Source: Human Rights Watch
Detention Appears to Be Retaliation for Independent Journalism
(New York) – Uzbek authorities should immediately disclose the fate and
whereabouts of Sergei Naumov, an independent journalist who disappeared
after being detained by the authorities on September 21, Human Rights
Watch said. The authorities should afford him full due process rights if
he is in detention. The case of Sergei Naumov, who was last heard from
in police custody on September 21, highlights the Uzbek government’s
continuing crackdown on independent journalists and peaceful civil
society activists, and its attempts to stifle independent monitoring.
“The brutal practice of ‘disappearing’ government critics is a terrible blight on Uzbekistan’s already abysmal human rights record,” said Steve Swerdlow,
Central Asia researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The enforced
disappearance of an independent journalist is going to cause the
criticism to swell, not to stop.”
Uzbek authorities should immediately reveal Naumov’s whereabouts and,
if he’s still in custody, either release him or bring formal charges
against him, Human Rights Watch said.
Naumov, 50, is an award-winning independent journalist and a contributor to several independent media outlets, including the Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR), Fergana.ru, and Jarayon.com.
Based in Urgench in northwestern Uzbekistan, Naumov is known for his
willingness to address politically sensitive issues in his work. He has
collaborated closely with human rights activists on a number of
multimedia projects.
In the days preceding his disappearance, Naumov had been shooting video
footage in local cotton fields about the government’s practice of
forcing over a million children and adults to pick cotton during the
annual harvest, from mid-September to early November. Representatives of
the International Labour Organization (ILO) are currently in Uzbekistan
to monitor its compliance with ILO conventions banning the use of child
labor.
Witnesses told activists that police officers from the Urgench police
station came to Naumov’s home on September 21, claiming they had been
sent in response to an allegation that Naumov had stolen a gold necklace
from an unnamed woman and telling Naumov that he could face up to seven
years in prison for theft. At around 7 p.m., Naumov sent a text message
to a colleague at the IWPR to say that he was at the local
police station and that, “I have a problem.” All subsequent attempts to
reach him on his cell phone have been unsuccessful. Over the past three
days, local rights activists have visited police stations and the
offices of the prosecutor-general and security services in his home
region to determine his whereabouts. All officials have denied that they
had arrested him or were holding him.
Under international law, authorities commit an enforced disappearance
when they refuse to acknowledge holding someone in custody or conceal
the person’s fate or whereabouts, thereby placing them outside the
protection of the law. “Disappearances” increase the likelihood of
torture or other ill-treatment, Human Rights Watch said.
Naumov’s close colleagues told Human Rights Watch they fear that Naumov, like many independent journalists and human rights defenders,
has been detained to prevent him from carrying out his journalistic
work, in his case specifically during the cotton harvest when ILO
monitors are present in the country.
His colleagues also told Human Rights Watch that security services had
warned him in recent months to stop his independent reporting. Naumov
was most recently detained for an interrogation on August 30 when
returning from Nukus, Karakalpakstan, where he had been reporting on one
family’s protest of their forced eviction from their home.
“Sergei Naumov’s detention bears all the hallmarks of an illegal,
enforced disappearance and appears aimed at silencing his independent
reporting,” Swerdlow said.
Well over a dozen human rights defenders and numerous independent
journalists and opposition activists are in prison in Uzbekistan in
retaliation for their work or criticism of the government. Many
activists are in serious ill-health and have been tortured in pretrial
custody or in prison.
Naumov’s case is part of a pattern in which Uzbek authorities hold
government critics in unacknowledged custody. In June, security services
detained Hasan Choriev, father of the leader of the peaceful political
opposition party Birdamlik (“Solidarity”) at his home and held him in unacknowledged custody for several weeks.
In September 2012, during the peak of the cotton harvest,
authorities beat and held in unacknowledged custody Uktam Pardaev, a
rights activist well known for reporting on police abuses, torture, and
forced labor. After his release 15 days later, Pardaev told Human Rights
Watch he believed he was arrested to prevent him from monitoring the
rights of the children and adults forced to carry out the harvest.
Uzbek authorities should grant Naumov immediate access to independent
counsel and allow him to contact close relatives and friends.
“Uzbekistan’s international partners, including the United States and the European Union,
are by now extremely familiar with the Uzbek government’s pattern of
stamping out independent journalism and human rights monitoring,”
Swerdlow said. “The question now is how forcefully they will choose to
condition their relationships with Tashkent on Uzbekistan immediately
ending these egregious abuses.”