Uzbekistan - History
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan, the most populous and arguably the most powerful state in
Central Asia, has a long and magnificent history. Located between two
rivers--the Amu Darya to the north and the Syrdariya to the south--the
region that is modern Uzbekistan has been one of the cradles of world
civilization. Some of the world's oldest sedentary populations and
several of its most ancient cities are located here. Beginning at the
height of the Roman Empire, the region was a crossroads on the
transcontinental trade routes between China and the West. Subject to
constant invasion and to in-migration of nomads from the great
grasslands to the north, Uzbekistan became a region of legendary
conquests where various peoples with different traditions have
consistently had to live together.
Early History
The first people known to have occupied Central Asia were Iranian
nomads who arrived from the northern grasslands of what is now
Uzbekistan sometime in the first millennium B.C. These nomads, who spoke
Iranian dialects, settled in Central Asia and began to
build an extensive irrigation system along the rivers of the region. At
this time, cities such as Bukhoro (Bukhara) and Samarqand (Samarkand)
began to appear as centers of government and culture. By the fifth
century B.C., the Bactrian, Soghdian, and Tokharian states dominated the
region. As China began to develop its silk trade with the West, Iranian
cities took advantage of this commerce by becoming centers of trade.
Using an extensive network of cities and settlements in the province of
Mawarannahr (a name given the region after the Arab conquest) in
Uzbekistan and farther east in what is today China's Xinjiang Uygur
Auton-omous Region, the Soghdian intermediaries became the wealthiest of
these Iranian merchants. Because of this trade on what became known as
the Silk Route, Bukhoro and Samarqand eventually became extremely
wealthy cities, and at times Mawarannahr was one of the most influential
and powerful Persian provinces of antiquity.
The wealth of Mawarannahr was a constant magnet for invasions from
the northern steppes and from China. Numerous intraregional wars were
fought between Soghdian states and the other states in Mawarannahr, and
the Persians and the Chinese were in perpetual conflict over the region.
Alexander the Great conquered the region in 328 B.C., bringing it
briefly under the control of his Macedonian Empire.
In the same centuries, however, the region also was an important
center of intellectual life and religion. Until the first centuries
after Christ, the dominant religion in the region was Zoroastrianism
(see Glossary), but Buddhism, Manichaeism, and
Christianity also attracted large numbers of followers.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The Early Islamic Period
Uzbekistan
The conquest of Central Asia by Islamic Arabs, which was completed in
the eighth century A.D., brought to the region a new religion and
culture that continue to be dominant. The Arabs first invaded
Mawarannahr in the middle of the seventh century through sporadic raids
during their conquest of Persia. Available sources on the Arab conquest
suggest that the Soghdians and other Iranian peoples of Central Asia
were unable to defend their land against the Arabs because of internal
divisions and the lack of strong indigenous leadership. The Arabs, on
the other hand, were led by a brilliant general, Qutaybah ibn Muslim,
and they also were highly motivated by the desire to spread their new
faith (the official beginning of which was in A.D. 622). Because of
these factors, the population of Mawarannahr was easily conquered. The
new religion brought by the Arabs spread gradually in the region. The
native cultures, which in some respects already were being displaced by
Persian influences before the Arabs arrived, were displaced farther in
the ensuing centuries. Nevertheless, the destiny of Central Asia as an
Islamic region was firmly established by the Arab victory over the
Chinese armies in 750 in a battle at the Talas River.
Under Arab rule, Central Asia retained much of its Iranian character,
remaining an important center of culture and trade for centuries after
the Arab conquest. However, until the tenth century the language of
government, literature, and commerce was Arabic. Mawarannahr continued
to be an important political player in regional affairs, as it had been
under various Persian dynasties. In fact, the Abbasid Caliphate, which
ruled the Arab world for five centuries beginning in 750, was
established thanks in great part to assistance from Central Asian
supporters in their struggle against the then-ruling Umayyad Caliphate.
During the height of the Abbasid Caliphate in the eighth and the
ninth centuries, Central Asia and Mawarannahr experienced a truly golden
age. Bukhoro became one of the leading centers of learning, culture, and
art in the Muslim world, its magnificence rivaling contemporaneous
cultural centers such as Baghdad, Cairo, and Cordoba. Some of the
greatest historians, scientists, and geographers in the history of
Islamic culture were natives of the region.
As the Abbasid Caliphate began to weaken and local Islamic Iranian
states emerged as the rulers of Iran and Central Asia, the Persian
language began to regain its preeminent role in the region as the
language of literature and government. The rulers of the eastern section
of Iran and of Mawarannahr were Persians. Under the Samanids and the
Buyids, the rich culture of Mawarannahr continued to flourish.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Mawarannahr
Uzbekistan
In the ninth century, the continued influx of nomads from the
northern steppes brought a new group of people into Central Asia. These
people were the Turks who lived in the great grasslands stretching from
Mongolia to the Caspian Sea. Introduced mainly as slave soldiers to the
Samanid Dynasty, these Turks served in the armies of all the states of
the region, including the Abbasid army. In the late tenth century, as
the Samanids began to lose control of Mawarannahr and northeastern Iran,
some of these soldiers came to positions of power in the government of
the region, and eventually they established their own states. With the
emergence of a Turkic ruling group in the region, other Turkic tribes
began to migrate to Mawarannahr.
The first of the Turkic states in the region was the Ghaznavid
Empire, established in the last years of the tenth century. The
Ghaznavid state, which ruled lands south of the Amu Darya, was able to
conquer large areas of Iran, Afghanistan, and northern India during the
reign of Sultan Mahmud. The dominance of Ghazna was curtailed, however,
when large-scale Turkic migrations brought in two new groups of Turks
who undermined the Ghaznavids. In the east, these Turks were led by the
Qarakhanids, who conquered the Samanids. Then the Seljuk family led
Turks into the western part of the region, conquering the Ghaznavid
territory of Khorazm (also spelled Khorezm and Khwarazm).
Attracted by the wealth of Central Asia as were earlier groups, the
Seljuks dominated a wide area from Asia Minor to the western sections of
Mawarannahr, in Afghanistan, Iran, and Iraq in the eleventh century. The
Seljuk Empire then split into states ruled by various local Turkic and
Iranian rulers. The culture and intellectual life of the region
continued unaffected by such political changes, however. Turkic tribes
from the north continued to migrate into the region during this period.
In the late twelfth century, a Turkic leader of Khorazm, which is the
region south of the Aral Sea, united Khorazm, Mawarannahr, and Iran
under his rule. Under the rule of the Khorazm shah Kutbeddin Muhammad
and his son, Muhammad II, Mawarannahr continued to be prosperous and
rich. However, a new incursion of nomads from the north soon changed
this situation. This time the invader was Chinggis (Genghis) Khan with
his Mongol armies.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The Mongol Period
Uzbekistan
The Mongol invasion of Central Asia is one of the turning points in
the history of the region. That event left imprints that were still
discernible in the early twentieth century. The Mongols had such a
lasting impact because they established the tradition that the
legitimate ruler of any Central Asian state could only be a blood
descendant of Chinggis Khan.
The Mongol conquest of Central Asia, which took place from 1219 to
1225, led to a wholesale change in the population of Mawarannahr. The
conquest quickened the process of Turkification in the region because,
although the armies of Chinggis Khan were led by Mongols, they were made
up mostly of Turkic tribes that had been incorporated into the Mongol
armies as the tribes were encountered in the Mongols' southward sweep.
As these armies settled in Mawarannahr, they intermixed with the local
populations, increasingly making the Iranians a minority. Another effect
of the Mongol conquest was the large-scale damage the warriors inflicted
on cities such as Bukhoro and on regions such as Khorazm. As the leading
province of a wealthy state, Khorazm was treated especially severely.
The irrigation networks in the region suffered extensive damage that was
not repaired for several generations.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Timur
Uzbekistan
Following the death of Chinggis Khan in 1227, his empire was divided
among his three sons. Despite the potential for serious fragmentation,
Mongol law maintained orderly succession for several more generations,
and control of most of Mawarannahr stayed in the hands of direct
descendants of Chaghatai, the second son of Chinggis. Orderly
succession, prosperity, and internal peace prevailed in the Chaghatai
lands, and the Mongol Empire as a whole remained strong and united.
In the early fourteenth century, however, as the empire began to
break up into its constituent parts, the Chaghatai territory also was
disrupted as the princes of various tribal groups competed for
influence. One tribal chieftain, Timur (Tamerlane), emerged from these
struggles in the 1380s as the dominant force in Mawarannahr. Although he
was not a descendant of Chinggis, Timur became the de facto ruler of
Mawarannahr and proceeded to conquer all of western Central Asia, Iran,
Asia Minor, and the southern steppe region north of the Aral Sea. He
also invaded Russia before dying during an invasion of China in 1405.
Timur initiated the last flowering of Mawarannahr by gathering in his
capital, Samarqand, numerous artisans and scholars from the lands he had
conquered. By supporting such people, Timur imbued his empire with a
very rich culture. During Timur's reign and the reigns of his immediate
descendants, a wide range of religious and palatial construction
projects were undertaken in Samarqand and other population centers.
Timur also patronized scientists and artists; his grandson Ulugh Beg was
one of the world's first great astronomers. It was during the Timurid
dynasty that Turkish, in the form of the Chaghatai dialect, became a
literary language in its own right in Mawarannahr--although the Timurids
also patronized writing in Persian. Until then only Persian had been
used in the region. The greatest Chaghataid writer, Ali Shir Nava'i, was
active in the city of Herat, now in northwestern Afghanistan, in the
second half of the fifteenth century.
The Timurid state quickly broke into two halves after the death of
Timur. The chronic internal fighting of the Timurids attracted the
attention of the Uzbek nomadic tribes living to the north of the Aral
Sea. In 1501 the Uzbeks began a wholesale invasion of Mawarannahr.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The Uzbek Period
Uzbekistan
By 1510 the Uzbeks had completed their conquest of Central Asia,
including the territory of the present-day Uzbekistan. Of the states
they established, the most powerful, the Khanate of Bukhoro, centered on
the city of Bukhoro. The khanate controlled Mawarannahr, especially the
region of Tashkent, the Fergana Valley in the east, and northern
Afghanistan. A second Uzbek state was established in the oasis of
Khorazm at the mouth of the Amu Darya. The Khanate of Bukhoro was
initially led by the energetic Shaybanid Dynasty. The Shaybanids
competed against Iran, which was led by the Safavid Dynasty, for the
rich far-eastern territory of present-day Iran. The struggle with Iran
also had a religious aspect because the Uzbeks were Sunni (see Glossary)
Muslims, and Iran was Shia (see Glossary).
