Online TV Station In Kazakhstan Ordered To Stop Using Antennas

ALMATY — An Almaty court has ruled that the independent online television company Stan-TV must stop using the antennas on the roof of its Almaty offices, RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service reports.

The Almaty-based nongovernmental organization Adil Soz responded to the ruling with a statement saying the court’s decision imposes limitations on the station’s professional activities.

The court’s ruling was based on a statement by the Almaty city Health Office that the antennas and equipment of the Internet providers ASTEL and Digital TV pose a threat to the residents of nearby buildings.

On August 23, Stan-TV editors Elina Zhdanova and Baurzhan Musirov told journalists that the company had been subjected to intrusive inspections because of its independent news coverage.

They said their offices were inspected without prior notice in mid-August by Almaty’s architecture and construction control, fire-safety control, and hygiene control agencies.

The inspectors told them the inspections were undertaken in response to written complaints from residents of nearby apartment blocks about the large antennas mounted on the roof of Stan-TV’s office. The inspectors said the residents complained that the antennas are affecting their health.

Zhdanova and Musirov said they subsequently met with some of those residents, who told them police had pressured them to write letters of complaint.

Stan-TV is funded by fugitive Kazakh businessman Mukhtar Ablyazov, who lives in self-imposed exile in England.

The station — which covers Central Asia in video reports posted on its website — often publishes video reports critical of the Kazakh government and some of its officials.

http://www.nansmit.tj/admin/eng/?data=news&act=add

As Tajikistan Celebrates Its Independence, Let’s Recall What The President Won’t

The five Central Asian states are marking 20 years of independence this year. The leaders of the five will use their independence days to speak of the great accomplishments they’ve made since the collapse of the Soviet Union — some genuine and some exaggerated.

But there are some events and names the presidents won’t be mentioning in the speeches, and I thought for the sake of balance I’d recall some of them.

Tajikistan celebrates 20 years of independence on September 9. President Emomali Rahmon, formerly Rakhmonov (explanation below), will undoubtedly be standing in Dushanbe, near the world’s biggest flagpole, flying the country’s flag, to recount Tajikistan’s achievements since 1991.

Unfortunately for Tajikistan and its citizens, the first 10 years were a period of intense violence and suffering, starting with the 1992-97 civil war.

Rahmon will probably not wish to recall that he became head of state after the country had three presidents between September 1991 and November 1992.
And Rahmon won’t want to remind Tajikistan’s people that leaders of the Popular Front — paramilitary groups essentially serving warlords — selected him to be speaker of parliament (effectively head of state at that time) at a meeting at the Urukhojayev state farm in Khujand in early November 1992. One Popular Front leader would later say that Rahmon, who had been the chairman of the Kulob provincial council, was only chosen because the group agreed he would be easy to dispense with once he had served his purpose.

With presidential elections due in 2013, this Independence Day is probably not the correct time to remember the 1994 election for the newly recreated post of president, when Rahmon won 60 percent of the vote and his opponent — Abdumalik Abdullojonov — won 35 percent, the closest presidential election in post-Soviet Central Asia’s history. And observers said the poll was rigged in Rahmon’s favor.

Rahmon is unlikely to mention the 1999 presidential election, either. For the first presidential election held after the end of the civil war, the OSCE, UN, and a number of individual countries made great efforts to help Tajikistan hold a poll that would restore the people’s confidence in government and put the civil-war days far behind. Instead, all three of Rahmon’s contenders withdrew less than one month before election day. In the end, Davlat Usmon of the Islamic Renaissance Party appeared on the ballot but said in interviews on election day that he was not a candidate.

The Tajik president will not speak of Dodojon Atavullo, a leading critic and the editor of the newspaper «Charoghi Ruz,» which was banned in Tajikistan. He’s been living in Moscow trying to organize the Tajik diaspora into an opposition movement.

