New York, August 15, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns the deportation of Russian journalist Igor Rotar, who was detained
by Uzbek authorities in Tashkent on Thursday and put on a plane bound
for Almaty, Kazakhstan, late the next day, according to local and international
press reports.
Uzbek security and immigration officials detained Rotar when he arrived
at the Tashkent airport, holding him incommunicado for most of two days.
In an interview today with the Moscow-based news Web site Fergana.ru,
Rotar said that he received no explanation for his detention and
that he refused to leave the country voluntarily. Rotar had traveled to
Uzbekistan on assignment for Forum 18, a human rights news Web
site based in Oslo, Norway.
"We deplore this arbitrary deportation of our colleague, Igor Rotar, and
we call on President Islam Karimov to end his government's crackdown on
the independent media," CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said. "In taking
an actions such as this, President Karimov's government draws the curtain
of secrecy ever tighter and reaffirms its disturbing move toward international
isolation."
Uzbek authorities did not publicly comment on the deportation, but the
Foreign Ministry in Tashkent issued a statement today outlining accreditation
procedures for foreign correspondents. It stated that journalists may
apply for temporary accreditation upon arrival, but they could be denied
if they had violated Uzbek laws. The statement did not refer to Rotar
specifically, nor did it state that he had violated any laws.
Furkat Sidikov, a press officer at the Uzbekistan Embassy in Washington,
D.C., told CPJ in a telephone interview today that Rotar was held for
"technical reasons" because he did not have accreditation from the Foreign
Ministry.
Rotar told Fergana.ru that he was traveling to Uzbekistan to report
on the harassment of Protestants in the Western Uzbek region of Karakalpakistan
for Forum 18. He said he believes his detention was part of a broader
government crackdown on the media following the May 13 massacre of anti-government
protesters in the northeastern city of Andijon.
Rotar, a Central Asia correspondent for several Russian newspapers and
Western Web sites, was detained by border guards after arriving Thursday
at 10:25 a.m. on a flight from neighboring Kyrgyzstan, according to Forum
18.
Forum 18, citing unnamed sources in Uzbekistan, reported
that border guards detained the journalist on orders from the National
Security Service.

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