Near the end of the sixteenth century, the Uzbek states of Bukhoro
and Khorazm began to weaken because of their endless wars against each
other and the Persians and because of strong competition for the throne
among the khans in power and their heirs. At the beginning of the
seventeenth century, the Shaybanid Dynasty was replaced by the Janid
Dynasty.
Another factor contributing to the weakness of the Uzbek khanates in
this period was the general decline of trade moving through the region.
This change had begun in the previous century when ocean trade routes
were established from Europe to India and China, circumventing the Silk
Route. As European-dominated ocean transport expanded and some trading
centers were destroyed, cities such as Bukhoro, Merv, and Samarqand in
the Khanate of Bukhoro and Khiva and Urganch (Urgench) in Khorazm began
to steadily decline.
The Uzbeks' struggle with Iran also led to the cultural isolation of
Central Asia from the rest of the Islamic world. In addition to these
problems, the struggle with the nomads from the northern steppe
continued. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Kazak nomads and
Mongols continually raided the Uzbek khanates, causing widespread damage
and disruption. In the beginning of the eighteenth century, the Khanate
of Bukhoro lost the fertile Fergana region, and a new Uzbek khanate was
formed in Quqon.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Arrival of the Russians
Uzbekistan
The following period was one of weakness and disruption, with
continuous invasions from Iran and from the north. In this period, a new
group, the Russians, began to appear on the Central Asian scene. As
Russian merchants began to expand into the grasslands of present-day
Kazakstan, they built strong trade relations with their counterparts in
Tashkent and, to some extent, in Khiva. For the Russians, this trade was
not rich enough to replace the former transcontinental trade, but it
made the Russians aware of the potential of Central Asia. Russian
attention also was drawn by the sale of increasingly large numbers of
Russian slaves to the Central Asians by Kazak and Turkmen tribes.
Russians kidnapped by nomads in the border regions and Russian sailors
shipwrecked on the shores of the Caspian Sea usually ended up in the
slave markets of Bukhoro or Khiva. Beginning in the eighteenth century,
this situation evoked increasing Russian hostility toward the Central
Asian khanates.
Meanwhile, in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries new
dynasties led the khanates to a period of recovery. Those dynasties were
the Qongrats in Khiva, the Manghits in Bukhoro, and the Mins in Quqon.
These new dynasties established centralized states with standing armies
and new irrigation works. But their rise coincided with the ascendance
of Russian power in the Kazak steppes and the establishment of a British
position in Afghanistan. By the early nineteenth century, the region was
caught between these two powerful European competitors, each of which
tried to add Central Asia to its empire in what came to be known as the
Great Game. The Central Asians, who did not realize the dangerous
position they were in, continued to waste their strength in wars among
themselves and in pointless campaigns of conquest.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The Russian Conquest
Uzbekistan
In the nineteenth century, Russian interest in the area increased
greatly, sparked by nominal concern over British designs on Central
Asia; by anger over the situation of Russian citizens held as slaves;
and by the desire to control the trade in the region and to establish a
secure source of cotton for Russia. When the United States Civil War
prevented cotton delivery from Russia's primary supplier, the southern
United States, Central Asian cotton assumed much greater importance for
Russia.
As soon as the Russian conquest of the Caucasus was completed in the
late 1850s, therefore, the Russian Ministry of War began to send
military forces against the Central Asian khanates. Three major
population centers of the khanates--Tashkent, Bukhoro, and
Samarqand--were captured in 1865, 1867, and 1868, respectively. In 1868
the Khanate of Bukhoro signed a treaty with Russia making Bukhoro a
Russian protectorate. Khiva became a Russian protectorate in 1873, and
the Quqon Khanate finally was incorporated into the Russian Empire, also
as a protectorate, in 1876.
By 1876 the entire territory comprising present-day Uzbekistan either
had fallen under direct Russian rule or had become a protectorate of
Russia. The treaties establishing the protectorates over Bukhoro and
Khiva gave Russia control of the foreign relations of these states and
gave Russian merchants important concessions in foreign trade; the
khanates retained control of their own internal affairs. Tashkent and
Quqon fell directly under a Russian governor general.
During the first few decades of Russian rule, the daily life of the
Central Asians did not change greatly. The Russians substantially
increased cotton production, but otherwise they interfered little with
the indigenous people. Some Russian settlements were built next to the
established cities of Tashkent and Samarqand, but the Russians did not
mix with the indigenous populations. The era of Russian rule did produce
important social and economic changes for some Uzbeks as a new middle
class developed and some peasants were affected by the increased
emphasis on cotton cultivation.
In the last decade of the nineteenth century, conditions began to
change as new Russian railroads brought greater numbers of Russians into
the area. In the 1890s, several revolts, which were put down easily, led
to increased Russian vigilance in the region. The Russians increasingly
intruded in the internal affairs of the khanates. The only avenue for
Uzbek resistance to Russian rule became the Pan-Turkish movement, also
known as Jadidism, which had arisen in the 1860s among intellectuals who
sought to preserve indigenous Islamic Central Asian culture from Russian
encroachment. By 1900 Jadidism had developed into the region's first
major movement of political resistance. Until the Bolshevik Revolution
(see Glossary) of 1917, the modern, secular ideas of Jadidism faced
resistance from both the Russians and the Uzbek khans, who had differing
reasons to fear the movement.
Prior to the events of 1917, Russian rule had brought some industrial
development in sectors directly connected with cotton. Although
railroads and cotton-ginning machinery advanced, the Central Asian
textile industry was slow to develop because the cotton crop was shipped
to Russia for processing. As the tsarist government expanded the
cultivation of cotton dramatically, it changed the balance between
cotton and food production, creating some problems in food
supply--although in the prerevolutionary period Central Asia remained
largely self-sufficient in food. This situation was to change during the
Soviet period when the Moscow government began a ruthless drive for
national self-sufficiency in cotton. This policy converted almost the
entire agricultural economy of Uzbekistan to cotton production, bringing
a series of consequences whose negative impact still is felt today in
Uzbekistan and other republics.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Entering the Twentieth Century
Uzbekistan
By the turn of the twentieth century, the Russian Empire was in
complete control of Central Asia. The territory of Uzbekistan was
divided into three political groupings: the khanates of Bukhoro and
Khiva and the Guberniya (Governorate General) of Turkestan, the last of
which was under direct control of the Ministry of War of Russia (see
fig. 3). The final decade of the twentieth century finds the three
regions united under the independent and sovereign Republic of
Uzbekistan. The intervening decades were a period of revolution,
oppression, massive disruptions, and colonial rule.
After 1900 the khanates continued to enjoy a certain degree of
autonomy in their internal affairs. However, they ultimately were
subservient to the Russian governor general in Tashkent, who ruled the
region in the name of Tsar Nicholas II. The Russian Empire exercised
direct control over large tracts of territory in Central Asia, allowing
the khanates to rule a large portion of their ancient lands for
themselves. In this period, large numbers of Russians, attracted by the
climate and the available land, immigrated into Central Asia. After
1900, increased contact with Russian civilization began to have an
impact on the lives of Central Asians in the larger population centers
where the Russians settled.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The Jadidists and Basmachis
Uzbekistan
Russian influence was especially strong among certain young
intellectuals who were the sons of the rich merchant classes. Educated
in the local Muslim schools, in Russian universities, or in Istanbul,
these men, who came to be known as the Jadidists, tried to learn from
Russia and from modernizing movements in Istanbul and among the Tatars,
and to use this knowledge to regain their country's independence. The
Jadidists believed that their society, and even their religion, must be
reformed and modernized for this goal to be achieved. In 1905 the
unexpected victory of a new Asiatic power in the Russo-Japanese War and
the eruption of revolution in Russia raised the hopes of reform factions
that Russian rule could be overturned, and a modernization program
initiated, in Central Asia. The democratic reforms that Russia promised
in the wake of the revolution gradually faded, however, as the tsarist
government restored authoritarian rule in the decade that followed 1905.
Renewed tsarist repression and the reactionary politics of the rulers of
Bukhoro and Khiva forced the reformers underground or into exile.
Nevertheless, some of the future leaders of Soviet Uzbekistan, including
Abdur Rauf Fitrat and others, gained valuable revolutionary experience
and were able to expand their ideological influence in this period.
In the summer of 1916, a number of settlements in eastern Uzbekistan
were the sites of violent demonstrations against a new Russian decree
canceling the Central Asians' immunity to conscription for duty in World
War I. Reprisals of increasing violence ensued, and the struggle spread
from Uzbekistan into Kyrgyz and Kazak territory. There, Russian
confiscation of grazing land already had created animosity not present
in the Uzbek population, which was concerned mainly with preserving its
rights.
The next opportunity for the Jadidists presented itself in 1917 with
the outbreak of the February and October revolutions in Russia. In
February the revolutionary events in Russia's capital, Petrograd (St.
Petersburg), were quickly repeated in Tashkent, where the tsarist
administration of the governor general was overthrown. In its place, a
dual system was established, combining a provisional government with
direct Soviet power and completely excluding the native Muslim
population from power. Indigenous leaders, including some of the
Jadidists, attempted to set up an autonomous government in the city of
Quqon in the Fergana Valley, but this attempt was quickly crushed.
Following the suppression of autonomy in Quqon, Jadidists and other
loosely connected factions began what was called the Basmachi revolt
against Soviet rule, which by 1922 had survived the civil war and was
asserting greater power over most of Central Asia. For more than a
decade, Basmachi guerrilla fighters (that name was a derogatory Slavic
term that the fighters did not apply to themselves) fiercely resisted
the establishment of Soviet rule in parts of Central Asia.
However, the majority of Jadidists, including leaders such as Fitrat
and Faizulla Khojayev, cast their lot with the communists. In 1920
Khojayev, who became first secretary of the Communist Party of
Uzbekistan, assisted communist forces in the capture of Bukhoro and
Khiva. After the amir of Bukhoro had joined the Basmachi movement,
Khojayev became president of the newly established Soviet Bukhoran
People's Republic. A People's Republic of Khorazm also was set up in
what had been Khiva.
