Tajik Youth Look To Mosque For Outlet

Farhod Hasanov has never heard of e-mail, or Facebook, or other social-networking tools teenagers in other parts of the world take for granted in this digital age.

The 17-year-old Tajik student does know what it takes to feed a family of five, however.

«I help my father cutting wood, collecting fodder for our cattle, and harvesting apricots in our backyard, because we need them all during the winter season,» Hasanov says. «If you buy them from the bazaar, it will cost a lot of money and then you would have to cut back on other things, like clothes.»

Farhod lives in the village of Tagisada in Tajikistan’s northern Isfara district, a remote village where most locals make a living by farming or working in Russia as migrant laborers.

To connect to the Internet or watch a movie at a cinema, Farhod would have to take a bus 30 kilometers to the nearest town, Isfara. But Farhod, speaking with a group of friends outside a former madrasah (Islamic religious school) in his village, says he can’t afford such hobbies.

Farhod and many of his friends used to study at the madrasah, but the authorities closed the madrasah down a few years ago amid rumors that some of its students had joined extremist groups in Afghanistan.

The move came amid growing concerns in Tajikistan that some extremist groups were seeking to take advantage of the rising influence of Islam to recruit supporters, especially among the young Tajiks. Islam is rapidly on the rise in Tajikistan, and observers note that Tajikistan’s younger generation is far more religious than their parents, who were brought up during the Soviet era.

Aside from registered religious schools like Farhod’s, the authorities have also closed down several unregistered madrasahs in recent years. A number of mosques have been raided amid suspicions that their imams were conducting unsanctioned religious lessons for children. Some imams, especially graduates of foreign madrasahs, have been accused of using mosque sermons to promote radical agendas of unsanctioned groups, such as Salafiya, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, and Hizb ut-Tahrir.

‘No Place to Socialize’

«I go to mosque because I meet other young people there,» says Farhod, who regularly attends prayers along with most of his friends — a practice they say they began at the age of six or seven.

«I don’t have anywhere else to hang out,» he explains. «Our village doesn’t have a sports center. We don’t have any stadium, or a youth club.»

Farhod and his friends say they have never been to a concert, a movie, or a sports competition, because «such things don’t exist in villages.»

It is a common problem all over the country, where some 70 percent of the population live in rural communities. Hoji Akbar Turajonzoda, Tajikistan’s former religious leader and a former deputy prime minister, says that because of the lack of alternatives «mosques have become almost the only place where villagers can socialize.»

«Mosques everywhere in Tajikistan usually have two rooms or halls — one is a prayer hall, and another room is used by villagers as a place for socializing,» Turajonzoda says. «After the prayers, older people go home, but young people stay until the midnight and even early hours to mingle, eat, or even play cards.»
Like any teenager, Farhod dreams of a better future. He says he wants to become a successful businessman or to work in a bank but is not sure if his dreams will ever materialize.

«I think I will have to go to Russia as a laborer after I finish my school next summer,» Farhod says. «I heard you have to pay bribes to get a good job or enter universities, but our family doesn’t have money for that. And I see that many people in our neighborhood go to Russia even after they graduate from universities, because they can’t find jobs.»

«There are good jobs in cities, but you need to have a good knowledge of English and computers to get them,» adds 17-year-old Amonullo Haitov, one of Farhod’s friends.

Unemployment is indeed one of the key social problems in the impoverished country, where some 60 percent of the population lives below the official poverty line. Official unemployment figures stand at 2.2 percent, but according to local experts, the real number is above 35 percent.

Future Doubts

Farhod and his friends’ lack of faith in the future is a sentiment shared by many young people in Tajikistan.

Tajik experts, especially those dealing with youth issues, say young people’s frustration with the lack of opportunities is alarming.

With some 60 percent of Tajikistan’s population of 7 million under the age of 25, the country simply can’t afford not to tackle their major problem, says Qiyomiddin Avazov, head of the youth committee of the Islamic Renaissance Party.

«Unemployment among the youth could contribute to much bigger problems in the country, including to extremism, especially when young people find themselves in a hopeless situation,» Avazov says.

«In addition to unemployment and poverty, they face a lack of political freedom,» he adds, «which doesn’t help the situation.»

«When a person is left unemployed, he becomes capable of many things; he can cause many troubles,» Avazov says. «It is true especially when the situation in the country is already volatile. Extremist elements try to target such disillusioned people.»

