|
UZBEKISTAN: SECURITY SERVICE REBUTS CHARGES IT KNEW OF TASHKENT BOMBINGS IN ADVANCE
Bruce Pannier:
11/29/03
A EurasiaNet Partner Post from RFE/RL
Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people were arrested or detained in the aftermath of the 1999 bombings in the Uzbek capital, Tashkent. When a series of trials started a few months later, the testimony of suspects matched almost exactly the initial suspicions of Uzbek investigators. One of the suspects whose testimony helped to prove the Uzbek prosecutors case was Zayniddin Askarov. Askarov was a political leader in the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU), a group that made several armed incursions into Uzbekistan following the Tashkent bombings. Askarov was sentenced to 10 years in jail after his testimony helped implicate IMU leaders Juma Namangani and Takhir Yuldash and Erk Democratic Party leader Mohammed Solih. All three were tried in absentia in connection with the bombings and found guilty. On November 26, Uzbekistans National Security Service invited journalists from the BBC, Voice of America, and Radio Liberty to speak with Askarov, apparently after challenges to the official version of events that appeared on the Internet. After repeating his basic testimony, Askarov suddenly found himself alone with the journalists when the security official left the room. At that point, Askarov changed his statement and told the reporters he had been deceived by Uzbek Interior Minister Zokir Almatov into admitting his guilt and implicating others in the bombings. "The Interior Minister Almatov himself invited me to his office and promised that if I would give testimony against Solih, if I played this role, then everyone would be amnestied, that no one would be shot, and I would be released after the trial. So I said what I said in court to save these people," Askarov said. Askarov says he was seeking to save his religious teacher, Bahrom Abdullayev, and five other acquaintances from the firing squad. Abdullayev was accused by authorities of being behind the bombings, despite the fact he was already in prison at the time they were carried out. In his comments to journalists, Askarov disputed the Uzbek governments official version of what happened on February 16 1999, saying the authorities knew in advance the bombings would take place. Askarov said Abdullayev had warned the authorities about the impending attacks. As proof, Askarov offered this explanation of what happened immediately after the bombings. "Not even five minutes after the blasts, [Uzbek President Islam] Karimov, [National Security Committee chairman] Rustam Inoyatov, and [Interior Minister] Zokir Almatov were at the square [Mustakillik Maidoni, the site of Tashkents government buildings]. And as if according to a script, they declared this was the work of religious fanatics and said, We know who did this and we will soon find them, " Askarov said. Askarov also said Erk leader Solih had nothing to do with the Tashkent bombings, nor did IMU ideological leader Takhir Yuldash. Askarov named a former mufti as the organizer of the attacks -- Abdullah Qori -- and said the goal of those who carried out the bombings was, indeed, to kill Karimov. The next day, Lieutenant Colonel Ravshan Abdullakhanov of the SNB paid a visit to RFE/RLs bureau in Tashkent to rebut Askarovs charges and to try to explain why Askarov said what he did. "If we consider that [Askarov] himself has said that he is mentally ill, then I think your listeners will be able to judge for themselves [the validity of his comments]," Abdullakhanov said. Abdullakhanov brought a stack of documents that he says proves Erk leader Solih is guilty as charged of planning the bombings. Asked by RFE/RL who had initiated the meeting between Askarov and the journalists, Abdullakhanov said mysteriously, "[The meeting] took place at the initiative of Zayniddin Askarov." The Askarov case raises a number of questions. Why was there an apparent security lapse around a convicted prisoner? Why did the security service not demand the tapes of Askarovs seemingly unapproved conversation with foreign journalists before they were aired? And why did the SNB feel the need to come to Radio Liberty the next day to dismiss Askarovs charges and try to explain what had happened? Uzbekistan is accused by international rights organizations of routinely torturing and killing prisoners. There is no precedent for security officials granting a prisoners request to speak with the foreign media -- or of seeking out the media themselves to deny statements made by the prisoner.
Email this article | Printer-Friendly Version
Posted November 29, 2003
© Eurasianet
http://www.eurasianet.org
 |
 |
The Central Eurasia Project aims, through its website,
meetings, papers, and grants, to foster a more informed
debate about the social, political and economic developments
of the Caucasus and Central Asia. It is a program of the
Open Society Institute-New York. The Open Society Institute-New
York is a private operating and grantmaking foundation
that promotes the development of open societies around
the world by supporting educational, social, and legal
reform, and by encouraging alternative approaches to complex
and controversial issues.
The views expressed in this publication do not necessarily
represent the position of the Open Society Institute and
are the sole responsibility of the author or authors.
|
 |
 |
|