The Basmachi revolt eventually was crushed as the civil war in Russia
ended and the communists drew away large portions of the Central Asian
population with promises of local political autonomy and the potential
economic autonomy of Soviet leader Vladimir I. Lenin's New Economic
Policy (NEP--see Glossary). Under these circumstances, large numbers of
Central Asians joined the communist party, many gaining high positions
in the government of the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic (Uzbek SSR),
the administrative unit established in 1924 to include present-day
Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. The indigenous leaders cooperated closely
with the communist government in enforcing policies designed to alter
the traditional society of the region: the emancipation of women, the
redistribution of land, and mass literacy campaigns.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The Stalinist Period
Uzbekistan
In 1929 the Tajik and Uzbek Soviet socialist republics were
separated. As Uzbek communist party chief, Khojayev enforced the
policies of the Soviet government during the collectivization of
agriculture in the late 1920s and early 1930s and, at the same time,
tried to increase the participation of Uzbeks in the government and the
party. Soviet leader Joseph V. Stalin suspected the motives of all
reformist national leaders in the non-Russian republics of the Soviet
Union. By the late 1930s, Khojayev and the entire group that came into
high positions in the Uzbek Republic had been arrested and executed
during the Stalinist purges.
Following the purge of the nationalists, the government and party
ranks in Uzbekistan were filled with people loyal to the Moscow
government. Economic policy emphasized the supply of cotton to the rest
of the Soviet Union, to the exclusion of diversified agriculture. During
World War II, many industrial plants from European Russia were evacuated
to Uzbekistan and other parts of Central Asia. With the factories came a
new wave of Russian and other European workers. Because native Uzbeks
were mostly occupied in the country's agricultural regions, the urban
concentration of immigrants increasingly Russified Tashkent and other
large cities. During the war years, in addition to the Russians who
moved to Uzbekistan, other nationalities such as Crimean Tatars,
Chechens, and Koreans were exiled to the republic because Moscow saw
them as subversive elements in European Russia.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Rashidov
Uzbekistan
Following the death of Stalin in 1953, the relative relaxation of
totalitarian control initiated by First Secretary Nikita S. Khrushchev
(in office 1953-64) brought the rehabilitation of some of the Uzbek
nationalists who had been purged. More Uzbeks began to join the
Communist Party of Uzbekistan and to assume positions in the government.
However, those Uzbeks who participated in the regime did so on Russian
terms. Russian was the language of state, and Russification was the
prerequisite for obtaining a position in the government or the party.
Those who did not or could not abandon their Uzbek lifestyles and
identities were excluded from leading roles in official Uzbek society.
Because of these conditions, Uzbekistan gained a reputation as one of
the most politically conservative republics in the Soviet Union.
As Uzbeks were beginning to gain leading positions in society, they
also were establishing or reviving unofficial networks based on regional
and clan loyalties. These networks provided their members support and
often profitable connections between them and the state and the party.
An extreme example of this phenomenon occurred under the leadership of
Sharaf Rashidov, who was first secretary of the Communist Party of
Uzbekistan from 1959 to 1982. During his tenure, Rashidov brought
numerous relatives and associates from his native region into government
and party leadership positions. The individuals who thus became
"connected" treated their positions as personal fiefdoms to
enrich themselves.
In this way, Rashidov was able to initiate efforts to make Uzbekistan
less subservient to Moscow. As became apparent after his death,
Rashidov's strategy had been to remain a loyal ally of Leonid I.
Brezhnev, leader of the Soviet Union from 1964 to 1982, by bribing high
officials of the central government. With this advantage, the Uzbek
government was allowed to merely feign compliance with Moscow's demands
for increasingly higher cotton quotas.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The 1980s
Uzbekistan
During the decade following the death of Rashidov, Moscow attempted
to regain the central control over Uzbekistan that had weakened in the
previous decade. In 1986 it was announced that almost the entire party
and government leadership of the republic had conspired in falsifying
cotton production figures. Eventually, Rashidov himself was also
implicated (posthumously) together with Yuriy Churbanov, Brezhnev's
son-in-law. A massive purge of the Uzbek leadership was carried out, and
corruption trials were conducted by prosecutors brought in from Moscow.
In the Soviet Union, Uzbekistan became synonymous with corruption. The
Uzbeks themselves felt that the central government had singled them out
unfairly; in the 1980s, this resentment led to a strengthening of Uzbek
nationalism. Moscow's policies in Uzbekistan, such as the strong
emphasis on cotton and attempts to uproot Islamic tradition, then came
under increasing criticism in Tashkent.
In 1989 ethnic animosities came to a head in the Fergana Valley,
where local Meskhetian Turks were assaulted by Uzbeks, and in the Kyrgyz
city of Osh, where Uzbek and Kyrgyz youth clashed. Moscow's response to
this violence was a reduction of the purges and the appointment of Islam
Karimov as first secretary of the Communist Party of Uzbekistan. The
appointment of Karimov, who was not a member of the local party elite,
signified that Moscow wanted to lessen tensions by appointing an
outsider who had not been involved in the purges.
Resentment among Uzbeks continued to smolder, however, in the
liberalized atmosphere of Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev's policies
of perestroika (see Glossary) and glasnost (see
Glossary). With the emergence of new opportunities to express dissent,
Uzbeks expressed their grievances over the cotton scandal, the purges,
and other long-unspoken resentments. These included the environmental
situation in the republic, recently exposed as a catastrophe as a result
of the long emphasis on heavy industry and a relentless pursuit of
cotton (see Environmental Problems, this ch.). Other grievances included
discrimination and persecution experienced by Uzbek recruits in the
Soviet army and the lack of investment in industrial development in the
republic to provide jobs for the ever-increasing population.
By the late 1980s, some dissenting intellectuals had formed political
organizations to express their grievances. The most important of these,
Birlik (Unity), initially advocated the diversification of agriculture,
a program to salvage the desiccated Aral Sea, and the declaration of the
Uzbek language as the state language of the republic. Those issues were
chosen partly because they were real concerns and partly because they
were a safe way of expressing broader disaffection with the Uzbek
government. In their public debate with Birlik, the government and party
never lost the upper hand. As became especially clear after the
accession of Karimov as party chief, most Uzbeks, especially those
outside the cities, still supported the communist party and the
government. Birlik's intellectual leaders never were able to make their
appeal to a broad segment of the population (see Opposition Parties,
this ch.).
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Independence
Uzbekistan
The attempted coup against the Gorbachev government by disaffected
hard-liners in Moscow, which occurred in August 1991, was a catalyst for
independence movements throughout the Soviet Union. Despite Uzbekistan's
initial hesitancy to oppose the coup, the Supreme Soviet of Uzbekistan
declared the republic independent on August 31, 1991. In December 1991,
an independence referendum was passed with 98.2 percent of the popular
vote. The same month, a parliament was elected and Karimov was chosen
the new nation's first president.
Although Uzbekistan had not sought independence, when events brought
them to that point, Karimov and his government moved quickly to adapt
themselves to the new realities. They realized that under the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS--see Glossary), the loose
federation proposed to replace the Soviet Union, no central government
would provide the subsidies to which Uzbek governments had become
accustomed for the previous seventy years. Old economic ties would have
to be reexamined and new markets and economic mechanisms established.
Although Uzbekistan as defined by the Soviets had never had independent
foreign relations, diplomatic relations would have to be established
with foreign countries quickly. Investment and foreign credits would
have to be attracted, a formidable challenge in light of Western
restrictions on financial aid to nations restricting expression of
political dissent. For example, the suppression of internal dissent in
1992 and 1993 had an unexpectedly chilling effect on foreign investment.
Uzbekistan's image in the West alternated in the ensuing years between
an attractive, stable experimental zone for investment and a post-Soviet
dictatorship whose human rights record made financial aid inadvisable.
Such alternation exerted strong influence on the political and economic
fortunes of the new republic in its first five years (see International
Financial Relations, this ch.).
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Geography
Uzbekistan
With an area of 447,000 square kilometers (approximately the size of
France), Uzbekistan stretches 1,425 kilometers from west to east and 930
kilometers from north to south. Bordering Turkmenistan to the southwest,
Kazakstan to the north, and Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan to the south and
east, Uzbekistan is not only one of the larger Central Asian states but
also the only Central Asian state to border all of the other four.
Uzbekistan also shares a short border with Afghanistan to the south (see
fig. 1).
Topography and Drainage
The physical environment of Uzbekistan is diverse, ranging from the
flat, desert topography that comprises almost 80 percent of the
country's territory to mountain peaks in the east reaching about 4,500
meters above sea level. The southeastern portion of Uzbekistan is
characterized by the foothills of the Tian Shan mountains, which rise
higher in neighboring Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan and form a natural
border between Central Asia and China. The vast Qizilqum (Turkic for
"red sand"--Russian spelling Kyzyl Kum) Desert, shared with
southern Kazakstan, dominates the northern lowland portion of Uzbekistan
(see fig. 2). The most fertile part of Uzbekistan, the Fergana Valley,
is an area of about 21,440 square kilometers directly east of the
Qizilqum and surrounded by mountain ranges to the north, south, and
east. The western end of the valley is defined by the course of the
Syrdariya, which runs across the northeastern sector of Uzbekistan from
southern Kazakstan into the Qizilqum. Although the Fergana Valley
receives just 100 to 300 millimeters of rainfall per year, only small
patches of desert remain in the center and along ridges on the periphery
of the valley.
Water resources, which are unevenly distributed, are in short supply
in most of Uzbekistan. The vast plains that occupy two-thirds of
Uzbekistan's territory have little water, and there are few lakes. The
two largest rivers feeding Uzbekistan are the Amu Darya and the
Syrdariya, which originate in the mountains of Tajikistan and
Kyrgyzstan, respectively. These rivers form the two main river basins of
Central Asia; they are used primarily for irrigation, and several
artificial canals have been built to expand the supply of arable land in
the Fergana Valley and elsewhere.
Another important feature of Uzbekistan's physical environment is the
significant seismic activity that dominates much of the country. Indeed,
much of Uzbekistan's capital city, Tashkent, was destroyed in a major
earthquake in 1966, and other earthquakes have caused significant damage
before and since the Tashkent disaster. The mountain areas are
especially prone to earthquakes.
<"16.htm">Climate
<"17.htm">Environment
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Climate
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan's climate is classified as continental, with hot summers
and cool winters. Summer temperatures often surpass 40�C; winter
temperatures average about -23�C, but may fall as low as -40�C. Most
of the country also is quite arid, with average annual rainfall
amounting to between 100 and 200 millimeters and occurring mostly in
winter and spring. Between July and September, little precipitation
falls, essentially stopping the growth of vegetation during that period.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Environment
Uzbekistan
Despite Uzbekistan's rich and varied natural environment, decades of
environmental neglect in the Soviet Union have combined with skewed
economic policies in the Soviet south to make Uzbekistan one of the
gravest of the CIS's many environmental crises. The heavy use of
agrochemicals, diversion of huge amounts of irrigation water from the
two rivers that feed the region, and the chronic lack of water treatment
plants are among the factors that have caused health and environmental
problems on an enormous scale.
