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NANSMIT promotes media reforms in Tajikistan

The National Association of Independent Mass Media (NANSMIT) supports the reforms in the media. Democratic alterations require equal conditions and opportunities for healthy competition amongst the media with different forms of property, which leads to pluralism in the society.

In October 2010, the Tajik parliamentarian Davlatali Davlatzoda suggested to reduce allocations from the national budget for financing of the government newspapers. The parliamentarian considers that many ministries and government institutions continue to print their own outlets, which do not play any essential role in the information environment, while the government keeps subsidizing them spending big amounts from the national budget.

Parliamentarians promised to consider the practicability of further financing of the government newspapers in the process of budget drafting for 2012, as well as the feasibility of financial support to the media and public organizations.

Russian lawmakers are working on a draft law to abolish the compulsory support to the government and municipal media; at the same time, the law establishes other ways of supporting and promoting independent and interesting periodicals.

Experts of NANSMIT consider that many official newspapers are not interesting for the audience; they publish boring tables and reports misspending the money from the national budget. In distinction from the government periodicals, the private media cover the most topical subjects and developments while facing big challenges and financial difficulties. Besides that, the authorities on different levels practice the so-called “voluntary-forced” subscription in order to artificially support particular official periodicals.

In our opinion, at the current stage of development, Tajikistan badly needs new and pluralistic media, as well as new broadcasting structures.

NANSMIT expresses its readiness to working with the government and the parliament in the area of media reforms.

NANSMIT

THE U.S. EMBASSY IN DUSHANBE REQUESTS PROJECT PROPOSALS FOR THE 2011 DEMOCRACY COMMISSION SMALL GRANTS PROGRAM

SUBMISSION DEADLINE: January 28, 2011

The U.S. Embassy in Dushanbe announces a request for proposals under the 2011 Democracy Commission Small Grants Program. The purpose of the program is to award small grants for specific projects that support the development of democratic institutions in Tajikistan. Primarily, grants will be awarded to non-governmental, non-profit organizations (NGOs). The amount of a grant must not be more than $50,000 (USD), but the Commission will give priority to applications that implement similar projects with lower budgets. To be eligible for consideration, every applicant must be engaged in or carry out a project the purpose of which is to promote the development of democratic institutions in Tajikistan. The Democracy Commission Small Grants Program has existed in Tajikistan since 2001.

The U.S. Embassy in Dushanbe will accept proposals for consideration by the Democracy Commission Small Grants Program for the following themes:

— Fostering a strong and independent media (media management);
— Increasing environmental and/or climate change awareness;

Proposals should contain clearly formulated goals and target groups, and show the ability of the applying organization to carry out the project. Proposals should be submitted in English only to:

U.S. Embassy, Public Affairs Section
109 A Ismoili Somoni Avenue
Dushanbe, Tajikistan
Tel: (992 37) 229 2315, 229 2000, fax: (992 37) 229 2050
Email: GrantProposalsDushanbe@state.gov
Contact person: Sherzod Abdujabborov

Note: Projects with a computer based English translation will not be accepted.

The U.S. Embassy’s Democracy Commission Grant Program is limited to organizations based in Tajikistan. Projects NOT funded by the U.S. Embassy Democracy Commission Program include those requested by non-Tajikistani organizations, those relating to partisan political activity, charitable activity and humanitarian aid, fund-raising campaigns, commercial projects, those involving individuals not affiliated with an organization that can provide long-term sustainability to the project, and those that duplicate existing projects.

Grant application forms are available on our web site http://dushanbe.usembassy.gov/demcom.html They can also be obtained from the U.S. Embassy in Dushanbe via the email noted above. If you have additional questions or need consultation on your project proposal please contact the Public Affairs Section of the U.S. Embassy at the numbers above on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 9:30 to 12:00

http://dushanbe.usembassy.gov/

Threat to Open Data withdrawn by French Parliament

Madrid/Paris, 20 December 2010 – Access Info Europe and Regards Citoyens welcomed the withdrawal on 16 December 2010 of a proposed amendment to France’s security and access to information laws which would have required background behaviour checks on users of government information.

The proposed amendment was significantly changed in the French parliament on Thursday 16 December following an international campaign by 35 organisations and experts from 25 countries which had raised concerns that the new law would seriously constrain both access to information and freedom of expression. Read the campaign letter(here).

As a result, multiple members of parliament from all political groups proposed either to change the dangerous amendment or to withdraw it. The version eventually adopted no longer refers to France’s access to information law and only requires “morality” checks on users of the national database of car number plates.

