PRAGUE, April 12, 2006 -- Durdykuliev sent the letter to President
Niyazov in early January 2004. He wanted permission to hold a two-day
political demonstration on the main square of the western Turkmen city
of Balkanabad. And he wanted the demonstration to take place on
February 18 and 19 -- coinciding with celebrations marking Niyazov's
birthday.
They kept me detained with lunatics and criminals. ... I was kept with them so I would lose my mind. They kept me
there for two years and two months."
In
his letter, Durdykuliev wrote that he wanted the demonstration to
express "disagreement with the policies of the president and other
senior government officials" -- and to call on them to correct the
situation. About a month later, medical personnel and security
officials arrived at Durdykuliev's home to take him to a psychiatric
hospital at Garashsyzlyk in eastern Turkmenistan.
On April 11, Durdykuliev was freed from the hospital. He arrived back at his home early this morning.
Durdykuliev
told RFE/RL's Turkmen Service that he has been "worn out" by his ordeal
in the hospital. But he said he already feels better because he is no
longer a patient there:
"They [put me in the hospital] with the
aim of driving me crazy," Durdykuliev said. "They kept me detained with
lunatics and criminals. Among them were people who had cut off their
wives' breasts, or killed their wives or children. I was kept with them
so I would lose my mind. They kept me there for two years and two
months. The [health] commission came and confirmed that I was not
[mentally] ill."
Durdykuliev said health commission officials did
not return after that sole visit. He said he was told that there was no
reason for the commission to see him because he was not mentally or
physically ill.
Durdykuliev also said officials told him during
the health commission's visit that he was a political prisoner. He said
he posted letters from the hospital to both the provincial health
center and the local prosecutor to inform them about his case. But he
received no response. He said he also wrote to an international court
about bringing legal action for being falsely committed to the
hospital. But again, he said he received no response.
Then,
Durdykuliev said, life became more difficult for him. "Recently, they
stopped giving permission for my wife and daughter to come visit me,"
he explained. "They told my wife -- since her name was Annagul Anayeva
-- that she was not a relative. After March 22, my daughter came here
because her name is Durdykulieva. But [the hospital authorities]
refused to pass on to me whatever she brought. Previously, my wife and
daughter brought me things to eat. But they stopped that. I haven't
eaten hot food since March 22."
Durdykuliev said his fortunes
changed on the afternoon of April 11 when hospital personnel came to
him. But he wasn't immediately aware of his imminent release.
"They
told me to be quiet. Do not gossip. Remain silent," Durdykuliev
said. "And then they said, 'Maybe things will be worse [for you].'
I said: 'We will see. Let's go.' After two years and two months [in the
psychiatric hospital], they had done everything to me. Worse things
they could no longer do. So I told them, 'We will see.'"
Durdykuliev said he only realized he was being set free when he was told to gather together his personal belongings.
"They
said, 'Get ready.' But they didn't say where I was going," he said.
"I thought my letters got to the international court and they
would take me to The Hague. It was only when we got to Charjou that
they said, 'We are going to take you home.' They didn't say anything
else. There was no one from the [health] commission there. There were
seven to 10 people there -- the chief doctor, his assistant and some
nurses. They took me out. And in Charjou, they wanted to put me on a
plane. But then they said: 'You have no passport and you need it. So
you cannot fly.' And then they put me in a car."
The people accompanying Durdykuliev were under orders not to stop for food, drink, or to use a toilet. He arrived home at 3 a.m.
Durdykuliev
said he plans to bring a law suit against the Turkmen government
in international court. He said he wants $5 million as
compensation for his physical suffering and financial loses.
Durdykuliev
also is thanking those that he credits for helping obtain his
release -- particularly 54 members of the U.S. Congress who sent a
letter to President Niyazov earlier this month calling for his release.
"I
want, through your radio, to say thank you very much to international
organizations and to the U.S. Congress," Durdykuliev said. "And also to
the many people who sent telegrams, postcards, and letters to me -- 40
or 50 of them. [Hospital officials] showed them to me once. But they
are still kept by the head of the psychiatric hospital. I want to thank
them."
Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and other
rights groups are welcoming Durdykuliev's release. But Durdykuliev
said he is under surveillance. He also says he does not have any means
of earning a living for himself or his family.
Durdykuliev's
release comes one month after pressure from international organizations
and Western governments helped obtain the release of two RFE/RL
correspondents who were held for 10 days without charge by police in
Turkmenistan.
(Contributors to this report include RFE/RL
correspondent Bruce Pannier, and RFE/RL Turkmen Service correspondents
Rozynazar Khudaiberdiev and Guvanch Geraev.)