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ALTHOUGH CIVIL WAR
NO LONGER RAGES IN TAJIKISTAN, popular unrest and an increasingly authoritarian
regime have made conditions hard for journalists in the republic. Reporting
remains a dangerous profession, especially for the few journalists who dare
to investigate power struggles in the political and military elite or trafficking
in weapons and drugs by criminal mafias. According to local journalists,
local law enforcement agencies are responsible for much of the harassment,
beatings, and threats that they endure.
International observers of the parliamentary elections in February and March,
including a joint mission of the United Nations and the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe, condemned state interference in the
electoral process. Local press coverage of the campaigns overwhelmingly
favored the ruling People's Democratic Party of President Imomali Rakhmonov,
which retained nearly all important government posts and dominated Parliament
after the elections.
Article 135(2) of the Tajik Penal Code stipulates that "the distribution
of clearly false information defaming a person's honor, dignity, or reputation"
is punishable by up to two years in jail. Article 137 stipulates a punishment
of up to five years imprisonment for insulting or defaming the president.
No journalist was jailed under these provisions in 2000. Instead, attacks
on the press took a more violent form.
On May 12 in the capital, Dushanbe, armed men in military uniforms assaulted
Saifadin Dostiev, a correspondent for the Tajik-language service of Radio
Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Dostiev was badly beaten. On August 27, CPJ sources
reported the beating of Nematulloi Nurullo, a journalist for the paper Jumhuriyat,
who was allegedly assaulted by two Dushanbe policemen and received serious
injuries, including a concussion and hearing loss in one ear.
Dodojon Atovullo, editor of the Russian-language paper Chroghi Ruz,
which is now being published in Moscow, claimed that Tajik officials had
taken out a contract on his life. The officials were angered, he told CPJ,
by articles and interviews in which he accused government authorities of
patronizing drug trafficking in Central Asia. Atovullo claimed that the
Tajik government had asked Russian authorities to extradite him, forcing
the journalist to flee to Germany.
On May 20, unknown individuals murdered Saifulo Rahimov, president of Tajikistan's
State TV and Radio Committee. CPJ sources in the region believe the killing
was motivated by political intrigue, rather than Rahimov's journalistic
work. They also cited a possible financial motive, since the government
had earmarked huge funds for state television.
On August 5, the weekly newspaper Najot was banned from sale at the
Sharki Ozod center, where most newspapers are printed and sold. The newspaper,
which is published by an opposition Islamic party, also claimed that a number
of journalists at the paper received threatening calls during the month
of August. The editor, Muhiddin Idizod, was beaten up on the street earlier
in the year, according to local sources.
In May, Umed Mamadponoev, an employee of the state radio station Gosteleradio
in the autonomous region of Gorno-Badakhshan, disappeared after the Tajik
KGB interrogated him in connection with a program he had recently produced
on the appalling living conditions of soldiers in the Tajik army. Mamadponoev's
piece mentioned that many soldiers from Gorno-Badakhshan had died or been
injured during their service. After local and international protests, it
emerged that Mamadponoev had been conscripted into the army in retaliation
for his broadcast. Colleagues who visited him in the fall of 2000 said he
was in good health.
Tajikistan embraced the Internet only in January 1999, when the Ministry
of Communications set up the republic's first Internet Service Provider
(ISP). Though access is expensive for ordinary Tajiks, there are now four
ISPs in the country and, so far, no legislation governing use of the Internet.
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