Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 9 –
Turkmenistan, the most authoritarian and closed country in the post-Soviet
space, seldom attracts much attention; but this year, its dictator, Gurbanguly
Berdymukhamedov, has managed to attract some because of his continuing
assertion that no on in Turkmenistan has contracted the coronavirus.
If anyone becomes sick of dies, he
and his government have said, it must be from something else. European
officials and human rights activists have responded by asking him to act as if
the virus is there even if it is not lest more people suffer and die as many
already have with symptoms remarkably like those others have identified as
coronavirus ones.
Now, opposition journalist Azar Redzhepov
says, there is a chance to Turkmenistan will garner attention for another
reason: The EU is holding online meetings about the impact of events in Belarus
on the former Soviet republics.
Turkmenistan is one of them and so it will get its moment in the son (gundogar.org/?0120519462000000000000011000000).
According to Redzhepov, some in
Turkmenistan have been affected by the events in Belarus even though their own
government has done everything it can to block news about this popular challenge
to a dictator who also manipulates the constitution and the election system to
legitimate his position in power.
The reason that Turkmens are looking
as intently as they are at Belarus is that Belarusians rather than any outside
force are taking things into their own hands and showing that a dictator who
completely loses the support of his people cannot hope to remain in power
forever.
Berdymukhamedov has already
completely lost that support, but because outsiders pay so little attention to
his actions, he has been able to use force far more freely against the
population and intimidated many into silence and inaction. He likely can continue to do that for some
time unless Turkmens conclude that they are not alone in watching the events in
Belarus.
A major problem for the Turkmens,
Redzhepov argues, is that outsiders rarely pay attention to his country or to
the ways in which its dictator chameleon-like changes things periodically to
hide his authoritarian approach. Those who look at Turkmenistan only occasionally
can seldom see the full dimensions of the problem.
It is a good thing, the opposition commentator
says, that the EU is considering the impact of Belarus even on Turkmenistan. It
would be a better thing if the EU and other Western institutions would pay
greater and more continuing attention to how the Turkmen people have been
suffering.
If they did, Redzhepov suggests,
they would see something truly horrific in Berdymukhamedov’s dictatorship; but
they would also see a Turkmen nation prepared to stand up for its rights as the
Belarusian people have stood up against Lukashenka in Belarus.
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