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The situation is bad in many dimensions - that is true. However, many reports use over-dramatized statements and exaggerations also. Reports that there is no independent media, that there is no free access to the Internet, that all critics of Karimov are in jail or in exile are examples of such exaggerated statements. (Recently, a referendum took place extending the presidential term to seven years. While this referendum also floated the idea of making Karimov president for life, that shift has not yet taken place.) So the United States needs a picture that does not come only from interest-group propaganda. Because judgement based on inaccurate, over-dramatized reports or considering only one side of the complex picture leads to wrong diagnosis and ineffective, counter-productive, or even dangerous actions. The question of dissent illustrates this challenge. Despite its terrible human rights record, Karimov's government more or less tolerates opposition parties with secular-democratic slogans, reporters of human rights violations and activists who use democratic rhetoric (although one generally finds the same few individuals in all these roles). These educated dissidents are allowed to travel across Europe and America to disseminate views and reports critical of the government, and brief Western officials and journalists, in Uzbekistan and outside. On March 6, just before Karimov's visit to Washington, the government registered the Independent Organization for Human Rights. This local group is widely known for strong criticism of government's policies and also for insulting attacks against other human rights activists and groups. So progress is possible. The vexing question is, how can Western democracy, respect for individual freedoms and civil society come about in Uzbekistan? The approach based on "export of democracy" or "punishment for human rights violations" cannot work due to a lack of support in national traditions and a weak, divided democratic opposition. This opposition has a small social base in the country, due to radicalism disproportionate to its current weakness. Uzbekistan faces huge problems of polarization in the economic sphere and politics. Middle class and centrist-oriented constructive opposition movements, who may become the main supporters of the gradual, step-by-step democratic development, are nearly non-existent. Pro-democracy observers hope that the drift of four official political parties, which Karimov founded or approved, will lead to centrist or moderate opposition positions. One can also hope for the emergence of new opposition with realistic agendas, or the drift of some currently radical opposition members to more moderate positions. The United States should encourage this incremental progress. All other alternatives mean fighting and cynical attempts to use the peoples' dissatisfaction as a means of inciting them. If the United States allows this to happen, it will be serving neither Uzbekistan nor itself. Editor's Note: Abdumannob Polat is a director of Central Asian Human Rights Information network at the Union of Councils. ![]() Copyright © . Asia Society. All rights reserved. Please click here for legal restrictions and terms of use applicable to this site and Asia Society's Privacy Policy. |