Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 30 – Conditions in
Tajikistan’s military and police have never been good, and there have already
been some high-profile cases where officers who had been serving Dushanbe have
gone over to the Islamist rebels. But
now, Zarif Shoyev says, there is an increasing probability that this will
become a mass phenomenon.
According to the Tajik expert, “all
conditions have already been established in Tajikistan for the going over into
the ranks of the militants of the Islamic State officers of the law enforcement
agencies and the military.” These include cutbacks in benefits, weak
educational efforts, and increasing
unwillingness to serve the state (centrasia.ru/news.php?st=1490823300).
A particular problem that Dushanbe
hasn’t figured out how to address, Shoyev says in commentary today, is that
police and military personnel more often than others come in contact with and
are infected by “extremist propaganda” and increasingly accept the arguments
and inducements that the authors of such propaganda offer.
Despite talk about blocking the influx
of such propaganda, he continues, Dushanbe has not been able so far to prevent
it from becoming ever more widely available and from attracting officers,
including senior officers like Colonel Gulmurod Khalimov, who defected from the
Tajik OMON to the Islamic State two years ago.
Nor has Dushanbe been able to block
the flow of young Tajiks, including Tajik soldiers into the ranks of the
Islamic State in Syria, Shoyev adds.
The situation is likely to get worse
because as a result of budgetary stringencies, Dushanbe has reduced the
benefits of the siloviki and made it more difficult for them to get a pension.
They now much serve more than twice as long as soldiers in Uzbekistan, and many
see service in ISIS as a way to make money for themselves and their families.
There is an additional problem that
this propensity creates that Shoyev doesn’t mention but that may be even more
important. If Tajik policemen or soldiers suspect that their comrades in arms
are getting ready to go over to the enemy, they are likely to be ever less
willing to take risks to defend public order.
If that should prove to be the case,
then the problems the Tajik analyst points to are likely to feed on themselves
and multiply in the coming weeks and months.
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