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- <text id=92TT0951>
- <title>
- Apr. 27, 1992: Five New Nations Ask Who Are We?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 27, 1992 The Untold Story of Pan Am 103
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CENTRAL ASIA, Page 44
- Five New Nations Ask Who Are WE?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Muslim republics search for an identity somewhere between
- radical Islam and Western secularism
- </p>
- <p>By John Kohan/Bishkek--With reporting by J.F.O. McAllister/
- Washington and Yuri Zarakhovich/Namangan
- </p>
- <p> On a rugged, snow-mantled mountainside above Bishkek, the
- capital of Kyrgyzstan, Joloi Beishenov tends his flock on
- horseback, as his ancestors did centuries ago. During the cold
- season he shelters his 70 sheep in two traditional canvas yurts
- and lives alone in a spartan wooden shack until the warm weather
- brings his family up from the lowlands. This spring there is
- another new season, the opening out of the former Soviet Union;
- Beishenov has heard about new economic reforms, and hopes to
- rent from a neighboring state farm the strip of stony pasture
- he uses for grazing. But he is unmoved by larger questions of
- politics and religion. He is the kind of Muslim, he says, "who
- prays to himself." He just wants a piece of land he can call his
- own.
- </p>
- <p> Beishenov may soon get his wish. Since the Soviet Union
- collapsed five months ago, more dramatic changes have been
- taking place in Central Asia than the sheepherder could ever
- imagine. Freed from control by Moscow, a vast stretch of the
- Eurasian continent populated by more than 50 million
- predominantly Muslim, Turkic-speaking peoples has unfolded to
- the outside world. The former Soviet republics of Uzbekistan,
- Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan never
- agitated for the breakup of the union and even served as a
- passive but powerful prop for the communist regime. Once
- centralized Soviet control began to split apart, however, they
- had little choice but to join the exodus toward independence.
- </p>
- <p> The economically underdeveloped states of the south were
- not ready to deal with such newfangled concepts as political
- pluralism or free-market economics. The vast majority of the
- population lives a rural life, cut off from urban political
- developments. Robbed of their natural resources and even their
- cultural identity by the Kremlin, the Central Asians were forced
- to take charge of their destiny overnight. Their struggle to
- define the future is even more basic than in the old Soviet
- European republics.
- </p>
- <p> Nevertheless, the outside world is already vying to shape
- it for them. Presidents and diplomats, businessmen and clergy
- shuttle in and out of the republics like traders from the
- caravans that once crisscrossed the great Silk Road to China.
- After U.S. Secretary of State James Baker made a whirlwind
- December visit, Washington became the first foreign nation to
- establish formal diplomatic ties with Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan.
- Neighboring Turkey and Iran have been the main competitors for
- influence, inviting the Central Asians to take part in their
- rival Black Sea and Caspian Sea cooperation zones. China has
- cautiously proposed joint-venture projects, and even the South
- Koreans have offered a taste of free enterprise with a fast-food
- restaurant in the Kazakhstan capital of Alma-Ata. If an Islamic
- regime emerges in Afghanistan, the Asian republics can expect
- strong overtures to bring about fraternal ties.
- </p>
- <p> With so many suitors, the newly independent states have
- been wary of making geopolitical commitments. Askar Akayev,
- President of Kyrgyzstan, wants his country to be "politically
- like Switzerland, but in the heart of Asia." Foreign Minister
- Abdu Kuliyev believes Turkmenistan should be "neither Islamic
- nor Soviet but a secular, democratic state." President Nursultan
- Nazarbayev thinks Kazakhstan, which stretches from the Volga
- region of Russia to the western borders of China, should be a
- bridge between Europe and Asia. Says he: "We want to enter the
- democratic world like any other state."
- </p>
- <p> Much of the diplomatic activity has been prompted by
- growing fears in the West that if democratic values and
- free-market economies fail to take root, the whole southern rim
- of the old Soviet empire will slide inexorably into the embrace
- of Islamic fundamentalism. Central Asia has been an arena for
- clashing values, an ancient land swept successively by Persians,
- Greeks, Arabs, Turks, Mongols, Tatars, Russians and finally
- communist bureaucrats. During 70 years of heavy-handed rule,
- Soviet administrations made every effort to standardize life and
- co-opt Islamic culture. The abrupt end of Moscow's power has
- left a yawning political and spiritual vacuum. Since most of the
- region's Muslims have predominantly Turkic ethnic roots, the tug
- is between two versions of the Islamic state: the secular,
- Westernized Turkey and the radical, anti-Western Iran.
- </p>
- <p> When strict confessional differences are considered, the
- pull of Iranian-style fundamentalism appears to be greatly
- exaggerated. The overwhelming majority of Central Asian Muslims,
- including the ethnically Persian peoples of Tajikistan, follow
- the Sunni Islam observed in Saudi Arabia and most of the Muslim
- world. A true religious revival in Central Asia would probably
- produce an Islamic state more like Pakistan than Iran, which
- holds to the more extreme fundamentalist Shi`ite dogma.
- </p>
- <p> Such theological distinctions are lost, however, on a
- younger generation of radicals, who accuse the official Islamic
- establishment of having collaborated with a godless Soviet
- regime. "It doesn't matter that they are Shi`ite over there and
- we are Sunni," argues a militant in the Uzbek city of Namangan.
- "The Ayatullah made Iran strong and glorious, while in Sunni
- Turkey they have weakened Islam."
