Tajik journalist faces 16 years in jail if convicted on defamation, insult charges

New York, September 29, 2011-The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the ongoing imprisonment of journalist Makhmadyusuf Ismoilov and is dismayed by prosecutors’ call for a hefty prison term on defamation and other charges.

Ismoilov, a regional reporter for the Dushanbe-based independent weekly Nuri Zindagi, was arrested last November on separate counts of defamation, insult, and incitement to hatred over an article titled, «Asht is being destroyed. Who is responsible for it?» In the article, published in the August 2010 issue of Nuri Zindagi, Ismoilov criticized government and law enforcement officials in the Asht district in the northern Sogd region of Tajikistan, and cited corruption, abuse of office, and mismanagement of funds, CPJ research showed.

If convicted, Ismoilov will be the first journalist imprisoned in Tajikistan on defamation and insult charges in the last decade, CPJ research found.

At a hearing today, prosecutors asked the court to convict Ismoilov and sentence him to 16 years in jail, the independent regional news website Fergana Newsreported. Mukhabbat Dzhurayeva, Ismoilov’s lawyer, told the court that investigators had failed to prove the journalist’s guilt, and asked them to drop the charges and release him, Fergana News reported. Ismoilov has denied any wrongdoing.The next court hearing is scheduled for October 3.

«The Tajik authorities are using the threat of prison to intimidate journalists and shield officials from public scrutiny,» said CPJ Deputy Director Robert Mahoney. «Instead of demanding a preposterous 16-year sentence for Makhmadyusuf Ismoilov, the prosecution should drop all charges against him immediately.»

Ismoilov’s trial began in June, and 12 officials were named as plaintiffs in the case, news reports said. At the second court hearing, several witnesses who had initially testified against the journalist changed their statements to his defense, Radio Ozodi, the Tajik service of the U.S. government-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, reported.

Ismoilov has consistently criticized regional authorities, law enforcement agencies, and the judiciary for alleged mismanagement, poor social and economic policies, and abuse of power, Nuriddin Karshiboyev, head of the Dushanbe-based National Association of Independent Media of Tajikistan told CPJ. Earlier this month, local and international press freedom advocates wrote an open letter to Tajik President Emomali Rahmon, calling on him to ensure a fair trial for Ismoilov, the radio station reported.

CPJ is a New York-based, independent, nonprofit organization that works to safeguard press freedom worldwide. For more information, visit [url=http://cl.s4.exct.net/?qs=49d65425c0c03c034b82cc60c91d6ba24ccb85c3d8c0a47a097e2b44a437ae42.]http://cl.s4.exct.net/?qs=49d65425c0c03c034b82cc60c91d6ba24ccb85c3d8c0a47a097e2b44a437ae42.[/url]

Kyrgyzstan Bans Foreign Media Broadcasts During Campaign

BISHKEK — Kyrgyzstan’s new ban on foreign-media broadcasts in the country during the presidential-election campaign has caused mixed reactions, RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz Service reports.

The recently adopted election law makes live broadcasting into Kyrgyzstan by foreign media outlets illegal from September 25 until the election on October 30. If a runoff were to be held two weeks later then the ban would be extended.

Tattu Mambetalieva, chairwoman of Bishkek-based Internet’s Civil Initiative, told RFE/RL on September 26 that the law violates Kyrgyz citizens’ right to receive and share information.

She said it is technically impossible to broadcast all international media programs in a recorded format. «For that we need significant financial resources, which we do not have.»

Marat Tokoev, chairman of the nongovernmental organization Journalists, told RFE/RL that the temporary ban of live broadcasts by foreign TV and radio stations could be defined as censorship.

He said the law was adopted hastily and might cause protests by people who have no access to satellites.

Meanwhile, the leader of the opposition Ata-Meken (Fatherland) party and former presidential candidate, Omurbek Tekebaev, told RFE/RL that the law was adopted properly and its main goal is to prevent interference by foreign countries and governments in the election process.

Tekebaev said that during last year’s parliamentary elections a Russian television channel was promoting one Kyrgyz political party while denigrating others.

Parliament deputy Irina Karamushkina told journalists on September 26 that while more than 60 foreign television and radio corporations stopped broadcasting live to Kyrgyzstan as of September 25, nothing has been done to control the Internet or satellite televisions.

She said a special parliamentary commission has to be established in order to gain full control of the situation.

http://www.rferl.org/content/kyrgystan_bans_foreign_media_broadcasts_during_campaing/24340800.html

Kyrgyz Parliament Gets Own TV Channel Despite President’s Veto

BISHKEK — The Kyrgyz parliament has overturned a presidential veto and converted the Channel 5 television company into a parliamentary TV channel, RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz Service reports.

The vote by parliament means Channel 5 will show live broadcasts of all parliamentary sessions and hearings.

The parliament’s initial vote, in July, to make Channel 5 a parliamentary TV channel was vetoed by President Roza Otunbaeva for financial reasons.

