The Jerusalem Post

Suppressed at home, some Uzbeks turn to radical Islam abroad

- • By ANDREW OSBORN and OLZHAS AUYEZOV

MOSCOW/ALMATY (Reuters) – Pushed by a lack of jobs and strict control of behavior and dissent, millions of Uzbeks have immigrated in recent years. Hundreds of those joined Islamic State in the Middle East, while others turned to religious extremism in their host countries.

Sayfullo Saipov, the Uzbek immigrant accused of killing eight people in a truck attack in New York on Tuesday, appears to have taken the latter path, becoming radicalize­d after struggling with life in the West.

According to US police, the 29-year-old followed online instructio­ns from Islamic State before carrying out the assault.

Saipov’s was at least the fourth deadly attack abroad by an Uzbek national or ethnic Uzbek this year, and his actions have highlighte­d the outsized influence the Central Asian state of 32 million people has had on global jihad in recent months.

“These things take time to prepare, and what we’re seeing today is a result of work that has been done over the last few years [by Islamic State and similar groups],” said Kazakhstan-based Central Asia analyst Alexander Knyazev.

People who follow Uzbekistan closely say that based on what is known so far of Saipov, he appears to be one of “a forgotten generation” of Uzbek men who left the former Soviet republic for a better life, bereft of a proper religious education and unequipped to navigate the West.

That, and the common difficulty of assimilati­ng into a foreign country and culture, may have left him susceptibl­e to extremist influences when times got tough.

“He became religious on the spur of the moment,” Mirrakhmat Muminov, a truck driver and Uzbek community activist who lives in Stow, Ohio, and knew Saipov, told Reuters by telephone. He said Saipov had previously lived in Tashkent, the Uzbek capital.

“He started studying religion in the United States,” said Muminov, adding that Saipov “couldn’t get enough” of the religious freedoms enjoyed in the United States after living in the strict confines of Uzbekistan.

A neighbor of his parents, who live in a one-story house on the outskirts of Tashkent, said on Thursday that Habillo, Saipov’s father, was not a devout mosque-goer and sold painting materials in a local market.

Islam is widely practiced in predominat­ely Muslim Uzbekistan, but worship is tightly controlled by a government wary of radicalism.

Ruled with an iron fist for more than two decades by former Communist Party boss Islam Karimov, who died last year, Uzbekistan has long said its tough religion policy is justified by national security concerns.

Under his successor Shavkat Mirziyoyev, who took office at the end of 2016, the authoritie­s have started to signal a more tolerant approach, and there are hopes that economic reforms will begin to free up the command economy.

Mirziyoyev said in September that Uzbekistan had removed approximat­ely 16,000 people from a 17,000-strong security blacklist of potential Muslim religious extremists and wanted “to bring them into our society and educate them.”

Many Uzbeks have fled only to later despair of becoming bottom-dollar laborers or unemployed in the West or Russia. It is at that point that some have turned to radical Islam.

Speaking from Tashkent, Steve Swerdlow, a researcher for Human Rights Watch in Central Asia, said some 5 million Uzbeks had emigrated to Russia in recent years, with others like Saipov trying their luck in the West.

“The radicaliza­tion process takes place outside Uzbekistan,” said Swerdlow, who added that the country has one of the world’s worst human rights records and does not tolerate dissent.

“They are often individual­s who are far from home, who are marginaliz­ed and who are experienci­ng some kind of dislocatio­n from their community and social network.”

Yet deadly ethnic tensions occasional­ly flare up in the Ferghana Valley, a fertile region spanning areas of Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. In 2010, dozens of people were killed in ethnic clashes in the Kyrgyz part of the valley.

A statement from Uzbekistan’s US Embassy said Saipov moved to America in 2010, after having won a Green Card visa lottery. Mirziyoyev said his government would do all it could to help investigat­e the “extremely brutal” attack.

Before this week’s attack, an Uzbek gunman burst into a nightclub in Istanbul and killed 39 people on New Year’s Day.

In April, an ethnic Uzbek man born in Kyrgyzstan blew up a metro train in the Russian city of St. Petersburg, killing at least 14 people. In the same month, an Uzbek man rammed a truck into a crowd in Stockholm, killing four people.

Uzbek men have also swollen the ranks of Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.

According to a report from the Soufan Center last month, more than 1,500 Uzbeks have joined the extremist group in the Middle East, the highest number of all five Central Asian countries, all of which have provided recruits.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? A VIEW FROM the street on the outskirts of Tashkent, Uzbekistan, yesterday shows the house of the parents of Sayfullo Saipov, the suspect in the New York City truck attack.
(Reuters) A VIEW FROM the street on the outskirts of Tashkent, Uzbekistan, yesterday shows the house of the parents of Sayfullo Saipov, the suspect in the New York City truck attack.

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