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Thursday 30 January 2014

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Uzbek President Islam Karimov
Uzbek President Islam Karimov
Uzbekistan’s president is launching a preemptive strike. He is warning citizens who have left the country to join Islamic extremist groups and train at terrorist camps that if they return home they will go to prison; and he’s telling citizens inside Uzbekistan if they know of plots for terrorist attacks and do not inform the authorities, they are going to prison too. The same day that Uzbek media carried news of the changes in the law, 33 Uzbek fighter in an Islamic militant group linked to Al-Qaeda, were reported killed in a Pakistani air strike in North Waziristan.

To be sure, Uzbek President Islam Karimov has an itchy trigger finger when he sees even the potential threat of Islamic militants. One should remember thousands of Muslims in the eastern Namangan and Andijon provinces almost toppled him just a couple of months after 1991 independence when they protested Karimov’s moves against religious officials and institutions. He has never viewed Islam-inspired challenges calmly since then. And probably as a result of these early encounters and later incidents of terrorism in Uzbekistan, Karimov has become the most tenacious hunter of jihadists in Central Asia, though rights groups note that he often snares more innocents than militants.

Now Karimov is facing the unpleasant prospect of a recurrence of history. Foreign forces are reducing their presence in Afghanistan and Afghan government forces are taking over security in their country. The last time Afghan government forces were responsible for security in Afghanistan, without any foreign military backing, the Taliban overran the country and became Central Asia’s neighbors.

They arrived at Uzbekistan’s border in August 1998. In February 1999, bombs exploded in the Uzbek capital, Tashkent (that the government blamed on an unlikely alliance of Islamic figures and secular opposition leaders); and in August 1999, militants from the previously unheard of Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) descended from the mountains of Tajikistan into southern Kyrgyzstan and announced they were aiming to overthrow Karimov and his government. They were repelled in 1999, but they returned in 2000 and that time made it onto Uzbek territory before again being fended off.

Uzbeks recently killed in Pakistan were likely from the IMU or one of its splinter groups that set up bases in Pakistan after U.S. bombing chased them from their lairs in northern Afghanistan at the end of 2001.

During the years since they have been out of Uzbekistan, the Uzbek nationals roaming Afghanistan and the tribal areas of northwestern Pakistan’s tribal have become formidable fighters, and for several years now they are prized bomb-makers in Afghanistan. Most Afghans are illiterate, while Uzbekistan still has one of the highest standards of education in the region -- a legacy of Soviet times -- so Uzbeks could read instructions for making explosives. An ISAF statement from February 2013 noted the capture of six IMU militants, including an IMU leader who was “allegedly instrumental in manufacturing, procuring and distributing improvised explosive devices.”

The Pakistani military strike that killed the 33 Uzbeks, along with three German nationals, came in retaliation for militant bombings in Bannu and Rawalpindi that Pakistani authorities seem to believe were carried out by the Uzbeks.

The IMU website furqon.com confirmed an air strike and said one assault targeted an Uzbek fighter’s home in Pakistan but killed only his wife and small child. According to the militant group’s website, the Uzbek fighter said Pakistani military helicopters attacked the tribal town of Mirali on January 19 and returned for further strikes during the next three days. The militant claims four children, two women, and five mujahids were killed in a January 19 attack. He also concludes the attacks were retaliation for bombings in Bannu, Rawalpindi, and other Pakistani towns and cities. He said the other mujahids had dispersed to different villages in the Mirali area.

Closer to Uzbekistan, in neighboring Afghanistan, there was increased IMU activity across the northern part of the country in 2013. At least three militants, reportedly from the IMU, were killed in Baghlan Province, in July last year. Afghanistan’s Shamshad TV reported on increased IMU activity in the Sar-e Pol Province in May. Only Afghanistan’s Balkh Province separates those two provinces from Uzbekistan.

So the threat is out there, and the new law that Karimov just spoke of could be seen as among the first of many likely countermeasures Uzbekistan is taking to stave off the threat from its erstwhile native sons, and possibly daughters.

Authorities in neighboring Tajikistan just faced a similar legal dilemma in late December when sentencing five of the country’s nationals for taking part in fighting in Syria. There was no law criminalizing mercenaries, so the five were convicted of “participation in a criminal group” and given various prison sentences, none longer than two years. Uzbekistan’s new law closes this legal loophole.

The new law does essentially put any Uzbek national returning home after visiting unsettled areas in the Muslim world under suspicion, and Uzbek authorities have long been accused of casting a wide net in pursuit of security or, less kindly put, as part of ensuring the regime’s preservation. Thousands have been rounded up before in Uzbekistan when only dozens were guilty, and secular political opponents have found themselves lumped together with genuine jihadists more than once in security crackdowns.