Channel 5 used to be controlled by Maksim Bakiev, a son of President Kurmanbek Bakiev, who was ousted by antigovernment protests in April last year.

The interim government that came to power after Bakiev left the country decided to nationalize the company in May 2010.

According to the Kyrgyz Constitution, Otunbaeva must sign the law on transforming Channel 5 into a parliamentary channel within two weeks. If she does not do so, the parliament speaker has the right to endorse it with his signature.

http://www.rferl.org/content/kyrgyz_parliament_gets_own_tv_channel_despite_presidents_veto/24338296.

Tajik Media Organizations Seek Support For Juma Tolib

Dushanbe, 21 September 2011

The Tajik National Association of Independent Mass Media (NANSMIT), the Union of Journalists of Tajikistan (UJT) and the Tajik Media Alliance (MAT) apply to the media community seeking support for the well-know journalist Jumaboi Tolibov (Juma Tolib) who needs a serious medical treatment.
Juma Tolib has been a member of the Union of Journalists since 1984; he worked for an Ainy district printing outlet, was the founder of the Nuri Khalk weekly and wrote for many other periodicals.

In 2005, the law enforcement agencies persecuted the journalist for his publications in local newspapers where he criticized the government. In July 2005, he received a two-year term; due to efforts of lawyers and solidarity of his colleagues, in December 2005, Tolibov was released.

After the release from custody, Tolib continued his journalistic activities working for the Farazh weekly; he became the executive director of the Media Investigation Center and founded the Zarafshon Times news agency. He also headed the Linguistic Expertise Bureau and chief editor of the Paykon weekly. He is known as the author of numerous publications criticizing government officials and disclosing corruption.

Court trials and professional problems and the closure of the public organization, which was the founder of Paykon undermined the journalist’s health; at present, he is hospitalized and needs support of his colleagues and friends.

NANSMIT and UJT call upon the Tajik media community to help Juma Tolib. The fund raising is conducted by NANSMIT; the contact person is Ms. Aslibegim Manzarshoeva. Updates about the campaign will be posted on NANSMIT’s web site: www.nansmit.tj
Telephones: +992 907 767 239, +992 37 221 3 711; e-mail: asol.77@gmail.com

NANSMIT has opened a special account to mobilize funds and assit Juma Tolib:
NANSMIT
AMONATBONK, Dushanbe
Bank account: 20202972800479101000
BIK/MFO 350101626
Correspondent Account: 20402972316264
INN. 010012355
Assignment: assistance to Juma Tolib

www.nansmit

International Media Support Is Seeking a Programme Manager to manage media projects in Tajikistan (deadline extended to 28 September)

From October 2011 the international media NGO, International Media Support, will run a two and a half year programme in Tajikistan with various media projects focussing on support and professionalization of media, youth and media, capacity building of local media organizations and coordination of media activities with other international media NGOs.
 
International Media Support (IMS) seeks a Programme Manager to manage these media projects and to react to sudden future needs in the media environment of Tajikistan.
 
The Programme Manager must live in Tajikistan and work from there in close collaboration with local partners and IMS head quarters in Denmark, Department for Eastern Europe, Caucasus and Central Asia.

The Programme Manager is expected to work closely together with IMS’ local umbrella partner, NANSMIT and work from the office of NANSMIT.
 
The IMS Programme Manager in Tajikistan will be responsible for the IMS projects in Tajikistan, including the following tasks:
 
1.    To become completely familiarized with the IMS projects in Tajikistan, budget, objectives, results and the time-frame in which the projects will take place (grant-administration and project cycle management).
 
2.    To locally manage and coordinate all IMS projects in Tajikistan in close cooperation with IMS’ local partners and to assess sudden needs of IMS involvement in non-planned activities.
 
3.    To make sure, that all IMS projects are carried out professionally, efficient and at reasonable economic costs in accordance with the budget-lines allocated.
 
4.    To monitor the results of the IMS projects in Tajikistan in accordance with the planned outputs. 

5.    To support the project management of NANSMIT (the umbrella partner of IMS in Tajikistan) and to monitor the results of the projects led by NANSMIT on behalf of IMS.
 
6.    To function as a communication link and coordinator between IMS and relevant local and international media/development organisations located in Tajikistan.
  
7.    To manage the project budgets and to pay local staff who are working for IMS (e.g. short term experts).
 
8.    To closely follow and monitor the media development in Tajikistan and to follow and monitor the overall political situation in the country (to the extent needed for media-development purposes).
 
9. To deliver qualified written input on the political development, the media development and the IMS projects in Tajikistan every half year for bi-annual reports to IMS’ back-donor and/or to report to IMS on the above listed tasks when required and needed.
 
10.To participate in a Skype meeting every 2nd week with IMS HQ.
 
 
Qualifications of the programme officer:
 
1.    Relevant educational background (in journalism, international relations, communications, politics, business, business administration, cultural studies, or similar academic studies).
 
