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AS PRESIDENT ISLAM
KARIMOV'S GOVERNMENT CONTINUED its harsh crackdown on Islamic militants,
officials kept local media on a tight leash. Uzbek human rights workers,
themselves targets of bureaucratic harassment and violence, condemned numerous
violations of the rights of their fellow citizens, including journalists.
In April, CPJ raised the plight of three imprisoned Uzbek journalists in
testimony to the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe (the Helsinki
Commission) at a hearing in Washington, D.C. The cases were also outlined
in a letter to the U.S. Department of State prior to Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright's visit to Central Asia later that month.
In two separate letters to President Karimov, CPJ urged the release of radio
reporter Shodi Mardiev on humanitarian grounds. Mardiev's 11-year sentence
for defamation and extortion was cut in half under two presidential decrees,
but he still had about three years to serve in a notorious penal colony,
where his health was rapidly deteriorating due to the appalling living conditions.
Muhammad Bekjanov and Iusuf Ruzimuradov of the banned opposition newspaper
Erk continued to serve 14- and 15-year sentences, respectively, for
their involvement with the paper. Local human rights workers told CPJ that
both men were being held in penal colonies and that Bekjanov was in poor
health.
ALC TV in the city of Urgench, one of the few remaining independent stations
in Uzbekistan, was effectively closed when the Interagency Coordination
Commission, the government body that regulates broadcast licensing, refused
repeatedly to renew the station's license.
Government domination of the media, including the Internet, is all but absolute
in Uzbekistan. Close allies of the president or other government officials
own the main media companies. The government has a monopoly on printing
presses and newspaper distribution, and it finances the main newspapers.
Its chief weapon, though, is fear. Local journalists generally shy away
from subjects that could land them in trouble. The extremely vague Law on
the Protection of State Secrets encourages journalists to withdraw controversial
material before it reaches the censor. In an extremely rare instance of
prior censorship, the State Press Committee reviews articles before publication,
and can order any material withdrawn.
MARCH 7
TV ALC
CENSORED
TV ALC, one of the few independent stations in Uzbekistan, continued to contest its broadcast ban, filing a second appeal with the district court on March 7.
The ban was imposed by the government's Interagency Coordination Committee (ICC) on June 7, 1999. On March 3, the station lost an initial appeal in a court in
the town of Urgench. It was the third time in five years that the government had suspended the station, leading
TV ALC to accuse authorities of seeking to drive them permanently off the air.
The ICC regulates broadcasting licenses and is made up of representatives from several government agencies. Under a 1998 regulation that all stations must reregister before receiving permission to broadcast, it has used its regional offices to clamp down on independent television in Uzbekistan.
Aloqa TV, in the town of Gulistan, was closed on similar grounds in November 1999, but chose not to appeal the decision. At the same time, other stations less critical of the government, such as Orbita in Yangiabad, were allowed to continue broadcasting pending receipt of a new license.
On July 20, the Interagency Coordination Committee, headed by deputy Prime Minister Khamidullo Karamatov, officially refused to renew TV ALC's license. The stated reasons were that the station lacked the necessary recommendation from the local authorities, and that the State Press Committee insisted that the renewal not be granted, according to the station director.
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