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On Right Column.*
MaximsNews
Columnist
Anora
Mahmudova

Uzbek
special forces soldier

The
Uzbek government insists that it was an attack by a small
group of terrorists which resulted in the deaths of 173
people.
However, the eyewitness reports and unnamed army sources who
spoke with BBC revealed that the number of killed may easily
exceed 700 with many more wounded.
Numerous
eyewitnesses say that shootings lasted for hours with brief
intervals and that soldiers shot at the wounded to finish
the job.

Uzbekistan's window of opportunity
Anora
Mahmudova was born in Ferghana, Uzbekistan, when
it was part of the Soviet Union.
She
studied at Ferghana and Tashkent State
Universities and won a scholarship to study
journalism at Pace University, New York.
Anora
Mahmudova is the BBC World Central Asian Service
correspondent in the US and at the United
Nations.
She
has lectured on Central Asia at Paterson
University, New Jersey, Buffalo State College
and Almaty State University, Kazakhstan.
She
has also appeared on VOA, RFERL, Pacifica and
has written for AlterNet, OpenDemocracy,
Tribune, Institute for War and Peace Reporting,
Middle East International, Novoe Russkoe Slovo
and others. Anora Mahmudova is also a columnist
for www.MaximsNews.com.
See:
Uzbek
Tiananmen Redux
and Uzbekistan's
Growing Police State
AnoraMahmudova@MaximsNews.com
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UNITED NATIONS - 29 July 2005 / www.MaximsNews.com
/ Islam Karimov's regime is using every weapon - guns, lies, diplomacy -
to maintain its dictatorial power, but Uzbekistan's secular opposition
leader Muhammad Solih tells Anora Mahmudova that change is coming.
The massacre of peaceful demonstrators in the city of Andijan,
Uzbekistan on 13 May is a tragedy without end.
No closure is
possible: for the bereaved, who are still denied the truth of their loved ones'
deaths; for the survivors, many of whom have fled across the border
into Kyrgyzstan; for the Uzbek people as a whole, repressed and
confined by a government that refuses to tell them what happened; and
the democratic members of the international community, unable to
establish normal relations with a state operating by rules of violence
and lies.
With each passing day it becomes more difficult to reach the truth
about the brutal Andijan killings.
There are still no exact, reliable
figures of how many people died and exactly what happened.
The Uzbek
government in Tashkent has rejected multiple requests for an
independent investigation; support from its strong Russian and Chinese
neighbours has even emboldened it to accuse western governments of
inciting revolts against Islam Karimov's regime.
The "attempt to overthrow the constitutional regime" - embodied in
article 159 of Uzbekistan's criminal code - is used as the prime legal
weapon against Uzbek dissidents; they are routinely also charged with
"extremist, terrorist activities" or with membership of the Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) or Hizb-u-Tahrir opposition groups.
The Uzbek government regards being a dissident as evidence of the
intention to overthrow the government, install a Taliban-like
theocracy, and breed terrorism.
The circle around Islam Karimov -
helped by western-educated children of the ruling elite and expensive
PR companies - portrays any opposition as Islamist.
As a result,
perhaps 6-7,000 people (according to United States state department or
Human Rights Watch figures) are in jail in Uzbekistan for being
dangerous subversives, extremists, terrorists and Islamists.
An argument based on a choice between Karimov and the Taliban can
count on more than Russia's and China's support.
The excuses offered
by some analysts after Andijan - that Karimov "needed to use force to
clamp down on terrorists" - echo persistent views of influential
westerners like Henry Kissinger, who in 2002 praised Karimov for "his
great contribution to the struggle with international terrorism".
Karimov was at the time also an honoured guest at George W Bush's
White House.
His visit was organised by members of the Bukharan Jewish
community, most of whom had long ago left the collapsed economy of
their ancient city for Israel and the United States.
Rafael
Nektalov, a native of Samarkand who edits the Bukharian Times, confirmed to me
that Bukhara's Jews stand firmly with Karimov.
When I asked him if he
considered killing 173 civilians (the figure the Uzbek government
admits to) a crime, he said the numbers do not matter: Andijan was
done in the name of "greater stability."
Who are the Uzbek opposition?
Those who think like Rafael Nektalov believe Karimov's claim that the
only alternative to his regime is fundamentalist Islamic rule.
The
enemies named by the Uzbek regime in connection with the Andijan
uprising - the IMU and Hizb-ut-Tahrir - do not offer clear evidence to
support this argument.
The IMU in the early 1990s did carry out armed
attacks on the government, but later merged with the Taliban and
shared the latter's defeat and dispersal in November 2001.
Hizb-ut-Tahrir have never been convincingly associated with military
action.
Its London headquarters deny any participation in the Andijan
uprising, and told me that they advocate creating an Islamic caliphate
solely by peaceful means.
Members of Hizb-ut-Tahrir arrested in Uzbekistan are almost always
charged under article 159 and tried in groups.
They are routinely
accused of distributing flyers (written in Arabic) calling for a
central Asian caliphate while in possession of bullets (very rarely
actual guns).
