15.02.2005
Repression in Advance of Elections
Letter to Kyrgyz President Askar Akaev
February 14, 2005
President Askar Akaev
Prospekt Chuy, 205
Dom Pravitelstva
Bishkek 720003
Kyrgyzstan
Dear President Akaev,
We are writing to express concern about several developments surrounding
Kyrgyzstan’s forthcoming parliamentary election, scheduled for February
27.
The election will be an important test of the government’s commitment
to democracy and respect for basic human rights. We note that your government
has made clear, through statements and action, its opposition to any
repeat of the ‘Ukraine scenario’ in your country. We would urge you
to look closely at what is at the core of the two recent manifestations
of politics through “people power” in the CIS region: the demand for
responsive government and fair elections. Your most positive response
to concerns about a ‘Ukraine scenario’ in Kyrgyzstan would be to guarantee
an electoral process on February 27 that truly meets internationally
recognized democratic standards, and enjoys the confidence of the electorate.
Regrettably, a series of troubling statements made by you and other
government leaders seems designed to intimidate and impugn civil society
activists and members of the political opposition. Government statements
have treated the opposition as “extremists” and accused independent
and opposition-affiliated media of subversion. Your government has also
suggested that mass popular movements are merely creations of the West
and has dismissed the concerns of these movements. These statements
reject the ‘Ukraine scenario’ and at the same time degrade the idea
of human rights. In Georgia and Ukraine popular movements used peaceful
and democratic means to reverse the outcome of illegitimate and unfair
elections and to ensure that the will of the people determined the make-up
of the government.
In addition, a number of statements about mass protests seem aimed at
undercutting the legitimacy of freedom of assembly and at intimidating
critics of your government. Especially disturbing are reports of statements
that you made claiming that human rights are internal affairs and questioning
the legitimacy of election observers.
We have appended to this letter examples of such statements, which have
created an atmosphere hostile to the exercise of people’s rights in
advance of the election.
New legislation on demonstrations and recent, undue government interference
in peaceful protests restrict freedom of assembly. The government’s
refusal to register several opposition candidates appears to be politically
motivated. Voices critical of the government have been silenced or marginalized
in the media. Law enforcement and other government officials appear
to be intimidating opposition political activists and civil society
actors through petty harassment.
The above calls into question the government of Kyrgyzstan’s willingness
to fulfill its human rights obligations under article 25 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR; acceded to by Kyrgyzstan
in 1994). That provision enshrines each citizen’s rights “To take part
in the conduct of public affairs, directly or through freely chosen
representatives;” and “To vote and to be elected at genuine periodic
elections which shall be held by secret ballot, guaranteeing the free
expression of the will of the electorate.” Government actions and pronouncements
have also provided reason to regard the rights to freedom of expression,
assembly and association, articles 19, 21, and 22 of the ICCPR respectively,
to be at risk in Kyrgyzstan.
This letter details these concerns and offers concrete recommendations
for steps your government can take to improve the situation.
Exclusion of Would-be Candidates
One of the amendments to the Election Code, signed into law on January
24, 2004, establishes a residency requirement of five years for would-be
parliamentary candidates. This new provision, article 69-1, appears
to be an unreasonable restriction on the right to political participation,
specifically enacted to exclude opposition candidates who have served
in government posts abroad.
The new requirement stipulates that anyone wishing to run for office
must prove residency in Kyrgyzstan for the five years leading up to
elections; six months of each year can be spent abroad, however. (For
the first time, this year Kyrgyz citizens living abroad will not be
permitted to vote in the parliamentary election.)
Election officials have cited the new residence requirement in denying
the registration of several would-be candidates from the political opposition
who had been serving as ambassadors abroad. The amendment has the effect
of penalizing these leaders for the public service they have done representing
their country abroad. It also ignores diplomatic convention that diplomatic
representations abroad are sovereign territory of the represented state.
An eleventh-hour attempt by some in parliament to reverse the restrictions
foundered on January 18 and then passed on January 20, and was sent
to you for your signature. Under this measure, former diplomats who
submitted their documents to the relevant electoral commission before
the January 18 deadline for submission of nominations presumably would
have been registered. But in an interview on January 28 you announced
that you would not sign the measure.
