Central Asia: Islam and the State
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
To avoid future instability, Central Asian states need to re-examine
their policies towards Islam and step back from reliance on repression. Seventy years of
Soviet rule in Central Asia did not crush Islam but it had a profound effect in
secularising society and political elites. Nevertheless, after independence there was a
surge of interest in Islam, including the emergence of political Islamist groups seeking
to challenge the secular nature of these new states. The heavy-handed repression of early
manifestations of political Islam led to confrontation, violence, and the appearance of
extremist and terrorist groups.
In Uzbekistan the first manifestations of Islamism were rapidly
suppressed, and an all-out campaign against any Muslim political activity was initiated.
Many Islamists fled first to Tajikistan and then to Afghanistan, where they formed the
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), an ally of the Taliban. High levels of repression
continued inside the country, provoking widespread discontent and fuelling political Islam
as a focus for opposition. There are at least 6,000 religious prisoners in 2003 but
dissatisfaction with the regime continues to feed into Islamist sentiment.
In Tajikistan tension over the role of Islam in state-building was a
contributory factor to the outbreak of civil war in 1992. The Islamic Renaissance Party
(IRP) led opposition to the former Communist regime but failure on both sides to
compromise produced bitter fighting that continued until a peace accord was reached in
1997. That agreement legalised the IRP but in practice President Rakhmonov has gradually
undermined its position in the political system. With the emasculation of the IRP, more
radical groups have gained influence, such as Hizb ut-Tahrir which seeks the overthrow of
all secular states in the region in favour of a single Islamic Caliphate, although it
claims to be committed to non-violence.
In Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan there has been much less interest in
ideologies that challenge secularism. But non-traditional Muslim tendencies have appeared
in both, and there is debate over the role of religion in society and in politics and over
the limits to state interference in religion. In southern Kyrgyzstan and southern
Kazakhstan, the growth in influence of groups such as Hizb ut-Tahrir has sometimes been
exaggerated, but they do have a committed following.
In Turkmenistan Islam has only weak roots as an organised religion but
President Niyazov has combined widespread repression of any independent religious activity
with attempts to create a pseudo-Islamic spiritual creed centred on his own personality.
Central Asian governments have often resorted to old Soviet methods of
control. In Uzbekistan this has been repressive in the extreme; in Kyrgyzstan much more
subtle. All five regional governments, however, have two aims: first, to control any
appearance of political Islam, whether moderate or extreme, since they consider
independent expressions of Islam a threat to the constitutional order; secondly, to use
Islam as a conduit to promote their own ideologies and campaigns, and in general as a tool
of the state.
These attempts to control and manipulate Islam have taken different
forms. Laws on religion are severely restrictive in Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, while
liberal legislation in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan is often undermined in practice. In all
states in the region, a government body responsible for religious affairs intervenes often
in the internal affairs of religious organisations. In most states this body carries out
registration of religious organisations, without which, in Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan at
least, any religious activity is a criminal offence.
State bodies also interfere formally or informally in the running of
the Islamic hierarchy, often controlling what clergy may say in the mosque. The state has
a considerable role in appointments of religious leaders. At the local level this is often
exercised through the power of local authorities, while at the higher level the state
seeks malleable figures who will not challenge the political leadership or act as an
alternative power centre.
The results of this co-option and control policy are mixed. Many imams
are content merely to conduct rituals but some find government interference increasingly
stifling and seek more freedom. The more the government controls it, the less authority
the religious hierarchy has with believers, and the less impact it has in carrying
government ideology to the population. Poorly educated clergy who parrot state ideology
and refuse to stand up to the authorities have none of the respect informal leaders can
gain, whether orthodox Muslims or followers of Wahhabism or other trends.
Levels of education and knowledge of Islam in the region are generally
low. Religious education is seldom satisfactory. In Uzbekistan severe restrictions have
pushed religious teaching underground. Mostly these underground schools teach traditional
forms of Islam but the result of repression has been that the state in fact has no control
over or knowledge of what is being taught. Where there is formal education, it tends to be
intellectually weak, with little discussion of contemporary issues in Islam.
The security forces are tasked with tackling Islamic extremism but
often interpret this in as broad a sense as possible. Frequently their repressive methods
create unnecessary antagonism. In Uzbekistan, in particular, mass arrests of Muslims –
many but not all members of radical political groups – have led to serious mistrust
between authorities and the population and radicalisation of those who have suffered from
a brutal police force.