The clumsiness of many such charges is apparent: Ismail
Odilov, a human-rights activist, reported a case where the police
planted leaflets and a bullet on a blind man.
It is likely that severe economic hardship and high unemployment in
Uzbekistan may have radicalised some young men and persuaded them to
accept money to distribute leaflets.
But to argue that Hizb-ut-Tahrir
in Uzbekistan has any real political following is stretching things
too far.
They seem to lack any political strategy for establishing a
caliphate, and behave more like a Christian sect expecting the second
coming than a coherent organisation.
It is unclear whether the Uzbek government believes its own propaganda
about Hizb-ut-Tahrir; but the movement's underground status gives
Karimov's tame media the freedom to accuse at will, and tarnish every
dissident voice in Uzbekistan in the process.
Islamists and secularists
In any case, after seventy years of Soviet rule the people of
Uzbekistan are thoroughly secular in their daily lives.
Men drink
vodka, women only start wearing headscarves when they marry, and few
young people attend mosques.
True, many Uzbeks revere imams and the
holy Qur'an (even if they cannot read it). But there is no evidence to
suggest that, given a real choice, they would follow the "Islamists"
and their agenda against a secular democratic
alternative.
Meanwhile, the secular opposition that developed in the post-Soviet
era has been gradually marginalised by Karimov's severe repression,
tolerated by the "democratic" west.
Its main opposition party is Erk
(Freedom), whose leader Muhammad Solih has lived in exile for thirteen
years since he lost the staged 1992 election.
A few diehard members of Erk, Birlik (Unity) and Ozod Dehkonlar (Free
Farmers) are routinely harassed, beaten, imprisoned or kept under
house arrest.
With no free media it is difficult for them to
communicate with people or engage in public debate.
To fill the space where public dialogue should be, the government has
created fictive "opposition" parties with legal registration, five of
whom have won parliament seats.
The "anti-Karimov" candidate in the
most recent presidential "election" exposed the farce himself by
announcing on his exit from the polling station that he had voted for
Islam Karimov.
When I met him recently, Muhammad Solih was still defiant and hopeful;
he retains some of the charisma that made him appear a possible leader
of a democratic Uzbekistan in the early 1990s.
After Andijan, a
coalition of the genuine opposition parties in Uzbekistan elected him
to represent them. He told me that Erk is still strong enough to
oppose the Uzbek government:
"Our members continue to press for freedom, even when they and
their families face harsh treatment from the Karimov regime.
"But who
is to say whether Hizb-ut-Tahrir or the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan
is stronger than us? They are underground. They have no political
programme that would find followers in Uzbekistan. The Hizb-ut-Tahrir
programme is a pan-Arabic doctrine - a caliphate with the sharia as a
way of life and the Arabic language as a lingua franca."
Another source of Solih's confidence is the post-Andijan chill between
Tashkent and Washington, as the US administration begins to realise
the real nature of its Uzbek ally.
Solih himself has been granted a US
visa after a decade-long refusal, and has used the opportunity to tour
the country, talking to think-tanks, meeting with US senators and some
government officials. On all occasions he has urged the US
administration to support democratic forces inside Uzbekistan.
The United States and Uzbekistan
Muhammad Solih's request might prove difficult to implement, for US
policy is split - between the Pentagon (which wants to continue the
US's extensive military cooperation with Uzbekistan) and the state
department (which is aware of the contradiction between promoting
"democracy" in the Muslim world and supporting Karimov).
The Karimov regime has its own cards to play.
It has long cultivated
Moscow and Beijing even as it posed as the US's firmest ally in the
region.
The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, which includes Russia
and China as well as Uzbekistan and two other central Asian states,
has issued a statement demanding the US set a deadline for withdrawal
of its troops from Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan.
The Uzbek foreign ministry has indicated that the Karshi-Khanabad
base, which US forces use to support operations and supply
humanitarian aid to Afghanistan, was intended only for anti-Taliban
combat operations.
"Any other prospects for a United States military
presence in Uzbekistan were not considered by the Uzbek side'', a
ministry statement said.
The delicacy of the US's strategic position in central Asia as it
pursues its "war on terror" is intensified by renewed fighting in
Afghanistan and evidence that the pivotal state of Uzbekistan cannot
be bent to its will.
But Islam Karimov's political future is even more difficult. His
economic policies are a disaster, offering his people no long-term
future; his domestic strategy may lead to the creation of the very
Islamist phantom that his cynical imagination has conjured; there is
evidence that dissent is growing, most importantly inside the regime
itself.
In this post-Andijan flux, the Uzbek people deserve to be
offered the option of a democratic secular government committed to
their freedom and prosperity.
AnoraMahmudova@MaximsNews.com
OpenDemocracy.Org
26 - 7 - 2005
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