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SILENCING CENTRAL ASIA: THE VOICE OF THE DISSIDENTS
Testimony from US Congressional Hearings on Central Asia
7. Testimony of Fiona Hill, Fellow, Foreign Policy Studies
Program, Brookings Institution
For my testimony, I will offer a broad perspective
on developments in Central Asia. We are focusing today on
the threats to the basic freedoms of expression and assembly
in Central Asia. It is clear from the public record, as well
as from the testimony of my colleagues on this panel from
Human Rights Watch and the Committee to Protect Journalists,
that there are flagrant violations of these basic freedoms
in all of the Central Asian states. But I would like to stress
that restrictions on the media and the infringements on freedom
of assembly are only two manifestations of much broader repression
in Central Asia.
Regional governments justify this repression
as a necessary feature of a concerted campaign to stamp out
acts of terrorism, get rid of Islamic militant groups either
emanating from neighboring Afghanistan or operating across
borders within Central Asia itself, and to curtail the activities
radical Islamic political movements. But, in continuing to
abuse basic freedoms, Central Asian governments are in effect
radicalizing their own populations rather than effectively
rooting out the individuals or groups engaged in terrorism
or promoting extremism. Looking across the region:
- In states like Uzbekistan, large-scale arbitrary arrests,
detention, torture, and other forms of ill-treatment are
becoming the norm. This is exacerbated by the virtual absence
of due process throughout Central Asia, and a prison system
in a state of collapse where chronic overcrowding and mistreatment
have led to catastrophic outbreaks of tuberculosis and other
infectious diseases.
- Freedoms of religion have been impinged upon. Practicing
Muslims have been arrested and mosques closed.
- Prominent opposition leaders have been hounded abroad,
and dissidents have been arrested, imprisoned and killed.
- In some states, political opposition movements have been
outlawed and public demonstrations have been forcibly broken
up or banned.
- Journalists have been subjected to trumped up judicial
proceedings, intimidated, and beaten.
- Newspapers have had their offices raided by various government
paramilitary forces and subjected to mysterious arson attacks.
They have had issues confiscated, access to printing denied,
electricity cut off, or their operations simply closed down.
The reports on daily incidents and systematic
violations of human rights in Central Asia can neither be
dismissed nor ignored. These abuses are consistent with a
pattern of political development across the Central Asian
states. They also contribute to the further destabilization
of an already fragile security situation in the region.
Opposition groups have now been forced underground
and every government clamp down or arrest of innocent civilians
increases sympathy, if not support, for extremist groups.
Groups like Hezb’ ut Tahrir, an Islamic renaissance
party, have made considerable inroads into states like Uzbekistan
and Kyrgyzstan, among educated urban youth as well as among
the rural poor, by espousing an ideology of political reform,
social justice, and wealth redistribution that is increasingly
compelling to a disaffected population denied other forms
of association or political participation. The fact that Hezb’
ut Tahrir also seeks the creation of an austere Islamic
caliphate in Central Asia has been overshadowed by its appeal
to common grievances.
Little Fundamental Change at the top of
Central Asian politics
In considering the situation in Central Asia,
we need to bear in mind that ten years after the dissolution
of the USSR, at the top of Central Asian politics there has
been little fundamental change. While the leaderships of these
states have implemented some political reforms by creating
parliaments, political parties and electoral mechanisms, in
general the vertical power structures of the USSR remain intact.
Executive rule is strong, and legislatures are weak. Politics
are focused on the routine of elections but presidents manipulate
these elections and rule by decree to bypass parliament.
Indeed, with only one exception, the "new
democratic" Central Asian presidents are former Soviet
party secretaries who have preserved their old authority.
They and their close associates have also effectively privatized
the Central Asian states. State assets have been transferred
into the hands of networks of elites that have replaced or
simply evolved from the old Communist Party nomenclature.
These networks are based on geographical association, common
educational background, and extended family ties and they
are clustered around the presidents.
The entrenchment of these old-Soviet leaders,
their families, and close associates at the upper echelons
of power has constrained the development of a new generation
of leaders, and prevented opposition political parties from
presenting themselves as viable alternatives to the ruling
regime. As in the Soviet period, the people of Central Asia
have few intermediaries between themselves and high politics.
Restrictions on the development of the
press
The press, which should and could play the
role of intermediary, is––at best––denied advertising revenues
and other means of ensuring financial sustainability by the
region’s persistent economic crisis. It must rely for support
on the patronage of the state or powerful business cliques
with their own agendas. The press is thus vulnerable both
to manipulation and direct repression. Journalists must answer
more frequently to big political and business "bosses"
than to their own editors and the population. In regions far
from capital cities, the media is even more vulnerable to
pressures from local leaders. Low salaries and inadequate
training also often result in bribe-taking among journalists
and poor professional standards, eroding public support for
the media as a democratic institution. At worst, in states
like Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, the media is heavily censored
and kept under tight control.
