[Excerpt: Hizb ut-Tahrir, or the Party of Liberation, has a following
among the young in Central Asia. It has called for Islamic rule to
replace secular governments and unite the Muslim world. And its
pamphlets criticize U.S. bases established in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan
after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks to support the war on terror......"Most
ordinary people I think support them now because they feel that in a
democratic society it is difficult to get anything done without
corruption. People believe that if the government was religious the
situation would change," he said from Bazar Korgon, about 20 miles from
Jalal-Abad.]

http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/world/wire/sns-ap-central-asia-uprisings,0,6025196.story?coll=sns-ap-world-headlines

Islamists See Opening in C. Asia Chaos

By KATHY GANNON
Associated Press Writer

March 23, 2005, 2:14 PM EST

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan -- The only splash of color in the drab bluish gray
office of Kyrgyzstan's Coalition for Democracy and Civil Society was a
wool orange scarf thrown over the back of its president's chair.

It was Edil Baisalov's souvenir from Ukraine's Orange Revolution that
swept opposition leader Victor Yushchenko to the presidency. Baisalov
had been in Kiev in December as an election monitor. He returned home
inspired: "I was intoxicated by the protests, by the desire for change,
the power of the people."

The popular uprisings in Ukraine and in Georgia a year earlier have
fired up Central Asia's nascent political opposition and brought
protesters into the streets of Kyrgyzstan.

The movement is unsettling authoritarian regimes who have ruled since
the Soviet Union collapse 15 years ago. But it's also exposed the
frailty of opposition groups who lack charismatic leaders -- and created
an opening for extremist Islamic parties to gain power in a strategic
oil-rich region known as a terrorist haven.

"What happened in Ukraine and Georgia touches the hearts of our people
because these countries are like us," said Kyrgyzstan's deputy ombudsman
Sadyk Sherniyas, whose office investigates complaints against the
government.

In most of Central Asia, however, the absence of a cohesive opposition
group is encouraging regionalism and chaos, said political activist
Alymkulov Berdi, who protested when his candidate was disqualified from
Kyrgyzstan's February elections.

"Today all we have are regional leaders and that is a dangerous
situation because people are frustrated and furious but they don't have
one leader to guide them," Berdi said.

During the February elections, opposition leaders sought to mimic
Ukraine's Orange Revolution with a color of their own -- but even there
they couldn't agree.

In the more prosperous and liberal north, Roza Otunbayeva, leader of the
opposition Ata-Jurt movement, wrapped supporters in yellow. In the
south, demonstrators wore pink, called their uprising the "pink
revolution" and strung pink banners from windows of government offices
they overran to demand the resignation of President Askar Akayev.

Protests against Akayev began after the first round of voting in
February and swelled after run-off balloting that the opposition and the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said was seriously
flawed. The fiercest opposition has been in the south.

Akayev blames the demonstrations on outside interference.

A senior Georgian lawmaker who helped stage his country's 2003 Rose
Revolution was in southern Kyrgyzstan, where opposition seized control
of the country's second-largest city and other towns, Georgia's
Rustavi-2 television reported. Givi Targamadze was also in Ukraine for
the Orange Revolution.

A series of parliamentary elections across the region in the past six
months -- which exposed authoritarian regimes to criticism from
international observers -- spawned allegations of U.S. attempts to
foment anti-government uprisings through U.S.-funded democracy building
organizations, like the National Democratic Institute (NDI) and Freedom
House.

"American organizations like the NDI were involved in the revolution in
Ukraine and Georgia and definitely they want to create the same
situation here," says the Kyrgyz president's spokesman, Abdil
Seghizbayev. "The United States thinks we are too close to Russia and
China."

In February, electricity was shut off at the Freedom House printing
press in Bishkek, where opposition newspapers were printed. Tajikistan
refused to register Freedom House. Uzbekistan in 2004 denied
registration to the Open Society Institute funded by the George Soros
Foundation.

"After Ukraine and Georgia we have certain concerns about the activities
of these western democratic promotion organizations," said Igor
Sattarov, the foreign ministry's information chief in Tajikistan.

Baisalov, president of the Coalition for Democracy and Civil Society
that receives a U.S. grant, described his Kyrgyz group as a "civil
non-partisan organization."

"But we are able to criticize authoritarian governments," Baisalov told
The Associated Press in early March. "After 15 years of Akayev we say it
is enough. The personality cult around Akayev has stifled discourse in
our country."

On Wednesday, Baisalov was among 20 to 30 protesters detained by riot
police in Bishkek as the government got tougher with demonstrators. "The
tolerance is being scaled down," he told AP by cell phone from a police
station.

Both the United States and Russia regard the Central Asian countries as
vital security interests -- and both have military bases outside
Bishkek. The United States places high importance on stability in the
region, which borders Russia, Afghanistan and Iran.

Although the Bush administration supports pro-democracy movements, the
turmoil in the region also has created a potentially dangerous opening
for extremist Islamic parties.

Hizb ut-Tahrir, or the Party of Liberation, has a following among the
young in Central Asia. It has called for Islamic rule to replace secular
governments and unite the Muslim world. And its pamphlets criticize U.S.
bases established in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan after the Sept. 11, 2001
attacks to support the war on terror.

A senior Western diplomat in Tajikistan confirmed that Hizb ut-Tahrir's
influence is growing across the region, particularly among the young who
are looking for alternatives to what they perceive as corrupt,
totalitarian regimes with links to the Soviet past.

The United States has not declared Hizb ut-Tahrir a terrorist
organization because it does not advocate violence, but the diplomat
said some of its literature is virulently anti-American and anti-Semitic
and could inspire violence.

Leaders across Central Asia have banned Hizb ut-Tahrir. Kyrgyz security
authorities have accused the group of having links with the Islamic
Movement of Uzbekistan, which is allied to al-Qaida and operates in
Afghanistan and Pakistan. The Kyrgyz government has also warned of
cooperation between Hizb ut-Tahrir and Uighur separatists in China, but
has not provided evidence. Russia has accused Hizb ut-Tahrir of
involvement in breakaway Chechnya.

The south of Kyrgyzstan is where Hizb ut-Tahrir is strongest,
presidential spokesman Seghizbayev told the AP. He said the group blames
the government for every problem and makes promises it cannot fulfill.

Hizb ut-Tahrir has become more politically active. In Jalal-Abad, the
scene of some of the fiercest anti-government protests, the group
collected 20,000 signatures on a petition calling for more Islamic
instruction in schools and segregation of the sexes.

The petition, circulated in November, also demanded state sponsorship of
Muslim schools and restrictions on the sale of pornography. Candidates
who espoused a like-minded philosophy got support from Hizb ut-Tahrir
members.

Askarov Azimjan, a human rights activist whose office in southern
Kyrgyzstan is partially funded by Freedom House, says Hizb ut-Tahrir has
emerged as an alternative for residents frustrated by corruption.

"Most ordinary people I think support them now because they feel that in
a democratic society it is difficult to get anything done without
corruption. People believe that if the government was religious the
situation would change," he said from Bazar Korgon, about 20 miles from
Jalal-Abad.

"Even high school students know exactly how much they will have to pay
if they want to get a job in the police station," he added. "If Hizb
ut-Tahrir registered as a political party it would get a lot of support.
But the government won't allow them to register. They are afraid."
enditem


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