| Uzbekistan's Reform Program: Illusion or Reality? EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Since October 2001, Uzbekistan has been a key ally of the U.S. in the
military campaign in Afghanistan. A U.S. base has been established and a far-reaching
Agreement on Strategic Partnership was signed in March 2002. Uzbekistan, however, sits
uncomfortably in a campaign known as "Enduring Freedom." It is one of the most
authoritarian of the post-Soviet states, with a poor record on human rights and an economy
that still owes much more to Soviet central planning than the market.
The new relationship with the U.S. seemed to open up the possibility of
a wide range of political, and economic reforms. At the beginning of 2002, many suggested
that Uzbekistan had a 'window of opportunity' through which to push reforms in a
favourable international environment. This report concludes that reforms have largely
failed so far and that present international policies are unlikely to persuade the
government to change course significantly in 2003.
Many Soviet structures have been preserved from repressive law
enforcement agencies to an economic system still dominated by the state. There is very
little press freedom, elections are entirely under executive control, there is no legal
political opposition, and there is widespread persecution of regime opponents. At least
7,000 people are imprisoned for religious or political beliefs; torture and brutality in
police custody and in prisons are commonplace.
The repressive political apparatus is matched by an economic system in
which a small elite manages key export sectors, ensuring personal enrichment in the
process. But the overall economy does not allow the growth of a significant private
sector. Businessmen face a hostile bureaucracy, government interference, high taxes, and a
constantly-changing legislative environment. The judiciary provides little defence of
contracts, and the multiple exchange-rate system for foreign currency ensures that access
to U.S. dollars is possible only for a few favoured businessmen linked to government
officials.
The state still dominates agriculture, and much of the product consists
of state-order cotton. Almost no profit from export crops remains with farmers. Poverty is
growing fast, and with it a sense of hopelessness, especially among young people. Illegal
migration of the unemployed to cities is reaching record levels and producing a
marginalised, embittered minority. This social discontent threatens to undermine stability
and provides fertile ground for Islamic radical groups. Only labour migration abroad
provides something of a safety valve.
This report examines the promises made by the Uzbek government to
change the system. While political reforms were outlined in the agreement with the U.S.,
economic reforms have been the subject of a detailed plan drawn up with the IMF. This
report examines how far the government has met its public commitments, and how much
farther it has to go.
Political reform has been largely non-existent. A referendum in January
2002 was not monitored by international organisations, but observers concluded it was
largely rigged in favour of the government. The electorate approved a two-year extension
of President Karimov's rule and the creation of a new bicameral parliament to replace the
one-chamber, rubber-stamp body, but with no indication that parliamentary elections due in
late 2004 would be more democratic.
There have been some small positive human rigthts steps, with a decline
in arrests in early 2002 and the registration of one human rights group in March 2002. But
arrests on the basis of political or religious ideas have continued, with hundreds
sentenced in 2002 after trials that did not meet international standards. Several
well-publicised cases of torture and killings in prisons have undermined positive moves,
such as the visit of the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture. Other human rights groups
seeking registration have been refused, and a number of human rights activists were
arrested during 2002. Strong rhetoric on judicial reform by President Karimov has not yet
translated to real improvements.
An IMF Staff Monitored Program (SMP) agreed in January 2002 was
supposed to lead to major agricultural reforms, improvements in the banking system, trade
liberalisation, and moves toward foreign exchange convertibility by July 2002. The
government met none of the key targets, although it did achieve some less difficult
technical requirements. The centrepiece – progress on foreign exchange liberalisation
and convertibility of the Uzbek som – was not met, although there was some devaluation
of official exchange rates and limited relaxation of the exchange regime.
After the government failed to take advantage of an extension of the
reform program for an additional two months, an IMF mission departed in September 2002,
offering to return only when the main planks were achieved. This failure was accentuated
by bad government decisions, including new tariffs on imports and extra documentation
requirements on private traders that seriously damaged cross-border trade and emptied
bazaars across the country. Further decrees undermined the legal basis of privatised
companies, suggesting they could be nationalised, and placed capital restrictions on
import-export companies that ensured small and medium-sized companies would be unable to
trade.
The reasons why the government failed to take advantage of an improved
external environment and widespread international support to move on reform are complex
but mostly relate to a political system dominated by vested interests at all levels that
have a considerable investment in retaining the status quo. A bureaucratic machine that
fears change and lacks the capacity to implement reforms has also slowed any program. A
people with a long history of authoritarian rulers has also been slow to take independent
action and struggle for new freedoms.
Visiting Western legislators and officials tended to take President
Karimov's pro-reform rhetoric at face value. Few openly criticised the regime’s
appalling human rights record and hardly any commented publicly on the lack of a
functioning parliament or free press. While some compromises are necessary in an era of
military action, this blindness to the problems of the system does not help those in the
elite who have long pushed quietly for reform from inside. They are few in number and lack
the clout to effect real change. But they are the potential future leaders whom Western
partners of Uzbekistan should be supporting, rather than the present corrupt elite that
has little interest in the success of any reform program.