Governments in general––again as a hold-over
from the Soviet period––see the mass media as a tool of political
propaganda. In Kazakhstan, for example, President Nazarbayev’s
immediate family and associates directly control most media
outlets as well as the bulk of the economy. While there are
no significant alternatives for financial support, independent
newspapers and TV stations will remain small in size and scope
in Central Asia.
Patterns of political development in Central
Asia
Looking across the Central Asian states,
there are common patterns in political development but also
distinct differences in the political situations of states
like Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan, on the one
hand, and Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan, on the other.
Turkmenistan is the most extreme of the Central
Asian states and is well on its way to joining the ranks of
states like Belarus and North Korea that have turned inward
upon themselves, retreating from interactions with the outside
world and reducing their dependence on it, rather than seeking
engagement. Here, an insular political regime has been established
with a Soviet-style personality cult around the president—the
self-styled "Father of the Turkmen" (Turkmenbashi)
and recently declared "President for Life"—that
brooks no other contender for power. There are no political
parties, no political opposition, and almost no manifestations
of civic life outside the sphere controlled by the government.
Uzbekistan has also become a closed society
and closed economy in an attempt to stave off what its leadership
perceives to be inevitable political and economic collapse
if reforms are enacted. All political opposition has been
repressed, although there is some modest scope in some spheres
for activity by non-governmental groups (NGOs), especially
on a local level and in areas of the country that have been
particularly hard hit by social and environmental problems.
Tajikistan has fallen apart at the seams
after five years of civil war in the 1990s. The state has
been effectively regionalized, if not communalized, and the
government’s influence is confined to the capital, Dushanbe.
While this precludes effective attempts at authoritarian rule,
it does not prevent abuses of authority when actors outside
the government––particularly local journalists investigating
high-level corruption––try to challenge the president. But
a daunting array of social and economic problems, and poor
inter-regional communications, have distracted the government
and loosened controls. As a result Tajikistan has a flourishing
grassroots NGO community, and public debates have taken place
openly and regularly in Tajikistan that are rare elsewhere
in Central Asia.
In Kazakhstan, while the president dominates
political life, keeps a tight rein on the opposition and has
effectively exiled leading political figures, the country’s
huge energy reserves have also brought the country closer
to the West and have generated resources for development.
Growth in the private sector has already begun to drive a
modest degree of political reform with the emergence of a
more active middle class and property-owing interest groups
who have a stake in democratic as well as economic development.
NGOs operating in the private enterprise sector, such as small
business advocacy groups and professional associations, have
been fairly successful in Kazakhstan. The Kazakh government
has also been somewhat flexible and open to innovation, especially
at the community level, allowing grassroots and civil advocacy
groups to lobby for legislative improvement and change. In
addition, the government has pursued an active and ambitious
program of sending the cream of its youth from all social
backgrounds to study in the West and then finding employment
for them in government ministries and international organizations.
This does not compensate for the continued attempts to stifle
the media and other civil actors in Kazakhstan, but it does
offer a space in which more progress can be made.
In Kyrgyzstan, which was once touted by the
US government and other international observers as a bastion
of democracy in Central Asia, the president has cracked down
on opposition groups and attempted to ban domestic monitors
from observing elections. But, in the period preceding this
crack down, NGOs and other grassroots organizations were able
to establish themselves as part of the political landscape.
Even now, the NGO movement has retained a voice with the Kyrgyz
government and it is not uncommon for NGOs to advocate through
the courts, parliament or legislature even as the government
arrests and detains activists.
Sense of crisis in Central Asia
Overall, at this juncture, there is a sense
of impending crisis in Central Asia. Regional governments
have developed a siege mentality. The intensification of the
civil war in neighboring Afghanistan, and the activities of
regional militant groups like the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan
have contributed to this, as have the mounting domestic economic
and social problems.
When the USSR collapsed, the Central Asian
states were the poorest and least developed of all the Soviet
republics, as well as the most geographically distant from
the West. Over the course of the last decade, the Central
Asian states, as a group, have fallen further behind former
Soviet neighbors as well as the West. Soviet-era achievements
in education, infrastructure, industrial development, and
health have been seriously eroded.
The Asian and Russian financial crises of
1998 set Central Asian economies back further––leading to
the devaluation of currencies, untenable debt burdens, and
the withdrawal of foreign investment. Although Kazakhstan
has the potential to become a prosperous country in the future
by virtue of its energy resources, landlocked, resource poor
countries like Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan have little hope
of effecting a turn around. Recent regional drought has put
them at risk of a humanitarian disaster, and a staggering
70-80% of their populations have fallen beneath the poverty
line. In recent years, as a result of this economic deprivation,
there has been a massive exodus of ethnic Russians and the
most progressive members of indigenous ethnic groups from
Central Asia. Reports from Kyrgyzstan suggest, for example,
that one tenth of the total population has left for Russia
over the last decade.