Environmental devastation in Uzbekistan is best exemplified by the
catastrophe of the Aral Sea. Because of diversion of the Amu Darya and
Syrdariya for cotton cultivation and other purposes, what once was the
world's fourth largest inland sea has shrunk in the past thirty years to
only about one-third of its 1960 volume and less than half its 1960
geographical size. The desiccation and salinization of the lake have
caused extensive storms of salt and dust from the sea's dried bottom,
wreaking havoc on the region's agriculture and ecosystems and on the
population's health. Desertification has led to the large-scale loss of
plant and animal life, loss of arable land, changed climatic conditions,
depleted yields on the cultivated land that remains, and destruction of
historical and cultural monuments. Every year, many tons of salts
reportedly are carried as far as 800 kilometers away. Regional experts
assert that salt and dust storms from the Aral Sea have raised the level
of particulate matter in the earth's atmosphere by more than 5 percent,
seriously affecting global climate change.
The Aral Sea disaster is only the most visible indicator of
environmental decay, however. The Soviet approach to environmental
management brought decades of poor water management and lack of water or
sewage treatment facilities; inordinately heavy use of pesticides,
herbicides, defoliants, and fertilizers in the fields; and construction
of industrial enterprises without regard to human or environmental
impact. Those policies present enormous environmental challenges
throughout Uzbekistan.
Water Pollution
Large-scale use of chemicals for cotton cultivation, inefficient
irrigation systems, and poor drainage systems are examples of the
conditions that led to a high filtration of salinized and contaminated
water back into the soil. Post-Soviet policies have become even more
dangerous; in the early 1990s, the average application of chemical
fertilizers and insecticides throughout the Central Asian republics was
twenty to twenty-five kilograms per hectare, compared with the former
average of three kilograms per hectare for the entire Soviet Union. As a
result, the supply of fresh water has received further contaminants.
Industrial pollutants also have damaged Uzbekistan's water. In the Amu
Darya, concentrations of phenol and oil products have been measured at
far above acceptable health standards. In 1989 the minister of health of
the Turkmen SSR described the Amu Darya as a sewage ditch for industrial
and agricultural waste substances. Experts who monitored the river in
1995 reported even further deterioration.
In the early 1990s, about 60 percent of pollution control funding
went to water-related projects, but only about half of cities and about
one-quarter of villages have sewers. Communal water systems do not meet
health standards; much of the population lacks drinking water systems
and must drink water straight from contaminated irrigation ditches,
canals, or the Amu Darya itself.
According to one report, virtually all the large underground
fresh-water supplies in Uzbekistan are polluted by industrial and
chemical wastes. An official in Uzbekistan's Ministry of Environment
estimated that about half of the country's population lives in regions
where the water is severely polluted. The government estimated in 1995
that only 230 of the country's 8,000 industrial enterprises were
following pollution control standards.
Air Pollution
Poor water management and heavy use of agricultural chemicals also
have polluted the air. Salt and dust storms and the spraying of
pesticides and defoliants for the cotton crop have led to severe
degradation of air quality in rural areas.
In urban areas, factories and auto emissions are a growing threat to
air quality. Fewer than half of factory smokestacks in Uzbekistan are
equipped with filtration devices, and none has the capacity to filter
gaseous emissions. In addition, a high percentage of existing filters
are defective or out of operation. Air pollution data for Tashkent,
Farghona, and Olmaliq show all three cities exceeding recommended levels
of nitrous dioxide and particulates. High levels of heavy metals such as
lead, nickel, zinc, copper, mercury, and manganese have been found in
Uzbekistan's atmosphere, mainly from the burning of fossil fuels, waste
materials, and ferrous and nonferrous metallurgy. Especially high
concentrations of heavy metals have been reported in Toshkent Province
and in the southern part of Uzbekistan near the Olmaliq Metallurgy
Combine. In the mid-1990s, Uzbekistan's industrial production, about 60
percent of the total for the Central Asian nations excluding Kazakstan,
also yielded about 60 percent of the total volume of Central Asia's
emissions of harmful substances into the atmosphere. Because automobiles
are relatively scarce, automotive exhaust is a problem only in Tashkent
and Farghona.
Government Environmental Policy
The government of Uzbekistan has acknowledged the extent of the
country's environmental problems, and it has made an oral commitment to
address them. But the governmental structures to deal with these
problems remain confused and ill defined. Old agencies and organizations
have been expanded to address these questions, and new ones have been
created, resulting in a bureaucratic web of agencies with no generally
understood commitment to attack environmental problems directly. Various
nongovernmental and grassroots environmental organizations also have
begun to form, some closely tied to the current government and others
assuming an opposition stance. For example, environmental issues were
prominent points in the original platform of Birlik, the first major
opposition movement to emerge in Uzbekistan (see The 1980s, this ch.).
By the mid-1990s, such issues had become a key concern of all opposition
groups and a cause of growing concern among the population as a whole.
In the first half of the 1990s, many plans were proposed to limit or
discourage economic practices that damage the environment. Despite
discussion of programs to require payments for resources (especially
water) and to collect fines from heavy polluters, however, little has
been accomplished. The obstacles are a lack of law enforcement in these
areas, inconsistent government economic and environmental planning,
corruption, and the overwhelming concentration of power in the hands of
a president who shows little tolerance of grassroots activity (see
Postindependence Changes, this ch.).
International donors and Western assistance agencies have devised
programs to transfer technology and know-how to address these problems
(see International Financial Relations, this ch.). But the country's
environmental problems are predominantly the result of abuse and
mismanagement of natural resources promoted by political and economic
priorities. Until the political will emerges to regard environmental and
health problems as a threat not only to the government in power but also
to the very survival of Uzbekistan, the increasingly grave environmental
threat will not be addressed effectively.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Population
Uzbekistan
The population of Uzbekistan, estimated in 1994 at about 23 million,
is the largest of the Central Asian republics, comprising more than 40
percent of their total population. Growing at a rapid rate, the
population is split by ethnic and regional differences. The Russian
component of the population shrank steadily in the years after
independence.
Size and Distribution
Relative to the former Soviet Union as a whole, Uzbekistan is still
largely rural: roughly 60 percent of Uzbekistan's population lives in
rural areas. The capital city is Tashkent, whose
1990 population was estimated at about 2.1 million people. Other major
cities are Samarqand (population 366,000), Namangan (308,000), Andijon
(293,000), Bukhoro (224,000), Farghona (200,000), and Quqon (182,000).
The population of Uzbekistan is exceedingly young. In the early
1990s, about half the population was under nineteen years of age.
Experts expected this demographic trend to continue for some time
because Uzbekistan's population growth rate has been quite high for the
past century: on the eve of the collapse of the Soviet Union, only
Tajikistan had a higher growth rate among the Soviet republics. Between
1897 and 1991, the population of the region that is now Uzbekistan more
than quintupled, while the population of the entire territory of the
former Soviet Union had not quite doubled. In 1991 the natural rate of
population increase (the birth rate minus the death rate) in Uzbekistan
was 28.3 per 1,000--more than four times that of the Soviet Union as a
whole, and an increase from ten years earlier (see table 2, Appendix).
These characteristics are especially pronounced in the Autonomous
Republic of Karakalpakstan (the Uzbek form for which is Qoroqalpoghiston
Respublikasi), Uzbekistan's westernmost region. In 1936, as part of
Stalin's nationality policy, the Karakalpaks (a Turkic Muslim group
whose name literally means "black hat") were given their own
territory in western Uzbekistan, which was declared an autonomous Soviet
socialist republic to define its ethnic differences while maintaining it
within the republic of Uzbekistan. In 1992 Karakalpakstan received
republic status within independent Uzbekistan. Since that time, the
central government in Tashkent has maintained pressure and tight
economic ties that have kept the republic from exerting full
independence.
Today, the population of Karakalpakstan is about 1.3 million people
who live on a territory of roughly 168,000 square kilometers. Located in
the fertile lower reaches of the Amu Darya where the river empties into
the Aral Sea, Karakalpakstan has a long history of irrigation
agriculture. Currently, however, the shrinking of the Aral Sea has made
Karakalpakstan one of the poorest and most environmentally devastated
parts of Uzbekistan, if not the entire former Soviet Union.
Because the population of that region is much younger than the
national average (according to the 1989 census, nearly three-quarters of
the population was younger than twenty-nine years), the rate of
population growth is quite high. In 1991 the rate of natural growth in
Karakalpakstan was reportedly more than thirty births per 1,000 and
slightly higher in the republic's rural areas. Karakalpakstan is also
more rural than Uzbekistan as a whole, with some of its administrative
regions (rayony ; sing., rayon ) having only villages
and no urban centers--an unusual situation in a former Soviet republic.
The growth of Uzbekistan's population was in some part due to
in-migration from other parts of the former Soviet Union. Several waves
of Russian and Slavic in-migrants arrived at various times in response
to the industrialization of Uzbekistan in the early part of the Soviet
period, following the evacuations of European Russia during World War
II, and in the late 1960s to help reconstruct Tashkent after the 1966
earthquake. At various other times, non-Uzbeks arrived simply to take
advantage of opportunities they perceived in Central Asia. Recently,
however, Uzbekistan has begun to witness a net emigration of its
European population. This is especially true of Russians, who have faced
increased discrimination and uncertainty since 1991 and seek a more
secure environment in Russia. Because most of Uzbekistan's population
growth has been attributable to high rates of natural increase, the
emigration of Europeans is expected to have little impact on the overall
size and demographic structure of Uzbekistan's population. Demographers
project that the population, currently growing at about 2.5 percent per
year, will increase by 500,000 to 600,000 annually between the mid-1990s
and the year 2010. Thus, by the year 2005 at least 30 million people
will live in Uzbekistan.
High growth rates are expected to give rise to increasingly sharp
population pressures that will exceed those experienced by most other
former Soviet republics. Indeed, five of the eight most densely
populated provinces of the former Soviet Union--Andijon, Farghona,
Tashkent, Namangan, and Khorazm--are located in Uzbekistan, and
populations continue to grow rapidly in all five. In 1993 the average
population density of Uzbekistan was about 48.5 inhabitants per square
kilometer, compared with a ratio of fewer than six inhabitants per
square kilometer in neighboring Kazakstan. The distribution of arable
land in 1989 was estimated at only 0.15 hectares per person. In the
early 1990s, Uzbekistan's population growth had an increasingly negative
impact on the environment, on the economy, and on the potential for
increased ethnic tension.
