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Posted 03/06/2002 Central Asia
division Human Rights Watch
(New York, March 6, 2002) -- The legalization of Uzbekistan's
first independent rights monitor is a positive development, but much more
progress is needed, Human Rights Watch said today. On Tuesday, March 5,
the government of Uzbekistan registered the Independent Human Rights Organization
of Uzbekistan (IHROU), giving the group legal status to operate in the
country.
"Finally, a decade after independence from the Soviet Union, the government
has recognized the legitimacy of a truly independent local human rights
organization," said Elizabeth Andersen, executive director of the Europe
and Central Asia division of Human Rights Watch. The IHROU, headed by
Mikhail Dmitrivich Ardzinov, was founded in 1996. Since its establishment,
the Uzbek government had repeatedly refused to legally register the group,
thereby consigning it to the status of an illegal organization. In recent
months, the Bush administration had made registration of rights groups
a priority in its relations with Uzbekistan. The administration has also
asked Uzbek officials to register another independent rights group, the
Human Rights Society of Uzbekistan "Ezgulik," which is also preparing
to apply for legal status. President Islam Karimov is due to visit the
United States for a meeting with President Bush on March 12. "This shows
that the U.S. government has leverage and can achieve real successes when
it chooses to use that leverage," said Andersen, "But it should be the
first in a series of steps by the Uzbek government to show the U.S. and
the rest of the international community whether it is committed to making
genuine progress in human rights." The IHROU's lack of legal status has
been used by authorities as a pretext for the harassment, physical mistreatment,
and imprisonment of its members. IHROU member Makhbuba Kasimova, a former
schoolteacher and mother of five children, who researched abuses against
independent Muslims, was jailed in July 1999 on spurious charges that
she hid a criminal in her home. At her 15-minute trial, the prosecutor
charged specifically that she was a member of an "illegal organization."
The court sentenced her to five years in prison. She was released on the
order of President Karimov in December 2000 as the result of an international
campaign on her behalf and concerted U.S. government pressure to gain
her freedom. Kasimova's colleague, Ismail Adylov, was also imprisoned
on false charges in August 1999, and released in July 2001. In a visit
to the United States this past November to be honored by Human Rights
Watch, Adylov recounted the torture and humiliation he had experienced
in prison and vowed to continue his work on behalf of those who remained
in custody.