Human Rights Watch is aware of the details of at least three cases in
which this restriction has barred the registration of individuals representing
opposition parties or movements.
? Roza Otunbaeva
Roza Otunbaeva is the co-chair of the Ata-Zhurt (Fatherland) political
movement. Otunbaeva is a former minister of foreign affairs and prime
minister, and has served as ambassador to the United States and Canada,
and to the United Kingdom.
On January 7, Otunbaeva was denied registration as a candidate for parliament
on the grounds that she allegedly was not a permanent resident of Kyrgyzstan
for the five years leading up to the election. In its decision, the
District Election Commission cited article 56 of the Constitution and
article 69-1 of Kyrgyzstan’s Election Code. Otunbaeva has argued that
she remained a registered resident of Kyrgyzstan even while living and
working abroad. The Lenin District Court found against Otunbaeva, and
her appeal before the Supreme Court, in which she argued that embassies
and diplomatic spaces abroad should be considered part of the territory
of Kyrgyzstan, was rejected on January 18.
The denial of Otunbaeva’s registration raises additional concern that
election authorities sought to eliminate potential rivals to your daughter,
Bermet Akaeva, in her parliamentary race. Akaeva, registered on January
20, and Otunbaeva would have been direct rivals for a seat in parliament
representing the same district.
? Usen Sydykov
On January 10, election officials denied registration to Usen Sydykov,
a leading member of the Kyrgyzstan People’s Movement, also citing the
residence requirement. Sydykov formerly served as Kyrgyzstan’s envoy
to the CIS.
Sydykov was also deregistered as a candidate in the 2003 parliamentary
by-elections for a seat in Kara-Kulja, in the Jalal Abad province. After
a dispute over the first round of voting in which he participated (he
claimed a majority of votes while government figures declared his opponent
the winner) a runoff vote was called for; but before it took place Sydykov
was disqualified on the grounds that he failed to provide proof that
you had given him permission to take a leave from his job as envoy to
the CIS in order to run for office. He was also accused of failing to
report some of his property and assets on his application.
? Medetkan Sherimkulov
Sherimkulov is a former ambassador of Kyrgyzstan to Turkey and also
served as speaker of parliament in the mid-1990s. He was a candidate
for president in the 1995 elections. On January 8 the Central Electoral
Commission (CEC) denied Sherimkulov registration to run for parliament,
citing the residency requirement.
? Bolotbek Maripov
The case of Maripov, a journalist and editor for the privately owned
newspaper Obshchestveni Reiting (Public Poll), also suggests a political
motivation for the residency restrictions. On January 19 Maripov was
denied registration as a candidate for parliament on the grounds that
he did not have a Bishkek city residency permit in his passport for
seven months (February to September) in 2003. The election commission
decided that a long-term gap in the permit amounted to a violation of
article 69-1 of the new Election Code, the same law used to disqualify
former diplomats from standing for office. Maripov explained that he
had been without a permit for several months because he was living with
his parents during this period while looking for an apartment to purchase.
He argued that article 69-1 of the code requires residency in the country
and does not mention issues of city housing registration. He provided
evidence that he had been residing in Kyrgyzstan for the entire period
in question. Although initially rejected, Maripov appealed and won his
registration in the Universitetski district on January 24.
Freedom of Assembly
The ICCPR provides for freedom of assembly and specifies that: “No restrictions
may be placed on the exercise of this right other than those imposed
in conformity with the law and which are necessary in a democratic society
in the interests of national security or public safety, public order
(ordre public), the protection of public health or morals or the protection
of the rights and freedoms of others.” Thus, while some restriction
is foreseen as permissible, states are not supposed to restrict the
right in such a way that nullifies or destroys the right itself. New
government proposals to amend the law on public assemblies, taken together
with recent statements by government leaders and the unjustified interference
with peaceful demonstration in the past, raise concern that this right
may be in jeopardy, particularly in the lead-up to and aftermath of
the election.
New Draft Law and Decree Restricting Freedom of Assembly
In October 2004 Kyrgyzstan’s Constitutional Court ruled that the existing
law on public assemblies was facilitating the violation of citizens’
right to peaceful assembly and must be nullified and replaced with one
that is in compliance with the constitution. However, the new draft
law “On Making Amendments and Additions to the Law of the Republic of
Kyrgyzstan on the Right of Citizens to Gather Peacefully and Without
Arms, and to Conduct Rallies and Demonstrations” proposed by your government
on November 23, 2004 and currently before the Kyrgyz parliament, if
adopted, would represent a serious setback to freedom of assembly in
Kyrgyzstan, creating unnecessary and unwarranted restrictions on this
right.