Nor will Rahmon bring up the name Mahmud Khudaiberdiyev, the renegade colonel of the Tajik Army’s First Brigade who tried overthrow Rahmon — twice. Absent from Rahmon’s Independence Day speech will be any reference to First Brigade’s battle with the Eleventh Brigade in late 1995 and early 1996. Khudaiberdiyev defied Rahmon’s orders not to attack another army unit and after he achieved victory over the Eleventh Brigade Khudaiberdiyev was made deputy commander of the presidential guard.

There won’t be time for Rahmon to name any of the more than 100,000 people who were killed during the civil war or in the shaky reconciliation process that followed. But here are some names that should be remembered:

— UN observer Austrian Lieutenant Wolf Sponner, killed investigating a clash between the 1st and 11th brigades in September 1995.

— BBC journalist Muhiddin Olimpour, murdered in December 1995.

— ORT correspondent Viktor Nikulin, killed in March 1996.

— Tajikistan’s chief Mufti Fatkhullo Sharifzoda, shot dead along with three members of his family and a religious student in January 1996.

— Otakhon Latifi, a journalist by profession and former «Pravda» correspondent who became a leader of the democratic wing of the United Tajik Opposition, the group fighting Rahmon’s government, and later a leader in the reconciliation commission, shot dead outside his home in September 1998.

— French aid worker Karen Main, captured by a criminal group and killed in an attempted rescue in November 1997.

— UN military observers Richard Shevchuk of Poland, Adolfo Sherpegi of Uruguay, Yukata Akino of Japan, and driver-translator Jurajon Mahramov, stopped by gunmen on a remote mountain road and shot dead in July 1998.

Actually, no one in Tajikistan wants to remember those days.

Rahmon should thank international organizations and individual countries for providing aid to Tajikistan throughout the last 20 years.

But he won’t bring up the time in 2003 when the International Monetary Fund (IMF) discovered Tajikistan had obtained three loans worth $31.63 million based on false information. Or the time in early 2008 when the IMF said Tajikistan’s central bank provided misleading information about the country’s finances to receive $47.8 million in loans.

Rahmon won’t need to tell anyone in Tajikistan that in April 2007 he officially removed the Russian «-ov» from his name and became not Rakhmonov but Rahmon. But the Tajik president might not have noticed the slight alteration changed him into a moral and style guide.

He was President «Rahmon» for less than one week when he banned miniskirts and veils for female students. Before the end of that month he made clear he didn’t want Tajikistan’s citizens spending money on extravagant weddings or funerals. At the end of 2007 he said he didn’t like vehicles with steering wheels on the right-hand side. In 2008, students at the country’s Islamic university were prohibited from having beards and required to wear neckties on campus.

Lip-singing or recorded accompanying music were banned from live performances in May 2008.

And recently, minors have been banned from attending mosques and parents are legally responsible for ensuring their children do not cause any problems.

Modesty will prevent Rahmon from recalling he personally went to bandit country in eastern Tajikistan (Obigarm) in February 1997 to negotiate the release of hostages (UN workers, Russian journalists, a Red Cross worker and his security minister).

One thing sure to go unmentioned will be the «flag incident» of August 30. With great pomp and ceremony, the sort Rahmon prohibited his people from indulging in at weddings and funerals, a large flag was raised up the world’s biggest flagpole, in Dushanbe. The problem was that the flag did not unfurl properly, putting a damper on an otherwise spectacular event. Several people found themselves in a great deal of trouble for that.

Visit «Chaikhana» before Turkmenistan marks its 20th anniversary of independence on October 27. You won’t want to miss memories of Turkmenbashi and life under «Arkadag.»

Bruce Pannier, RFE/RL

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/content/tajikistan_independence_celebrations_rahmon_history/24322679.html

Activists At Uzbek Embassy In Bishkek Support Uzbek Journalist

BISHKEK — Dozens of activists picketed the Uzbek Embassy in Bishkek today in support of Uzbek journalist Yelena Bondar, RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz Service reports.

