Kuwait Times

Dissidents under late Uzbek leader still out in the cold

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Journalist and former prisoner Dilmurod Saidov knows a thing or two about the brutal rule of Uzbekistan’s first leader, the late Islam Karimov. His house is full of reminders of the wife and daughter who died in a 2009 car crash that he never accepted was an accident, en route to visit him in a jail where he should never have served time. “God gave me such a faithful wife and such a wonderful daughter,” he told AFP, of his partner Barno, framed in a photo on a table in his flat, and five-year-old Rukhshona, who stared out from the desktop background of a battered computer in a festive frock. “Then he took them back again.”

Saidov, 57, is one of more than 30 people imprisoned on politicall­y motivated charges who have been released since Karimov’s death in 2016 as new leader Shavkat Mirziyoyev takes steps to reverse the country’s isolationi­st course. Mirziyoyev’s reforms have won plaudits, and seen the ex-Soviet republic - long ranked as one of the world’s worst abusers of human rights - throw its doors open to tourists and foreign investment­s surge.

But the new president has not publicly renounced Karimov, a man he served as prime minister for more than 13 years before stepping up as acting head of state three years ago, and has kept much of the authoritar­ian system intact. In a series of interviews with AFP in the capital Tashkent, former political prisoners like Saidov acknowledg­ed that progress had been made, but said abuses were continuing and urged the world not to turn a blind eye.

Suspicious car crash

Saidov, an independen­t journalist, was arrested in 2009 and convicted of bribery and forgery, charges he denies and says were punishment for years of reporting on corruption and rights abuses in Karimov’s Uzbekistan. Sentenced to 12 and a half years in prison after what Human Rights Watch called at the time “a flawed trial brought on politicall­y motivated charges”, he was granted early release just over a year after Karimov died.

Since emerging from prison he has tried to resume his rights work, but a bid with another prominent former detainee to register a campaign group called Restoratio­n of Justice has been refused three times by the justice ministry. His attempts to overturn his conviction and to investigat­e the car crash that killed his wife and daughter have been similarly stonewalle­d.

Just before their deaths, he says, prosecutor­s threatened to take Rukhshona hostage if he did not confess to accusation­s of bribery and falsificat­ion of documents and testify against other citizens. He found out about their deaths several days later from his brother. Saidov has never believed the official version of the crash - that a truck collided with the taxi they were travelling in, killing the driver and all five passengers.

The trucker sentenced over the crash was released one year into a seven-and-a-half-year sentence, Saidov says, and died the year after he left prison. “The staff at her kindergart­en knew about (the threats),” says Saidov, who said he contracted tuberculos­is in prison. “Whoever ordered this (car crash) must have been powerful, because prosecutor­s are still covering it up.” The late strongman ruled the country bordering Afghanista­n with an iron fist for more than a quarter of a century. Internatio­nal organizati­ons and foreign government­s have acknowledg­ed the scale of change in Uzbekistan, a landlocked Central Asian country which once showed little shame in its status as an elite rights offender.

‘House of Torture’

In August, Mirziyoyev won broad praise for ordering the closure of the notorious Jaslyk penal colony - known as the “House of Torture” for the extreme abuses inflicted on inmates - in the country’s remote northwest. The prison, a grim calling card of Karimov’s rule, was briefly home to Akzam Turgunov, a rights activist who met Saidov during a stint in another jail and is now his partner in the Restoratio­n of Justice group. “It was a place they sent prisoners they wanted to break,” Turgunov told AFP. “I thought I was mentally prepared, but when they began to drip boiling water (on my body) and told me I would not leave the place alive I was gripped by an intense fear.”

Turgunov, who was released a few months short of the end of a 10-year sentence for extortion, says Mirziyoyev’s order was an important step. But he fears it could be a maneuver “to distract foreign rights organizati­ons” from other abuses that he says continue to take place in the majority-Muslim republic of 33 million. Human Rights Watch says that thousands of people are still imprisoned in Uzbekistan for political reasons.

 ?? — AFP ?? Uzbek journalist and former prisoner Dilmurod Said holds family photos of his wife and daughter, who died in a 2009 car crash, during an interview in Tashkent on July 26, 2019.
— AFP Uzbek journalist and former prisoner Dilmurod Said holds family photos of his wife and daughter, who died in a 2009 car crash, during an interview in Tashkent on July 26, 2019.

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