Jahongir.Org
05/30/2001
BBG-IBB-VOA EDITORIAL NUMBER=0-09287
REPRESSION IN
The authoritarian regime of
Mr. Mamatov escaped from a political
prison in 1993 and was later granted asylum in the
Uzbekistan security forces routinely
plant narcotics, weapons, or Islamic literature on detainees to justify arrest
or extort bribes. The Karimov government also uses psychiatric abuse to punish
those who speak out against it. Human rights activist Elena Urlaeva
[yeh-LEH-nah oor-LEH-yeh-vah] was arrested on her way to a political protest on
April 6th. Since then, she has been held incommunicado in a
psychiatric hospital in
Uzbekistan authorities target the
families of political opponents who incur the government's wrath, a practice
common to totalitarian regimes. Family members are often detained, beaten, or
forced to undergo public humiliation. Following Jahongir Muhammad Mamatov's
escape from prison, his wife was sentenced to two years in prison on trumped-up
charges. More than twenty of his friends and relatives were also detained.
By persecuting those who report on its
abuses, the Karimov government in