“Some could still argue that having such personal data accessible for commercial marketing purposes is unacceptable, but that will be up to the Senate to discuss in a couple months. Today the threat to open public data has been withdrawn,” said Benjamin Ooghe-Tabanou, co-founder of Regards Citoyens.
“The immediate danger for the right to information has passed,” commented Helen Darbishire of Access Info Europe, “but there remains a concern that a special legal regime has been adopted to give a handful of businesses privileged access to personal data.”

Access Info and Regards Citoyens noted with concern that other measures adopted by the French parliament include administrative filtering of internet content without judicial oversight, something human rights organisations fear will lead to censorship of the internet.Read more here.

The two civil society organisations today called on the French government to focus on a broader initiative to open up public sector information for all users. They noted that this is happening in many leading democracies – such as Australia, Denmark, New Zealand, Norway, the United Kingdom and the United States – which are posting large volumes of raw public data online with no preconditions on who may use it or how. This is done in recognition of the significant social and economic benefits that such transparency brings, including promoting participation in decision-making and permitting development of applications that benefit society as a whole.

Notes for Editors:

1. Access Info Europe is a human rights organisation head-quartered in Madrid which promotes the right of access to information and open government data in Europe. Access Info Europe believes that more public information means better participation in and greater accountability of public bodies.
2. Regards Citoyens is a civic association which promotes the opening of public data to secure greater transparency of democratic institutions in France.
3. Information about the amendment finally adopted can be found (in French) on the websiteNosdeputes.fr
4. Examples of online portals for accessing public data include www.data.gov , www.data.gov.uk , www.data.gov.au , www.data.gov.nz.

For more information – in English or French — please contact:
Victoria Anderica, Access Info Europe, victoria access-info.org
Office phone: +34 91 366 5344
Mobile: +34 606 592 976
Helen Darbishire, Access Info Europe (www.access-info.org)
helen access-info.org, mobile: +34 667 685 319

www.access-info.org

Funding available for efforts to safeguard journalists’ rights

Deadline:31/01/11
Media Legal Defence Initiative (MLDI)

The Media Legal Defence Initiative (MLDI) is accepting proposals from organizations and groups who seek funding for legal assistance or litigation activities that safeguard or advance media freedom.

MLDI exists to help journalists and media outlets defend their rights. It provides financial assistance to pay legal fees, help to access free legal advice and take cases to international courts and supervisory bodies. MLDI also works to strengthen the capacity of lawyers to defend media rights by supporting education, networking, exchange of information and cooperation among legal professionals working to defend media freedom.

Application form and guidelines are available at www.mediadefence.org. For questions, contact info@mediadefence.org, using the reference “December 2010 call for proposals.»

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/71655

Crisis-reporting grant available

Deadline:01/02/11
Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting

Journalists interested in crisis reporting can apply for a US$7,500 travel grant. Applicants should live outside the U.S.

The Persephone Miel Fellowship will fund a reporting project that focuses on a global crisis under-reported in the mainstream American media.

The grant is designed to help a non-native English speaking journalist reach an international audience. For more information, click here: http://pulitzercenter.org/persephone-miel-fellowship

http://ijnet.org/opportunities/71296

Independent journalist arrested on defamation, insult charges

New York, December 16, 2010—The Committee to Protect Journalists today denounced the imprisonment in northern Tajikistan of Makhmadyusuf Ismoilov, a reporter with the Dushanbe-based independent weekly Nuri Zindagi. Ismoilov was arrested in Sogd region on November 23, but the regional press first reported on the case on Monday. Ismoilov is currently being held in a pretrial facility in the city of Khujand, according to the local press.
The Dushanbe-based National Association of Independent Media of Tajikistan said Ismoilov was criminally charged with defamation and insult through the media (two separate counts). If convicted, Ismoilov faces up to two and a half years in prison. Authorities have not named a plaintiff in the indictment.

Nuriddin Karshiboyev, the media association’s director, told CPJ he believes Ismoilov was arrested in retaliation for his reporting. Ismoilov consistently criticized the regional government, law enforcement agencies, and the judiciary for alleged mismanagement, poor social and economic policies, and abuse of power, Karshiboyev told CPJ. According to Karshiboyev and local press reports, regional prosecutors asked Nuri Zindagi to provide them with all the articles Ismoilov had written for the weekly since he joined the newspaper in 2008.

“We call on Tajik authorities to drop all these politicized charges against Makhmadyusuf Ismoilov and release him at once,” CPJ Europe and Central Asia Program Coordinator Nina Ognianova said. “Tajikistan must decriminalize its defamation and insult laws in order to bring itself in line with international norms for press freedom.”

Karshiboyev told CPJ that he has studied Ismoilov’s publications in detail and has not found any instances of insult or defamation.