The amendments would ban public gatherings, regardless of size, that
are “adjacent to” (the exact distance is left undefined) the residences
of the president and prime minister, the parliament, court buildings,
and prisons; yet these are important symbolic venues for people seeking
to have their grievances heard by the government. While article 21 of
the ICCPR grants governments latitude to restrict the timing and place
of demonstrations to meet the demands of public order, the amendments
in this regard appear overly broad and likely to unjustifiably infringe
on the right to freedom of assembly.
If this law is accepted, protest meetings also will not be allowed to
begin before 8:00 a.m. or continue past 11:00 in the evening. This appears
aimed at preventing mass campouts or prolonged protests, but could also
be used to unreasonably restrict other public gatherings that do not
pose a challenge to public order.
Of even greater concern are the proposed rules on notification. At first
glance the proposed amendments appear to comply with the Constitutional
Court’s ruling by requiring prior “notification” for demonstrations,
rather than explicit permission. However, a closer reading clearly indicates
that under the proposed amendments prior government permission is still
required for public gatherings. The proposed amendments would make it
illegal to hold public meetings, demonstrations and rallies in venues
without notifying local government authorities in writing at least nine
days in advance. Within six days the government is then obligated to
“inform the event organizers in writing about the lack of objections”
to the event. This proposal constitutes an unreasonable restriction,
as it eliminates the possibility of spontaneous or quickly organized
protests.
New Ordinance for Bishkek
We are concerned about further restrictions on demonstrations in Bishkek,
which are more likely to attract the attention of the media and diplomatic
community and to involve the leadership of opposition parties and movements.
On January 13 the Bishkek City Council issued a decree requiring organizers
of all public gatherings to “notify” the city administration at least
ten days prior to an event. To register, one has to provide a written
request listing the name of the organization, names, home addresses,
work addresses of the group’s representatives, a map of any march route,
the date and time of the event, and the approximate number of participants.
This appears to be tantamount to a licensing regime in parallel with
the draft national law on assembly before the parliament.
The decree also states that city authorities should “recommend” that
organizers hold all of their public meetings in Pervomaiski district,
in the square near the Maxim Gorky monument in central Bishkek. Some
authorities seem to have interpreted this as a requirement. For instance,
as early as January 14 one rights defender reported that law enforcement
officers cited the decree and told a small group of protestors outside
a government building in Bishkek that public gatherings could now only
be held in the square near the Maxim Gorky monument.
Restrictions in Practice
Because Kyrgyz law enforcement authorities have engaged in a pattern
of suppressing peaceful demonstrations by the political opposition,
but allowing others to take place, we are concerned that authorities
may apply the amendments under consideration and the Bishkek ordinance
in a discriminatory manner. For example, in 2004 demonstrations such
as one protesting the work of the Renton group, a company that allegedly
defrauded investors, and even a protest in which people allegedly publicly
burned signs and threw condoms at officials during a demonstration against
a sex-education text, were allowed to proceed. Yet rallies that support
the political opposition, such as those in support of imprisoned Ar-Namys
(Dignity) party leader Feliks Kulov, are not similarly tolerated.
For the past few years, Kyrgyz law enforcement have developed a record
of unjustifiably breaking up such demonstrations. For instance, police
used force against small groups of protesters peacefully demanding justice
for their relatives killed by police in the 2002 Aksy demonstration.
On several occasions in 2003 officers forcibly removed people who had
come to Bishkek to protest, transporting them back to their home cities
in the south. In May 2003, Bishkek police shoved a group of women onto
buses and held them in police detention when they attempted to rally
on behalf of the dead and wounded victims of Aksy. Police have also
used force detaining seasoned civil society activists engaged in peaceful
public assembly. In April 2004, one officer punched an activist after
detaining her at a rally—she had attended the rally as part of a project
to assess the degree of freedom of assembly in Kyrgyzstan.
