Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 15 – For most of the
post-Soviet period, Turkmenistan has been one of the most stable countries in
Central Asia, its stability purchased at the cost of a highly repressive regime
and by Ashgabat’s insistence on neutrality in the conflicts swirling around it.
But, according to one Central Asian analyst, its “period of relative stability
is approaching its end.”
On the one hand, the deteriorating
security situation in Afghanistan means that despite its neutrality, Ashgabat
now faces a real threat from the outside. (For a discussion of this, see centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1428475200).
And on the other, there are mounting indications of growing discontent at home,
discontent that may be linked with the outside challenges.
Turkmenistan
President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow has used money
from gas sales to win some support and deployed his special services to
suppress any opposition, Serdar Nurmyradov says, and he has benefited from his
neutrality and the relative calm in the portion of Afghanistan adjoining his
country (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1428943620).
But
the gas money is running out, things are heating up even in that part of
Afghanistan, and there are signs that anger about his authoritarian rule is
increasing, the analyst says. Anti-government
leaflets have begun to appear, and their contents suggest what is now agitating
Turkmens about Berdimuhamedow’s regime.
One
in the form of an open letter to the president said “We greet you in place of
the New Year with new prices! Thanks to
you, a million of our brothers are in slavery in Turkey, and our women are
subjected to sexual exploitation. Despite the oil and gas reserves of the
country, our men in their motherland are forced to work for a pittance under
the yoke of the Chinese, the numbers of which on Turkmen lands grow with each
year.”
The
leaflets printed in both Turkmen and Russian said that the president “devotes
his attention to the development of Ashgabat while other cities and regions of
the country remain in ruins thus creating ever larger socio-economic problems.”
But despite its “pompousness,” the city has been transformed by the regime into
“’a ghost city’ populated by zombis.”
And
the broadsides include calls for “overthrowing the regime and uniting with ‘brothers
engaged in jihad’ against infidels abroad.”
Not
surprisingly, the regime has cracked down hard, arresting some 20 people on
suspicion of composing, printing and distributing the leaflets, which have now
appeared in more parts of the country.
And
there are concerns in Ashgabat that the Turkmen opposition in exile, one that
remains extremely divided, may be getting its act together, now that the leaders
of its three main branches, the Republican Party of Turkmenistan, the Turkmen
Human Rights Initiative, and the United Democratic Opposition have met in
Moscow with Russian human rights groups.
According
to Nurmyradov, the situation in Turkmenistan has reached the point that
increasing repression is only generating more anger and opposition and not
intimidating the population as it has in the past. If he is right, then yet
another country in Central Asia is about to become a real trouble spot.
No comments:
Post a Comment