On a side note, while Uzbeks are certainly among the militant groups in neighboring Afghanistan and Pakistan, they do not seem to be present in any large numbers in the Middle East, certainly not in Syria. When Syrian Grand Mufti Ahmad Badreddin Hassun claimed at the end of October there were some “100,000 mercenaries” fighting in Syria, he listed among them 360 citizens of Turkmenistan, 250 from Kazakhstan, and 190 from Tajikistan. No mention of Uzbeks.

Zamira Eshanova of RFE/RL’s Uzbek Service contributed this report
Umed Tojiev
Umed Tojiev
Some 5,000 people turned out in the northern Tajik town of Chorkuh on January 20 to pay their last respects to Umed Tojiev. The 34-year-old father of two passed away on January 19 in a prison hospital from what prison officials say was a heart attack. Many of the 5,000 mourners at his funeral believe Tojiev died of torture.

Tojiev was detained on October 30 on charges of failure to obey police orders but that charge would soon change to something much more serious. A court ordered Tojiev held in custody for 10 days, but on November 2 he jumped from a third-floor window at a police detention facility in Isfara, not far from Chorkuh, breaking both his legs. Police said he was trying to escape. Tojiev, whose first name means “hope,” said he was trying to kill himself.

His attempted suicide brought Tojiev’s plight to the attention of the Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan (IRPT), hardly surprising because Tojiev was a member of the party from Chorkuh, where the IRPT has widespread support. IRPT representatives sent to check on Tojiev, who was by this time at a prison hospital in Khujand some 60 minutes' drive from Isfara, said Tojiev had been tortured while in custody.

Traveling Deep Into Tajikistan's 'Islamic Triangle,' Feared New Hotbed Of Islamic Insurgency

The IRPT said police subjected Tojiev to sleep deprivation, denied him food and water, put a plastic bag over his head to prevent him from breathing, and administered electric shocks through a wet blanket, all techniques that leave no marks. The accusations seemed to have some credibility because on November 7 the Interior Ministry announced it was punishing those involved for “negligence in carrying out their duties.” It is still not clear how the policemen were punished.

More details about Tojiev’s case came to light. He was being charged with “organizing a criminal group,” and in fact those charges were formally brought against him the day he jumped from the window. Authorities rejected his first selection for legal representation -- attorney Fayzinisso Vakhidova. Vakhidova was already defending one of Tojiev’s relatives and Tajik law prohibits an attorney from defending two people involved in the same case. There were actually two of Tojiev’s relatives under arrest and according to the IRPT, they were receiving treatment in custody similar to that Tojiev received. And they had confessed to charges of organizing a criminal group and implicated Tojiev.

On November 28, Amnesty International released a statement on Tojiev. The statement said on November 13 Tojiev was finally able to see a lawyer of his choice who, according to the statement, said Tojiev “was carried into the room as he could not walk, he was shaking and crying, and he said he was forced to incriminate himself under duress.” The statement also quoted Tojiev explaining why he jumped from the window. “I am religious and understand that suicide is a sin but I did not have any choice, I needed to attract public attention as I understood that no one will help me.… I wanted to express protest against the unlawful actions of the police,” he said.

He was eventually returned to a holding facility. His mother Bibisalima visited him in late November. She told RFE/RL’s Tajik Service, Ozodi, Umed’s condition was “very, very bad, there is no proper medical treatment in the jail and they (prison authorities) won’t transfer him to the hospital.”

On January 16, his lawyer, Yusuf Doniyorov, told RFE/RL’s Tajik Service “after repeated requests” to be moved because of the cold and difficult conditions in the holding cell, Tojiev was transferred again to a prison hospital, where he died.

IRPT representative Hikmatullo Sayfullozoda told RFE/RL's Tajik Service witnesses and Tojiev’s lawyer said Tojiev’s body had bruises on it. The IRPT political council said Tojiev’s body showed signs of having been subjected to electric shock, which probably brought on the heart attack. Tojiev’s brother Khasanboy said doctors did not give the family any reasons for Umed’s death.

Tajikistan has been criticized for use of torture, including by the UN Human Rights Committee Against Torture. The Tajik government has pledged to address the problem but clearly this was not done in time to save Umed Tojiev.

-- Bruce Pannier (Farangis Najibullah from RFE/RL's Newsroom and Mirzo Salimov and Salimjon Aioubov from RFE/RL’s Tajik Service contributed to this report.)

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About This Blog

Qishloq Ovozi is a blog by RFE/RL Central Asia specialist Bruce Pannier that aims to look at the events that are shaping Central Asia and its respective countries, connect the dots to shed light on why those processes are occurring, and identify the agents of change.​

The name means "Village Voice" in Uzbek. But don't be fooled, Qishloq Ovozi is about all of Central Asia.

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