Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 24 – The Tajik
militia have arrested approximately 20 imams in the northern portion of
Tajikistan for administrative violations and detained them for 15 days; but
their lawyers expect that the authorities will fabricate cases of extremism
against them during that time and bring more serious charges against them.
Up to now, the official Tajik media
have not reported on these arrests. They have been the subject of a report only
by the independent Payom news agency (payom.net/2016/03/21/oil-navbati-imomoni-masoid-am-rasid-bozdoshti-15-20-imom-hatib-dar-sud.html)
whose coverage has been summarized by the Russian-language Ansar portal (ansar.ru/rfsng/sever-tadzhikistana-sotryasli-massovye-aresty-imamov).
Most
of those arrested, the Payom agency says, have condemned the Islamist
opposition in Tajikistan and have urged their parishioners not to take part in
politics; but the 20 share one thing in common: all of them received their
theological educations abroad, mostly in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia.
That
makes them suspect in the eyes of Dushanbe which has been carrying out the most
thorough-going effort of any post-Soviet state to identify and exclude
graduates of foreign medrassahs and Islamic universities. (On this campaign and
its limitations, see windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2012/01/window-on-eurasia-tajikistan-brings.html).
This
wave of arrests reflects Dushanbe’s nervousness about the spread of Islamist
values from Afghanistan into Tajikistan, but there are three reasons to think
that instead of restricting the influence of Islamist radicalism there, this
action will have exactly the opposite effect and allow the radicals to gain
ground:
·
First, the imams
who have been arrested are likely to be replaced by far less qualified people
who will be far less able to oppose the appeals of Islamists coming into
Tajikistan from abroad.
·
Second, many
Tajiks are likely to see this wave of arrests as evidence of the anti-Islamic
nature of the Tajik state and thus be more willing to listen to the radicals.
·
And third,
Dushanbe’s assumption that it can control Muslims by controlling the mosques is
likely to be shown as unwarranted. Many Tajiks will now go to underground
mosques that the state doesn’t control and where the messages they will receive
are far more radical than any these 20 have given.
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