Accessibility links

Breaking News

Watchdog

Uzbek Prime Minister Abdulla Aripov
Uzbek Prime Minister Abdulla Aripov

TASHKENT -- Uzbekistan's government is abandoning an experiment introduced earlier this year that had given rare leeway to journalists on tightly controlled state television.

A departure from decades of precedent in one of the former Soviet Union's most authoritarian states, tolerance for live questioning of Uzbek officials had emerged amid criticism from the newly minted President Shavkat Mirziyoev that state TV was full of sycophantic adulation for public officials and needed to better reflect the realities faced by ordinary Uzbeks.

But authorities this week decided, at least for now, to halt live broadcasts of talk shows and panel discussions in which officials face journalists.

A presidential ally defended the return to canned programming and blamed it on impudence on the part of journalists.

“Just because a couple of individuals have stepped over the line, that doesn't mean democratic reforms are being reversed,” Abduqodir Toshkulov, a Mirziyoev backer and parliamentary deputy from Prime Minister Abdulla Aripov's Uzbekistan Liberal Democratic Party, said.

While it appears early to talk of meaningful "democratic reforms," Mirziyoev has announced modest shifts in domestic- and foreign-policy areas since taking office in December that have fueled speculation that he might be ever-so-slightly easing Uzbek authorities' grip on public life.

The reversal was announced to state broadcasters and journalists on August 21 by Aripov during a meeting headed by Mirziyoev's state adviser on information and culture.

Uzbek human rights activist Abdurahmon Tashanov
Uzbek human rights activist Abdurahmon Tashanov

An independent journalist with the Tashkent-based human rights group Compassion who was present at the meeting, Abdurakhmon Tashanov, speculated that Aripov's announcement must have been ordered by Mirziyoev because the prime minister is not in a position to contravene the directives of Uzbekistan's president.

“Prime Minister Aripov's meeting with journalists at Uzbekistan's National Radio and Television Company was called as a result of the personal initiative of President Mirziyoev,” Tashanov told RFE/RL.

Separate accounts from three journalists from Uzbekistan's state media who also attended the gathering -- but who asked not to be named because they fear retribution from state media managers -- indicate that the meeting became heated when Aripov began criticizing journalist Sherzod Qudrathojaev, the moderator of a live public-affairs talk show called International Press Club on the Uzbekistan 24 channel.

Since the daily weekday program began on April 7, state authorities complain that Qudrathojaev has displayed disrespect for public officials who appear on it -- including mayors, regional administrators, parliamentary deputies, and even cabinet officials like Foreign Minister Abdulaziz Komilov.

Aripov shouted contemptuously at Qudrathojaev, the sources who attended said.

They said Qudrathojaev responded by telling Aripov, “Just because you are the prime minister now doesn't mean you are allowed to yell at me or address me” in such a belittling way.

International Press Club appeared to have been growing in popularity but has not been broadcast since the August 21 meeting -- not even in a prerecorded format.

On his Facebook page, Qudrathojaev denied that his program has been canceled, saying that it would go back on the air after resolving “some technical issues.”

Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoev
Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoev

Meanwhile, two other live talk shows on the state-run Yoshlar youth channel -- Point Of View and Triangle -- are no longer being broadcast in the live format. Instead, they are being aired as prerecorded programs.

Under Uzbekistan's former autocratic ruler, the late President Islam Karimov, there was no live news or public affairs programming on state television. The only live broadcasts were of major sporting events like the Olympics.

Some public officials have incurred criticism under the live broadcast format with responses to public concerns that were widely seen as lacking media savvy.

Footage from a recent live broadcast of Point Of View went viral on Uzbek social media after a government official was seen laughing about interviews with impoverished Uzbeks who complained about rising meat prices.

Neither Mirziyoev's office nor Aripov's government has commented publicly about the heated argument between the prime minister and Qudrathojaev.

Mirziyoev ally Toshkulov said on August 23 that Qudrathojaev was using his program to promote himself.

