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With public resentment in Turkmenistan increasing, the government is attempting to remedy its precarious position by snuffing out access to news about the bad situation in the country. (file photo)
With public resentment in Turkmenistan increasing, the government is attempting to remedy its precarious position by snuffing out access to news about the bad situation in the country. (file photo)

Connecting to the Internet has never been easy in Turkmenistan, but authorities in the isolationist Central Asian country are waging a new campaign aimed at preventing unsavory information from entering or exiting the country.

Authorities are hunting for people who have virtual private networks -- popularly known as VPNs -- and have also taken measures to block them.

As part of the crackdown, students are also being made to sign statements that they will not use the Internet to access banned sites.

And even outside the country, Turkmen officials were able to have the YouTube site of a Turkmen opposition group taken down after a semiofficial Turkmen news site that also posts on YouTube filed a complaint.

Why the Turkmen government has engaged in these new measures at this time is not difficult to understand.

The situation in Turkmenistan is really bad and the patience of the people with their government is wearing thin.

Turkmenistan has been in a steep economic decline for some five years.

The price for natural gas -- Turkmenistan’s main export that accounts for between 70 to 80 percent of the country’s revenue -- has fallen by more than 70 percent since 2015, and its biggest customer, China (it and Russia are actually the only customers), announced in March it was cutting back on the amount of gas it would buy from Turkmenistan.

Mother nature has also pounded Turkmenistan in the last few years.

Floods and drought have hit different areas of the country, and a freak salt storm blew over northern and eastern areas of the country in May 2018, destroying crops and leaving alkaline deposits on farmers' fields.

In both of these cases, authorities were unable to provide the necessary assistance to those who were affected.

Meanwhile, the government continues to claim there are no cases of the coronavirus in the country, despite testimony from people in the country that the situation with the virus is out of control, with hospitals filled and widespread shortages of medicine and personal protective equipment.

It is exactly these types of reports that Turkmen authorities hope to stop from reaching the world outside by further clamping down on access to the Internet.

But in a new development, growing opposition to the Turkmen government abroad has received greater publicity, and anti-government messages, including calls for protests and even the ouster of President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov, have made their way into Turkmenistan.

That has forced the already paranoid Turkmen authorities to visibly increase security measures across the country.

RFE/RL’s Turkmen Service, known locally as Azatlyk, reported in mid-August that the only Internet provider in the country, Turkmentelekom, has started using new technology reportedly obtained from Germany and installed by Chinese specialists that can block websites and many VPN services more thoroughly.

People inside Turkmenistan can only access many sites outside of the country by using VPNs, so authorities started questioning and, in some cases, arresting telephone salesmen or repairmen who were downloading VPN apps onto people's phones.

First-time offenders face 15 days in detention or a fine, while third-time offenders can have their businesses shut down.

In any case, many of the shops that once engaged in such work are now closed.

The official reason is to prevent the possible spread of the coronavirus, which, again, the government says is not present in Turkmenistan, as well as the aforementioned requirement for students to sign declarations pledging not to access prohibited websites and to only use the Internet for “educational purposes.”

The YouTube channel Erkin (Free) Turkmenistan is one of the sites blocked in Turkmenistan, and now the channel has been forced to remove material due to a complaint by another YouTube channel called Watan Habarlary (Homeland News).

Erkin Turkmenistan broadcasts content that is critical of the Turkmen government. Watan Habarlary broadcasts what could definitely be considered to be pro-government reports.

According to Erkin Turkmenistan, Watan Habarlary filed three complaints with YouTube between August 29 and September 3, alleging Erkin Turkmenistan was using its footage without permission.

After the third warning on September -- when Erkin Turkmenistan aired a report called It Is Not Worth Torturing People -- YouTube informed the station it would be blocked for three months.

Erkin Turkmenistan countered that although it is the same footage Watan Habarlary used, it comes from Turkmen state television, which is where Erkin Turkmenistan gets it, as do others such as Watan Habarlary.

Erkin Turkmenistan also notes that its programming also includes original material and reporting, whereas Watan Habarlary simply takes state TV footage and reposts it as is.

A letter sent to RFE/RL from the founder of Erkin Turkmenistan said: "We have never knowingly violated or are violating YouTube's internal policies…[and had] not previously received a warning from YouTube regarding our shows [until Watan Habarlary made its complaint]."

Turkmen authorities are currently confronting problems they have never seen before.

The incompetent management of the country in recent years by Berdymukhammedov's government has spawned local resentment and emboldened Turkmen outside the country to stage public demonstrations.

Turkmen citizens have staged protests in Cyprus, Turkey, and in the United States, including in Washington, D.C., and outside the UN building in New York.

Some of these Turkmen are calling for the ouster of the Turkmen government and that message has reached Ashgabat.

On September 25, the Halk Maslahaty (People’s Council) is expected to approve a package of amendments to the constitution, none of which is expected to improve life for the people of Turkmenistan.

The big amendment to be passed is the establishment of a 56-member Senate. As the country's parliament and the Halk Maslahaty have always been rubber-stamping bodies, it is difficult to see what benefit there is in creating a bicameral parliament in Turkmenistan.

The bigger issue would be the appointment of the chairman of the Senate, who would be the No. 2 official in Turkmenistan. There have been suggestions that Berdymukhammedov would guide his son Serdar into that role.

Two days after the Halk Maslahaty session, Turkmenistan will mark its Independence Day.