<"19.htm">Ethnic Composition
Updated population figures for Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Ethnic Composition
Uzbekistan
Population pressures have exacerbated ethnic tensions. In 1995 about
71 percent of Uzbekistan's population was Uzbek. The chief minority
groups were Russians (slightly more than 8 percent), Tajiks (officially
almost 5 percent, but believed to be much higher), Kazaks (about 4
percent), Tatars (about 2.5 percent), and Karakalpaks (slightly more
than 2 percent). In the mid-1990s, Uzbekistan
was becoming increasingly homogeneous, as the outflow of Russians and
other minorities continues to increase and as Uzbeks return from other
parts of the former Soviet Union. According to unofficial data, between
1985 and 1991 the number of nonindigenous individuals in Uzbekistan
declined from 2.4 to 1.6 million.
The increase in the indigenous population and the emigration of
Europeans have increased the self-confidence and often the
self-assertiveness of indigenous Uzbeks, as well as the sense of
vulnerability among the Russians in Uzbekistan. The Russian population,
as former "colonizers," was reluctant to learn the local
language or to adapt to local control in the post-Soviet era. In early
1992, public opinion surveys suggested that most Russians in Uzbekistan
felt more insecure and fearful than they had before Uzbek independence.
The irony of this ethnic situation is that many of these Central
Asian ethnic groups in Uzbekistan were artificially created and
delineated by Soviet fiat in the first place. Before the Bolshevik
Revolution, there was little sense of an Uzbek nationhood as such;
instead, life was organized around the tribe or clan (see Entering the
Twentieth Century, this ch.). Until the twentieth century, the
population of what is today Uzbekistan was ruled by the various khans
who had conquered the region in the sixteenth century.
But Soviet rule, and the creation of the Uzbek Soviet Socialist
Republic in October 1924, ultimately created and solidified a new kind
of Uzbek identity. At the same time, the Soviet policy of cutting across
existing ethnic and linguistic lines in the region to create Uzbekistan
and the other new republics also sowed tension and strife among the
Central Asian groups that inhabited the region. In particular, the
territory of Uzbekistan was drawn to include the two main Tajik cultural
centers, Bukhoro and Samarqand, as well as parts of the Fergana Valley
to which other ethnic groups could lay claim. This readjustment of
ethnic politics caused animosity and territorial claims among Uzbeks,
Tajiks, Kyrgyz, and others through much of the Soviet era, but conflicts
grew especially sharp after the collapse of central Soviet rule.
The stresses of the Soviet period were present among Uzbekistan's
ethnic groups in economic, political, and social spheres. An outbreak of
violence in the Fergana Valley between Uzbeks and Meskhetian Turks in
June 1989 claimed about 100 lives. That conflict was followed by similar
outbreaks of violence in other parts of the Fergana Valley and
elsewhere. The civil conflict in neighboring Tajikistan, which also
involves ethnic hostilities, has been perceived in Uzbekistan (and
presented by the Uzbekistani government) as an external threat that
could provoke further ethnic conflict within Uzbekistan. Thousands of Uzbeks living in Tajikistan have
fled the civil war there and migrated back to Uzbekistan, for example,
just as tens of thousands of Russians and other Slavs have left
Uzbekistan for northern Kazakstan or Russia. Crimean Tatars, deported to
Uzbekistan at the end of World War II, are migrating out of Uzbekistan
to return to the Crimea.
Two ethnic schisms may play an important role in the future of
Uzbekistan. The first is the potential interaction of the remaining
Russians with the Uzbek majority. Historically, this relationship has
been based on fear, colonial dominance, and a vast difference in values
and norms between the two populations. The second schism is among the
Central Asians themselves. The results of a 1993 public opinion survey
suggest that even at a personal level, the various Central Asian and
Muslim communities often display as much wariness and animosity toward
each other as they do toward the Russians in their midst. When asked,
for example, whom they would not like to have as a son- or
daughter-in-law, the proportion of Uzbek respondents naming Kyrgyz and
Kazaks as undesirable was about the same as the proportion that named
Russians. (About 10 percent of the Uzbeks said they would like to have a
Russian son- or daughter-in-law.) And the same patterns were evident
when respondents were asked about preferred nationalities among their
neighbors and colleagues at work. Reports described an official
Uzbekistani government policy of discrimination against the Tajik
minority.
More about the <"18.htm">Population
of Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Other Social Affiliations
Uzbekistan
Other social factors also define the identities and loyalties of
individuals in Uzbekistan and influence their behavior. Often regional
and clan identities play an important role that supersedes specifically
ethnic identification. In the struggle for political control or access
to economic resources, for example, regional alliances often prevail
over ethnic identities. A United States expert has identified five
regions--the Tashkent region, the Fergana Valley, Samarqand and Bukhoro,
the northwest territories, and the southern region--that have played the
role of a power base for individuals who rose to the position of first
secretary of the Communist Party of Uzbekistan. Often clan-based, these
regional allegiances remain important in both the politics and the
social structure of post-Soviet Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Language and Literature
Uzbekistan
As with ethnic patterns and boundaries of post-Soviet Uzbekistan, the
dominant native language, Uzbek, is in many ways a creation of the
Soviet state. Indeed, until the beginning of the Soviet period, the
languages spoken among the native population presented a colorful and
diverse mosaic. Under Soviet rule, officially at least, this mosaic was
replaced by Uzbek, which almost overnight became the official language
of the Turkic population of the republic. But Russian, which at the same
time was declared the "international language" of Uzbekistan,
was favored above even Uzbek in official usage. Many Russian words made
their way into Uzbek because Russian was the language of higher
education, government, and economic activity throughout the Soviet era.
In the 1980s, Uzbeks began a strong effort to eliminate the recent
Russian borrowings from the language. The Latin alphabet was introduced
to begin a gradual process of replacing the Cyrillic alphabet. But in
the mid-1990s Russian still was widely used in official and economic
circles.
<"22.htm">Linguistic Background
<"23.htm">Influences in the Soviet Period
<"24.htm">Language in the 1990s
<"25.htm">Literature
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Linguistic Background
Uzbekistan
Uzbek is a Turkic language of the Qarluq family, closely related to
Uyghur and Kazak. Although numerous local dialects and variations of the
language are in use, the Tashkent dialect is the basis of the official
written language. The dialects spoken in the northern and western parts
of Uzbekistan have strong Turkmen elements because historically many
Turkmen lived in close proximity to the Uzbeks in those regions. The
dialects in the Fergana Valley near Kyrgyzstan show some Kyrgyz
influence. Especially in the written dialect, Uzbek also has a strong
Persian vocabulary element that stems from the historical influence of
Iranian culture throughout the region (see Early History, this ch.).
Uzbek has a relatively short history as a language distinct from
other Turkic dialects. Until the establishment of the Soviet republic's
boundaries in the 1920s, Uzbek was not considered a language belonging
to a distinct nationality. It was simply a Turkic dialect spoken by a
certain segment of the Turkic population of Central Asia, a segment that
also included the ruling tribal dynasties of the various states. The
regional dialects spoken in Uzbekistan today reflect the fact that the
Turkic population of Southern Central Asia has always been a mixture of
various Turkic tribal groups (see Ethnic Groups, ch. 1; Social
Structure, ch. 2; Population, ch. 5). When the present-day borders among
the republics were established in 1929, all native peoples living in
Uzbekistan (including Tajiks) were registered as Uzbeks regardless of
their previous ethnic identity.
Until 1924 the written Turkic language of the region had been
Chaghatai, a language that had a long and brilliant history as a vehicle
of literature and culture after its development in the Timurid state of
Herat in the late fifteenth century. Chaghatai also was the common
written language of the entire region of Central Asia from the Persian
border to Eastern Turkestan, which was located in today's China. The
language was written in the Arabic script and had strong Persian
elements in its grammar and vocabulary. Experts identify the Herat
writer Ali Shir Nava'i as having played the foremost role in making
Chaghatai a dominant literary language.
In modern Uzbekistan, Chaghatai is called Old Uzbek; its origin in
Herat, which was an enemy state of the Uzbeks, is ignored or unknown.
Use of the language was continued by the Uzbek khanates that conquered
the Timurid states. Some early Uzbek rulers, such as Mukhammad Shaybani
Khan, used Chaghatai to produce excellent poetry and prose. The
seventeenth-century Khivan ruler Abulgazi Bahadur Khan wrote important
historical works in Chaghatai. However, all of those writers also
produced considerable literature in Persian. Chaghatai continued in use
well into the twentieth century as the literary language of Central
Asia. Early twentieth-century writers such as Fitrat wrote in Chaghatai.
In the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century, Chaghatai
was influenced by the efforts of reformers of the Jadidist movement, who
wanted to Turkify and unite all of the written languages used in the
Turkic world into one written language (see The Russian Conquest, this
ch.). These efforts were begun by the Crimean Tatar Ismail Gaspirali
(Gasprinskiy in Russian), who advocated this cause in his newspaper Terjuman
(Translator). Gaspirali called on all the Turkic peoples (including the
Ottoman Turks, the Crimean and Kazan Tatars, and the Central Asians) to
rid their languages of Arabic, Persian, and other foreign elements and
to standardize their orthography and lexicon. Because of this effort, by
the early 1920s the Turkic languages of Central Asia had lost some of
the Persian influence.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Influences in the Soviet Period
Uzbekistan
Unfortunately for the reformers and their efforts to reform the
language, following the national delimitation the Soviet government
began a deliberate policy of separating the Turkic languages from each
other. Each nationality was given a separate literary language. Often
new languages had to be invented where no such languages had existed
before. This was the case for Uzbek, which was declared to be a
continuation of Chaghatai and a descendant of all of the ancient Turkic
languages spoken in the region. In the initial stage of reform, in
1928-30, the Arabic alphabet was abandoned in favor of the Latin
alphabet. Then in 1940, Cyrillic was made the official alphabet with the
rationale that sharing the Arabic alphabet with Turkey might lead to
common literature and hence a resumption of the Turkish threat to
Russian control in the region.
