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Institute for Democracy in Eastern Europe |
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What is IDEE? |
Crackdown
on Human
Rights Work Intensifies as Elections Near ( In recent days,
Uzbek authorities in Karshi and Margilan
have detained human rights advocates to prevent them from meeting with
a Human
Rights Watch researcher. In Karshi, the Human Rights Watch researcher
was also
attacked by an unknown assailant, then detained and forced to leave the
city.
The attack appeared to be a setup. Parliamentary
elections are scheduled for December 27, 2009.
It is not clear whether the recent efforts to halt human rights work
were
linked to the election or part of an ongoing effort to stifle
discussion about
the human rights situation in the country. Key international
actors, including the Detentions and
Attack in Karshi On December 5,
police in Karshi, in southern Akhatov told
Human Rights Watch that at one point he asked
an officer why the authorities were so concerned about his meeting
Lokshina. He
said the officer answered, We will not let anyone meddle in our
internal
affairs. Also on the
morning of December 5, a police official
contacted Karaeva to tell her he had allegedly found a doctor who would
examine
her son who has a disability, and that he would drive them to the
hospital
himself. When Karaeva declined, he suggested that she go alone to be
introduced
to the doctor. Karaeva again declined, explaining she was expecting
guests. That morning, as
Lokshina was walking toward the street where
Karaeva lives, a young woman unknown to Lokshina lunged at her without
warning,
screaming loudly. The assailant grabbed Lokshina s hair, and pulled
violently,
trying to drag her away. Lokshina called out for help, but none of the
people
who saw the attack came to her assistance. A police officer suddenly
appeared,
pulled Lokshina into his car, and accused her of provoking a street
fight. He took Lokshina
to a police station, where she was
questioned about why she came to Karshi and whom she planned to visit. Police
photocopied Lokshina s identification, demanded to
see the contents of her bag and her notebook, and made her write a
description
of the attack, even though she said she did not want to press charges.
They
held her for four hours, saying the police chief wanted to speak to
her. Then
an apparently higher-ranking officer from the security services put
Lokshina
into a taxi, which took her to The police
officers refused to identify themselves and
insisted that Lokshina had not been detained, though they forbade her
to use
her cell phone or leave. Lokshina saw her attacker leave the police
building,
use her cell phone, and move around the building without police escort.
The attack left
Lokshina with trauma to the neck, light
bruising, the loss of some hair and a violent headache for over 24
hours. Margilan The next day,
Lokshina planned to meet with Ahmadjon
Madumarov, of the Independent Human Rights Organization of Uzbekistan,
in
Margilan, a city in the He was allowed to
leave the station for a short time to attend
a wake, though he was followed by a police car, and then was held again
in the
station for hours. He finally told the police they should show him an
official
summons if they wanted to keep him longer. He was released at about
5:15 p.m.,
an hour after Lokshina left Margilan. What happened to
Lokshina and the people who tried to meet
her has frequently been happening to human rights monitors in Last month seven
human rights and political activists were
detained, three of whom were also beaten, when they attempted to meet
with a
political opposition leader. The Uzbek
government has long obstructed Human Rights Watch
s work in For more examples
of violent attacks on human rights
monitors in http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/04/16/uzbekistan-rights-defender-attacked-threatened
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2006/10/05/uzbekistan-journalist-imprisoned-widening-crackdown
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2003/08/29/uzbekistan-uzbek-rights-activist-kidnapped-and-beaten
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