In a sign of how concerned the authorities are about the situation and the unhappiness among the people playing out, security has been noticeably increased across Turkmenistan.

In Mary Province, where small-denomination banknotes with messages calling for a revolt have been distributed in at least two districts, there are reportedly many police on the streets. Vehicles are often stopped, the trunks of vehicles thoroughly inspected, and drivers and passengers photographed.

In the meantime, officials are doing their best to ensure that no one in the country transmits or receives any information that would help fuel the growing discontent in the country.

RFE/RL's Turkmen Service contributed to this report
Gulsanam Alijonova faced assault charges after confronting two men who she said has sexually harrassed her.
Gulsanam Alijonova faced assault charges after confronting two men who she said has sexually harrassed her.

Assault charges have been dropped against 23-year-old Uzbek Gulsanam Alijonova, who could have received a five-year prison sentence if she had been convicted of beating up two men who she said sexually harassed her.

Many people wonder if Alijonova was criminally charged for punching the men or if it was for being so brazen to stand up to a man in the conservative, patriarchal society of Uzbekistan.

News of the charges against Alijonova, who lives in the eastern Namangan Province, were announced on September 8 even though the alleged crime occurred on June 25.

It is interesting, and telling, to follow the events starting with September 8, when the Interior Ministry posted information about the case.

The Interior Ministry's website said in its statement that on June 25 at 5:30 p.m. local time, "G.A. deliberately disregarding the rules of conduct of society…without cause beat 33-year-old U.A., inflicting physical harm on him…and further, G.A. continued her criminal activity, striking 30-year-old A.N., who was trying to calm the situation, several times in the face."

The Uzbek website Gazeta.uz reported on the case, following closely the information on the Interior Ministry website.

Alijonova was charged with violating Section 3, Article 277 of the Criminal Code, hooliganism.

Given that the Interior Ministry had used words such as "deliberately disregarding" and "continued her criminal activity," Alijonova's chances in court did not look good.

But Alijonova was fortunate that the case against her did not go unnoticed.

Nikita Makarenko, a former journalist for Gazeta.uz, tweeted on September 8 that "A 23-year-old girl has beaten two guys in Namangan right after they catcalled her from a car. So she chased them in a car."

Social Media Support

The reaction of many on Twitter was supportive of Alijonova and critical of Uzbekistan's law enforcement for detaining her.

Then came more information about Alijonova.

Gazeta.uz published an interview with her on September 10.

Alijonova explained that she was accompanying her sister-in-law and her 10-month-old baby to Andijon. They were outside and Alijonova's sister-in-law was trying to arrange the trip to Andijon with a taxi driver when a car pulled up and a man started laughing and making faces at Alijonova for wearing short pants and a T-shirt.

When Alijonova replied to him, the man started using foul language, insulting Alijonova, and making some rude remarks about her mother.

Then the car with the two men drove off.

Since Alijonova already had a taxi, she jumped in and asked the driver to follow the men's car.

She caught up with her antagonists and confronted one of them. He reportedly hurled insults at her and grabbed her shirt, at which point she started hitting him. When the other man tried to intervene, Alijonova fought him off.

Wearing short pants is not against the law in Uzbekistan, but Uzbek socieiy's patriarical mores mean that many find in offensive. (file photo)
Wearing short pants is not against the law in Uzbekistan, but Uzbek socieiy's patriarical mores mean that many find in offensive. (file photo)

Both men ran off in different directions but their friends, who were in a different car, started to attack the taxi driver until they saw Alijonova coming after them.

It turns out that Alijonova is a tae kwon do champion in Namangan and competes internationally. She also boxes and knows karate.

She recently worked as a volunteer during the coronavirus outbreak, bringing food to some 500 families in her district.

She is also in her third year of studies at a university.

Public Sentiment

That Gazeta.uz would side with Alijonova in the online article was a sign that public sentiment was behind the young woman in the ordeal.

And sure enough, there was ample public support for her on social networks.

Even Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoev's eldest daughter mentioned Alijonova's case in broader comments about judicial equality for women and journalists.

But while there were many other comments on social media that seemed to vindicate Alijonova, that is not usually the case for women who try to defend themselves in Uzbekistan and Central Asia in general.

Alijonova's case also received attention outside Uzbekistan and the absurdity of charging a woman who didn't quietly accept being insulted was apparently something Uzbek prosecutors could not ignore.

Wearing short pants is not against the law in Uzbekistan, but it is somehow offensive to the patriarchal society that demands women dress modestly and to be submissive.

Alijonova was neither of those and that clearly bothered some people.

Nowhere in the tale of Gulsanam Alijonova is there any mention of the two men who started the problem being questioned by police, lectured about stopping their vehicle to insult someone, about treating women with more respect, or apologizing for making inappropriate comments.

Alijonova was able to physically defend herself, but that is usually not the case in Central Asia.

Uzbek officials -- including President Mirziyoev, the Women's Committee, or the Senate's gender equality committee -- have been promising equal rights for women but none of them have commented publicly about Alijonova's situation.

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About This Blog

Qishloq Ovozi is a blog by RFE/RL Central Asia specialist Bruce Pannier that aims to look at the events that are shaping Central Asia and its respective countries, connect the dots to shed light on why those processes are occurring, and identify the agents of change.​

The name means "Village Voice" in Uzbek. But don't be fooled, Qishloq Ovozi is about all of Central Asia.

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