TURKMENISTAN
In a region where freedom of the press and free
expression are endangered concepts, the authoritarian regime of President
Saparmurat Niyazov still manages to set a horrible example. Niyazov often
takes his repression to absurd extremes. In April, for example, he banned
opera and ballet from his country on the grounds that they are "alien"
to Turkmen culture.
Niyazov also works hard to maintain a Soviet-style
cult of personality. On October 19, the government adopted Rukhnama,
his 400-page book of moral commandments based on Turkmen customs and traditions,
as a national code of spiritual conduct. Delegates to a May conference
of the Humanitarian Association of Turkmen in the capital, Ashgabat, bestowed
on Niyazov the title Turkmenbashi the Great, though they stopped short
of elevating him to the status of "prophet" after Niyazov professed
to be weary of overly lavish praise.
The state controls all publishing and broadcast
licenses, and Internet access is only available through the state provider,
Turkmentelecom. In late March, Niyazov berated Turkmenistan's media outlets,
saying that television in particular failed to reflect the nation's traditions
and culture. On April 4, he restructured the state's media monopoly by
abolishing the national broadcasting corporation and establishing three
new television channels and three new radio stations. The channels are
controlled by the Coordination Council for Broadcasting, which was created
at the same time and answers to the Turkmenistan Cabinet of Ministers.
Turkmenistan has 10 Turkmen-language publications
and one in Russian. A few Russian newspapers are also available, and the
government carefully selects five hours of material for the country's
one Russian-language television channel. In late April, a supplement to
the Russian-language newspaper Neutral Turkmenistan titled Serdar
Yeli (The Way of the Leader) was immediately withdrawn because it
had been published without official permission.
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) Turkmen
service correspondent Saparmurat Ovesberdiyev was searched at Moscow's
Domodedovo Airport on February 27. Customs officials found US$4,000 in
false notes in the journalist's luggage, which Ovesberdiyev believes one
of the officers planted. After five hours of questioning, he was released
without charges.
Few dare to speak out against a regime that routinely
persecutes political and religious dissidents. A handful of Turkmen journalists
write for foreign publications, but only under pseudonyms. Government
security forces regularly refuse reporters entry to events sponsored by
other countries, such as embassy parties or corporate press conferences,
and journalists often face reprisals if they travel abroad. The Council
for the Supervision of Foreigners also controls outside influences by
strictly monitoring the activities of all international visitors.
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