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Muslims Face Horrific Torture in Jails: Relentless
Campaign Of Religious Suppression Continues
18 January 2011 By Pavol Stracansky
Muslims are facing a dark future of repression and
torture in Uzbekistan for years to come as the
government’s relentless campaign of religious
suppression continues.
At least 39 people were
tortured to death last year in prisons, according to
the Independent Human Rights Defenders Group (IHRDG)
in Uzbekistan - a rise from 20 recorded the previous
year.
IHRDG says that the torture has become steadily worse
in recent years, and activists warn that the real
number of those tortured to death is probably much
higher as authorities cover up inmates’ abuse by
sending bodies back to families in sealed coffins.
Relatives of the dead are wary of reporting incidents.
Religious prisoners are also now facing the prospect
of being interred for life as unilateral
extra-judicial orders are handed down to extend their
jail terms indefinitely, rights campaigners say.
The dictatorial regime, led by President Islam Karimov
who has ruled the central Asian nation since its
independence from the Soviet Union, shows no signs of
letting up in its persecution of any religious groups
it sees as a potential threat to its power.
Alisher Ilkhamov who works on Uzbek issues for the
Open Society Foundation in London told IPS: "The
torture of religious prisoners is constant and I don’t
see any hope for improvement in the coming years.
Muslims will continue to be repressed for a long time
into the future, I have no illusions over that."
Karimov’s regime has long been held by the
international community as having one of the world’s
worst records on human rights.
Brutal state suppression of civil society has been
well documented over the last almost two decades. The
UN has described use of torture by law enforcement
officials, many of whom were schooled under the KGB
when the country was part of the Soviet Union, as
widespread and systematic.
In at least one case it was found that a prisoner had
been boiled to death, and horrific abuse of inmates at
the Zhaslyk prison in the remote northwest of the
country – described as a post-Soviet gulag and one of
the worst jails in the world by some activists – has
also been recorded.
Activists working in Uzbekistan say that people
arrested or convicted on charges related to religious
offences – almost always falsely - are facing the
worst of the torture.
One activist working in Uzbekistan, who asked not to
be named, told IPS: "I have spoken to dozens of
relatives of people in prison following trumped-up
charges of religious extremism who have told me, in
great detail, of the torture they have suffered in
prison.
"It does seem that people in prison for religious
extremism charges make up a disproportionate amount of
those suffering torture."
Independent verification of many such reports is
almost impossible as the state keeps severe
restrictions on independent access to prisoners.
Much information on the abuses suffered by prisoners
comes from their relatives speaking to rights groups.
They have now revealed a new method of suppression by
the state as prisoners are handed down extensions to
original sentences that will see them kept in jail
until the end of their lives.
One activist told IPS: "What we have heard is that the
authorities are unilaterally extending the sentences
of religious prisoners. Some who have been in prison
for ten years or so whose terms are ending are having
them extended, without trial, by authorities and their
relatives are saying that the prisoners are being
told‚ ‘you will die here in jail‘."
Tashkent has justified its more than decade-long
campaign of suppression of religious groups by
claiming it is trying to combat the dangers of
religious extremism.
More than 90 percent of the country’s 28 million
population is estimated to be Muslim. The state
controls practice of Islam strictly through a network
of state-approved Muslim groups and places of worship.
The same is true for the roughly five percent of
Uzbeks who are Christian.
Many rights groups say the real reason for control is
a fear of the threat a strong Muslim community could
pose to the regime.
"The government sees the Muslim community as its
biggest potential threat. Muslim clerics and leaders
have the potential to mobilise a large number of
people. In the past some have drawn crowds of
thousands at talks and meetings," said Ilkhamov.
Mass, closed trials of people arrested on religious
extremism charges are not uncommon, and one such trial
last month saw 19 people sentenced to jail.
Activists also say that the state’s suppression of
religious groups as well as restricting other basic
freedoms is merely fuelling a growth of non state-
approved religious communities, and potentially
pushing some to radical groups.
"The lack of any alternative space for an outlet for
expression, combined with repression, provides a
potentially fertile ground for extremism. People are
thrown into prison and labelled as religious
extremists and end up sometimes being forced to join
those very extremists just for protection," one
activist said.
"And prisons are known to have become recruiting
grounds for extremist groups," he added.
International and local rights monitors have warned
for years that Tashkent’s repressions could drive
people into membership of some of the militant
religious groups known to be operating in Uzbekistan
and the rest of Central Asia.
Local Muslim scholars have warned publicly of such
dangers and appealed to Karimov to hold open religious
discussions rather than persecute worshippers and take
a heavy-handed approach to extremist groups.
Meanwhile, rights campaigners are dismayed at the
approach of western governments to the continuing
torture of prisoners and rights abuses by Tashkent.
The country’s geopolitical importance has given rise
to what one activist described to IPS as Karimov’s
power to "bully Western governments into turning a
blind eye to the bad parts of his regime."
One senior official at a western rights organisation
told IPS: "The torture situation is already atrocious
and what is seriously concerning to human rights
groups is that the growing close relationship between
the U.S., EU and Uzbekistan, driven by its strategic
position along supply lines needed for troops in
Afghanistan, is overshadowing a long history of human
rights abuses which could lead to a further
deterioration in human rights." (END)
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