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Beyond Ukraine, a grim picture

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  • Beyond Ukraine, a grim picture

    International Herald Tribune, France
    Dec 27 2004

    Beyond Ukraine, a grim picture

    Rachel Denber
    Post-Soviet democracy

    TASHKENT, Uzbekistan On Sunday, Ukraine's voters returned to the
    polls to elect their president. Ukrainian society's peaceful
    rejection of last month's manipulated vote and its demand for honest
    elections and government accountability made the election a dramatic
    break with the Soviet past.

    The opposition leader, Viktor Yushchenko, appeared to have a clear
    lead, but the very fact that the vote took place was a victory for
    civil society. Across much of the former Soviet Union, however, the
    picture for democracy and institutions that protect basic freedoms is
    grim.

    On Sunday, people in Uzbekistan, a former Soviet state 3,000
    kilometers, or 1,875 miles, east of Kiev, elected a new Parliament.
    Few people were watching what happened because there wasn't much to
    see. A victory for the pro-government party was a foregone conclusion
    because there were no opposition candidates. The government has
    stifled institutions that underpin a free and fair electoral process
    - opposition political parties, media freedoms, an open atmosphere
    for nongovernmental organizations and freedom of assembly.

    This time last year, after reformists in Georgia staged the "Rose
    Revolution" that ousted President Eduard Shevardnadze, many wondered
    what lessons governments in the region would draw. No leader relishes
    political instability. But the question was, what would the region's
    leaders do to avoid it? Would they promote honest elections, greater
    accountability, better governance and peaceful transitions of power?
    Or would they ignore the issues that cause public discontent, such as
    entrenched, widespread corruption, and undermine the political
    opposition and democratic institutions in order to retain power at
    all costs?

    Overwhelmingly, governments in former Soviet states have chosen the
    latter path, continuing policies that had started well before the
    Georgian revolt. Uzbekistan may be one of the more acute examples of
    this trend but it has plenty of company.

    Azerbaijan's fraudulent presidential elections last year led to
    political violence, for which the government has imprisoned many
    opposition leaders. Public demonstrations in Azerbaijan by people
    seeking to express dissident views are nearly impossible.

    In Armenia in spring the government tried to use a variety of
    arbitrary measures to prevent massive rallies protesting falsified
    elections the previous year. The police used excessive force on
    demonstrators, raided the headquarters of opposition parties,
    arrested a handful of opposition political leaders and rounded up
    hundreds of their supporters.

    Two months ago the government of Kazakhstan created an unfair playing
    field for the parliamentary vote, resulting in only one opposition
    party member gaining a seat in the lower house of legislature. A
    couple of weeks ago not a single opposition candidate was elected in
    Belarus's parliamentary vote, after the electoral authorities used a
    combination of nonregistration of candidates and polling day fraud to
    keep the opposition out.

    In Kyrgyzstan, the government has already taken steps to increase its
    control over the news media and other civil society institutions
    before parliamentary elections in February.

    Throughout the region, governments control television and try to
    intimidate independent print media through punitive defamation suits
    and sheer bullying. In many countries, human rights and other civil
    society organizations are the targets of politically motivated tax
    inspections. Human rights defenders are unlawfully jailed by the
    authorities and subject to violent assaults by unknown attackers.

    Russia's crackdown on civil society has been under way for the past
    four years. President Vladimir Putin's government gradually seized
    control over what had been a diverse, if not exactly free, broadcast
    media and began using it to promote pro-government political
    candidates and vilify the opposition.

    Putin himself led a broadside attack on democratic organizations,
    accusing them in his "state of the nation" speech of serving foreign
    masters rather than the interests of ordinary Russians. Now new
    legislation will make the funding of nongovernmental organizations
    subject to government review.

    In contrast to their response to compromised elections in other parts
    of the region, Western countries leaped to the defense of Ukrainians
    demanding electoral integrity in Ukraine. For the most part, they
    were not cowed by accusations, from Russia and other countries, that
    they were meddling. But what would Western leaders have done had it
    not been possible for Ukrainians to take to the streets? Would their
    defense have been as firm?

    Elections in this part of the world are stolen all the time, but
    governments get away with it by stifling democratic institutions.
    Western leaders need to be every bit as supportive of the other
    struggling civil societies in the region, before there is nothing
    left to support.

    (Rachel Denber is the acting executive director of Human Rights
    Watch's Europe and Central Asia division.)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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