Tackling Unemployment?

The State Committee for Youth Affairs acknowledges the growing problem. The committee sets up job fairs every three months in major cities. It also assists some young people in finding legal employment outside the country, such as seasonal job contracts in construction and agricultural firms in Russia.

The committee has provided money for a number of athletes to travel abroad to take part in sports competitions. It also gives small grants to nongovernmental organizations that offer projects to create jobs for young people.

There are also a number of NGOs in the country — such as the Youth Development Fund in the northern city of Khujand and the Noor society in the eastern town of Shugnon — that offer free classes in English and computer basics, among others.

Unfortunately, NGOs suffer from a lack of funds, limiting the number of young people they can reach. And government job fairs usually offer a limited number of positions, which often pay meager wages.

Avazov says more needs to be done and quickly. «There are many other ways to create jobs, such as opening small and medium businesses, setting up smaller-scale factories,» he says.

Bringing Students Home

The government has recently called home some 1,500 young men studying in madrasahs in countries like Iran, Egypt, and Pakistan. The country’s top officials, including President Emomali Rahmon, have cited the risks of the students becoming «terrorists and extremists» under the influence of certain foreign groups.

Some parents of returning students are concerned about the future of their children. They had hoped that, upon return, the government would help their children find alternative places to study or work at home.

Farhod says he doesn’t want to study in foreign madrasahs but he would not mind «traveling abroad some day.»

«I watch American movies and music video clips on DVDs and want to see where they were filmed,» Farhod says. «My favorite singer is Enrique [Iglesias].»

Farhod listens to Enrique’s songs on the radio and compact disks. Digital music players haven’t reached his village yet.

Farangis Najibullah, RFE/RL

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/content/tajikistan_poverty_extremism_islam/2242717.html

Journalist accused of libel arrested in northern Tajikistan

On 23 November, the Sughd province law enforcement authorities in Asht district arrested a 50-year-old Makhmadyusuf Ismailov, correspondent of a private newspaper Nuri Zindagi (Ray of Life). The fact of arrest was publicly reported only on 13 December.
The journalist is suspected in crimes specified in Article 135 and 136 of the Tajik Criminal Code (libel and insult contained in public statements or in mass media) and Article 250 (extortion).

Observers say that Ismailov’s arrest is related to a publication in the Istiklol weekly, which reveals misconduct of law enforcement officers and the absence of justice in Ast district.

Juma Mirzo, editor of Nuri Zindagi has confirmed the fact of arrest of his correspondent. The editor says that the Ast district prosecutor sent an official letter requesting copies of all articles, which Ismailov is the author of.

http://www.fergananews.com/

RFE/RL Kazakh Journalists Win Awards for Outstanding Human Rights Reporting

Two RFE/RL journalists covering Kazakhstan have been awarded major journalism prizes by the London-based Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR) for their «outstanding coverage of human rights issues in Central Asia.»

Almaty-based Dilbegim Mavloniy earned the honor for her series of reports on a group of more than 200 Kazakh Muslims seeking asylum in the Czech Republic, which eventually prompted authorities to stop their forced deportation. And Zhasulan Kuzhekov was recognized for his reporting on a string of violent prison riots in Kazakhstan earlier this year.

Kuzhekov, who is based in Astana, reported directly from the scene of a bloody crackdown on a prison riot in Northern Kazakhstan in August in which authorities brought in troops and heavy machinery from the Kazakh army. His reporting received a huge amount of feedback from prisoners’ relatives and, according to some Kazakh human rights activists, was responsible for a softening of the tactics used by prison officials.

IWPR handed out the awards in Bishkek on December 10, corresponding to the UN’s Human Rights Day. The jury consisted of prominent human rights activists and media experts from Central Asia and the competition was conducted in partnership with the regional office of the United Nations High Commision for Human Rights (UNHCR) and the U.S. Embassy in Tajikstan.