CPJ is a New York–based, independent, nonprofit organization that works to safeguard press freedom worldwide. For more information, visit www.cpj.org.

Muzaffar Suleymanov
Research Associate, Europe and Central Asia
Committee to Protect Journalists
Phone: 212.465.1004 (x101)
Fax: 212.465.9568
E-mail: msuleymanov@cpj.org
Web: www.cpj.org

www.cpj.org

The Deep Roots Of Nepotism In Central Asia

All five post-Soviet Central Asian states are characterized by rampant nepotism, which has arguably become the main obstacle hampering their economic and political development. Kyrgyzstan’s two post-Soviet leaders — Askar Akaev and Kurmanbek Bakiev — were both undone by the favoritism they showed their children and close relatives, a lesson that should not be lost on the heads of Kyrgyzstan’s neighbors.

Bakiev, who was ousted as president in April, appointed his son and brothers to high state positions. His son, Maksim, and his brother, Janysh, in fact, became some of the most influential political figures in the country. Leading opposition figure Azimbek Beknazarov went so far in 2007 as to say that Janysh and Maksim were actually running Kyrgyzstan. While politician Omurbek Tekebaev said Kyrgyzstan had established a system of medieval nepotism in which power is distributed solely on the basis of consanguinity.

Nepotism became a great danger for Kyrgyzstan, menacing its very integrity whenever the clans that emerged around Maksim and Janysh found themselves at odds over some prize or other.

Between them, they pretty well divided Kyrgyzstan into fiefdoms. Maksim, dubbed «The Prince,» controlled key businesses, including the gems of the banking system, the media, and the financial sector. Janysh was originally the deputy head of the National Security Service. Later he headed the State Protection Service, which provides security for the president, government officials, members of parliament, and the justices of the Supreme Court and Constitutional Court. In fact, he controlled all the country’s law enforcement organs, including the prosecutor’s office, the criminal investigations units, and the judiciary.

Two more presidential brothers — Marat and Adil — were ensconced in Kyrgyz embassies abroad. One is ambassador to Germany, while the other is a senior official in the embassy in Beijing.

Another brother, Kanybek, headed a village administration, while another, Akhmat, is a successful businessman and the «unofficial governor» of the family’s native Jalalabad Oblast. Another brother, Jusupbek, served as deputy director of Kyrgyzstan’s Agency for Community Development and Investment before his death in early 2006.

The End Of An Era

But this corrupt system ended in a bloody uprising in which 87 people were killed by gunfire from state security agents. I doubt Kurmanbek Bakiev foresaw the dangerous, deadly dynamic he was unleashing when he named his son to the second-highest position in a rigid vertical of power.

And how could he? Having surrounded himself with sons, brothers, and other relatives, Bakiev had no reliable circle of politicians and professionals to advise him. The political allies who helped him oust Akaev all abandoned him. Gradually, his only thought came to be how to hold on to the position his whole clan relied on despite the country’s increasingly unstable, untenable political environment. The logic of this system became fatally self-perpetuating; as his political companions abandoned him, he became increasingly dependent on his network of powerful family members.

Looking back at Akaev’s presidency, it is clear that his wife was really calling the shots. Mairam Akaeva made most key personnel decisions. A graduate of Leningrad State University, she was a professor of mechanics and president of the Meerim charity foundation. All businesspeople or officials who sought her favor would transfer funds to the foundation. After Akaev was ousted, prosecutors began looking into several cases in which state ministries allegedly illegally transferred budget funds to Meerim.

Experts have estimated that as much as 20 percent of Kyrgyzstan’s GDP ended up in the pockets of Akaev’s family and close allies. Mairam and Akaev’s son, Aidar, were notorious for «selling» state posts. In 2006, prosecutors opened and investigated 106 criminal cases connected to Akaev’s relatives or members of his inner circle.

Akaev and his wife used to say, «all the riches we have are our books and paintings.» But in reality, his children and relatives impudently seized everything in Kyrgyzstan that glittered. Akaev installed his daughter, Bermet, as a parliament deputy and his son, Aidar, as adviser to the finance minister and parliament deputy. When both Bermet and Aidar ran for parliament in 2005, there was impudent falsification on their behalf and in favor of other members of the pro-presidential Alga Kyrgyzstan party.

But it was Akaev’s son-in-law, Adil Tojgonbaev (a Kazakh citizen and the husband of Bermet), who was the most irritating. Some journalists estimated that Tojgonbaev oversaw virtually every profitable industry in Kyrgyzstan, controlling in particular the market for alcohol. He also purportedly owned several broadcasting companies and several popular newspapers, including «Evening Bishkek.»

