|
Human Rights Watch
World Report 2000
Kyrgyzstan Chapter
|

|
Kyrgyzstan
Human Rights Developments
The year 1999 was a troubled one for Kyrgyzstan. Armed clashes with
militants in the south of the country put the region in crisis. Torture in police custody
continued, as did widespread trafficking of women into forced prostitution abroad. The
government's adoption of a flawed election law and its ongoing campaign against the
independent media continued a downward trend in respect for human rights in Kyrgyzstan. In
August, armed militants, apparently en route to Uzbekistan, clashed with Kyrgyz government
troops in the southern Batken region. On August 3, the militants took four Kyrgyz citizens
hostage in the village of Zardaly, Osh region. The militants released the hostages on
August 13following the reported payment by the government of an unspecified ransom. The
crisis escalated two days later when the Kyrgyz army, backed by Uzbek warplanes, began to
attack suspected strongholds of the militants both in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. In
response, on August 22,another group of militants, reportedly numbering between 500 and
1,000,entered Kyrgyzstan via the border with Tajikistan and took approximately twenty
persons hostage, including four Japanese geologists and a general of the Kyrgyz army,
Anarbek Shamkeev. The militants released four ethnic Kyrgyz hostages on August 31 and
reportedly demanded the release of wrongfully jailed Muslim believers held in Uzbekistan,
including thoseheld in connection with a series of bomb explosions in Uzbekistan in1999.
The Russian government agreed to consider supplying military equipment to the Kyrgyz army,
but ruled out sending troops to the region.
Victims of the crisis multiplied on August 29 when the Uzbek airforce
mistakenly bombed the village of Kara-Teyit, killing four, injuring 280,and rendering
thirty-one families homeless. As of this writing, estimated casualties from the numerous
and ongoing clashes were at least twenty government soldiers killed, with around half that
number wounded. The government claimed to have inflicted similar casualties on the
militants although that claim could not be independently verified. As of this writing, at
least nine persons were still being held hostage, although some reports suggested that
figure may be much higher. Independent human rights activist Tursunbai Akunov assumed the
role of mediator in the crisis and reported on September 10 that the hostages were alive
and well. Akunov stated that the militants were overwhelmingly ethnic Uzbek with Tajiks,
Kyrgyz, and Afghans making up the remainder.
The government's response to the crisis was indiscriminate:
InSeptember, police systematically rounded up hundreds of ethnic Uzbeks, Tajiks, and
Afghans in the city of Jala-Abad and the capital, Bishkek on the pretext of passport
checks, holding them in custody for up to two days. As of this writing, it was unclear how
many remained in custody. Local human rights groups reported that over 5,000 persons had
been displaced in the conflict and were located in government-organized camps, while on
September 9, the director of the Federal Migration Agency, Cholponkul Arabayev, put that
figure at 7,500. As of mid-October, reports stated that many internally displaced persons
had begun to return home with between 3,000 to 5,000 remaining in government camps. On
September 3, the Kyrgyz Committee for Human Rights reported that many of those displaced
complained of inadequate food and medicine in the camps and expressed fears that their
difficulties would be exacerbated by the imminent onset of winter.
The government continued to crack down on the independent media using
forcible break-ins, libel suits, and tax inspections in an attempt to silence dissent. On
the night of April 24, the Kyrgyz Committee for Human Rights reported that the premises of
the independent Bishkek newspaper, Asaba (The Standard) were broken into and information
related to members of the Ministry of National Security erased from computers. No items of
value were stolen, strongly suggesting a political motive, as opposition strengthened by
statements reportedly made by the deputy minister for national security two days prior to
the break-in, calling for information held by the newspaper on the ministry's members to
be handed over and threatening legal action if the information were published.
On February 18, the independent Bishkek newspaper Res Publica (The
Republic) published an appeal to President Akaev and other senior government officials in
which journalists and employees of the State Television and Radio Company alleged that
they had been unfairly dismissed by the head of that company, Amambek Karepkulov.
Karepkulov immediately filed a lawsuit to defend his "honor and dignity" under
article 18 of the civil code. On March 30, the Pervomaisky court in Bishkek found in
Karepkulov's favor and awarded him 200,000 som (approximately U.S.$5,000) in damages. As
of this writing, Res Publica's appeal against the decision was pending.
On August 18, the government stepped up its attack on the independent
media with a series of tax inspections on Vecherny Bishkek (The Evening Bishkek), a daily
mass-circulation independent newspaper. On August 24,tax police threatened Vecherny
Bishkek editor and majority shareholder Alexander Kim with arrest after he refused to
admit inspectors onto the newspaper's premises. Kim alleged that the newspaper was due to
undergo a tax inspection in December, a full year after the previous inspection, and that
any additional inspections contravened the Kyrgyz tax law. Kim further stated that the
multiple inspections began after the paper carried interviews with several opposition
politicians, including potential candidates in the 2000 presidential elections. In
addition to the tax inspections, local printing presses came under direct pressure from
the presidential administration not to print the paper. On September 21, Kim resigned as
editor of the newspaper, citing the tax inspections, along with internal staff
difficulties, as the reason. As of this writing, Vecherny Bishkek continued to be
published. On June 24, the government adopted a new electoral code. While containing
numerous praiseworthy clauses that safeguard the transparency of the electoral process, a
clause excluding candidates convicted of an administrative or criminal offense from
standing for public office left the code open to politically motivated abuse.
In a positive move, on December 5, President Akaev signed a decree
imposing a two-year moratorium on the death penalty. The decree was announced three days
after the declaration of an amnesty for 2,000prisoners, mostly minors, women, and those
guilty of economic crimes. The moratorium and amnesty were announced to commemorate the
fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights. On December 15, a
Bishkek court issued its ruling in the case of three ethnic Uighurs - Kurban Yasin, Kular
Dilaver, and Jalal Mahmud Kasarly - arrested in April 1998 on charges of disseminating
Wahhabi literature, inciting inter-religious hatred, terrorism, forgery, and the illegal
possession of weapons. The court sentenced Kasarly, a Turkish citizen, to fourteen years
of imprisonment for illegal possession of weapons and armed resistance to the authorities.
The court sentenced Yasin, a Chinese citizen, to time served and acquitted Dilaver, a
Turkish citizen.
E-mail, 30 March, 2000
http://www.hrw.org/wr2k/Eca-13.htm |
|
|