Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08BISHKEK1185
2008-11-26 04:58:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Bishkek
Cable title:  

ETHNIC TENSIONS AND GROWING FUNDAMENTALISM IN

Tags:  PGOV PREL ECON KG 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BISHKEK 001185 

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR SCA/CEN

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/26/2018
TAGS: PGOV PREL ECON KG
SUBJECT: ETHNIC TENSIONS AND GROWING FUNDAMENTALISM IN
JALALABAD, KYRGYZSTAN

BISHKEK 00001185 001.2 OF 002


Classified By: Classified By: Amb. Tatiana C. Gfoeller, Reasons 1.4 (b)
and (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 BISHKEK 001185

SIPDIS

DEPT FOR SCA/CEN

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/26/2018
TAGS: PGOV PREL ECON KG
SUBJECT: ETHNIC TENSIONS AND GROWING FUNDAMENTALISM IN
JALALABAD, KYRGYZSTAN

BISHKEK 00001185 001.2 OF 002


Classified By: Classified By: Amb. Tatiana C. Gfoeller, Reasons 1.4 (b)
and (d).


1. (C) SUMMARY: A trip by EmbOff to the southern Kyrgyz city
of Jalalabad, the third largest in the country, to promote
the U.S. elections shed light on several worrying issues. An
eager crowd of students gathered at Jalalabad State
University's (JSU) American Center for an Embassy-hosted
election discussion on November 5, while the university
leadership told of deteriorating conditions at the school.
The director of the Jalalabad Media Support Center described
a restrictive media environment, official corruption,
tensions between ethnic groups, and growing support for Hizb
ut-Tahrir (HT). The city mayor reported guarded optimism
about the winter, but concern over HT, continuing electricity
shortages and emigration. A visit to the Friendship of
Peoples University, owned by a private ethnic Uzbek
businessmen, showed the wealth of the Uzbek community and a
school that is teaching Sharia law. END SUMMARY.

CORRUPTION IN A KYRGYZ UNIVERSITY? SHOCKING.
--------------


2. (C) Approximately 50 students enthusiastically
participated in an Embassy-hosted election discussion at JSU.
Interestingly, two State Committee on National Security
(GKNB) agents also visited the University,s Vice-Rector
before the event to warn against discussing Kyrgyz politics.
(Comment: This is not the first time that the GKNB,s
Jalalabad branch has warned local officials about discussing
politically sensitive topics at Public Affairs Section
events. End Comment. ) In a separate meeting, university
vice-rectors expressed a strong desire to learn from American
success in higher education amid worsening educational
standards in Kyrgyzstan. They also reported a high demand
for the English language, which about 8,000 students now
study, in contrast to the declining interest in Arabic (now
20 students) in recent years. Sadly, JSU reinforced its
reputation for corruption when the American Corner staff
submitted forged receipts to us for the election event
expenses.

A FRIENDSHIP OF PEOPLES, UNDER SHARIA LAW

--------------


3. (C) The private Friendship of Peoples University, founded
by businessman and former member of Parliament Kadyrjan
Batyrov, stands in gleaming contrast to the dilapidated
infrastructure of JSU. Batyrov is a leader of the ethnic
Uzbek community in Kyrgyzstan's south, an area where
inter-ethnic relations are a sensitive subject for the Kyrgyz
government. The University opened in 1999 and currently
enrolls 1,500 students, many ethnically Uzbek. Although one
teacher claimed that Batyrov is not very religious himself,
the university has opened a Faculty of Sharia law in
cooperation with the Islamic University in Medina, Saudi
Arabia. It also has prayer rooms for students, a rare sight
in the largely secular world of Kyrgyz education. The ethnic
Uzbek teacher said that Kyrgyz and Uzbek students get along
for the most part, but the broader Uzbek community is tired
of not having media sources in the Uzbek language.

MEDIA CENTER: PRESS AND SOCIAL PROBLEMS
--------------


4. (C) The director of the Jalalabad Media Resource Center,
Shuhrat Aitiev, described a decline in media freedom based on
fear of government retribution. The center is financed in
part by an Embassy Democracy Commission grant and other
Western donor support. Aitiev said that journalists choose
not to write about the corruption of the Bakiyev

BISHKEK 00001185 002.2 OF 002


administration and family, though they know about it
personally given Bakiyev's roots in the Jalalabad region. By
contrast, they felt free to write critically of the
administration of former President Akayev. He cited the
recent example of a local journalist who was fired after
calls to his paper by the mayor and the GKNB for reporting a
trash scandal with the mayor. More broadly, he noted the
dominance of Russian television stations and newspapers in
southern Kyrgyzstan, and the corresponding popularity of
Russia and Vladimir Putin.


5. (C) Aitiev also reported continuing tensions between
ethnic Uzbeks and Kyrgyz in the South, which the media does
not report on. He said the tensions are generally below the
surface, though a fight recently occurred in Jalalabad with
about 50 of each ethnic group per side. Aitiev believes the
Uzbek community is tolerant of the disproportion of ethnic
Kyrgyz in political power, but is becoming frustrated with
the paucity of mass media and education in the Uzbek
language. He also argued that Islam is growing in
popularity: many new mosques have been built, and they
overflow with worshippers. He worries about extremism,
saying that HT is getting bolder in its public outreach,
including holding a lottery during Ramadan. He thinks a
confrontation between HT and the authorities could occur,
though is more likely outside of the city center.

MAYOR: "RADICAL ISLAM IS A BIG PROBLEM"
--------------


6. (C) City mayor Tilek Akambaev claimed that Jalalabad will
endure the coming winter between official coal purchases,
private preparations of citizens, and the option of going
into debt to buy gas from Uzbekistan. He admitted that
electricity shortages have hurt the local economy, though
there will still be year-to-year growth thanks to an increase
in oil production. Akambaev is also worried by the severe
shortage of water in the region and poor infrastructure that
leaks what water they do have. The city has seen mixed
effects of huge emigration to Russia: the remittances
flowing back help families survive and boost retail trade,
but there are real shortages of qualified workers.


7. (C) Akambaev is also worried about the growth of radical
Islam. He hopes a tougher new law on religion will help
crack down on HT, Christian missionaries and others who have
"too many rights." Akambaev claimed HT is growing thanks to
money from Saudi Arabia that allows it to expand its
outreach, especially to young people in schools. In the
future, the mayor recommended working with the governor: "I
take orders from him, since we have an Oriental
("vostochniy") mentality here in the South -- everything is
top down."

COMMENT:
--------------


8. (C) Jalalabad is a city with many problems, though the
government seems more than aware of them. Emigration has
eased unemployment concerns and the city's multiple bazaars
are certainly expanding. Local officials tend to view ethnic
tensions and religious issues in terms of potential security
threats, and they offer no ideas for resolving these issues
beyond expanding government control.
GFOELLER