One of the organizers of the picket, Ulugbek Babakulov, told RFE/RL that Bondar was arrested at Tashkent airport on August 22 on her return from Bishkek, where she had attended journalism seminars organized by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and the German international broadcaster Deutsche Welle.

The protesters signed a petition addressed to Uzbekistan’s Prosecutor-General Rashidjon Kadyrov urging him personally to look into Bondar’s case.

Bondar was briefly detained and fined for bringing in undeclared goods that included CDs and memory sticks, which were confiscated and are now being analyzed by the state Information and Communications Agency.

No Uzbek Embassy official met with the protesters.

Kadyrov said the petition will therefore be sent to the Uzbek authorities by regular mail and via the Internet.

http://www.rferl.org/content/uzbekistan_journalist_arrest/24315808.html

Joint Statement by Reporters Without Borders & NANSMIT on the case of Ismoilov

His Excellency Emomali Rakhmon
President of Tajikistan
Address: Rudaki Ave. 80
Dushanbe, Republic of Tajikistan
Email : mail@president.tj

Paris, Dushanbe, 7 September 2011

Your Excellency, President Emomali Rakhmon,

The international press freedom organization Reporters Without Borders and the National Association of Independent Mass Media in Tajikistan (NANSMIT) would like to share with you their relief at BBC correspondent Urunboy Usmonov’s recent provisional release. We also would like to thank you if it was because of your intervention. We will be following his trial closely.

On the eve of the International Day of Solidarity with Journalists, we want to draw your attention to the case of Makhmadyusuf Ismoilov, a journalist detained in the northern province of Sughd since 23 November 201, whose case has similarities with Mr. Usmonov’s. As guarantor of your country’s Constitution and the international conventions it has ratified, we urge you to do everything in your power to ensure respect for the presumption of innocence and a fair trial for Mr. Ismoilov.

Mr. Ismoilov is charged with inciting religious and racial hatred (Article 189 of Tajikistan’s Criminal Code), blackmailing (Article 250), defamation (Article 135) and insult (Article 136) for what he wrote in various publications including the newspaper Nuri Zindagi about alleged corruption among representatives of local judicial bodies and certain local officials.

We therefore urge you to intercede with the judicial authorities, within the limits of your powers under to constitution, so that an additional investigation can be conducted and so that Mr. Ismoilov’s trial can be transferred to a different location such as Dushanbe and can be heard by a court that is not directly involved.

In order to respect the principle of the presumption of innocence, Mr. Ismoilov must also be granted provisional release without delay. Pre-trial detention is a serious measure that seems out of all proportion in this case. He is not in a position to put pressure on witnesses or eliminate evidence. Depriving Mr. Ismoilov of his freedom seems more like an act of personal revenge than an act of impartial justice.

We hope that you, as the President and guarantor of constitutional rights of Tajik citizens, will make sure that Mr. Ismoilov is treated in a fair and equitable manner and that national and international rules of justice are respected. We trust that you will appreciate the importace of our request and will take an appropriate action.

Sincerely,

Jean-François Julliard Nuriddin Karshiboev
Reporters Without Borders Secretary-General NANSMIT Chairman

www.nansmit.tj

Uzbekistan Deports Retired Tajik Journalist

DUSHANBE — A retired Tajik journalist says he has been deported from Uzbekistan on spurious grounds, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reports.

Hamid Atakhanov, 70, told RFE/RL on September 5 that on August 20 he was invited to the prosecutor’s office in the central Uzbek city of Bukhara where he was told he is being deported from the country.

Atakhanov said the official explanation was that he is accused of igniting hatred between Tajiks and Uzbeks and also because he is active on environmental issues.

Atakhanov said the prosecutor showed him two letters sent by residents of Bukhara that led them to decide he must be deported. He said prosecutors did not give him enough time even to say goodbye to his family.