High unemployment among those who remain
has fostered the smuggling of raw materials, and trafficking
in arms and drugs across porous regional borders, but legal
cross-border trade has broken down. Protectionist tariff policies,
stringent visa regimes, and corrupt customs officials have
all ruptured the so-called "shuttle trade" in food
stuffs and consumer goods across Central Asia and with Russia
that the region’s population relies on to survive. Government
searches for drugs and weapons are often used as ruses by
border guards to shake down traders. And the government of
Uzbekistan has also begun to mine its border with neighboring
Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan––ostensibly to guard against incursions
by Islamic militants, but more evidently to curb routine border
crossing. Uzbek mines have killed or injured more than fifty
Tajik citizens alone since the mining began this spring. The
majority of casualties have been inhabitants of border settlements
who were visiting relatives or tending livestock. In addition,
there have been a rash of highly-publicized suicides among
desperate Kazakh and Kyrgyz shuttle-traders who have been
stripped of all their money and goods by officials on other
international borders.
Disease has had an easier time crossing the
region’s borders. The heroin trade across Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan,
and Kazakhstan from Afghanistan has created a burgeoning intravenous
drug problem and an HIV/AIDS outbreak that mimics the early
epidemic in Africa. Regional health workers fear an escalation
in the next two years that will overwhelm local medical systems
and the region’s miniscule international programs. A major
HIV/AIDS crisis would be the final straw for states like Tajikistan
and Kyrgyzstan. The growing HIV/AIDS epidemic along drug routes
threatens to undermine the entire region’s meager economic
and political achievements.
It is clear that––outside Kazakhstan where
the economic situation is more robust and Turkmenistan where
a quasi-totalitarian system is in place––the other Central
Asian governments fear a social explosion. They have good
reason to do so as frustration with misrule and lack of significant
progress with reform continues to build up. Both Kyrgyzstan
and Uzbekistan have recently contended with, and crushed,
major street demonstrations.
In May, the Kyrgyzstan government directly
blocked a series of protests and street rallies by opposition
groups against the suppression of freedom, human rights violations,
and steep rises in the cost of food, electricity, gas, and
water. The government banned public demonstration during holidays
and weekends, tried to confine those that took place to remote
locations, sent directives to students and workers warning
of dire consequences if they joined rallies, spread rumors
of clashes and bloodshed, and even organized distractions
with street sales of low-priced food, outdoor concerts, and
races to lure away would-be demonstrators. Protest leaders
who chose to proceed with rallies were arrested, accused of
trying to destabilize society, and fined. Pensioners, the
unemployed, and street traders who also participated in the
rallies were harassed by police. These developments were covered
by local journalists with assistance from the London-based
Institute of War and Peace Reporting.
Earlier this month, in Uzbekistan, the authorities
were slightly less creative but just as determined to break
up demonstrations of women and children protesting the detention
of their relatives and members of the Hezb’ ut Tahrir
organization. Women in religious dress were seized directly
from city streets, even if not gathered in distinct groups,
and taken into custody and fined. Again, this crackdown was
reported by local human rights organizations and journalists
with the assistance of international counterparts.
Kyrgyz and Uzbek opposition figures predict
that demonstrations such as these will become more frequent
over the next several months as more poverty-stricken and
persecuted citizens vent their rage in public. This will in
turn increasingly frighten the governments, resulting in further
repression and stricter punishments.
Conclusions and recommendations
How should the United States react to the
violations of basic freedoms given the course of developments
in Central Asia?
I would argue that, in spite of the persistent
infringements on rights, we must not disengage and
cut these states off diplomatically. Without the involvement
of the US and other Western countries in Central Asia, these
violations will only get worse, not better. These are fragile
states and they are vulnerable to outside pressures. In the
absence of engagement with the United States and with the
West, the Central Asian states are likely to be pulled by
all their immediate neighbors (including Russia, China, Afghanistan
and Iran) in directions that will not necessarily lead toward
democracy. The strong impulse to conform to the negative exigencies
of the neighborhood is clearly exemplified in the fate of
Kyrgyz President Askar Akayev, who embraced relations with
the West and genuinely pursued a democratic path in the early
years of his presidency, but was unable to sustain it given
Kyrgyzstan’s political and economic isolation and its dependence
on Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Russia.
The United States can engage in Central Asia
without reinforcing authoritarian regimes and facilitating
governments’ infringements of basic freedoms and human rights.