As parliamentary elections near, state authorities have already taken
action against the organizers of political opposition rallies.
Recent examples involve the organizers of rallies in support of Roza
Otunbaeva, the opposition leader who was denied registration as a candidate
for parliament. Beginning January 8, supporters of Otunbaeva gathered
outside parliament in Bishkek to protest her exclusion as illegal and
unconstitutional and call for her registration as a candidate. Approximately
200 people, including leading opposition members of parliament, took
part in the protest gatherings.
The public gatherings at first went smoothly, even when, on January
10, about 100 counter-protestors were reportedly bused to the site,
where they voiced their support for the president and called for parliament
to resign. But following a particularly large demonstration held near
the Gorky monument on January 19 involving about 400 people, authorities
took action against some of the most prominent critics of the government
who had appeared at the rally. Administrative charges were brought against
Topchubek Turgunaliev, a human rights defender and leader of the Erkindik
party, Ishengul Boljurova, co-chair of the Kyrgyzstan People’s Movement,
and Roza Otunbaeva. The political opposition activists were accused
of disturbing public order during a rally or procession (administrative
code article 392), violating traffic rules (administrative code article
247), and disobeying the orders of a representative of the state (administrative
code article 371) during the course of the January 19 public meeting.
All three were tried in January in separate hearings and each fined
the equivalent to ten times the monthly minimum wage (1,000 som, or
about U.S. 24 dollars).
Pressure to Join a Pro-government Party
Human Rights Watch has received numerous reports, including from credible
non-partisan groups, that the new pro-government party Alga, Kyrgyzstan!
(Forward, Kyrgyzstan!), reportedly run by Bermet Akaeva, compelled people
paid from the state budget—teachers, doctors, government officials,
students—to become members of the party, under threat of losing their
jobs or being deprived future benefits.
The Kyrgyz Committee for Human Rights (KCHR) recently reported allegations
that university students in Bishkek were coerced into forming initiative
groups and gathering thousands of signatures in support of Akaeva’s
candidacy for parliament. This campaign came on the heels of months
of mobilization of teachers and others in academia on behalf of the
Alga, Kyrgyzstan! party.
The students’ signatures were submitted to the district election commission
on January 17. Two days later, your government raised government stipends
for students by thirty percent and raised the salaries of employees
of cultural and educational institutions, including teachers and administrators.
This created the impression that the increase in state benefits was
somehow conditional upon student and teacher support of Akaeva.
Intimidation and Harassment of Opposition Politicians and Civil Society
Activists
Acts of petty vandalism and harassment of NGO leaders, opposition politicians,
and persons associated with them may signal a campaign to intimidate
and silence critics of your government in advance of the election.
? On the night of January 9, unknown persons vandalized the homes of
opposition parliamentarian Azimbek Beknazarov and Roza Otunbaeva, as
well as leading civil society activists. Graffiti, including dollar
signs, was painted on the sides of the homes of Tolekan Ismailova, head
of the NGO Civil Society against Corruption, Natalia Ablova, director
of the Bureau on Human Rights and Rule of Law, and Jaypar Jeksheev,
another human rights activist, as well as on the wall of the offices
of Res Publica, an opposition-affiliated newspaper. The victims of the
graffiti said they felt threatened by the incident. The dollar signs
are presumably a reference to Western money and meant to suggest that
these leading opposition and civil society activists receive funding
from Western sources. The prospect of Western funding of the opposition
in Kyrgyzstan has been publicly denounced by you and senior members
of your government.
Several incidents involving police in Bishkek suggested that opposition
deputies are being persecuted for their support of Otunbaeva and involvement
in protests supporting her and others.
? According to the KCHR, on January 10 two men who identified themselves
as police officers held and interrogated Talant Turgunaliev, the driver
of opposition parliamentarian Bolotbek Sherniazov. The men, who said
they were police, allegedly stopped Turgunaliev and drove him around
in their own car, asking him questions about the recent opposition rallies.
He told the Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR) that the men
asked him about the organizers of the recent protests, where protest
signs and tents in the city square had come from and, “tried to frighten
me saying I could be arrested for possession of drugs.” He reported
that when he returned to his car, someone had planted a small amount
of marijuana in the trunk and taken sixty-eight dollars. According to
the KCHR report, the driver was released after being warned that police
would do the same “to every opposition activist.”