In general, state responses to Islamist activity have been poorly
informed and too often reliant on heavy-handed repression. In an environment of widespread
social decline and sharp falls in living standards over the last decade, Islamism has for
some become an acceptable form of political opposition. In their fear of militant Islam,
governments have too often worked to undermine authoritative moderate voices in the
religious establishment, leaving the arguments against militant opponents to government
puppets. Not surprisingly, many Muslims are tempted to turn to groups that seem to offer a
more independent view of the government and world affairs.
For much of the population of Central Asia, Islam is not the central
factor in their lives. Secularism has gone a long way in undermining religious norms, and
the struggle to earn a living while battling with corrupt officials, closed borders and
oppressive business environments looms largest. The danger is that without open political
systems to channel discontent and with secular state structures failing to deliver
economic and political development, Islamist groups may gain greater credibility and
increasingly take over the role of opposition on a wide range of political, social and
economic issues.
It is important for the international community and especially those
states with significant strategic interests in the region, such as the U.S., to continue
to support freedom of belief for members of all religions; to maintain a sharp distinction
between groups using violence to promote Islamic ideas in politics and those accepting
democratic norms; and to maintain the argument that undifferentiated repression against
religious activism is likely to lead to more radicalisation rather than less. The
alternative is increasing identification of the West with regimes that many Muslims see as
not just secular, but actively anti-religious.
RECOMMENDATIONS
To the Government of Uzbekistan:
Undertake a wide-ranging review of legislation on religion, reforming
existing laws that violate international conventions on religious freedom and adopting new
laws that should:
permit religious education within mosques;
expand possibilities for religious education within licensed madrasas;
provide clear guidelines on registration of religious organisations and
allow appeals in courts against refusal to register religious groups; and
liberalise censorship of religious publications, providing clear
guidelines on what is not permitted and why.
Restore the credibility of the Muftiate among believers by increasing
its independence.
End primitive Soviet-style propaganda against non-traditional forms of
Islam, which often only serve to further discredit government policies and appear to many
as propaganda against Islam itself.
Accelerate amnesties for religious prisoners, end the practice of
seeking confessions before release, and provide social support for those released.
End the abuse and torture of religious prisoners, which merely creates
greater resentment in the wider community and support for radical groups.
Introduce more religious specialists into government structures dealing
with religious issues, provide training for all officials on religious affairs, and give
believers opportunities to practice their beliefs in state service.
To the Government of Kyrgyzstan:
Adopt a new law on religion, setting out the range of controls that the
government considers necessary, but balancing these against the demands for religious
freedom in the constitution and international conventions to which Kyrgyzstan is party.
Undertake a review of Islamic education aimed at:
encouraging better education for imams and other religious teachers,
particularly in city mosques;
improving education in madrasas and Islamic institutes, including by
introducing into curricula more secular subjects that will provide possible work
opportunities after graduation;
promoting more study and research into political and social issues in
Islam, focusing on contemporary issues, and modernising trends and ideas; and
developing more expertise on Islam within government structures and
training for security officials.
To the Government of Tajikistan:
Consider establishing an independent Muftiate, or appointing more
authoritative scholars to the present Council of Ulama.
Revoke unwritten bans on loudspeakers in mosques and other symbolic
restrictions on the practice of Islam.
Avoid arbitrary decisions on closure of mosques or other religious
institutions and revoke minimum population requirements for establishment of a mosque.
End low-level harassment of the Islamic Renaissance Party and permit it
to operate freely throughout the country.
To the International Community:
Consistently press Central Asian governments to respect freedom of
belief for members of all faiths and promote observance of international conventions
regarding freedom of belief and religion.
Take a firmly critical line against governments that practice torture
and other abuses of religious prisoners.
Consider widening exchange programs to include more religious figures,
with the aim of improving religious education and demonstrating freedoms of belief.
Consider funding libraries, resource centres and other programs to
provide access for people interested in religion to objective and mainstream literature
and resources.
Engage where possible with Islamic institutions to promote greater
awareness of the international community among their students and provide appropriate
assistance, for example with literature, computer technology, and language classes.
To the U.S. Government:
Declare Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan “countries of particular
concern” in the annual review of religious freedom.
Osh/Brussels, 10 July 2003
*Read the full ICG report on our website: http://www.crisisweb.org/
International Crisis Group
http://www.crisisweb.org/projects/showreport.cfm?reportid=1046
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