Lupa Kata Sandi? Klik di Sini

atau Masuk melalui

Belum Memiliki Akun Daftar di Sini


atau Daftar melalui

Sudah Memiliki Akun Masuk di Sini

Konfirmasi Email

Kami telah mengirimkan link aktivasi melalui email ke rudihamdani@gmail.com.

Klik link aktivasi dan dapatkan akses membaca 2 artikel gratis non Laput di koran dan Majalah Tempo

Jika Anda tidak menerima email,
Kirimkan Lagi Sekarang

Uzbekistan Buries President Islam Karimov

Translator

Editor

4 September 2016 11:08 WIB

A convoy of cars delivering the late Uzbekistan president Islam Karimov to his final resting place, September 03, 2016. REUTERS

TEMPO.CO, Almaty - Islam Karimov, president of Uzbekistan for the past quarter of a century, was buried in his home city of Samarkand on Saturday, leaving behind a power vacuum in a nation that serves as a bulwark against militant Islam in Central Asia.

Karimov, who was 78, died from a stroke. After a funeral rite in Samarkands ancient Registan square attended by hundreds of men - some of whom were in tears - his body was buried at the citys Shah-i-Zinda cemetery, two attendees told Reuters.

Karimov was derided by Western governments as a dictator who violated human rights, but for many people in Uzbekistan, a mainly Muslim ex-Soviet state which borders Afghanistan, he is the only head of state they have ever known.

With no obvious successor, Karimovs death has triggered an outpouring of grief, mixed with uncertainty about the future.

"I still cant believe it happened," said a 39-year-old resident of the capital, Tashkent, who was among thousands who lined the main thoroughfare early on Saturday to watch the funeral cortege pass by en route to Samarkand.

"I dont know what happens now, I am lost," said the man, who declined to be identified.

How the power vacuum is filled in Uzbekistan is of urgent concern to Russia, the United States and China, all powers with interests in the volatile Central Asia region, where Uzbekistan is the most populous state.

Central Asia analysts say a small circle of senior officials and Karimov family members will have been meeting behind closed doors to try to agree on anointing a new president.

The funeral rites offered clues as to who might be in the running. At the Samarkand ceremony, Prime Minister Shavkat Mirziyoyev, 59, and Finance Minister Rustam Azimov, 57, were allocated spots in the front row, nearest to Karimovs coffin.

If the elite fail to agree among themselves on a transition, the resulting instability could be exploited by Islamist militants who in the past have staged violent attacks in Uzbek cities and want to make Uzbekistan part of an Islamic caliphate.

Karimov jailed, killed or exiled most of the Islamist fighters inside Uzbekistan. Many have since joined the Taliban in Afghanistan and Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, where they have become battle-hardened.

An upsurge in Islamist violence in Uzbekistan would pose a threat to the United States, which is trying to contain the insurgency in Afghanistan, to Russia - home to millions of Uzbek migrant workers - and to China, which worries about Central Asian Islamists making common cause with separatists from its mainly Muslim Uighur ethnic minority.

Many people had anticipated that Karimov would be succeeded by his older daughter Gulnara, a businesswoman and pop star, but she fell from favour two years ago and there was no sign of her on Saturday among the family members in the funeral cortège.

At Tashkent airport, as the coffin was being loaded onto a plane bound for Samarkand, Karimovs wife, Tatiana, and his younger daughter, Lola Karimova-Tillyaeva, stood at the foot of the aircraft steps. His daughter, dressed all in black, was dabbing her eyes with a white handkerchief.

Karimovs death could unleash a new round of jockeying between Russia, the United States and China, which are all trying to bring Central Asia, with its oil and gas reserves and metal ore, into their sphere of influence.

In a statement offering his condolences, U.S. President Barack Obama said his country stood with Uzbekistan as it "begins a new chapter in its history".

Alexei Pushkov, the pro-Kremlin head of the foreign affairs committee in Russias parliament, responded on Twitter that Obama was "mistaken if he thinks the new chapter is going to be written in Washington".

The most prominent foreign dignitaries at the funeral were Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, Tajikistans President Imomali Rakhmon and Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.

Karimov was the head of the local Communist party in Uzbekistan when it was still a Soviet republic, and he remained at the helm after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.

While other newly-independent Soviet republics were convulsed by wars, economic upheaval and political turmoil, life for people in Uzbekistan stayed largely stable, safe and predictable -- a state of affairs that Karimovs supporters touted as his great achievement.

"The people of Uzbekistan associate the huge achievements of the country since independence with President Karimovs name," a state television anchor, in a black suit and tie, said on Saturday in an elegy that was preceded by sombre music.

But the stability came at a cost.

Elections were held but were not democratic, according to international observers. To ensure Uzbekistan could earn foreign currency from exporting cotton, people -- including children -- were press-ganged into going into the fields to help with the harvest, witnesses have told Reuters.

Citing an Islamist threat, Karimov cracked down ruthlessly on anyone deemed to be a religious extremist. Growing a beard or renouncing alcohol was sometimes enough to earn arrest. Rights groups say detainees were tortured.

In the Uzbek city of Andizhan in May 2005, security forces killed around 500 mostly unarmed people who had been protesting against local officials, witnesses and rights groups said.

Karimov put the death toll at 169 and said his forces had put down an armed uprising.

Karimov`s own family were not immune from the harsh treatment. In a letter smuggled to a BBC journalist in 2014, Gulnara, the older daughter, alleged she was being held under house arrest by her fathers security officials after her family ostracised her.

ANTARA




Prabowo Not against Globalization: Gerindra

29 Maret 2019

Prabowo Not against Globalization: Gerindra

Gerindra Party spokesman said Prabowo Subianto was not against globalization, but rather prioritized Indonesia's national interests.


Myanmar Releases 3,073 Prisoners

24 Oktober 2018

Myanmar Releases 3,073 Prisoners

The move was intended to gain sympathy prior to the ASEAN
Summit scheduled to be held in November.


Morsi Will Reshuffle The Cabinet

19 Oktober 2018

Morsi Will Reshuffle The Cabinet

Egyptian Presidetn Mohamed Morsi plans to conduct an extensive
reshuffle to the government.


Iran Nuclear Talks About to Take Place

19 Oktober 2018

Iran Nuclear Talks About to Take Place

Many predicts the meeting will not be any better than any
previous meetings.


Jakarta Administration Cancels World Bank Loan

19 Oktober 2018

Jakarta Administration Cancels World Bank Loan

Jakarta's Deputy Governor is confident that development project
will still runs even without foreign loan.


NATO-Russia Discuss Missile Defense System

19 Oktober 2018

NATO-Russia Discuss Missile Defense System

Russia is concerned that the European missile defense system
will be used against them.


US Citizen Suspected for Conspiracy

19 Oktober 2018

US Citizen Suspected for Conspiracy

A friend of Tracy claimed that Tracy was working on a
documentary in Venezuela and not in any way involved in a
conspiracy.


Egypt Walk Out from World Nuclear Convention

19 Oktober 2018

Egypt Walk Out from World Nuclear Convention

The walk out was intended as a form of protest against failed
implementation of Resolution 1955 on Nuclear Free Zone in the
Middle East.


Korea Arrests US Citizen

19 Oktober 2018

Korea Arrests US Citizen

Kenneth Bae, a United States citizen, was arrested for taking
pictures of skinny North Korean kids.


Bolivia Expels USAID

19 Oktober 2018

Bolivia Expels USAID

Bolivia's President Evo Morales exples USAID from the country
during May Day, claiming that the organization has harmed the
country's government.