“There is no country in the world where journalists have such a disrespectful attitude toward mayors, ministers, and parliamentary deputies,” Toshkulov argued. “Giving an assessment of the work of these officials is the prerogative only of the president” and not the job of journalists, he added.

Written by Ron Synovitz with reporting by RFE/RL's Uzbek Service and BBC Uzbek
Mehman Aliyev (center), the director of independent Azerbaijani news agency Turan, is taken to detention.
Mehman Aliyev (center), the director of independent Azerbaijani news agency Turan, is taken to detention.

WASHINGTON -- The U.S. State Department says it is "deeply troubled" by the detention of the director of Azerbaijan’s independent Turan News Agency and urged his immediate release.

“We are deeply troubled by the August 24 arrest and three-month pretrial detention of Mehman Aliyev, the prominent editor-in-chief of Azerbaijan’s only remaining independent media outlet," the department said in a statement on August 26.

“Other restrictive actions against Turan, including freezing its bank accounts and initiating tax-evasion charges against it, are also troubling,” it added.

The statement said the actions of the government of Azerbaijan “to curtail freedom of press and to further restrict freedom of expression are the latest in a negative trend that includes the government’s May decision to block access to Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and other independent media websites.”

The State Department urged the government to “immediately release” Aliyev, along with “all those incarcerated for exercising their fundamental freedoms, in accordance with its international obligations and OSCE commitments.”

Azerbaijani authorities on August 25 ordered Mehman to be sent to nearly three months of detention pending trial on tax-evasion and abuse-of-powers charges.

The director had been detained a day earlier, about two weeks after the Tax Ministry on August 7 initiated the criminal tax-evasion probe into Turan, which has often reported critically of the government and its leaders.

The authorities alleged that the agency owed 37,000 manats ($21,500) in taxes for 2014-16.

On August 18, Aliyev told RFE/RL that all of Turan's bank accounts had been frozen by the authorities amid the criminal probe, which the news agency said was politically motivated.

The news outlet, which was established in 1990, publishes reports in Azeri, English, and Russian and cooperates with leading international news agencies.

It has been a critic of President Ilham Aliyev, who has ruled the oil-producing South Caucasus country of nearly 10 million people since shortly before the death of his father, Heydar Aliyev, in 2003.

After Aliyev's detention and the freezing of its accounts, Turan in an August 25 statement announced it would be suspending operations starting September 1, with the hope of resuming operations at some point in the future.

Along with the U.S. State Department, the Azerbaijani authorities’ actions drew immediate rebuke from international rights groups and foreign leaders.

Thorbjorn Jagland, the secretary-general of the Council of Europe, on August 25 called on Azerbaijan to “fully abide by its commitments to European Convention on Human Rights” and to “avoid yet another case of unjust deprivation of liberty, which has no place in a democratic society.”

In a Twitter post, U.S. Senator Ben Cardin (Democrat-Maryland) called the charges against Aliyev "a tremendously troubling development," adding that "Azerbaijanis deserve a free and open press."

Reporters Without Borders said the case was based on "trumped-up charges."

“The authorities are stepping up the pressure on Turan because they have been unable to force it to cooperate,” said Johann Bihr, the head of RSF’s Eastern Europe and Central Asia desk.

“Mehman Aliyev is one of journalism’s pioneers in Azerbaijan. His only crime is to have headed the country’s last independent media outlet. We demand his immediate release and the withdrawal of all the politically-motivated charges against Turan,” he added.

On August 26, Turan reported that a "Public Committee for Freedom for Mehman Aliyev" had been formed after a meeting of representatives of "political forces, civil society, media, and families of political prisoners" at the opposition Musavat Party headquarters.

With reporting by RFE/RL's Baku correspondent Khadija Ismayilova, Turan News Agency, and AFP

Load more

About This Blog

"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

Subscribe

Latest Posts

Journalists In Trouble

RFE/RL journalists take risks, face threats, and make sacrifices every day in an effort to gather the news. Our "Journalists In Trouble" page recognizes their courage and conviction, and documents the high price that many have paid simply for doing their jobs. More

XS
SM
MD
LG