map
Our Affiliates
Listen In 28 LanguagesRFE/RL Radio
In 28 Languages

'Berlin Wall's Lessons For Today'

In an op-ed for "USA Today," Jeffrey Gedmin discusses RFE and the role of free media in societies living under repressive regimes. More
More Articles

Features

Tajiks Fear Another Cold Winter Without Heat Or Electricity

Staying warm in Dushanbe in January wasn't easy.

October 30, 2008
By Farangis Najibullah
Hanifa says she and her husband have spent all their savings to purchase enough coal and wood to keep their three-room apartment warm this winter.

"As soon as we get our October salary, we'll buy a wood-burning stove, and then our preparation for the winter will be complete," says the schoolteacher in the northern Tajik town of Khujand.

Hanifa's apartment block is connected to a centralized heating system, but the system has literally been paralyzed since the early 1990s.

"Everybody wants to get a stove, and coal and wood," she says. "After last year's experiences, people are very concerned. We had a meeting at school today, and our director said next winter will be even worse, so we have to install stoves in the classrooms. No one believes that we are going to have electricity and that our homes will be heated."

Tajiks across the country say one of their top priorities is storing up wood, coal, and essential foodstuffs for the upcoming winter.

They have reason to be concerned. Last year, Tajikistan experienced one of its coldest winters on record. Temperatures dropped below minus 20 degrees Celsius. Ice and snow blocked roads for weeks, isolating villages.

Compounding the problem was the near total lack of natural gas and severe shortages of electricity. At the same time, food prices soared, leaving residents of the impoverished country to subsist on the bare minimum.

Dozens, including some children, perished as a result of the cold. Rumors spread that newborn babies never made it out of maternity wards left without electricity.

Little Faith In Government Action

The government has never revealed the exact number of people who died as a result of last year's cold snap. But it appears eager to reassure people they won't face a similar energy crisis this winter.

Sharifkhon Samiev, the head of the Barki Tojik electricity company, says the authorities "are doing everything they can" to prevent the energy shortages that crippled the country last year.

This includes buying more than 1 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity from Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan for the winter season.

"We are planning to import 400 million kilowatt-hours of electricity from Turkmenistan during November and December. The government has ordered us to distribute the Turkmen electricity to households as our main priority," Samiev says. "As of November we will provide each household with four hours of electricity in the morning and another four in evening."

This has failed to ease concerns among the public, however. Similar electricity deals were signed with Turkmenistan and Kyrgyzstan in previous years, but the much-needed electricity failed to arrive on time. The authorities blamed Uzbekistan for hindering the transmission of electricity.

Tajik authorities say such problems will be alleviated "greatly" by the construction of a new block at the Sangtuda hydropower station in eastern Tajikistan. It is expected to be completed in mid-November.

But for now, people in rural areas and many cities say a strict rationing system is already in place, with some villagers claiming to receive just two hours of electricity a day.

Leaving For...Siberia?

Only certain sites and buildings classified as "strategically important" -- such as government offices, presidential residences, and central hospitals -- are reportedly exempt from rationing.

Officials have promised uninterrupted 24-hour electricity to Dushanbe. But residents of the capital have complained of constant, unexplained power cuts.

"Life simply stops in our high-rise building when we don't have electricity," says Mirzo, a journalist in Dushanbe. "You can't even put a kettle on to make tea, let alone cook or heat your home."

Mirzo, too, is thinking of installing a wood-burning stove in his flat for cooking and heating.

"During the winter we use only one room in our flat. It becomes our kitchen, dining and living room, as well as the bedroom for our family of six," he says. "We can't afford to heat all the rooms."

Like many Tajik migrant laborers, Mirzo's brother is taking their parents to Russia to ride out the winter. The elderly couple is staying in their son's rented flat in the Siberian city of Tyumen until early summer.

Living conditions there are not ideal, Mirzo says, "but at least we know that they won't freeze to death in Russia."
     
Comments
by: Lennie from: UK
November 03, 2008 11:59
The people of this country are being sacrificed by those very people charged with protecting them. The president and elite siphon off hundreds millions from this poor countrys coffers and the populous starves! This will all become transparent > http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/law/article5049335.ece
and should be the basis for regime change...give these people a fighting chance!!!

by: Marek from: The Czech Republic
October 31, 2008 17:37
And that's why I prefer living in the Central Europe to that one in the North or Eastern Europe :-) Minimal winter temperatures in lowlands at about C 0 through -10 centigrades and yet it still makes me wishing for the early spring to come as soon as possible.

by: Timo Haapanen from: Finland
October 31, 2008 08:25
Reading frequently about the everyday hardships of common people in Central Asia, I cannot avoid believing that their life was better in many respects in Bad Old Soviet Union.

One might condemn my stupid nostalgy, or whatever you call it, referring to the total lack of freedom there was under the Soviet = Russian regime, but there doesn't seem to be any freedom today either. Or maybe it's different now - you don't have much energy left to worry about your citizen's rights if you have to worry about what to eat tomorrow and how to keep your house warm.

When it's very cold in Finland, we say "it's cold like in Russian hell", actually thinking of Siberia. But for some people the place may have almost heavenly features, as I can read from the above...
     
TEXT SIZE - +
 
RFE/RL Central Asia Report
 

SUBSCRIBE For regular news and analysis on all five Central Asian countries by e-mail, subscribe to "RFE/RL Central Asia Report."

Follow Us On Twitter

Keep up-to-date on all the latest news from RFE/RL's broadcast region by following us on Twitter:
~ You can find our instant news feed at @RFE_RLNEWS.
~ An obsessive Kremlin watcher? Follow our blog at @PowerVertical.
~ Human rights abuses chronicled at @RightsWatchdog.
~ News, comment, and the odd silly dictator story at @TransmissionRFE.

Products and services:

RSSMail SubscriptionMobile