? On January 11, officers pulled over the driver of opposition parliamentarian
Zamirbek Parmankolov for a traffic violation and then impounded his
car. The same day police impounded the car of opposition parliamentarian
Azimbek Beknazarov and accused his driver of driving while intoxicated.
Beknazarov's driver, Jyrgal Jailobaev, told IWPR that police asked him
to open the trunk of the car and that, “When I said that I would not
open the car, the traffic police immediately drew up a report that I
was drinking and driving, and took away my documents.”
Both Beknazarov and Sherniazov have been actively involved in protests
supporting the candidacy of Roza Otunbaeva. A statement by the Bishkek
police department alleged that their cars had been spotted near the
recent protests blocking major streets.
? Rights group “Kylym Shamy” reported that the car of Kubanychbek Junushaliev,
Roza Otunbaeva’s official representative, was also impounded by police
in January. Bishkek police at first justified the action by alleging
that it was a stolen vehicle, but later confiscated protest posters
that were found in the car’s trunk. According to a report by MSN (formerly
Moya Stolitsa-Novosti), an administrative case was opened against the
driver for allegedly disobeying police orders.
The above incidents seem minor, but are significant given government
actions in recent years to intimidate or marginalize the political opposition
and civil society activists. For example, in January 2004 listening
devices were found in the government offices of several leading opposition
parliamentarians. A parliamentary report accused the National Security
Service of illegally placing the listening devices; the National Security
Service denied responsibility. The report revealed that prominent civil
society leaders were also the targets of illegal surveillance operations
during past years.
Also, for years the Ar-Namys (Dignity) party has been a particular target
of government persecution. Members told Human Rights Watch they are
regularly approached by government authorities or security agents and
that attempts are made to convince or coerce them to quit the party.
Some expressed fear of retribution for their political activities.
The continued incarceration of the party’s leader, Feliks Kulov, has
had a chilling effect not only on members of Ar-Namys but for the political
opposition in general. As you know, Feliks Kulov was arrested and acquitted
in 2000 on charges of abuse of office. He was rearrested after he declared
his intent to run for president in that year’s elections, and was tried
in 2001 and sentenced to seven years in prison. He faced new charges
in 2003, adding three years to his sentence. Human Rights Watch has
written to the government previously to protest Kulov’s incarceration,
which we believe is politically motivated.
As noted above, police are particularly quick to crack down on rallies
in support of the political opposition, particularly those involving
Ar-Namys members and calling for the release of Kulov.
Also relevant in this context is the November 16, 2004 abduction of
rights defender and politician Tursbunbek Akunov, who was released December
1. Allegedly, the kidnappers’ only demand was that Akunov halt his campaign
calling for your immediate resignation. Rather than conduct a thorough
investigation, officials accused him of staging the kidnapping himself
and twisted the incident to make it seem as though Akunov was plotting
to make himself a martyr to facilitate a Georgian-style popular uprising.
Instead of undertaking a thorough and unbiased investigation into this
serious crime, government officials launched a smear campaign against
Akunov. In our letter to you on December 2, Human Rights Watch expressed
our objection to outrageous statements made by members of the Kyrgyz
government in attempt to shift the blame for the kidnapping of Akunov
on the victim himself rather than his captors. Since our December 2
letter, National Security Service deputy chief Boris Poluektov gave
an interview discussing the possibility that the opposition would provoke
public unrest, in which he also alleged that parliamentary deputies
were planning a “Georgian scenario.” In that interview he reportedly
told Interfax, “Such actions as the kidnapping of a human rights defender,
Tursunbek Akunov, were planned in advance in the interests of certain
political forces.” Poluektov added, “Akunov's disappearance and statements
by some opposition deputies, who argue that the results of the 2005
parliamentary elections will be falsified and voters are already being
bribed, indicate the existence of such plans.”
Removing Critical Media
Human Rights Watch is concerned that critical voices were silenced in
advance of the campaign period, which began February 2. While all candidates
are given air time during the three-week campaign period, outside this
brief interval the routine practice in the government-affiliated media
is marginalization of the opposition. Of particular concern has been
the opposition’s lack of access to television coverage while the government
uses its influence on broadcast media to publicly smear opposition politicians
and critics of government policy.
