February 18, 2005
Uzbekistan: Britain's Former Envoy Speaks Out About Rights Abuses
by Kathleen Moore
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Two years ago, Britain's ambassador to Uzbekistan made headlines when he spoke out publicly about Tashkent's poor human rights record. Craig Murray had harsh words, too, for the United States, saying it was helping prop up a brutal regime. Murray was suspended from his post in October 2004 and has now taken severance pay -- moves the British Foreign Office has said are not connected with his outspoken views. He spoke to RFE/RL about his experiences -- and his future plans.
Prague, 18 February 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Craig Murray may be one of Britain's least diplomatic diplomats in recent memory.
While ambassador to Tashkent, he spoke publicly about repression and the lack of democratic freedoms in Uzbekistan. Last year he accused the United States and United Kingdom of using intelligence gained from people tortured in Uzbekistan. And in a widely published speech in November, he criticized the United States for helping prop up what he called President Islam Karimov's "brutal" regime.
These were all highly unusual comments from a diplomat -- especially, he said, coming as they did in the months immediately after Uzbekistan became a U.S. ally in the war on terror.
"When I first arrived in Uzbekistan [in 2002] and called on other European Union ambassadors and said to them, 'Goodness, the human rights situation here is terrible, this is a really nasty dictatorship,' two of them said to me absolutely directly, 'Yes we know, but we don't mention that because [Uzbekistan is a] close ally of the U.S.' And there was an understanding among ambassadors in Tashkent that they just pretended not to notice what was going on," Murray told RFE/RL (click here for full interview).