Uzbekistan enjoyed a uniquely positive environment in which to pursue
reforms in 2002. The longer they are delayed, the harder peaceful change will be. The need
for reform has only been accentuated by rumours of President Karimov’s ill health that
have gained increasing credence. There is a danger that infighting over positioning for a
succession could lead to serious instability in the absence of any normal political
process for change at the top and against a background of sharp economic decline.
Uzbekistan’s future looks bleak unless serious economic and political reforms are
implemented. Economic growth hardly keeps pace with the population; unemployment is rife,
and poverty is deepening. Now is the time for these reforms. Delay may mean that they will
never be effected at all.
RECOMMENDATIONS
To the government of Uzbekistan:
On economic policy
1. Address the outstanding issues of the IMF Staff Monitored Program,
including:
(a) the devaluation and moves toward convertibility of the som and
liberalised access to foreign exchange; and
(b) serious measures to diminish the state's role in setting prices for
agricultural products, permitting farmers free choice in selling cotton and grain.
2. Annul government decrees threatening re-nationalisation of
privatised enterprises.
3. Annul decrees and regulations restricting cross-border trade, in
particular the decree on the minimum size of companies involved in import-export business,
and end the high tariffs on private traders.
On political reform
4. Begin moves towards greater political pluralism, including:
(a) permit all political parties, human rights groups and other NGOs to
register with the Ministry of Justice; and
(b) reform the complicated process of registration and the implicit
threat it holds over independent organisations.
5. Advance parliamentary elections to early 2004, with a package of
measures designed to:
(a) guarantee that all registered social and political movements will
be permitted to register candidates for the election;
(b) reform the electoral law and the law on political parties to make
registration of candidates simpler, in line with existing recommendations of the
OSCE/ODIHR;
(c) implement new regulations allowing the financing of political
parties from independent sources;
(d) include representatives of all political parties on the electoral
commission; and
(e) reform the regulations of the parliament to ensure that deputies
have real access to information, to force ministers to appear before public hearings, and
to allow genuine opportunities for debate.
On human rights
6. Implement immediately measures to stem unwarranted arrests and
abuses of human rights by law enforcement agencies and implement the forthcoming
recommendations of the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture.
7. Establish an independent commission to investigate all complaints of
police brutality and all deaths in custody and that has powers to make public the results
of investigations and launch criminal cases against officials.
8. Use the amnesty announced on 6 December 2002 to release prisoners
arrested on religious or political grounds, ensuring that decisions on release are decided
by an authoritative commission and not prison officials.
On the media
9. End harassment of journalists over critical articles and ensure that
ministers hold press-conferences and face media scrutiny of their decisions.
10. Ensure that new laws on the media do not restrict access to
information or introduce new offences that would limit freedom of the press.
To the government of the United States:
11. Report publicly to Congress in March 2003 on the extent to which
both sides have met their obligations under the Agreement on Strategic Partnership with
Uzbekistan.
12. Use the democratisation elements of that agreement to draw up with
the Uzbek government a more detailed public document of political reform measures that
includes concrete benchmarks on electoral reform and the holding of early elections to
parliament.
To the IMF:
13. Continue to insist on real and full compliance with the terms of
the Staff Monitored Program (SMP) before any discussions of a stand-by agreement can
begin.
To other International Financial Institutions:
14. Continue to link all lending to macroeconomic change and compliance
with the IMF reform program.
15. Refuse new lending to the agricultural sector until serious reforms
have begun, including addressing child labour and the exploitation of farmers.
To the European Union:
16. Use the Partnership and Cooperation Agreement with Uzbekistan to
raise issues of democratisation, human rights and economic reform, and draw up a timetable
for reform in all three areas.
17. Prepare more common public positions with the U.S., and where
appropriate, the Russian Federation, to provide a united policy of support for reform.
To the EBRD:
18. Insist that the EBRD annual meeting in Tashkent in May 2003 is
conducted in an open manner that throws the spotlight on the political and economic
problems faced by Uzbekistan and in particular:
(a) ensure that there is access to the annual meeting for international
and local NGOs and other independent groups, including human rights groups;
(b) ensure that all journalists and delegates are provided visas and
accreditation and that independent experts are permitted to speak and take part in the
meeting as appropriate under EBRD rules; and
(c) arrange coverage of the meeting by an independent television
producer and for the resulting program to be shown on Uzbek television with a full and
correct translation.
To international donors:
19. Increase engagement with civil society, aiming particularly at
boosting advocacy efforts, formation of associations, legal assistance, and attempts to
put pressure on local and central government.
20. Increase support for media, including training for journalists and
backing for associations of journalists, but also support for new, independent media
outlets.
21. Increase training and defence for human rights activists, and
support a widening of their activities into spheres such as economic rights.
International Crisis Group, Osh/Brussels, 18 February
2003
http://www.crisisweb.org/projects/showreport.cfm?reportid=894
To view the full report see http://www.crisisweb.org/projects/showreport.cfm?reportid=894
|