Kuwait Times

Uzbek leader set to win with no real opposition

Uzbekistan holds polls with reform-touting strongman a shoo-in

- Taleban next door

TASHKENT: Voters across Uzbekistan in Central Asia took to the polls yesterday in a presidenti­al election where incumbent Shavkat Mirziyoyev faces no real opposition as he champions reforms in the ex-Soviet country while maintainin­g its authoritar­ian foundation­s. Mirziyoyev has been credited for launching what he calls a “New Uzbekistan”, ending a decades-old system of forced labor and introducin­g limited media freedoms.

The former prime minister came to power in 2016 after the death of his mentor, dictator Islam Karimov, who ruled Uzbekistan for 27 years. Mirziyoyev presided over an unpreceden­ted boom in foreign tourism in the country that borders Taleban-controlled Afghanista­n and counts China and Russia among its partners. But as his first term ends, the 64-year-old president is struggling to counter impression­s that his government is sliding back toward the habits of his long-reigning predecesso­r. The effects of the Covid19 pandemic have also blunted his initial economic achievemen­ts, with unemployme­nt rife amid sharp rises in living costs.

The last two years have also seen a crackdown on dissent, rights groups said, particular­ly in internet freedoms that bloomed after 2016. And Mirziyoyev has sidesteppe­d reforms that would allow competitio­n to his rule. He faces four regime-loyal opponents plucked from parties in the rubber-stamp parliament in his bid to secure a second five-year term. A would-be independen­t challenger, academic Khidirnaza­r Allakulov, fell at the first hurdle after failing to register a party that could nominate him. Human Rights Watch said this month that officials “harassed (Allakulov’s) party supporters and interfered in their efforts to collect signatures for registrati­on”. Uzbek political analyst Alisher Samigzhano­v said the vote was a mere show.

“The word opponent is contradict­ory here. None of the (other four) candidates honestly think they can become president,” he said. But for many in Tashkent, poverty rather than rights is the issue of the day. “There are a lot of poor and homeless people. We need to find housing for people,” said Sardor, a 26-year-old moneychang­er at the city’s Chorsu market who is voting for Mirziyoyev. “I hope he will help solve these problems.” Uzbekistan’s electoral authority claimed a turnout of more than 50 percent at 1:00 pm local time after just five hours of voting, which will conclude at 8:00 pm.

Mirziyoyev credited for

launching a ‘New Uzbekistan’

Taleban next door

Mirziyoyev cast his own vote at a polling station on Tashkent’s outskirts where he appeared alongside wife Ziroatkhon Hoshimova and their three children. He smiled as he posed for photograph­s before dropping his

vote in the ballot box. He did not address the press. Prolonged isolation under Karimov meant that commodity-rich Uzbekistan fell well short of its economic potential for most of independen­ce.

It is against the founding president’s brutal rule that the successes of Mirziyoyev’s reforms have been judged. His public disavowal of torture and campaign to clean up mass forced labor in cotton fields - where thousands of schoolchil­dren once toiled alongside their teachers gained internatio­nal praise. Zera, a 55-year-old woman who cast her vote at a high school in the capital Tashkent yesterday, said she backed Mirziyoyev.

But she was worried about the situation over the border in Afghanista­n, where the president has taken a pragmatic, trade-first approach to the Taleban takeover. “The whole world warred with them and nothing good came of it. Can we be their friends? I am not sure,” she told AFP, only giving her first name. Other voters in the capital Tashkent wanted authoritie­s to do more to develop the country’s rural regions. “In the capital, people have water, gas, electricit­y. In the provinces, unfortunat­ely, there is a lack of this,” Alexander Rakhmonov, a 28-year-old energy sector employee who also backed Mirziyoyev said.

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 ?? ?? TASHKENT: People queue at a polling station to vote during Uzbekistan’s presidenti­al election in Tashkent yesterday. — AFP
TASHKENT: People queue at a polling station to vote during Uzbekistan’s presidenti­al election in Tashkent yesterday. — AFP

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