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UZBEKISTAN: Are human rights activists agents-provocateurs?
Edgar Turulbekov, a Muslim human rights activist, has been jailed for organising a demonstration in front of a court in support of imam Rustam Klichev, sentenced to 14 years' imprisonment, and other Muslim prisoners. Another Muslim human rights activist, Tulkin Karayev, has told Forum 18 News Service that he too fears arrest. Local police chief Colonel Safar Sarmonov told Forum 18 that Turulbekov and Karayev are "blackmailers". "I do not believe these people are human rights activists," Sarmonov said, telling Forum 18 that "they are simply agents-provocateurs who push people into illegal activities instead of helping them." Members of Uzbekistan's minority faiths - such as Protestants or Jehovah's Witnesses - have generally not engaged in street demonstrations when their fellow-believers have been detained, beaten or imprisoned. However, lawyers who have defended their rights in court have faced harassment.
The head of the city police department, Colonel Safar Sarmonov, called Turulbekov and Karayev "blackmailers who are provoking people into staging spontaneous demonstrations during difficult times for the country". "I do not believe these people are human rights activists," Sarmonov told Forum 18 on 6 November in Karshi. "They are simply agents-provocateurs who push people into illegal activities instead of helping them." He warned that if Karayev does not stop his "provocative activity", he would hold him to account "in accordance with the law".
Karayev detailed the harassment he has faced. "My home telephone is being tapped and my home is under constant surveillance by the law enforcement agencies," he complained. He said he had been taken to the police station twice on 5 November. "There I faced detailed questioning about why I defend Muslim prisoners and was threatened with 'unpleasantness'."
Forum 18's correspondent's own experience supports the veracity of Karayev's report. All local residents who visited Karayev on 5 and 6 November were immediately detained by the police as they left his home. They were also asked whether a foreign correspondent was present in Karayev's house.
Interestingly, police arrested 17-year-old Begzot Rakhmonov at 8 am on 5 November and detained him until 5 pm. In particular, the police asked him whether Forum 18's correspondent was at Karayev's house. Given that Forum 18's correspondent did not arrive in Karshi until 6pm on 5 November, but had told Karayev about his imminent visit by telephone the day before, it is reasonable to conclude that the human rights activist's telephone is being tapped.
Other evidence also appears to support Karayev's claim that his home is under surveillance. On 6 November, Forum 18 saw a car without number plates near Karayev's home. In the car was a man who had told Forum 18 earlier at the city police department that he was a volunteer with the law enforcement agencies.
During his interview with Forum 18, Sarmonov categorically denied that Karayev's home was under surveillance and that his telephone was tapped. Asked by Forum 18 how the police had discovered its correspondent's plans to visit Karshi before he had even arrived in the city, Sarmonov responded that in Uzbekistan all movements by foreigners around the country are recorded. However, Sarmonov found it difficult to explain how the "recording" mechanism operated.
Karayev and Turulbekov have frequently reported to foreign journalists about the persecution of Muslims in Kashkadarya region and about the demonstrations by relatives of Muslim prisoners in front of the Kashkadarya regional court and the United Nations building in the capital Tashkent (see F18News 3 November 2004 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=444).
Klichev - imam of Karshi's central Navo mosque – was sentenced to 14 years' imprisonment under criminal code articles 155 (terrorism), 156 (inciting national, racial and religious hatred), 159 (undermining the constitutional basis of the republic of Uzbekistan), 242 (forming criminal groups), 244-1 (composing and distributing documents that present a public threat) and 242-1 (establishing, leading or participating in religious, separatist or fundamentalist organisations). Also sentenced under the same articles to lengthy terms of imprisonment were 16 members of the same mosque.
The case continues at Kashkadarya regional court against 16 devout Muslims from Shakhrisabz, a town 90 kilometres (55 miles) south of Samarkand and 120 kilometres (75 miles) east of Karshi. Karayev told Forum 18 on 28 October that the only "crime" of the accused in both cases consisted only in being devout Muslims and meeting to read the Koran.
Members of Uzbekistan's minority faiths that have faced harassment – such as Protestants or Jehovah's Witnesses - have generally not engaged in street demonstrations when their fellow-believers have been detained, beaten or imprisoned. However, a number of lawyers who have defended their rights in court have faced harassment.
After Jehovah's Witness lawyer Rustam Satdanov fled Uzbekistan for the United States earlier this year after secret police interrogation about his work defending fellow Jehovah's Witnesses, his wife and young children received anonymous telephone threats at their home in Tashkent (see F18News 15 June 2004 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=341). The threats have ceased for the moment. Tashkent-based lawyer Nail Gabdullin had his licence to practice stripped from him in March in retaliation for his work defending Protestants (see F18News 26 March 2004 http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=288). However, he was later able to regain his licence.
For more background information see Forum 18's Uzbekistan religious freedom survey at http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=105
A printer-friendly map of Uzbekistan is available at
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atlas/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=uzbeki
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3 November 2004
UZBEKISTAN: Imam and congregation jailed for being Muslims
The imam of a mosque in southern Uzbekistan, Rustam Klichev, has been sent to jail for 14 years, and 16 of the same mosque's congregation have been given similar long jail sentences. Even though the accused were sentenced on terrorism charges, "the judge, Homid Babakulov, simply asked the accused how they observed religious rituals, and what precisely my son had told them about the teachings of Islam," Forum 18 News Service was told by the imam's mother. The imam's wife insisted to Forum 18 in May that, when he was arrested, the NSS secret police planted a leaflet claimed to have been issued by an alleged radical Islamic organisation. The imam has great authority amongst Muslims in the region, which is thought to be the reason for his trial. The head of the government's committee for religious affairs, Shoazim Minovarov, told Forum 18 that he knew nothing about the case and therefore could not make any comment.
1 November 2004
UZBEKISTAN: Former chief mufti calls for lifting of restrictions on Islam
Uzbekistan's former chief mufti, Muhammad Yusuf, has called for restrictions on Islam in the country to be lifted. He is widely regarded as one of the most authoritative Muslim theologians of Central Asia, and has a freedom unique in Uzbekistan to publish his views in books, on a website, and via a private radio station. Such media outlets are tightly controlled in Uzbekistan, so such freedom is highly unusual, especially as Muhammad Yusuf is seen as being distant from the authorities. Speaking of the state of religious freedom, he told Forum 18 News Service that "Unfortunately, I can't say the situation is satisfactory." Muhumad Yusuf was in exile from 1993 to late in 2000, but told Forum 18 that "Uzbek theologians began to persuade Islam Karimov that, without my help, it would be hard for him to ensure stability in the republic." He is critical of the authorities' approach to radical Islamic movements, but did not discuss the tight restrictions imposed on the ethnic Iranian Shia Muslim minority, or the lack of religious freedom for non-Muslims.
28 October 2004
UZBEKISTAN: Government defies international human rights pressure
At the same time that Uzbekistan was being visited by a delegation from the official US Commission on International Religious Freedom, the police and NSS security police suddenly raided a worship service in a Baptist church which they have ignored for the past three years, Forum 18 News Service has learnt. The Pastor, Nikolai Shevchenko, was fined and warned that, if he did not halt the activity of the church, criminal charges would be brought against him. The church's repeated attempts to gain state registration have been frustrated by the authorities, and Pastor Shevchenko suggested to Forum 18 that the raid "can scarcely be a coincidence. Tashkent is using this to try and demonstrate that it is not afraid of pressure from the international community and that it does not intend to observe international standards on the rights of believers."