Atakhanov worked as a journalist for several different Tajik newspapers and for the Russian daily «Izvestiya.» He lived for a number of years in Russia before moving to Bukhara in 2003 to take care of his ill wife.

Nuriddin Qarshiboev, the head of Tajikistan’s National Association of Independent Journalists, said his organization has found a temporary home in Tajikistan for Atakhanov and is trying to find a job for him.

Atakhanov said he is going to ask human right organizations to help him get permission to return to Uzbekistan and care for his wife.

http://www.rferl.org/content/uzbekistan_deports_retired_tajik_journalist/24318936.html

Tajik Journalist Accepts Assailants’ Apologies

DUSHANBE — A Tajik newspaper editor who was attacked on his way to an end of Ramadan celebration says that he has met and forgiven his assailants, RFE/RL’s Tajik Service reports.

Khurshed Atovullo, editor of the independent weekly «Farazh,» said he was driving to a friend’s home in Dushanbe on August 31 when a car blocked the road and forced him to stop.

Three people armed with clubs then attacked Atovullo, his brother, and his brother-in-law, who were with him.

Atovullo said he saw the license-plate number of the assailants’ car and police immediately tracked them down.

Avatullo said he met with them and their parents after police on September 2 invited him to the police station.

He said his attackers are teenagers and that their parents asked him to forgive them.

He said on September 5 he accepted their apologies, adding that the assault was not related to his work.

http://www.rferl.org/content/tajik_journalist_firgives_attackers/24318565.html

Treatment Of Journalists In Uzbekistan Follows Familiar Pattern

Another journalist has come under pressure by the authorities in Tashkent, in a fashion that has become familiar to independent reporters who dare overstep boundaries set by officials.

Yelena Bondar, a 23-year-old freelance journalist and Uzbek citizen, faces misdemeanor charges of failing to fully declare goods upon her arrival at Tashkent’s international airport.

The airport’s customs department issued the following statement:

«During the search of Elena Bondar’s hand luggage, the following items were found that were not declared by her on the customs’ declaration form and also during verbal questioning: 3 DVDs, a compact disc, 4 memory sticks and 2 videocassettes.»

Bondar was briefly detained at the airport on August 22 upon her return from Bishkek, where she attended a journalism course organized for young Central Asian reporters by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the German international broadcaster Deutsche Welle.

The journalist told local media that she was held for some four hours, during which border guards, customs officers, and other officials searched her luggage and confiscated the discs and memory sticks.

Bondar said she believes officials at the airport knew of her return from Bishkek and «were prepared» to find a pretext for detaining and questioning her.

A few days later, Bondar was summoned by officials, who questioned the reporter about her trip to Bishkek and the content of the 10-week journalism course.

«They asked whether we were taught how to organize velvet revolutions,» the journalist told ferghana.ru, an independent news site.

Bondar said she was asked to sign a pledge that she would not leave the country and was told that the content of information in the discs and memory cards was being analyzed by «experts.»

Bondar has said the information consists of several articles from regional papers, a draft of a video report on art, and a few photos taken in Bishkek.

The charge of failing to declare goods to customs officials carries a financial penalty, but this is not the main concern of Bondar and free-media advocates in Central Asia.

The way Bondar was detained, as well as the charges, are all too familiar to Uzbek journalists.

Umida Niyazova, an independent reporter, was questioned in a similar fashion at Tashkent airport in 2006 and accused of failing to declare her portable computer. Niyazova, too, was returning from an OSCE-sponsored seminar for Central Asian journalists in Bishkek.

She was subsequently sentenced to seven years in prison on charges of illegally entering the country, carrying contraband, and fostering unrest with the help of foreign funding. One week later, an appeals court upheld the verdict but suspended the sentence and she was released.

Last year, Umida Ahmedova, an Uzbek photographer and documentary filmmaker, had the content of her work «analyzed.»

Ahmedova was found guilty of slandering and insulting the Uzbek people for her depiction of the lives of ordinary people in Uzbekistan. Ahmedova, who faced up to three years’ imprisonment for the conviction, was granted amnesty.