Television
For years, the government or its allies have closely controlled television
stations that broadcast nation-wide. The only exception was the Pyramida
station, which occasionally broadcast content critical of the government.
In 2004, a new group of investors said to be linked to your son, Aidar
Akaev, took over a controlling interest in the station. [Aidar Akaev
is also a candidate for parliament—he was registered on January 18—and
is expected to run under the auspices of his sister’s party Alga, Kyrgyzstan!].
Media watchdog groups have told Human Rights Watch that they now fear
Pyramida will no longer represent even a semi-independent source of
news.
Because television is the main source of news information for most people
in Kyrgyzstan, this decline in diversity in political content is a worrying
development, particularly coming as it did in the lead-up to the election
campaign.
Opposition politicians, including members of parliament, are given little
or no coverage on television. When they are shown, it is often along
with disparaging commentary. This lack of access to the television media
has crippled the political opposition’s ability to project to the public
its message and program.
The use of television to smear the opposition appears to be especially
prevalent. Koort TV—one of a half-dozen media holdings rumored to be
controlled by your son-in-law Adil Toigonbaev—is particularly strident
in its criticism of the opposition and is known to broadcast programs
ridiculing and discrediting rights defenders and opposition parliamentarians.
A representative of an international watchdog group who monitors media
coverage told Human Rights Watch that Koort TV does not lose an opportunity
to denounce the opposition.
MSN
Independent and opposition-affiliated print media have been the target
of repeated government harassment and persecution. Their struggles to
realize their right to publish critical content has been well-documented.
Representatives of independent newspapers have told Human Rights Watch
that the new independent printing press established with the help of
U.S. government assistance has improved the situation for them and is
in many ways a success. We welcome this progress and the end to the
arbitrary interference with newspaper publication that took place when
the state-run printing press was the only option. However, the government
appears to be employing heavy-handed lawsuits and new tactics to silence
critical print media.
In a recent example, antimonopoly laws were used to penalize a leading
independent newspaper. The government newspaper Vecherny Bishkek, along
with several other private and pro-government newspapers and the state
printing house “Uchkun,” filed a complaint against the independent newspaper
MSN, formerly known as Moya Stolitsa-Novosti. The complaint, filed with
the government’s antimonopoly agency, said that MSN was charging too
little for its newspaper, thereby undercutting the competition. The
anti-monopoly department of the Ministry of Economy and Development,
Industry and Trade ruled on September 29, 2004 that MSN had committed
“monopolistic actions,” ordered the paper to raise its prices, and recommended
that the complainants sue the paper for damages.
On December 3, 2004, O. Juravlev of the Department for Anti-monopoly
Policy under the Ministry of Economy and Development, Industry and Trade
wrote to the Oktiabrski district procurator’s office in Bishkek asking
that a criminal case be opened against the editors of MSN under Criminal
Code article 188, which punishes monopolistic activity and carries a
penalty of up to five years in prison and confiscation of property.
Recommendations for Improvement
We urge you to take immediate and concrete steps to improve the protection
of basic rights in Kyrgyzstan, in order to create a fairer pre-election
environment and to fulfill Kyrgyzstan’s international obligations.
As a matter of priority, we call on you to undertake the following:
? Reaffirm your government’s commitment to the ICCPR, particularly article
25, the right to political participation, and also the basic rights
to freedom of expression, assembly and association provided for in articles
19, 21, and 22 respectively.
? Withdraw the current draft law on assembly proposed by your government
and instead introduce one that is in keeping with the constitution of
Kyrgyzstan and the country’s international human rights commitments.
? Withdraw excessive limits on places where people can assemble in Bishkek.
? Sign into law the reversal of the unreasonable restriction that prevents
diplomats who worked abroad from running for office.
? Charge the relevant agencies to conduct a thorough and unbiased investigation
into the kidnapping of Tursunbek Akunov, including by looking into his
allegations that persons affiliated with the National Security Service
and Ministry of Internal Affairs were involved in the crime.
? Cooperate with local and international elections monitors and guarantee
them unfettered access to polling places on election day.
? Cease harassment of opposition and civil society leaders.
Thank you for your attention to these matters at this critical time,
Rachel Denber
Acting Executive Director
Europe and Central Asia division
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