the Disillusioned kid: Samarkand Unrest
| Email | Home | Linkage | Profile |

Monday, August 22, 2005

Samarkand Unrest

Some apparently positive developments in Uzbekistan, with two protests (link via Registan) taking place in the city of Samarkand, the country's second largest city.

The first demonstration was triggered when authorities gave residents of around 100 homes in Bogimaydon, a village on the city's outskirts a weeks notice to leave before they're homes were demolished to make way for a highway-extension programme. They also complained that the compensation they were offered was far less than the market-value of their houses:
In response, the residents blocked the village's main road for several hours on 20 August, holding placards reading: "Don't demolish an old house before building a new one." It is a phrase familiar to the country's authoritarian leader, Islam Karimov. He uses the expression often during speeches, and has also used it as the title of one of his numerous books.

In a voice mail message left with RFE/RL's Tashkent bureau, a protester described the scene: "Several people who suffered a lot and were fed up took to the streets to say their houses were to be demolished. We blocked the road and were holding placards."
There are also concerns that the village is of considerable historical and architechtural significance. Residents and experts are worried that this may be threatened. Although the highway extension will not affect the historical part of the village Toshpulat Rakhmatullaev, an independent journalist and historian who lives in Bogimaydon, believes that such an intrusion should never have been allowed so close to a place of such value.

Local human rights activists were reported to be among the protesters. This, unfortunately, did nothing to mitigate the response of the authorities who roughly dispersed the crowd. According to one report (there only seem to be two on the incident at the time of writing) placards were wrenched from the hands of protesters and torn up and BBC correspondent Mustakhkam Tangierova had her equipment confiscated, although there seems to be no mention of this on the BBC site. One human rights advocate, Zhamol Mirsaidov, was so badly beaten by the police that he had to be hospitalised.

The second protest took place in Chuqurbozor, Samarkand's biggest clothing market. Merchants - most of them women - gathered to protest a decision by authorities to close the bazaar. Again they had been given little notice, this time the decision had only been announced the day before it was to come into effect:
Local police forces quickly blocked the area of the market where the protests took place. A BBC correspondent who was trying to get to the site was detained and held by police for several hours.

Eyewitnesses told RFE/RL's Uzbek Service the number of protesters may have risen as high as several hundred people.
Again this incident doesn't seem to have received coverage on the BBC site, despite apparent harrasment of their reporter (if this was also Mustakhkam Tangierova, mentioned above, you'd have to conclude she wasn't having a very good day).

RFE/RL suggest that these protests are the first since the violent crackdown on protesters in Andijan in May. This isn't strictly true; there was a rally numbering several hundred people in the town of Korasuv around a week after the Andijan massacre, indeed that massacre triggered an uprising in the city which saw authorities lose control for a time. There was also a rally in the city of Jizzakh organised by government supporters in order to counter the fallout from Andijan, although I'd be more than happy for such a display of servility to be missed off any tally of "protests". Regardless of the strict accuracy of RFE/RL's assertion, these protests are very significant. That people are prepared to face up to the threat of severe state repression in order to assert their rights is an inspiration to us all. It also offers a glimpse into a possible, better future for Uzbekistan.

Anybody interested in doing something to help (even if it's a very small thing) might care to consider this.
|

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home

Side Projects

Carnival of Anarchy
The Peace Pipe
UK Watch Blog

Acquaintances

Against the Current
Atopian.org
Culture hits and gendered bits
Daniel Randall
In The Water
Mike Wood
On The Barricades
Pizarro's Sword
Space Cat Rocket Ship
Surveillant Assemblage
TashCamUK FotoPage
The Naked Lunch
The Peace Pipe
The World of the Dynamite Lady

Strangers

Anarchoblogs
Antiwar.com Blog
Arte & Lingua
Barker in Valencia
Blairwatch
Bloggerheads
Blood & Treasure
Bombs and Shields
Boomablog
Born at the Crest of the Empire
Chase me ladies...
Chicken Yoghurt
Craig Murray
Dead Men Left
Direland
Disreputable Lazy Aliens
Empire Notes
Europhobia
Friends of Al Jazeera
Global Guerillas
Guerillas in the Midst
I Blame the Patriachy
Informed Comment
Insultadarity
Janine Booth
Lenin's Tomb
Life of Riley Blog
Media Watch Watch
Neil Shakespeare
NO2ID NewsBlog
One Hump or Two?
Otto's Random Thoughts
Perfect.co.uk
Pitch In For Uzbekistan
Registan.net
Run over by the truth
Solidarity With Iraqi Workers
Shut Up You Fat Whiner!
Sudan: Passion of the Present
Talk Politics
The Anthropik Network
The Daily (Maybe)
The Devil's Kitchen
The Disillusioned
The f-word
The Head Heeb
The Killing Train
The Revenge of Winston Smith
The Socialist Unity Blog
The Wicked Truth
Theory of Power
Things I Don't Have Time For
This (Fresh) Gringo
This Is My Truth
Thumping the Tub
Time The Dreaded Enemy
UK Watch Blog
UK Poli Blogs
underbrella
Under The Same Sun
Uzbekistan.neweurasia.net
What Fresh Hell Is This?
Where is Raed? (RIP)
Who Are You to Accuse Me?
Words and Rocks
Zeropointnine
Z-Net Blog

Neighbours

Asbo Community Space
Defy-ID
Eastside Climate Action
Faslane 365
Freecycle
Indymedia
No Borders
Nottingham Student Peace Movement
Refugee Forum
Stop the War
Sumac Centre
The Demo Project

Ivory Towers

Anarchist Studies Network
Centre for the Study of Social and Global Justice
Postanarchism Clearinghouse

Miscellania

Anarchist FAQ
Antiwar.com
Chagos Discussion List
Chagos Support Forums
Electronic Intifada
Future of Iraq Portal
Index of Political Blogs
Indymedia UK
Infoshop
Iraq Occupation Focus
Pledgebank
Refuser Solidarity Network
SchNEWS
Socialist Unity Network
The New Standard
UK Chagos Support Association
UK Watch
Weekly Worker
Wikipedia
WriteToThem.com
Z-Net

The Progressive Blog Alliance

Register here to join the PBA.