The Central Asian states have already made some political
commitments to Western norms, which they can be pressured
to live up to through active diplomacy. It is important to
local governments how they are perceived on the outside—especially
in the United States. With the exception perhaps of Turkmenistan,
all the Central Asian states have either forged close relations
with the US or would like to do so, and the US is a major
donor to the region.
There are several approaches the United States
can take. It can censure Central Asian governments with punitive
measures by cutting back on aid and programs and making their
restoration conditional on verifiable improvements in government
policies and behavior on human rights. Conditionalities and
binding constraints are clearly important in trying to mitigate
against continued violations. Or, instead of cutting aid and
programs until some improvement is seen, the US can also look
at how its current assistance is being used and target it
more effectively. I would in fact recommend the latter approach.
In general, expectations are critical in
promoting changes in behavior and encouraging reform. The
Central Asian states need to have a sense of where they are
going. While Russia and some of the other former Soviet states
can reasonably expect to move toward the West in its broadest
conception over the next decade or so, the Central Asian states
can realistically have little expectation of doing so. In
Central Asia, we are not likely to see democratic systems,
as we understand them, develop in our lifetimes, given the
magnitude of the political and social changes necessary to
effect this. But we need to maintain our interactions and
keep the hope alive of improved and eventual close relations
with the West.
The US shares the security concerns of Central
Asian states about Afghanistan and radical Islamic terrorism.
But while militant groups are real threats to regional security,
the human rights abuses perpetrated by Central Asian governments
are becoming an equal threat as they increase public support
for the extremists. Here, the United States has considerable
leverage with regional governments to encourage a change in
behavior. A significant proportion of US assistance is currently
targeted toward initiatives to bolster border security as
well as to increase the effectiveness of regional militaries
in counter-insurgency operations. This includes programs implemented
through the State Department and the Pentagon, as well as
through the US Agency for International Development, the FBI,
the Treasury Department, the Department of Energy and other
agencies.
Congress has a special role to play here
and it has already stressed the importance of ensuring the
protection of human rights through US foreign assistance.
For Central Asia and other former Soviet States, the protection
of Human Rights was emphasized in the 1992 Freedom Support
Act. In 2000, Uzbekistan came close to losing congressional
certification for military-military programs, funded under
the auspices of the Freedom Support Act. As a result, the
Pentagon elevated human rights issues in its special forces
training curriculum.
However, there has not been similar scrutiny
of other US government programs such as those training customs
officials, drug enforcement agencies, and police, for example,
to examine whether or not these programs emphasize the protection
of basic freedoms. There is already considerable evidence
from independent as well as official studies that drug interdiction
efforts in countries like Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan,
funded by the United Nations as well as the US, have become
riddled by corruption and permitted violations of civil liberties.
The US Congress can emphasize mutually reinforcing
security and human rights objectives throughout Central Asia
by mandating cooperation between the Pentagon, State Department
and other US government agencies, and international human
rights groups. It can also mandate close monitoring, evaluation,
and assessment of US-funded programs related to security issues
and require regular reporting on the impact of these programs
on human and civil rights from the full range of agencies
that implement them.
In addition, Congress can emphasize US support
for regional non-governmental organizations that seek to increase
citizen participation in government and access to objective
sources of information. In Central Asia, local advocacy groups
need sustained support from international counterparts like
Human Rights Watch, the Committee to Protect Journalists,
Amnesty International, and others if they are to keep up their
pressure on governments to stop blatant abuses of human rights
and to curb the increasing tendencies to crack down on dissent.
Outside pressure from international organizations and governments
like the United States has been effective in securing the
release of journalists and activists from prison. International
organizations in conjunction with local groups and journalists
highlight government abuses and incidents that would otherwise
go unremarked abroad. In addition, the offices of international
organizations in the region have frequently served as safe
havens for those fleeing abuse while pressure on Central Asian
governments has been exerted on their behalf. These activities
should be given significant US political and financial support.
Finally, US government funding for broad-based
civil society programs and NGO development remains essential.
US foundations like the Eurasia Foundation and the Open Society
Institute, which have been active in Central Asia for almost
a decade now, have forged active partnerships with experienced
local groups and are now focusing on creating permanent institutions
in the region that will be able to support civil society once
Western donors have withdrawn. Creating local capacity to
effect and sustain reform is crucial. In closed states like
Turkmenistan, simply maintaining an international presence
on the ground is important. By funding even small numbers
of people through democracy initiatives supported directly
by the US Embassy and other activities, the US can demonstrate
that countries like Turkmenistan can not remain completely
isolated in the 21st Century––even in Central Asia.
Continue to the
testimony of the Committee to Protect Journalists 
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Posted July 27, 2001 © Eurasianet
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