Uzbekistan

Response to terror
Uzbek President seeks to again extend his term politics
Foreign Desk
RESPONSE TO TERROR Uzbek President Seeks to Again Extend His Term Politics: Despite his
poor record on rights, watchdog groups worry that his role in the terror war may compel
U.S. to overlook abuses.
ROBYN DIXON
TIMES STAFF WRITER
12/07/2001
Los Angeles Times
Home Edition
A-16
Copyright 2001 / The Times Mirror Company
MOSCOW -- Uzbek President Islam Karimov, one of America's strategic
Central Asian partners in the war against terrorism, plans to extend his term to 2007 by
referendum.
Karimov, who was Uzbekistan's Communist-era leader and retained power
after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, has been criticized frequently by international
watchdog groups for his government's poor record on democracy and human rights.
Despite these concerns, the U.S. and Uzbekistan have forged a close
military partnership in recent years. Karimov cemented those ties by becoming the first
Central Asian leader to give the U.S. military access to facilities for the war in
Afghanistan.
Organizations such as New York-based Human Rights Watch are alarmed
that Uzbekistan's military cooperation may lead the United States to overlook the
electoral abuses, torture and false imprisonment that the group says have been routine
under Karimov.
The referendum is to be held next month. It will mark the second time
Karimov has used the tactic to extend his rule. The first was in 1995, when he extended
his term to 2000. Last year he was elected to another five-year term.
"In Uzbekistan's current political conditions, there is no
possibility for any free or fair vote or for an informed choice to be made at the ballot
box," Rachel Denber of Human Rights Watch's New York office said Thursday.
"When Karimov was reelected in 2000, there were no genuine
opposition parties," she said. "The media are heavily censored."
As with previous balloting in Uzbekistan, last year's vote was widely
criticized for electoral violations. The sole opposition candidate announced that he would
vote for Karimov.
Using referendums to extend presidential terms became common among the
more authoritarian of the ex-Soviet leaders in the mid-1990s: Alexander G. Lukashenko of
Belarus was strongly criticized by the U.S. when he used the tactic in 1996.
Although the State Department has been consistent in its condemnation
of Lukashenko for his authoritarian leadership, U.S. criticism of Karimov's rule has been
less strident. Belarus lacks the strategic importance of Uzbekistan.
Other leaders who have extended their terms by referendum include
Presidents Nursultan A. Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan, Emamali Rakhmonov of Tajikistan and
Saparmurad A. Niyazov of Turkmenistan. Niyazov declared himself president for life in 1999
then announced this year that he might retire in 2010.
Karimov calls his nation of 24 million people a "democracy, Uzbek
style." Critics note that there are no genuine opposition parties, no free and fair
elections, and more than 7,000 political or religious prisoners in Uzbek jails.
Karimov's move to extend his rule comes as authorities here seek the
extradition from the Czech Republic of Mukhammat Salikh, the last strong opposition figure
to challenge Karimov in an election. Salikh ran against the president a decade ago.
Salikh, who was granted political asylum in Norway two years ago, was
detained Nov. 28 at the airport in Prague, the Czech capital, on an international arrest
warrant. The Karimov government accuses him of being an Islamic militant. Supporters say
that the charges are politically motivated and that Salikh's life would be in danger if he
were returned to Uzbekistan.
A recent Human Rights Watch background paper on Uzbekistan says
authorities harassed, jailed and beat local human rights activists, one of whom died in
custody in July as a result of torture.
"Torture is systemic in Uzbekistan," the report says.
"Police torture has resulted in at least 15 deaths in custody in the past two years
alone."
Karimov's government closed 900 mosques and required religious
organizations to register. The Human Rights Watch report says that more than 7,000 Muslims
were jailed, including many peaceful citizens who have been forced to practice their faith
in secret.
"In a throwback to the darkest days of the Soviet Union, local
authorities regularly organize public hate rallies to mobilize community pressure against
and to intimidate detainees' families," the paper says.
Karimov justifies his crackdown on Islam, saying his targets are
extremists and warning that the country faces the threat of a fundamentalist Taliban-style
rebellion.
Denber said it is too early to judge whether the Bush administration
has shelved human rights concerns to appease Karimov and retain Uzbekistan's military
cooperation. Much will depend on the approach taken by Secretary of State Colin L. Powell,
who is due to visit the region in coming days.
The U.S. "is not doing as much as it could do," Denber said.
"The biggest lost opportunity was in October, when the Bush administration did not
name Uzbekistan as a country of concern on religious freedom when it had every reason to
do so. That was clearly for political reasons."
Los Angeles Times, 7 December 2001 |