Because of this artificial reform process, the ancient literature of
the region became inaccessible to all but specialists. Instead, the use
of Russian and Russian borrowings into Uzbek was strongly encouraged,
and the study of Russian became compulsory in all schools. The emphasis
on the study of Russian varied at various times in the Soviet period. At
the height of Stalinism (1930s and 1940s), and in the Brezhnev period
(1964-82), the study of Russian was strongly encouraged. Increasingly,
Russian became the language of higher education and advancement in
society, especially after Stalin orchestrated the Great Purge of
1937-38, which uprooted much indigenous culture in the non-Slavic Soviet
republics. The language of the military was Russian as well. Those
Uzbeks who did not study in higher education establishments and had no
desire to work for the state did not make a great effort to study
Russian. As a result, such people found their social mobility stifled,
and males who served in the armed forces suffered discrimination and
persecution because they could not communicate with their superiors.
This communication problem was one of the reasons for disproportionate
numbers of Uzbeks and other Central Asians in the noncombat construction
battalions of the Soviet army.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Language in the 1990s
Uzbekistan
The official linguistic policy of the Karimov government has been
that Uzbek is the language of the state, and Russian is the second
language. Residents of Uzbekistan are required to study Uzbek to be
eligible for citizenship. Following similar decisions in Azerbaijan and
Turkmenistan, in September 1993 Uzbekistan announced plans to switch its
alphabet from Cyrillic, which by that time had been in use for more than
fifty years, to a script based on a modified Latin alphabet similar to
that used in Turkey. According to plans, the transition will be complete
by the year 2000. The primary reason for the short deadline is the
urgent need to communicate with the outside world using a more
universally understood alphabet. The move also has the political
significance of signaling Uzbekistan's desire to break away from its
past reliance on Russia and to limit the influence of Muslim states such
as Saudi Arabia and Iran, which use the Arabic alphabet. A major project
is under way to eradicate Russian words from the language and replace
these words with "pure" Turkic words that have been borrowed
from what is believed to be the ancient Turkic language of Inner Asia.
At the same time, Uzbekistan's linguistic policies also are moving
toward the West. In the early 1990s, the study of English has become
increasingly common, and many policy makers express the hope that
English will replace Russian as the language of international
communication in Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Literature
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan's literature suffered great damage during the Stalinist
purges of the 1930s; during that period, nearly every talented writer in
the republic was purged and executed as an enemy of the people. Prior to
the purges, Uzbekistan had a generation of writers who produced a rich
and diverse literature, with some using Western genres to deal with
important issues of the time. With the death of that generation, Uzbek
literature entered a period of decline in which the surviving writers
were forced to mouth the party line and write according to the formulas
of socialist realism. Uzbek writers were able to break out of this
straitjacket only in the early 1980s. In the period of perestroika
and glasnost , a group of Uzbek writers led the way in
establishing the Birlik movement, which countered some of the disastrous
policies of the Soviet government in Uzbekistan. Beginning in the 1980s,
the works of these writers criticized the central government and other
establishment groups for the ills of society.
A critical issue for these writers was the preservation and
purification of the Uzbek language. To reach that goal, they minimized
the use of Russian lexicon in their works, and they advocated the
declaration of Uzbek as the state language of Uzbekistan. These efforts
were rewarded in 1992, when the new national constitution declared the
Uzbek language to be the state language of the newly independent state.
At the same time, however, some of these writers found themselves at
odds with the Karimov regime because of their open criticism of
post-Soviet policies.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Religion
Uzbekistan
Islam is by far the dominant religious faith in Uzbekistan. In the
early 1990s, many of the Russians remaining in the republic (about 8
percent of the population) were Orthodox Christians. An estimated 93,000
Jews also were present. Despite its predominance, Islam is far from
monolithic, however. Many versions of the faith have been practiced in
Uzbekistan. The conflict of Islamic tradition with various agendas of
reform or secularization throughout the twentieth century has left the
outside world with a confused notion of Islamic practices in Central
Asia. In Uzbekistan the end of Soviet power did not bring an upsurge of
a fundamentalist version of Islam, as many had predicted, but rather a
gradual reacquaintance with the precepts of the faith.
<"27.htm">Islam in the Soviet Era
<"28.htm">Islamic Fundamentalism
<"29.htm">Mainstream Islam in the 1990s
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Islam in the Soviet Era
Uzbekistan
Soviet authorities did not prohibit the practice of Islam as much as
they sought to coopt and utilize religion to placate a population that
often was unaware of the tenets of its faith. After its introduction in
the seventh century, Islam in many ways formed the basis of life in
Uzbekistan. The Soviet government encouraged continuation of the role
played by Islam in secular society. During the Soviet era, Uzbekistan
had sixty-five registered mosques and as many as 3,000 active mullahs
and other Muslim clerics. For almost forty years, the Muslim Board of
Central Asia, the official, Soviet-approved governing agency of the
Muslim faith in the region, was based in Tashkent. The grand mufti who
headed the board met with hundreds of foreign delegations each year in
his official capacity, and the board published a journal on Islamic
issues, Muslims of the Soviet East .
However, the Muslims working or participating in any of these
organizations were carefully screened for political reliability.
Furthermore, as the Uzbekistani government ostensibly was promoting
Islam with the one hand, it was working hard to eradicate it with the
other. The government sponsored official antireligious campaigns and
severe crackdowns on any hint of an Islamic movement or network outside
of the control of the state.
Moscow's efforts to eradicate and coopt Islam not only sharpened
differences between Muslims and others. They also greatly distorted the
understanding of Islam among Uzbekistan's population and created
competing Islamic ideologies among the Central Asians themselves.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Islamic Fundamentalism
Uzbekistan
In light of the role that Islam has played throughout Uzbekistan's
history, many observers expected that Islamic fundamentalism would gain
a strong hold after independence brought the end of the Soviet Union's
official atheism. The expectation was that an Islamic country long
denied freedom of religious practice would undergo a very rapid increase
in the expression of its dominant faith. President Karimov has justified
authoritarian controls over the populations of his and other Central
Asian countries by the threat of upheavals and instability caused by
growing Islamic political movements, and other Central Asian leaders
also have cited this danger.
In the early 1990s, however, Uzbekistan did not witness a surge of
Islamic fundamentalism as much as a search to recapture a history and
culture with which few Uzbeks were familiar. To be sure, Uzbekistan is
witnessing a vast increase in religious teaching and interest in Islam.
Since 1991, hundreds of mosques and religious schools have been built or
restored and reopened. And some of the Islamic groups and parties that
have emerged might give leaders pause.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Mainstream Islam in the 1990s
Uzbekistan
For the most part, however, in the first years of independence
Uzbekistan is seeing a resurgence of a more secular Islam, and even that
movement is in its very early stages. According to a public opinion
survey conducted in 1994, interest in Islam is growing rapidly, but
personal understanding of Islam by Uzbeks remains limited or distorted.
For example, about half of ethnic Uzbek respondents professed belief in
Islam when asked to identify their religious faith. Among that number,
however, knowledge or practice of the main precepts of Islam was weak.
Despite a reported spread of Islam among Uzbekistan's younger
population, the survey suggested that Islamic belief is still weakest
among the younger generations. Few respondents showed interest in a form
of Islam that would participate actively in political issues. Thus, the
first years of post-Soviet religious freedom seem to have fostered a
form of Islam related to the Uzbek population more in traditional and
cultural terms than in religious ones, weakening Karimov's claims that a
growing widespread fundamentalism poses a threat to Uzbekistan's
survival. Available information suggests that Islam itself would
probably not be the root cause of a conflict as much as it would be a
vehicle for expressing other grievances that are far more immediate
causes of dissension and despair. Experts do not minimize the importance
of Islam, however. The practice of the Islamic faith is growing in
Uzbekistan, and the politicization of Islam could become a real threat
in the future.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Education
Uzbekistan
In developing a national education system to replace the centralized
education prescriptions of Moscow, Uzbekistan has encountered severe
budgeting shortfalls. The education law of 1992 began the process of
theoretical reform, but the physical base has deteriorated, and
curriculum revision has been slow.
Education System
Education is supervised by two national agencies, the Ministry of
People's Education (for primary, secondary, and vocational education)
and the Ministry of Higher Education (for postsecondary education). In
1993 Uzbekistan had 9,834 preschool centers, most of which were run by
state enterprises for the children of their employees. An estimated 35
percent of children ages one to six attend such schools, but few rural
areas have access to preschools. In the early 1990s, enterprises began
closing schools or transferring them to direct administration of the
Ministry of People's Education. A modest government construction program
adds about 50,000 new places annually--a rate that falls far short of
demand. Although experts rate most of Uzbekistan's preschools as being
in poor condition, the government regards them as contributing vitally
to the nutrition and education of children, especially when both parents
work, a situation that became increasingly frequent in the 1990s.
In 1993 enrollment in regular and vocational schools, which covered
grades one through eleven (ages six through sixteen), was 4.9 million of
the estimated 5.7 million children in that age-group. Because of funding
shortages, in 1993 the period of compulsory education was shortened from
eleven to nine years. The infrastructure problem of schools is most
serious at the primary and secondary levels; the government categorizes
50 percent of school buildings as unsuitable, and repair budgets are
inadequate. Construction of new schools has been delayed because the
boards of capital construction of the two education ministries do not
have direct control over contractor pricing or construction practices at
local levels. School nutritional levels often are below state standards;
an estimated 50 percent of students do not receive a hot meal. In 1992
about 5,300 of Uzbekistan's 8,500 schools had double shifts; because
most of these schools were rural, this situation affected only 25
percent of students, however.
In 1993 an estimated 220,000 students were in vocational training
programs, with about 100,000 students graduating annually from 440
schools. Working in close cooperation with local employers, the schools
choose from 260 trades to offer instruction conforming with industrial
needs. In the post-Soviet era, vocational curricula were modified to
accommodate an upsurge in light industry. Experts agree that, as the
national economy diversifies and expands, the vocational program must
expand its coverage of key industries and streamline its organization,
which suffered disorientation in its transition from the rigid Soviet
system.
In 1992 some 321,700 students were enrolled in institutions of higher
learning; of those, about 43 percent were in evening or correspondence
courses. The enrollment represented about 19 percent of the seventeen to
twenty age-group, a decrease from the more than 23 percent reported in
1990. In 1992 enrollment declined because an entrance examination was
used for the first time, Russian emigration continued, and the economy's
demand for college graduates fell. Experts predicted that the government
would restrict admittance levels until its policies succeed in expanding
the economy. Fifty-three institutions of higher learning, many with
productive research programs, were active in 1993. Higher education is
hindered, however, by a shortage of laboratories, libraries, computers
and data banks, and publishing facilities to disseminate research
findings.