http://www.rferl.org/content/kazakh_human_rights_reporting_iwpr/2248781.html

WikiLeaks cables paint bleak picture of Tajikistan, central Asia’s poorest state

Tajikistan is losing the battle against the flow of drugs from neighbouring Afghanistan and is characterised by «cronyism and corruption» emanating from the president downwards.
A series of leaked US diplomatic dispatches released by WikiLeaks paint a bleak picture of Central Asia’s poorest state. They note that it suffers from «earthquakes, floods, droughts, locusts and extreme weather» and is situated next to «obstructive Uzbekistan», «unstable Afghanistan» and the «rough, remote» Pamir mountains next to western China.
But Tajikistan’s worst obstacle is the country’s venal president Emomali Rahmon, diplomats say. A secret cable dated 16 February 2010, from the US embassy in Dushanbe, Tajikistan’s capital, describes how Rahmon runs the ex-Soviet republic’s economy for his own personal profit: «From the president down to the policeman on the street, government is characterized by cronyism and corruption.»
«Rahmon and his family control the country’s major businesses, including the largest bank, and they play hardball to protect their business interests, no matter the cost to the economy writ large. As one foreign ambassador summed up, President Rahmon prefers to control 90% of a ten-dollar pie, rather than 30% of a hundred-dollar pie.»
Tajikistan’s sole industrial exports are aluminium and hydroelectricity. But most of the revenues from the «technically state-owned Tajik Aluminium Company (Talco) end up in a secretive offshore company controlled by the president,» the cable states, adding dolefully: «The state budget sees little of the income.»
Tajikistan is of growing importance to the US as a military supply route for the US army in next-door Afghanistan. But attempts to stop the endless traffic of Afghan heroin in the other direction, to Europe and to Russia, have so far come to nothing, the cables say. Last year Dushanbe intercepted only 5% of the 40 tonnes of «Afghan opiates» smuggled to Russia, the cable says, noting: «Corruption is a major problem.» In addition, Tajikistan’s «largely conscript» border guards are «poorly trained, poorly paid, under-equipped and often under-fed».
In an entertaining cable the US ambassador in Tajikistan Richard E Hoagland describes a meeting with President Rahmon soon after he kicked the Russians out. Rahmon explained that Moscow had been using the border guards to orchestrate a coup against him.
Chucking away his notes, the president said the Russian special services were bent on «causing trouble in Tajikistan». «It’s coming from the Kremlin, and some of it comes from the top. We can never forget that Putin himself is a ‘chekist’ (career intelligence officer) at heart,» the president said.
During the two-and-a-half hour meeting, the president expressed gratitude to the US, arguing that it was important for the «international community to moderate what he described as Russia’s ‘worst instincts’.» The cables also reveal that Tajikistan agreed to host a US military base on its territory – in defiance of the Kremlin, which regards former Soviet central Asia as a zone of «privileged interest» and is determined to keep Washington out.
The US appears under no illusions about the Kremlin’s resistance to US encroachment in its back yard. «We believe Russia is exerting consistent and strong pressure on Tajikistan to reduce the US and western role and presence,» the embassy said in 2006.
America’s own attempts to make friends with the Russians in Tajikistan were often crudely rebuffed, the cables show. In November 2006 the US ambassador hosted a dinner. The Russian ambassador and his deputy failed to turn up, however, and the defence attache, Colonel Ivanov, left after just 10 minutes.
The one colonel who stayed, Alexei Zavizyan, «was mildly rude throughout the evening,» the ambassador recalled. His behaviour «deteriorated rapidly after Colonel Ivanov’s departure. Zavizyan made a series of sexist remarks. The dinner ended abruptly after he sunk to uttering racist slurs about African Americans».

Luke Harding, Guardian

Источник: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/dec/12/wikileaks-bleak-picture-tajikistan

Reuters offers journalism fellowships in England

Deadline:01/02/11
LocationUniversity of Oxford Oxford United KingdomSee map: Google Maps

Mid-career journalists can apply for a fellowship through the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.

Priority will be given to journalists who propose a research project within the Institute’s areas of focus. The fellowships may be three, six or nine months long.

Stipends will be provided for accommodation, food and general living costs. For more information, click here: http://ijnet.org/opportunities/71547

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/71547

Three-month fellowship in the US for international journalists

Deadline:31/01/11
World Press Institute
LocationUnited StatesSee map: Google Maps

International journalists interested in free press and democracy can apply for a U.S.-based fellowship. The program will run from mid-August to mid-October, 2011.

The fellowship provides insight into U.S. government, business, media, journalism ethics and culture. The 10 fellows will spend a month in Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota, and then travel to several U.S. cities, including New York and Washington, D.C., for briefings, interviews and visits.

Applicants must have five years of full-time experience, be employed outside the U.S., and be fluent in English.

For more information, click here: http://ijnet.org/opportunities/71446

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/71446