who himself made his first trip to the region only after the
Sept. 11 terror attacks transformed the geopolitical realities of formerly
forgotten Central Asia.
But, Mr. Wolfensohn added, "If they are going to take advantage of this
opportunity for funds and support, then change will be necessary."
Uzbekistan illustrates how hard that change will be. Despite heavy
pressure from the International Monetary Fund, it has yet to abandon its
currency restrictions. Policy often seems to be set mainly to buttress Mr.
Karimov's hold on power.
Meanwhile, a crazy quilt of new borders has disrupted trade and routine
travel throughout the region.
Many people are trapped in enclaves, a few square miles of Uzbek or Tajik
territory surrounded by Kyrgyzstan. Traders who once roamed freely across
borders now need to wait in long lines, show visas and often pay bribes.
"People are trapped," said Natalia Ablova, director of the Bureau on Human
Rights and Rule of Law, in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. "They cannot travel,
cannot trade, cannot create business. Just travel through the region, and
you will see the intolerable conditions that each country has created for
its own citizens."
Uzbekistan is hardly alone. Turkmenistan, which has big oil and gas
reserves, has become so autocratic and isolated that World Bank officials
have all but stopped offering aid.
Tajikistan, ravaged by civil war through much of the 1990's, remains
plagued by organized crime, heroin smuggling and violence. Few foreign
companies venture to do business there, and the average yearly income is
only about $200.
The new isolationism has greatly increased tensions throughout Central
Asia. Uzbekistan is critically short of water, and constantly accuses
Kyrgyzstan of hoarding it upstream. Kyrgyzstan says it needs to store
water for hydroelectric power, because its neighbors will not supply it
with enough electricity.
"You have this shadow play going on between leaders, whether it is about
problems in the Aral Sea or about trade," Mr. Wolfensohn said.
The difficulties become abundantly clear on a trip through the Fergana
Valley, a region that is just 200 miles long but is home to 10 million
people and a big share of Central Asia's industry and agriculture.
A one-hour trip between the Kyrgyz cities of Osh, an ancient trading post,
and Jalalabad now takes four hours — the main road cuts through Uzbek
territory, and side roads are winding and small.
The enclave of Sokh, claimed by Uzbekistan but surrounded by Kyrgyz
territory, is virtually fenced off from the outside world. Uzbek leaders
argue that strong borders are essential to preventing attacks by militant
Islamic groups, notably the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, which has
roots in the Fergana Valley and launched several attacks from Tajikistan
and Kyrgyzstan in 1999 and 2000.
Economics is also partly a factor in the Uzbek behavior — to keep prices
for basic commodities like flour, cotton and gasoline artificially low,
the government has imposed a mind-numbingly complex scheme of currency and
trade controls.
At a checkpoint near the Uzbek city of Kuvasai, border police put the
finishing touches last month on a massive new station that looks like the
entrance to a palace.
The new station has multiple rooms for interrogation and searches; animal
pens for the guard dogs; the latest in X-ray and bomb-sniffing equipment,
and a canteen and recreation room for off-duty guards. Police officials
boast that the "Welcome to Uzbekistan" sign can be seen from Kyrgyz
mountainsides 50 miles away.
"You can see that there is nothing like this in Kyrgyzstan or even
Kazakhstan," boasted the station's director, Col. Alisher Amanbaev. "This
has everything you need for a really civilized process."
But not necessarily an easy one. There are no buses or trains that go
straight across the border. Anyone driving a car from Kyrgyzstan will have
to pay $45 for insurance, prohibitive for people in a country where the
average annual income is $270.
"It would be good if we could just drive across," said Micha, a Kyrgyz
hairstylist who waited along the railroad for a ride to Kuvasai. "Before,
we would just go up to the border, stop and then drive through."
Economic life has been disrupted in scores of places. At a brick factory
in Kuvasai, managers were told they would have to pay steep new tariffs on
clay from a quarry just over the border in Kyrgyzstan. Factory managers
located another source on their side of the border, but the land belonged
to a collective farm. Local Uzbek authorities then ordered the farm
collective to hand over the quarry land on a 50-year lease at no cost.
Although factory managers say they are selling more bricks than before,
they are not selling any at all in Kyrgyzstan. A rival Kyrgyz brick
factory is not selling anything here, either.
Uzbek attempts to control exchange rates have created an even bigger set
of barriers. A handful of privileged companies, like the Daewoo automobile
assembly plant, are allowed to purchase dollars at about 700 som to the
dollar. Individuals are allowed to change limited amounts of money at
1,450 som to the dollar. The real exchange rate, available on the black
market, is about 1,500 som to the dollar.
The effect is to wreak havoc in trade, swamping neighboring countries with
artificially cheap Uzbek products and making most exports to Uzbekistan
artificially expensive.
"We are a country with a majority of the population living below the
poverty line," complained one top Kyrgyz official. "But trade with our
Eurasian neighbors dropped 20 percent last year."