Ultimately, five criminal cases were initiated against him, accusing him of causing damages in the amount of $18.8 million. But Astana refused to extradite him and now he lives peacefully in Kazakhstan. He and Bermet are divorced.

The fact that Bakiev so closely followed the doomed path of his predecessor demonstrates the deep roots that corruption and nepotism have in Central Asia.

Beyond Kyrgyzstan

Across the region, family is a crucial social institution and interpersonal ties among even extended-family members are exceptionally strong. Family connections are often tied to financial support and trust among family members is far higher than levels of trust in society generally. Several generations of a family will often live together, and elders are treated with noteworthy respect. Children are taught from the beginning to rely on their families.

That’s why, despite the obvious negative examples from Kyrgyzstan showing that nepotism and the corruption it engenders are key drivers of popular discontent, other Central Asian leaders continue to practice and defend similar systems.

Suhrob Sharipov, head of the presidential Strategic Research Center in Tajikistan, told Asia-Plus that President Imomali Rahmon has the right to appoint relatives to senior posts if he judges them qualified.

«Family links have always been used and will always be used in Tajikistan,» Sharipov said. «We have such a mentality that relatives try to be close to each other. Family links will always be used in our country by everyone, no matter who is in power.»

He argued that the main reason nepotism is less prevalent in Western democracies is because families often live scattered far apart.

As might be expected from Sharipov’s analysis, several of Rahmon’s children already occupy high-level post. Twenty-three-year old son Rustam has been enjoying a meteoric rise in Tajik politics and is widely viewed as a possible presidential successor. Daughter Tahmina is believed to be a cofounder of several trading networks and of the Development Bank of Tajikistan. Hasan Sadulloev, the brother of Rahmon’s wife, is chairman of the board of the country’s largest bank, Orienbanka. He owns dozens of factories, real-estate companies, a network of restaurants, and several mass-media outlets.

In Uzbekistan, the alleged U.S. diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks recently describe President Islam Karimov’s daughter, Gulnara, as «the most hated person in the country.» According to the U.S. diplomats in those texts, she «bites off a slice» of every profitable business in the country and has earned the nickname «the queen of thieves.» Gulnara has long lived in Geneva, where her Zeromax holding company is registered. She also spends considerable time in Spain.

Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbaev once joked that «my salary as president is very small, so my children are helping me.» According to «Forbes» magazine, Nazarbaev’s daughter, Dinara, and her husband, Timur Kulibaev, are among the world’s billionaires.

In 2007, Kulibaev bought a private residence from a member of the British royal family for 15 million pounds, about 25 percent more than the market price of the property, according to Britain’s «Daily Telegraph.» The Kazakh newspaper «Republic» has reported that Dinara paid nearly 75 million Swiss francs earlier this year for a country house near Lake Geneva.

Nazarbaev’s former son-in-law, Rakhat Aliev, amassed a great fortune before falling out of favor with his benefactor. Living now in Austria, Aliev has been sentenced in absentia to 40 years in prison by an Almaty court and has had his extensive properties in the country seized — factories, newspapers, aircraft, homes…

For his part, Aliev has penned a tell-all about Nazarbaev called «The Godfather,» in which he writes that Nazarbaev has three wives and plans to hand over power to a son by his third wife who is now just five years old.

Turkmenistan also has a reputation for corruption and nepotism. Former Turkmen leader Saparmurat Niyazov’s son, Murat, was given a privileged access to the business world. He was entrusted with control over exports of the country’s natural gas. Some media reported that the revenues were held in offshore banks in Cyprus. Murat was suspected of accepting bribes from foreign companies interested in drilling and extracting the gas. He also controlled earnings from the lucrative sale of alcohol and cigarettes.

In the three years since the death of «President-For-Life» Niyazov, Turkmenistan’s government has taken some steps to dismantle the corrupt Niyazov system. However, we now see the rise of the family and inner circle of President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov. Former dentist Berdymukhammedov used to drive an old Russian car, but has lately developed a taste for luxury. One of his daughters lives in London, another in Paris. He has been steadily installing his friends and fellow clan members in powerful state positions.

None of these leaders seems to have learned anything from the experience of Kyrgyzstan. They continue to ignore the simple truth that one day, inevitably, the patience of the people will simply run out.

Cholpon Orozobekova is a Kyrgyz journalist based in Geneva. She has worked for BBC radio, RFE/RL, IWPR, and as editor in chief of independent newspaper «De Facto.» The views expressed in this commentary are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of RFE/RL

Cholpon Orozobekova, RFE/RL

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/content/deep_roots_of_nepotism_in_central_asia/2249061.html

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