The state higher education system includes three universities,
located at Nukus, Samarqand, and Tashkent. Tashkent State University,
which has 19,300 students and 1,480 teachers, is the largest university
in Central Asia; it has sixteen full departments, including three
devoted to philology and one to Asian studies. Some twenty research
institutes offer courses in specialized areas of medicine, veterinary
science, and industry and technology. Another thirty institutes of
higher learning offer postsecondary studies in medicine, agriculture,
teaching, engineering, industrial technology, music, theater, economics,
law, pharmacy, and political science; seventeen of the latter category
are located in Tashkent.
<"31.htm">Curriculum
<"32.htm">Instruction
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Education - Curriculum
Uzbekistan
In the early 1990s, the greatest controversy in curriculum policy was
which language should be used for teaching in state schools. In 1992
Uzbek and the other Central Asian languages were made the official
languages of instruction, meaning that Uzbek schools might use any of
five Central Asian languages or Russian as their primary language. Uzbek
and Russian language courses are taught in all schools. After
independence, a new emphasis was placed on courses in Uzbek history and
culture and on increasing the short supply of textbooks in Uzbek in many
fields. For a time, the Karimov regime closed Samarqand University,
which taught in Tajik, as part of a broader crackdown on the country's
Tajik minority.
The expansion of curricula, including the addition of courses in
French, Arabic, and English, has placed new stress on a limited supply
of teachers and materials. In the mid-1990s, a major curriculum reform
was underway to support the post-Soviet economic and social
transformation. Among the changes identified by Western experts are a
more commercial approach to the mathematics curriculum, more emphasis in
economics courses on the relationship of capital to labor, more emphasis
in social science courses on individual responsibility for the
environment, and the addition of entirely new subjects such as business
management. Because such changes involve new materials and a new
pedagogical approach by staff, the reform period is estimated at ten to
fifteen years.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Education - Instruction
Uzbekistan
In the early 1990s, the thirty-six technical schools and six teacher
colleges produced about 20,000 new teachers annually for the primary and
secondary levels, and another 20,000 for higher education. In 1993 the
ratio of staff to students was 1 to 12 in preschool institutions, 1 to
11.5 in primary and secondary schools, 1 to 12 in vocational schools,
and 1 to 6.8 in institutions of higher education. The range of these
ratios indicates that Uzbekistan prepares too many teachers for the
needs of the existing student population, but experts do not consider
the existing staff adequately trained to deal with upcoming curriculum
changes and with the need to teach in Uzbek.
Experts have noted that the teacher training program must be reduced
to concentrate government funds on a few high-quality research and
training centers. Such a shift would free resources for material
support, salaries, and administrative and supervisory personnel, all in
short supply in the mid-1990s. Currently, teachers for preschool and
grades one through four are trained at technical schools; those for
grades five through eleven must train at the university level. The
technical school program is five years beginning after grade nine, and
the university program is four years beginning after grade eleven. Both
programs combine pedagogical and general courses.
In the early 1990s, the government made significant improvements in
teacher salaries and benefits. Many top teachers were lost to other
sectors, however, because salaries still were not competitive with those
elsewhere in the economy. In higher education, salaries were competitive
with those in other occupations in Uzbekistan but not with those on the
international teaching market.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Health
Uzbekistan
As Uzbekistan struggled to revise its Soviet-era health care system,
the physical condition of its population was exacerbated by severe
environmental conditions that were inherited from the Soviet period and
were not addressed effectively in the first years of independence. Key
health indicators showed a correlation between the high level of air and
water pollution and health problems (see table 5, Appendix).
Health Care System
In the mid-1990s, Uzbekistan continued a health care system in which
all hospitals and clinics were state owned and all medical personnel
were government employees. Although health care ostensibly was free of
change, this rarely was the case in practice. In the early 1990s, some
private medical practices have supplemented state facilities to a small
extent. In 1993 Uzbekistan undertook a program of privatization that
began with the introduction of health insurance and continued with the
gradual privatization of health care facilities, which is optimistically
projected at about three years. Under the new program, the government
would require private health facility owners to maintain the same
standards as state facilities and to offer minimum free health care for
the indigent. In the first few years of the program, however, only
pharmacies and small clinics were privatized. Plans for 1995 called for
privatizing twenty-four dental clinics and twelve prenatal clinics. In
1995 no plan provided for government divestiture of medium-sized health
care facilities.
The government disburses its funds through the national Ministry of
Health, through the health agencies of local and province governments,
and through specialized facilities serving ministries and state
enterprises. Treatment in the last two categories is generally better
than in general state facilities because staff salaries and work
conditions are better. As in the Soviet system, special facilities exist
for top political, cultural, and scientific dignitaries. In 1994 some
US$79 million, or 11.1 percent of the annual budget, was allocated for
health care. Of that amount, about 60 percent went to state hospitals,
30 percent to outpatient clinics, and less than 6 percent to medical
research.
Despite marked growth throughout the Soviet era, the public health
care system in Uzbekistan is not equipped to deal with the special
problems of a population long exposed to high levels of pollutants or
with other health problems. Although the numbers of hospitals and
doctors grew dramatically under Soviet rule--from almost no doctors in
1917 to 35.5 doctors per 10,000 population and to 1,388 hospitals and
clinics per 10,000 population in 1991--the increasing incidence of
serious disease raises questions about the effectiveness of care by
these doctors and their facilities.
In 1993 a total of 16.8 million patients were treated, of whom 4.8
million were treated in hospitals and about 275,000 in outpatient
clinics--meaning that the vast majority of patients received treatment
only at home. Experts predicted that this trend would continue until the
level of care in government facilities improved substantially.
Among the serious problems plaguing health care delivery are the
extremely short supply of vaccines and medicines in hospitals; the
generally poor quality of medical training; and corruption in the
medical profession, which exacerbates the negative impact of changes in
the system for the average patient and diverts treatment to favored
private patients. According to a 1995 private study, the state system
provided less than 20 percent of needed medicine and less than 40
percent of needed medical care, and budget constraints limited salaries
for medical professionals. In 1990 the percentage of children receiving
vaccines for diphtheria, pertussis, measles, and polio averaged between
80 and 90 percent. That statistic fell sharply in the first years of
independence; for example, in 1993 fewer than half the needed doses of
measles vaccine were administered.
The Ministry of Health has recognized that Uzbekistan has a serious
narcotics addiction problem; illicit drug use reportedly stabilized
between 1994 and 1996. The seven substance abuse rehabilitation clinics
treat both alcoholism and narcotics abuse. The Ministry of Health has
identified the following as its priorities, should expansion of services
become possible: improvement of maternal and infant health care,
prevention of the spread of infectious disease, and improvement of
environmental conditions leading to health problems. In 1995 Uzbekistan
was receiving aid from the United States Agency for International
Development (AID), the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), and the
World Health Organization (WHO) for improving infant and maternal health
care and for storage and distribution of vaccines.
<"34.htm">Health Conditions
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Health Conditions
Uzbekistan
According to experts, the most immediate impact of the environmental
situation in Uzbekistan is on the health condition of the population
(see Environmental Problems, this ch.). Although it is difficult to
establish a direct cause and effect between environmental problems and
their apparent consequences, the cumulative impact of these
environmental problems in Uzbekistan appears to have been devastating.
Frequently cited in Uzbekistan's press are increasing occurrences of
typhoid, paratyphoid, and hepatitis from contaminated drinking water;
rising rates of intestinal disease and cancers; and increased frequency
of anemia, dystrophy, cholera, dysentery, and a host of other illnesses.
One Russian specialist includes among the ailments "lag in physical
development," especially among children. According to this
observer, sixty-nine of every 100 adults in the Aral Sea region are
deemed to be "incurably ill." In 1990 life expectancy for
males in all of Uzbekistan was sixty-four years, and for females,
seventy years. The average life span in some villages near the Aral Sea
in Karakalpakstan, however, is estimated at thirty-eight years.
In the early 1990s, only an estimated 30 percent of women in
Uzbekistan practiced contraception of any kind. The most frequently used
method was the intrauterine device, distribution of which began in a
government program introduced in 1991. In 1991 the average fertility
rate was 4.1 children per woman, but about 200,000 of the women in the
childbearing age range have ten or more children.
Infant mortality increased by as much as 49 percent between 1970 and
1986 to an average of 46.2 deaths per 1,000 live births. In 1990 the
average rate of mortality before age one for the entire country was
sixty-five deaths per 1,000 live births. In the mid-1990s, official data
estimated the level of infant mortality in parts of Karakalpakstan at
110 per 1,000 live births; unofficial estimates put the level at twice
that figure. In 1992 the national maternal mortality rate was 65.3 per
100,000 live births, with considerably higher rates in some regions.
According to the WHO, Uzbekistan reported one case of acquired immune
deficiency syndrome (AIDS) in 1992, one in 1993, and none in 1994. No
treatment centers or AIDS research projects are known to exist in
Uzbekistan.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The Economy
Uzbekistan
Chief among the causes of dissension and despair in Uzbekistan is the
country's economic situation. According to United Nations (UN) figures,
in 1994 Uzbekistan was one of the poorest of the developed countries in
the world, with the average monthly wage less than US$50. But vast
natural resources suggest the potential for Uzbekistan to become one of
the most prosperous countries in Central Asia, provided the necessary
reforms can be made to unleash that potential. At the end of the Soviet
era, Uzbekistan was rated as one of the least industrialized Soviet
republics. Government reform, with the theoretical goal of achieving a
market economy, moved cautiously and unevenly in the directions of
industrialization and market reform in the early 1990s. By the
mid-1990s, signs indicated a more serious reform effort.
<"36.htm">Gold
<"37.htm">Energy
<"38.htm">Agriculture
<"39.htm">Industry
<"40.htm">Labor Force
<"41.htm">Postcommunist Economic Reform
<"42.htm">Structural and Legal Reform
<"43.htm">Banking and Finance
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Gold
Uzbekistan
One of Uzbekistan's most abundant and strategic resources is gold.