2.    Preferably at least 3 years of professional experience in development assistance.
 
3.    Preferably documented experience with project management.
 
4.    Interest in and knowledge about media.
 
5.    Knowledge about Tajik and Central Asian politics – and a sensitive flair of the present political development and potential conflicts.
 
6.    Neutral, fair and balanced regarding possible political, religious and social conflicts in Tajikistan.
 
7.    Extensive communicative and cooperative skills.
 
8.    Extensive network in the Tajik society.
 
9.    Efficient, constructive and solution oriented.
 
10. Preferably experience with or from CIS countries.
 
11. Fluent in Tajik and English and knowledge of Russian.
 
 
The salary will be negotiated according to qualifications.
 
The start of the job is preferably October 2011.
 
The work place will be at the office of NANSMIT: 34, Huseinzoda str, Dushanbe city, Tajikistan

Deadline for applications: September 20 2011.

More information about the job at:

NANSMIT: Nurridin Karshiboev, phone: (+992 37) 221-37-11, (992 93) 504 30 13(mobile), e-mail: knuriddin@yandex.ru , or at Henrik Hansen, International Media Support (hkh@i-m-s.dk or skype: henrikkeith)

www.nansmit.tj

Kyrgyz Journalist Sheds Light On High-Profile Killings

BISHKEK — A Kyrgyz journalist in exile says former presidential staff chief Medet Sadyrkulov was assassinated in 2009 for wanting to start a media campaign against President Kurmanbek Bakiev and his relatives, RFE/RL’s Kyrgyz Service reports.

Syrgak Abdyldaev told RFE/RL via phone on September 20 that Sadyrkulov had documents that were «a bomb that could blast the Bakievs’ reputation to smithereens within days.»

Abdyldaev said Sadyrkulov aproached him in early 2009 and asked him to launch a website to post the information presidential aide had amassed. The website was to be called «21st Century» and would have been based in Kazakhstan.

Sadyrkulov and the head of the Bishkek-based Institute for Strategic Studies and Analysis, Sergei Slepchenko, were going to handle financing and organizational issues, Abdyldaev said.

He added that the information Sadyrkulov had was «really explosive and I realized that I had got involved in a very dangerous game.»

On March 3, 2009, unknown assailants attacked Abdyldaev, stabbing him 29 times and nearly killing him.

Ten days later, the charred bodies of Sadyrkulov, Slepchenko, and their driver Kuat Sulaimanov were found in the wreckage of a car near Bishkek.

Officials said they died in a car accident, but their relatives challenged that, saying they had been killed long before the car was on fire.

A new investigation into the incident was begun after Bakiev was ousted in April 2010 and investigators agreed the three men had been killed before the alleged car accident.

Police said last week the murder of Sadyrkulov and Slepchenko was ordered by Bakiev’s brother, Janysh Bakiev, whose whereabouts are unknown.

Abdyldaev is living abroad at an undisclosed location.

http://www.rferl.org/content/kyrgyz_journalist_sheds_light_on_high_profile_killings/24335986.html

Kazakh-Based TV Journalists Complain Of State Pressure

ALMATY, Kazakhstan — Journalists at the Almaty-based online television company Stan-TV say they are under pressure from the Kazakh National Security Committee (KNB), RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service reports.

Stan-TV correspondent Sherniyaz Shaghatai told journalists in Almaty on September 20 that several persons who introduced themselves as KNB officers visited him last week in Hospital No. 7 — where he was undergoing treatment — and tried to persuade him to collaborate with them.

Shaghatai said they asked him about Stan-TV ‘s operations.
«They warned me that in the event that I refuse to collaborate with them, anything could happen to me or my relatives. They said that drugs may be found in my pockets or a car could hit my mother on her way home from work,» Shaghatai said.

He added that he and members of his family have noticed that a car follows them at all times and that they have recently started receiving strange phone calls from unknown callers.

Stan-TV producer Danesh Baibolatov told journalists that one of the company’s correspondents in a Kazakh region was recently urged by local KNB officials to quit his work.

Baibolatov added that Stan-TV’s video crew was constantly followed by unknown people during their visit last month to the western province of Manghystau, where they were covering an oil workers’ strike.

Shaghatai and Baibolatov say the pressure is connected with Stan-TV’s professional activities. They said they will ask local police for help.

On September 15, an Almaty court ruled that Stan-TV must stop using the antennas on the roof of its Almaty offices because they are endangering the health of nearby residents.

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 health threat.
On August 23, Stan-TV editors Elina Zhdanova and Baurzhan Musirov told journalists that the company had been subjected to intrusive inspections because of the company’s 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 Britain.

The station, which covers Central Asia in video reports posted on its website, often publishes reports critical of the Kazakh government and individual government members.

http://www.rferl.org/content/kazakhstan_tv_journalists_state_pressure/24335125.html

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

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