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TAJIKISTAN: GUILTY BY ASSOCIATION
By Zafar Abdullaev
May 20, 2004 (IWPR) Saodat Qodirova
has been in jail in the Tajik capital Dushanbe for over a month,
without being charged. The reason? No one knows for sure, but many
believe she was arrested because she had the temerity to write to
the authorities about her husband and two brothers, convicted as
Islamic radicals.
Qodirovas case is especially
worrying because it suggests the government is widening the net
in its battle against the banned Islamic organisation Hizb-ut-Tahrir
by targeting the relatives of the movements supporters.
Qodirova, 30, made a meagre living
as a seamstress in the village of Shodien, on the outskirts of Dushanbe.
Three years ago her husband and two brothers were arrested along
with about 17 others when police swooped on the village to root
out suspected Hizb-ut-Tahrir members.
She wrote in March to Tajik president
Imomali Rahmonov asking him to reduce their sentences reduced and
transfer them from a prison in northern Tajikistan to one in the
capital, where it would be much easier for her to visit them.
The presidents office passed
the letter to the relevant agencies - the chief prosecutors
office and Tajikistans supreme court. As a result, relatives
say, Qodirova was arrested. Her ten-year-old son was also taken
into custody but released the next day.
Neighbours say Qodirova was not involved
in religious activism.
They set Saodat up, said one. She never did anything
like that, but for some reason, the day she was arrested two women
went to her and begged her to give them lessons from the Koran.
They didn't have time to go inside with their religious literature
before the security services arrived.
Qodirovas two sisters and their
elderly mother Saidinisso also fear imminent arrest. The latter
was held for 15 days last December when a group of women from Shodien
tried to deliver a letter asking for their jailed male relatives
to be transferred from the north to Dushanbe.
In Qodirovas case, it took her
relatives a week to find out that she was being held in a police
detention unit. And it was another three weeks before the authorities
would admit that she was being held, after the local office of Radio
Liberty and IWPR took the case up.
IWPR has learnt that Qodirova has not
been formally charged - in apparent contravention of legislation
on how detainees should be treated.
In addition, relatives say she has
yet to see a lawyer, another legal right. The prosecution service
claimed she had been assigned legal counsel when she was taken into
custody, but when pressed they refused to give the defence lawyers
name. The official lawyers body which covers Qodirovas
village says they have not been approached by the authorities to
take her case on.
IWPR has learned that the secrecy surrounding
detained suspects believed to be linked to the banned Islamic group
is official policy. A senior police officer involved in Qodirovas
case told IWPR, At the beginning of this year we received
a secret order from the government not to release details of the
detention of Hizb-ut-Tahrir members - all the case files are stamped
Secret.
Tajikistan banned Hizb-ut-Tahrir in
2001 and has jailed more than 120 people to date, convicting them
of membership and preaching its message. The group has a radical
agenda replacing current governments with Islamic rule
but it says it does not advocate violence, and most people are arrested
for disseminating leaflets and posters.
In Central Asia, Hizb-ut-Tahrir first
appeared in Uzbekistan in the mid-Nineties, and most of its hostility
is directed towards that countrys government, which has in
turn arrested thousands of suspected members. The group spread to
Tajikistan through Sogd, a northern region adjacent to Uzbekistan.
Initially most recruits were ethnic Uzbeks, and the pattern of arrests
bears this out, whith most taking place in Sogd, Tursunzade and
other areas with substantial Uzbek communities. The people arrested
in the 2001 police raid on Qodirovas village Shodien were
also Uzbeks.
But it is premature to say that the
groups recruits are restricted to one group. In February and
March this year, 35 suspected activists arrested in the southern
region of Kulyab were all ethnic Tajiks.
The secrecy surrounding detention of
suspects can only increase fears that they will suffer mistreatment
at the hands of police. Physical abuse and torture are frequently
reported as a means of extracting confessions in Tajikistan.
Tursun Kabirov, an independent political
analyst, believes that the tough approach taken by the authorities
may be counterproductive.
"The excesses carried out by the
authorities, and infringements of the rights of Hizb-ut-Tahrir members
and their families create resentment among the general public. This
creates fertile ground for cells of this illegal organisation to
develop in Tajikistan, he warned.
From: http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/rca/rca_200405_286_1_eng.txt
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