New York, September 14, 2004A court in the Uzbek capital of
Tashkent shut the media training organization Internews-Uzbekistan yesterday
for six months for violating a law regulating non-governmental organizations,
according to local and international press reports.
The closure comes amid a broad government crackdown on the independent
media and non-governmental organizations ahead of parliamentary elections
in December. It also follows an Internews-Uzbekistan project documenting
government press abuses.
Internews said it corrected the infractions, which involved such things
as failure to register a logo. The Committee to Protect Journalists condemned
the government's action.
"Shutting down Internews-Uzbekistan for such technical violations is a
thinly veiled attempt to stifle criticism of the government as elections
approach," CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said.
The Justice Ministry filed a request to close the organization with the
Tashkent City Civil Court on September 3, claiming that Internews-Uzbekistan
failed to correct several infractions found during a June inspection,
according to local press reports.
The ministry reported that Internews-Uzbekistan, along with not registering
its logo, failed to inform authorities of activities conducted outside
the capital, a change of address, and the correct number of board members.
"We submitted corrected documents to the Justice Ministry in time and
the submission of the documents was registered," Internews-Uzbekistan
Executive Director Khalida Anarbaeva told the United Nations IRIN news
service. "But, replying to the court's demand, the ministry said that
they had received no documents from us."
In September 2003, Internews-Uzbekistan initiated a U.S.-funded project
to monitor countrywide government abuses against the press. (To see its
latest report, see: http://www.cafspeech.kz/uz/2004/en/monitoring/2004/07july.htm)
The U.S. Department of State announced in July that it was withholding
millions of dollars in aid to Uzbekistan because of the government's human
rights abuses.

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