Engaging in independent journalism comes at a high price in Uzbekistan, where the government has tightened its grip on the media, especially after its bloody response to the 2005 popular uprising in the eastern city of Andijon.

The situation led many leading Uzbek journalists, including Galima Bukharbaeva and Natalya Bushueva, to leave the country. Journalist Jamshid Karimov — a nephew of Uzbek President Islam Karimov — was placed in a psychiatric clinic for criticizing government policies.

The list of journalists persecuted by Uzbek authorities is long, and expanding.

The government has closed down the offices of international media organizations in Tashkent, including the BBC, Voice of America, and RFE/RL’s Uzbek Service, among others.

Ferghana.ru, a news agency that employed Elena Bondar as a freelance contributor during her student years, has expressed concern over the authorities’ handling of Bondar.

Farangis Najibullah, RFE/RL

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/

Activists At Uzbek Embassy In Bishkek Support Uzbek Journalist

BISHKEK — Dozens of activists picketed the Uzbek Embassy in Bishkek today in support of Uzbek journalist Yelena Bondar, RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz Service reports.

One of the organizers of the picket, Ulugbek Babakulov, told RFE/RL that Bondar was arrested at Tashkent airport on August 22 on her return from Bishkek, where she had attended journalism seminars organized by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and the German international broadcaster Deutsche Welle.

The protesters signed a petition addressed to Uzbekistan’s Prosecutor-General Rashidjon Kadyrov urging him personally to look into Bondar’s case.

Bondar was briefly detained and fined for bringing in undeclared goods that included CDs and memory sticks, which were confiscated and are now being analyzed by the state Information and Communications Agency.

No Uzbek Embassy official met with the protesters.

Kadyrov said the petition will therefore be sent to the Uzbek authorities by regular mail and via the Internet.

http://www.rferl.org/content/uzbekistan_journalist_arrest/24315808.html

UJT, NANSMIT, HRB — Joint Statement

Union of Journalists of Tajikistan
National Association of Independent Mass Media, Tajikistan
Bureau on Human Rights and Rule of Law

Joint Statement

The Union of Journalists of Tajikistan, the Tajik National Association of Independent Mass Media and the non-governmental organization Bureau on Human Rights and Rule of Law condemn the beating of Khurshed Niyozov (Khurshedi Atovullo), chief editor of the Farazh weekly by unknown assailants. This is the second attack upon Tajik journalists during this year, which raises serious concerns over physical safety among media professionals. IN February 2011, chief editor of the Najot weekly Khikmatullo Saifullozoda was beaten by unknown attackers.

On 31 August, approximately at 12:30 p.m., on the territory of Zaravshon district in Dushanbe, chief editor of the newspaper Farazh and secretary general of the Tajik media alliance Khurshed Niyozov was attacked by unknown persons. Two other persons accompanying the journalist also were attacked. Niyozov and his companions applied to the police in Sino district of the capital.

It would be inappropriate to state that the attack is related to Niyzov’s professional activities. However, the attack on any citizen of Tajikistan on the eve of the 20-th anniversary of the national independence upon the background of court hearings against the Tajik media raises a real concern among media professionals.

UJT, NANSMIT and HRB insist on a prompt and thorough investigation of the incident and bringing the criminals to responsibility. We stress that Khurshed Niyozov (Khurshedi Atovullo) is one of the leading Tajik journalists. Advocating resolution of any conflicts in the media environment within the frameworks of international and domestic laws, we also stress the necessity of guarantying safety of Tajik nationals by the law enforcement agencies – since personal physical safety is a fundamental constitutional right, as well as the right on free expression.

Akbarali Sattarov,
Chairman of UJT

Nargis Zokirova
Director of HRB

Nuriddin Karshiboev
Chairman of NANSMIT

Dushanbe, 1 September 2011

www.nansmit.tj