- </p>
- <p> Muslim political aspirations have found a focus in the
- Islamic Renaissance Party, which held its founding congress in
- 1990 in the Russian city of Astrakhan, once the historic
- capital of a Muslim Tatar fiefdom. "Our party's goals are
- similar to those of the Iranian revolution," explains
- Moscow-based spokesman Vali-Akhmet Sadur. "We stand for
- tradition." Before the union broke apart, the party could
- operate openly only in Russia, but it now has chapters in
- Uzbekistan and Tajikistan that have emerged from the
- underground.
- </p>
- <p> The movement has especially strong grass-roots support in
- Uzbekistan's Fergana Valley, a hotbed of Muslim resistance to
- communist rule. Angered by the new regime's failure to deal with
- corruption and a growing crime rate, local militants in the city
- of Namangan have organized local Islamic guard patrols, who
- punish offenders with religious indoctrination and the public
- pillory. Communist propaganda posters still decorate the
- streets, but the cry of "God is great!" echoing from the mosques
- has a more stirring effect on the local population. During
- afternoon prayers, the Islamic guards keep order among the
- steady stream of the faithful crowding through the ornate
- portals of a city mosque.
- </p>
- <p> Officials in the capital of Tashkent turned a blind eye to
- the growing power of the Islamic revivalists in Namangan, until
- they openly challenged the authority of President Islam
- Karimov. Last month police sealed off the city and whisked at
- least 80 activists away to prisons outside the region, deeply
- offending city residents. An enraged party member in Moscow
- warned, "A revolution is imminent. We have learned something
- from the Algerian experience."
- </p>
- <p> The conflict in some of the republics may be resolved only
- when stable, popularly supported governments take shape. So
- far, the political scorecard is mixed. Kyrgyzstan's Akayev and
- Kazakhstan's Nazarbayev have won praise in the West for their
- eagerness to open up to the outside world. They have tried to
- forge a policy of "public consensus" in their ethnically diverse
- states, presiding over what can best be described as "nonparty"
- systems made up of shifting groups of democrats, nationalists,
- environmentalists and Old Guard communists. Akayev says his
- major aim is to create "a strong and powerful middle class that
- will guarantee future stability." It is a commendable goal, but
- until such social forces develop, the future of reforms in both
- states may depend wholly on the political fate of their
- Presidents.
- </p>
- <p> The region's two potential flash points are Uzbekistan and
- Tajikistan, where postcommunist leaders seem unable to find
- common ground with either democratic or Islamic movements.
- President Rakhman Nabiyev of Tajikistan has been under a virtual
- state of siege since last month, when supporters of the
- opposition began to gather in the tens of thousands outside the
- parliament building to urge dismissal of the republic's legislature
- of holdover party officials. Uzbekistan's President Islam
- Karimov received a warning signal of his own in January, when
- students protesting the liberalization of prices clashed with
- police, resulting in two deaths. Muslim extremists view Karimov
- as the major obstacle to setting up an Islamic republic, while
- democrats see him as a sly defender of the old regime who, they
- claim, "gives with one hand while squeezing with the other."
- Uzbek moderates are worried that if Karimov should fall from
- power now, the fundamentalists rather than the democrats would
- pick up the pieces.
- </p>
- <p> However heated the current debate may be over Eastern and
- Western values, the region's most serious problems are economic.
- Uzbek writer Sabit Madaliyev contends that the political choice
- Central Asians ultimately make will be determined by the
- conditions of daily life, not by religious fanaticism. "They
- will think first about how to feed their children, and that
- means introducing a market economy," he says. "But democracy and
- a free-market system cannot be introduced in a day here. Our
- people could not endure such speed." Jabar Abduvakhid, deputy
- director of Tashkent's Institute of Oriental Studies, puts the
- dilemma more bluntly: "The growth of the Islamic movement will
- be in direct proportion to the decline in the region's economic
- and social conditions."
- </p>
- <p> The collapse of the Soviet Union has only deepened the
- economic crisis by disrupting traditional trade ties with Russia
- and the European republics. Central Asian republics used to
- receive almost all of their manufactured goods and cheap fuel
- in exchange for raw materials. Now they are without reliable
- suppliers and must fend for themselves. That has not proved
- easy. The fuel shortage in Kyrgyzstan grew so severe in February
- that only one flight a day could leave Bishkek's airport for
- Moscow; energy supplies at power stations dwindled to a 10-day
- reserve.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, Kyrgyzstan's Akayev contends that the pain of
- separation from Moscow will pay off if his republic can manage
- to rebuild its economy on a more stable foundation, open "to all
- four corners of the world." Kazakhstan's Nazarbayev makes a
- forceful case for greater Western economic involvement in the
- region. His republic, he argues, could become the Kuwait of the
- 21st century if Western know-how were harnessed to tap its rich
- energy sources. Even technical assistance in setting up and
- running food-processing plants would be invaluable in getting
- the new republics to stand on their own. Nazarbayev sums up the
- region's hopes and the expectations of the West in a single
- question, What are they waiting for?
- </p>
- <p> Washington's answer is, Democracy and free markets. The
- U.S. has opened embassies in all the Central Asian republics.
- But the $24 billion Western aid package President Bush
- announced three weeks ago is aimed at Russia almost exclusively,
- which Baker justifies on the grounds that Moscow's economic
- reforms are the most advanced.
- </p>
- <p> In the end, the West cannot afford to ignore the Central
- Asian call for cooperation, given its turbulent dealings with
- other Muslim states like Iran and Iraq. Says Uzbek political
- analyst Abduvakhid: "If the West waits until tomorrow or the day
- after to get involved, it may be too late." Perhaps it is time
- for the Marco Polos of this age to set out on a new voyage of
- discovery to this long-neglected corner of the fabled East.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-