Mr. Jahn, owner of an importing company called Jahn International, built a
thriving business here through much of the 1990's. But then the Uzbek
government cut in half the amount of Uzbek som he could convert to
dollars.
Then it reduced him to a quarter, and then it cut off his "allocation"
entirely.
To stop him from changing money on the black market, Uzbek authorities
limited bank withdrawals to little more than the amount needed for wages.
To make sure Mr. Jahn did not cheat by selling products out the back door,
they sent inspectors to check his warehouse inventories.
"I don't want to do business illegally," Mr. Jahn said. "Right now, I am
basically out of business."
Under pressure from the International Monetary Fund, change may be under
way. Last month, Uzbek authorities announced that citizens would no longer
have to show them airline tickets and travel documents in order to
exchange Uzbek som for dollars. It was a limited offer — no more than
$1,000 per person every three months.
By Uzbek standards, it is a major reform.
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Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Thursday, October 3, 2002
Child Labour Rising As Uzbek Economy Worsens
Families are pulling their youngsters out of school and putting them to work to ensure that there is food on the table
By Gairatjon Sultanov and Umida Khasanova in Samarkand (RCA No. 131, 23-July-02)
Ten-year-old Jakhongir is one of the scores of children who cart heavy goods around the Siab district bazaar, where people from all over the region travel to buy vegetables and other produce.
Jakhongir, who used to go to the local middle school, says that if he did not work his family could not afford to eat, "My father retired because of illness, and receives a pension of only 11,000 som (around $9-$10) a month, and my mother is at home looking after my three little brothers. This is not enough money for us, and as the oldest child, I have to help."
Sherali Ergashev, 12, says his earnings are used to put food on the family table. "I can make 1000-1500 som a day, which I use to buy bread, potatoes, onions, carrots and so on. The people in charge of the market, the police, and my teachers want me to stop, because if I do our family will be left without bread."
His father, Ali Ergashev, says there is simply no other choice, "I am forced to ask my son to do this work, because I am disabled with arthritis, and my wife is also an invalid. Although we are both disabled, the state doesn't pay us any pensions."
The head of the education board in Samarkand, Anvar Bekmurodov, says they have visited some of the parents involved and tried to explain that it's illegal for children to work in the bazaar, "But the parents did not want to listen to us." In fact, some were extremely hostile towards the officials, driving them out of their homes with axes.
Kakhramon Usmoniyon, a local official charged with the prevention of juvenile delinquency, said he had tried, but failed, to stop the practice. "We took carts away from children many times, and made them leave the markets. The next day their parents came to the station asking for them back and pleading with us to let the kids earn some money."
Amid fears that the children would turn to crime, the police, in agreement with the district market administrators, allow children from poor families to work provided they register at the market's police station.
"There is a special registration book that contains photographs and complete information about the children and their parents," said Usmoniyon. "The kids make around 200-250 som a day. They are all under our control."
Medics in the region are, however, critical of children so young doing such heavy work. According to local doctor Rano Bobomurodova, children should not perform taxing manual labour until at least the age of 14. "They could easily injure themselves and do themselves permanent damage, otherwise," he said. "What sort of a future will the republic have if the younger generation cripples itself, and has no education?"
Although Uzbekistan is a signatory to the UN convention on the rights of the child, local authorities have long flouted its provisions, frequently employing Soviet-era practices of mobilising children to gather cotton and do other seasonal agricultural work.
The practice of individual families putting their own children to work is relatively new, only really developing since the mid Nineties, as economic and social problems in the newly independent republic worsened.
Kamiljon Ashurov, a civil rights activist from Samarkand, says if the problem is to be truly resolved it is important that the causes and not just the symptoms are attacked, "We need to solve economic problems, employment issues, and develop social support for poorly-off sections of the population with large-scale reforms. Only then will our children not have to work in the markets."
Gairatjon Sultanov and Umida Khasanova are independent journalists in Uzbekistan.
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Thursday, October 3, 2002
Uzbekistan: Land Confiscations Anger Farmers
Farmers lose their livelihoods in government drive to counter drought and a shortage of arable ground.
By Khalmukhamed Sabirov in Andijan (RCA No. 134, 1-Aug-02)
The Goyib Toshmatov collective farm in Uzbekistan's Andijan province used to be a thriving business with a fine yield of rice. Seventy-year-old Gofir Ummatov and his colleagues spent years cultivating their land - but then government took it away to grow cotton.
"Once our work was done and the land was ready, the local administration seized it and sowed cotton. They promised to give us other plots in compensation but this hasn't happened," Ummatov told IWPR.
Due to a severe shortage of arable land, Uzbek farmers are no longer allowed to grow the crops of their choice. Andijan is one of the worst-affected areas, with many plots being confiscated by the government.
Thousands of farmers have been now been deprived of their sole source of subsistence - the land they till from morning to night.
According to collective farm chairman Toir Mirzakhakimov, the authorities believe that rice is no longer a viable crop, as it consumes too much water. "This region has been stricken by a severe drought for two years, so the government forbade farmers to continue sowing rice."
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