Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 21 – Over the last
five years, the number of Kyrgyz citizens convicted of extremism and terrorism
has risen 300 percent, and there are now about 600 of them behind bars, more
than half of them serving life sentences. But the others will be released, and
the challenge of deradicalizing them and preventing them from spreading their
views is growing.
According to Bishkek journalist Bolot
Isayev, however, the prospects for success are small. There is no money, no comprehensive
plan and few specialists; and the record of Kazakhstan is suggestive: There,
only one prisoner in five convicted of extremism reforms in prison (cabar.asia/ru/za-pyat-let-v-kyrgyzstane-v-tri-raza-vyroslo-kolichestvo-osuzhdennyh-za-ekstremizm-i-terrorizm/).
Since 2003, the Muslim Spiritual
Directorate (MSD) of Kyrgyzstan has had an arrangement allowing its
representatives to visit prisons and talk with those convicted of extremism and
terrorism in hopes of changing their views, Isayev says. But experts like Kadyr Malikov doubt this
works because the imams are viewed by prisoners as agents of the state.
Even prisoners who appear to change
their views often continue to propagandize their old views among others behind bars
and revert to their own views and actions upon their release, the Islamic
theologian says. If independent mullahs
were allowed to visit prisons, they might prove more effective, Malikov says.
Indira Aslanova, a specialist on
religion in Kyrgystan, says there is another problem: the authorities treat
those found guilty of terrorism and those found guilty of extremism as being in
the same category and treat them alike when in fact they are very different and
must be dealt with differently as well.
Because of its failure to re-educate
Islamists in prison, Bishkek since 2015 has isolated them from other prisoners
in special facilities. It has justified that action both to limit the Islamists
ability to spread their ideas and to protect them from ordinary criminals who
often treat Islamists brutally.
No comments:
Post a Comment