Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan’s abysmal record on press freedom has not changed much since
it gained independence in 1991. Claims by the autocratic president Islam
Karimov about freedom of speech and the lack of censorship in the large
Central Asian nation carry little substantive meaning or connection with
reality. Karimov and his government maintain a tight grip on State Television
and Radio, whose broadcasts are thoroughly censored, sterile, and devoid
of open debate and comment on the politics and the economy. The state limited
the number of Russian television programs broadcast in the country to a
minimum, dooming the 23 million Uzbeks to a diet of Karimov’s speeches,
political propaganda, and other sanitized broadcasts. The one non-government
channel in Tashkent, launched in March, was allowed to rebroadcast only
the entertainment and family programs of the Russian ORT. As proof of the
seriousness of the president’s call for democratization, the BBC and Radio
Liberty were allowed to open offices in Tashkent in this otherwise closed
country.
The print press is also heavily controlled and censored. In the Soviet
tradition, front pages of state-run newspapers such as Narodnoe Slovo
and Pravda Vostoka regularly feature the president’s photograph
and unabridged speeches. Liberal Russian newspapers are banned, as are
Uzbek independent and opposition papers published abroad. Underground opposition
newspapers smuggled in from Russia introduce some criticism of the government
into the country.
Karimov recently has professed a "commitment to democratic media and
reform," which he attempted to prove with the passage of a Law of the Republic
of Uzbekistan on the Mass Media in the last week of December. The draft
law was published in November in Narodnoe Slovo and passed during
the December session of the Oli Majlis, the national legislature. Article
2 of the law states that censorship of mass media is "inadmissible," and
yet the Republican Committee on Mass Media, appointed by the government,
completely controls the registration process of media outlets.