Interrogation of journalists in Uzbekistan raises concerns about new crackdown on press

Five journalists were summoned to the prosecutor’s office in Tashkent on Thursday for a grilling about their media activities and their sources of income. It has emerged that two other journalists received similar summonses Friday, Reporters sans Frontières (RSF) has reported.

The five journalist who were “invited” to the office of assistant prosecutor Bakhrom Nurmatov were Marina Kozlova, Sid Yanishev (also known as Said Abdurahimov), Khusnutdin Kutbetdinov, Abdumalik Babayev and Vasiliy Markov. Two of the five refused to go on the grounds that it was not a formal summons.

Nurmatov told the other three they had been summoned to “clarify the circumstances of their professional activities.” He had a file on each of them which he said contained information gathered by the national security agency and the foreign ministry.

Most of Nurmatov’s questions were about the financial support they receive from abroad, whether from foreign journalists or international organisations. He described some of their articles as “biased and tendentious” and as a “slight on the dignity of the Uzbek government.”

The two journalists who received similar summonses today were Alexey Volosevich and Andrey Kudryashov. The former was summoned on January 8, to the prosecutor’s office. The latter had a “chat” the same day with the head of media at the foreign ministry, who handles accreditation.

In both cases, the journalists were free to go after the meeting. But Uzbekistan specialists contacted by Reporters Without Borders expressed concern about the development.

“The international community, which has already made too many concessions to the Uzbek authorities, should make a concerted effort to protect the country’s few remaining independent journalists and prevent a new crackdown,” Paris-based RSF said.

“At least 10 journalists are already in prison in Uzbekistan just for doing their job and some of them are serving long sentences,” it continued. “Can one reasonably claim that the human rights situation under this dictatorship has improved? Must one sacrifice one’s principles for the sake of access to the country’s energy resources? Alternatives exist. Europe must not stop defending human rights.”

Marcus Bensmann, a freelance journalist specialising in Central Asia and Uzbekistan, saw the summonses as the start of another and final crackdown with the aim of “destroying once and for all what remains of an independent press in this county.” His view was shared by Galima Bukharbayeva, the editor of the Uznews website.

“On the basis of their relations with Europe, especially Germany, and with the United States, whose war against terrorism in Afghanistan they are supporting, the Uzbek authorities apparently consider themselves to be in a position of strength,” Bensmann said. “It is unlikely that they are going to be inclined to show tolerance towards journalists and human rights activists.”

Speaking on condition of anonymity, a journalist employed in Uzbekistan by a foreign news organisation told RSF, “The authorities intend to use the need to have accreditation to exercise the closest possible control over the remaining independent journalists.”

Under Uzbek legislation, the employees of foreign news media are required to obtain accreditation from the foreign ministry. At the same time, since 2005 and the ruthless suppression of an uprising in the eastern city of Andijan, the foreign ministry has been withdrawing the accreditation of leading international news media such as the BBC and Reuters, whose representatives have been forced to leave the country.

Free expression and press freedom are constantly violated in Uzbekistan, and a new crackdown would decimate the country’s already embattled journalistic community. At least 10 journalists including Solidzhon Abdurakhmanov, Jamshid Karimov and Sayid Dilmurod and the writer Yusuf Juma are currently imprisoned in Uzbekistan. Photographer and documentary-maker Umida Akhmedova is also being targeted by the judicial authorities.

Despite Uzbekistan’s disastrous human rights record, the last of the sanctions (an embargo on arms sales) imposed on President Islam Karimov’s autocratic regime after the 2005 bloodshed in Andijan was lifted by the European Union on October 27.

 
 
Date Posted: 8 January 2010 Last Modified: 8 January 2010