Turkmenistan: Niazov Challenged
Turkmenbashi is facing an unprecedented challenge from a one-time ally
Nyazik Ataeva
A savage denunciation of Turkmenistan's authoritarian regime by one of
the president's former top aides has raised speculation that a coup may be imminent
against the government of Saparmurat Niazov.
Boris Shikhmuradov, a former deputy prime minister and foreign minister
now living in exile, accused the President Niazov, known as Turkmanbashi, of running a
"primitive police state".
In a statement delivered to the press on November 1, he said
Turkmenbashi had created a "black whole wherein monstrous offenses are
perpetrated".
Lambasting the president as a dictatorial liar, Shikhmuradov, who is
currently living in Russia, said Niazov "used to talk a lot about democracy. Now we
know it was all a game, an exercise in politicking, a thin disguise for the president's
ambition to create a primitive, subservient police state".
The astonishing outburst did not go unanswered. The day after his
speech, the government published an indictment, allegedly prepared in June, charging
Shikhmuradov with embezzlement. It also put out an arrest warrant in an attempt to press
for his extradition from Russia.
Shikhmuradov, along with several other high-ranking military officials
named in the indictment, was charged with stealing government property in 1994 by the sale
of five SU-17 warplanes worth 25 million US dollars to a Russian firm. "The proceeds
of this transaction were embezzled by Boris Shikhmuradov," the prosecutor general's
indictment said.
It went on to accuse Shikhmuradov of taking part in the theft of 9,000
AK-47 submachine guns and 1,500,000 rounds of ammunition, worth 2 and a half million
dollars, later in 1994, and of illegally transporting the weapons out of Turkmenistan.
Shikhmuradov has denied the charges, which run counter to his reputation as politician of
integrity.
The former deputy prime minister fell from favour several years ago.
Demoted first to the role of deputy chairman of the cabinet, he briefly served as foreign
minister, before dropping to the relatively menial post of rector of the Institute for
Tourism and Sport.
In another career twist engineered by Turkmenbashi, who specialises in
drawing up ingenious schemes to undo his opponents, he was sent to China as ambassador, a
move that effectively terminated his career as a government official and a politician, as
the Beijing post is not considered a prestigious appointment.
At the same time, his nephew was sentenced to a long prison term in
what was widely seen as a rigged trial aimed solely at discrediting the family of the
President's former aide.
The president's motives for punishing Shikhmuradov are obscure, but he
probably resented his old ally's mild criticism of his policies and feared his popularity
might make him a dangerous rival. The public spat has raised speculation in Turkmenistan
about a coup. A change of government would satisfy certainly both Russia and the US, who
are equally concerned about Niazov's open-border policy with the Taleban regime in
Afghanistan.
Turkmen observers fear terrorists from Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda
organization may take refuge in Turkmenistan.
Turkmenistan's policy of military neutrality is an irritant to Russia,
which would like a more cooperative Turkmen leader who would allow Moscow to bolster its
business interests in the Caspian region. The fact that Shikhmuradov launched his attack
from Russia could be a sign that the Kremlin is actively promoting him as the best
candidate. Shikhmuradov - the only top politician to flee Turkmenistan for political
reasons in recent times - has followed a well-worn track into exile. Thousands of Turkmen
have forsaken their country since independence in a disastrous "brain drain" of
educated professionals. Many have moved to Sweden, where the dissident community includes
many prominent writers, cultural figures and former government executives who have had to
leave Turkmenistan and seek political asylum.
IWPR, November 9, 2001
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