Before 1992, Uzbekistan accounted for about one-third of Soviet gold
production, at a time when the Soviet Union ranked third in world gold
production. The Muruntau Gold Mine, about 400 kilometers northwest of
Tashkent in the Qizilqum Desert, is estimated to be the largest gold
mine in the world, and other gold reserves are located in the Chadaq
area of the Fergana Valley, on the southern slopes of the Qurama
Mountains. In 1992, a reported 80 tons of gold were mined in Uzbekistan,
making it the eighth largest producer of gold in the world. Fluorospar,
the most important source of fluorine, is mined at Tuytepa between
Olmaliq and Tashkent. In the region of Olmaliq, southeast of Tashkent,
are deposits of copper, zinc, lead, tungsten, and molybdenum that are
used in the well-developed metallurgical processing industries centered
in northeastern Uzbekistan. Uranium is mined and processed on the slopes
of the Chatkal and Qurama ranges that surround the Fergana Valley.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Energy
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan is also rich in energy resources, although it was a net
importer of fuels and primary energy throughout the Soviet period. The
republic was the third largest producer of natural gas in the former
Soviet Union behind Russia and Turkmenistan, producing more than 10
percent of the union's natural gas in the 1980s. In 1992 Uzbekistan
produced 42.8 billion cubic meters of natural gas; although this output
was used mostly within the republic in the Soviet period, pipelines to
Tajikistan, Kazakstan, and Russia exported increasing amounts of natural
gas to those countries in the early 1990s. Gas reserves are estimated at
more than 1 trillion cubic meters. Deposits are concentrated mainly in
Qashqadaryo Province in the southeast and near Bukhoro in the
south-central region. Bukhoro gas is used to fuel local thermoelectric
power plants. The biggest gas deposit, Boyangora-Gadzhak, was discovered
in southeastern Surkhondaryo Province in the 1970s.
Uzbekistan also has small coal reserves, located mainly near Angren,
east of Tashkent. In 1990 the total coal yield was 6 million tons. Oil
production has likewise been small; Uzbekistan has relied on Russia and
Kazakstan for most of its supply. Oil production was 3.3 million tons in
1992. But the discovery in 1994 of the Mingbulak oil field in the far
northeastern province of Namangan may ultimately dwarf Uzbekistan's
other energy resources. Experts have speculated that Mingbulak may prove
to be one of the world's most productive oil fields. Located in the
central basin of the Fergana Valley, the deposits could produce hundreds
of millions of dollars worth of oil in the late 1990s. Qoqdumalaq in
western Uzbekistan also has rich oil and natural gas deposits,
reportedly containing hundreds of millions of tons of oil.
The coal deposits on the Angren River east of Tashkent and the
natural gas deposits near Bukhoro are prime fuels for Uzbekistan's
thermoelectric power plants. The well-developed hydroelectric power
generating system utilizes the Syrdariya, Naryn, and Chirchiq rivers,
all of which arise to the east in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan.
Agreements with Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, through which the Syrdariya
also flows, ensure a continued water flow for Uzbek power plants.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Agriculture
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan has the advantages of a warm climate, a long growing
season, and plentiful sources of water for irrigation. In the Soviet
period, those conditions offered high and reliable yields of crops with
specialized requirements. Soviet agricultural policy applied
Uzbekistan's favorable conditions mainly to cotton cultivation. As
Uzbekistan became a net exporter of cotton and a narrow range of other
agricultural products, however, it required large-scale imports of grain
and other foods that were not grown in sufficient quantities in domestic
fields.
Organization of Agriculture
In the last decades of Soviet rule, the private agricultural sector
produced about 25 percent of total farm output almost exclusively on the
small private plots of collective and state farmers and nonagricultural
households (the maximum private landholding was one-half hectare). In
the early 1990s, Uzbekistan's agriculture still was dominated by
collective and state farms, of which 2,108 were in operation in 1991.
Because of this domination, average farm size was more than 24,000
hectares, and the average number of workers per farm was more than 1,100
in 1990. More than 99 percent of the value of agricultural production
comes from irrigated land (see table 21, Appendix).
Economic Structure of Agriculture
Uzbekistan's economy depends heavily on agricultural production. As
late as 1992, roughly 40 percent of its net material product (NMP--see
Glossary) was in agriculture, although only about 10 percent of the
country's land area was cultivated. Cotton accounts for 40 percent of
the gross value of agricultural production. But with such a small
percentage of land available for farming, the single-minded development
of irrigated agriculture, without regard to consumption of water or
other natural resources, has had adverse effects such as heavy
salinization, erosion, and waterlogging of agricultural soils, which
inevitably have limited the land's productivity. According to the
Ministry of Land Reclamation and Water Resources, for example, after
expansion of agricultural land under irrigation at a rate of more than 2
percent per year between 1965 and 1986, conditions attributed to poor
water management had caused more than 3.4 million hectares to be taken
out of production in the Aral Sea Basin alone. According to other
reports, about 44 percent of the irrigated land in Uzbekistan today is
strongly salinated. The regions of Uzbekistan most seriously affected by
salinization are the provinces of Syrdariya, Bukhoro, Khorazm, and
Jizzakh and the Karakalpakstan Republic (see fig. 13). Throughout the
1980s, agricultural investments rose steadily, but net losses rose at an
even faster rate.
Cotton
Uzbekistan's main agricultural resource has long been its "white
gold," the vast amounts of cotton growing on its territory.
Uzbekistan always was the chief cotton-growing region of the Soviet
Union, accounting for 61 percent of total Soviet production; in the
mid-1990s it ranks as the fourth largest producer of cotton in the world
and the world's third largest cotton exporter. In 1991 Uzbekistan's
cotton yield was more than 4.6 million tons, of which more than 80
percent was classified in the top two quality grades. In 1987 roughly 40
percent of the workforce and more than half of all irrigated land in
Uzbekistan--more than 2 million hectares--were devoted to cotton.
Other Crops
In light of increasing water shortages in Central Asia and the end of
the Soviet distribution system that guaranteed food imports, government
leaders have proposed reducing cotton cultivation in favor of grain and
other food plants to feed an increasingly impoverished population. In
fact, between 1987 and 1991 land planted to cotton decreased by 16
percent, mainly in favor of grains and fruits and vegetables. But
Uzbekistan's short-term needs for hard currency make dramatic declines
in cotton cultivation unrealistic. Likewise, Uzbekistan's entire
existing agricultural infrastructure--irrigation systems, configuration
of fields, allocation and type of farm machinery, and other
characteristics--is geared toward cotton production; shifting to other
crops would require a massive overhaul of the agricultural system and a
risk that policy makers have not wished to take in the early years of
independence. Under these circumstances, continued commitment to cotton
is seen as a good base for longer-term development and diversification.
In 1991 Uzbekistan's main agricultural products, aside from cotton,
were grains (primarily wheat, oats, corn, barley, and rice), fodder
crops, and fruits and vegetables (primarily potatoes, tomatoes, grapes,
and apples). That year 41 percent of cultivated land was devoted to
cotton, 32 percent to grains, 11 percent to fruits, 4 percent to
vegetables, and 12 percent to other crops. In the early 1990s,
Uzbekistan produced the largest volume of fruits and vegetables among
the nations of the former Soviet Union. Because Uzbekistan's yield per
hectare of noncotton crops is consistently below that for other
countries with similar growing conditions, experts believe that
productivity can be improved significantly.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Industry
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan's industrial sector accounted for 33 percent of its NMP in
1991. Despite some efforts to diversify its industrial base, industry
remains dominated by raw materials extraction and processing, most of
which is connected with cotton production and minerals (see table 22,
Appendix). As illustrated especially by the domestic oil industry, in
the Soviet era industrial production generally lagged behind
consumption, making Uzbekistan a net importer of many industrial
products. Under the difficult economic conditions caused by the collapse
of the Soviet Union's system of allocations and interdependence of
republics, this situation has worsened. In 1993 total manufacturing had
decreased by 1 percent from its 1990 level, and mining output had
decreased by more than 8 percent (see table 6, Appendix).
Heavy Industry
The Tashkent region, in the northeastern "peninsula"
adjacent to the Fergana Valley, accounts for about one-third of the
industrial output of Uzbekistan, with agricultural machinery the most
important product. The city is the nucleus of an industrial region that
was established near mineral and hydroelectric resources stretching
across northeastern Uzbekistan from the Syrdariya in the west to the
easternmost point of the nation. Electricity for the industries of the
region comes from small hydroelectric stations along the Chirchiq River
and from a gas-fired local power station.
Uzbekistan's most productive heavy industries have been extraction of
natural gas and oil; oil refining; mining and mineral processing;
machine building, especially equipment for cotton cultivation and the
textile industry; coal mining; and the ferrous metallurgy, chemical, and
electrical power industries. The chemical manufacturing industry focuses
primarily on the production of fertilizer.
Two oil refineries in Uzbekistan, located at Farghona and Amtiari,
have a combined capacity of 173,000 barrels per day. Other centers of
the processing industries include Angren (for coal), Bekobod (steel),
Olmaliq (copper, zinc, and molybdenum), Zarafshon (gold), and Yangiobod
(uranium). The Uzbek fertilizer industry was established at Chirchiq,
northeast of Tashkent, near Samarqand, and at several sites in the
Fergana Basin. Uzbekistan is the largest producer of machinery for all
phases of cotton cultivation and processing, as well as for irrigation,
in the former Soviet Union. The machine building industry is centered at
Tashkent, Chirchiq, Samarqand, and Andijon in the east, and at Nukus in
Karakalpakstan.
Light Industry
The predominant light industries are primary processing of cotton,
wool, and silk into fabric for export, and food processing. In 1989
light industry accounted for 27.1 percent of industrial production; that
category was completely dominated by two sectors, textiles (18.2
percent) and agricultural food processing (8.9 percent). The nature of
the Uzbek textile industry in the mid-1990s reflects the Soviet
allotment to Uzbekistan of primary textile processing rather than
production of finished products. Food processing has diversified to some
degree; the industry specializes in production of dried apricots,
raisins, and peaches. Other products are cottonseed oil for cooking,
wine, and tobacco.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Labor Force
Uzbekistan
The swelling of the working-age population has led to high rates of
unemployment and underemployment (see Population, this ch.). At the same
time, despite relatively high average levels of education in the
population, the shortage of skilled personnel in Uzbekistan is also a
major constraint to future development (see Education, this ch.).
Russians and other nonindigenous workers traditionally were concentrated
in the heavy industrial sectors, including mining and heavy
manufacturing. With the independence of Uzbekistan and the outbreak of
violence in several parts of Central Asia, many of these skilled
personnel left the country in the early 1990s. In 1990 as many as 90
percent of personnel in Uzbekistan's electric power stations were
Russians. Because Russian emigration caused a shortage of skilled
technicians, by 1994 half of the power generating units of the Syrdariya
Hydroelectric Power Station had been shut down, and the newly
constructed Novoangrenskiy Thermoelectric Power Station could not go on
line because there was nobody to operate it. In the mid-1990s, training
programs were preparing skilled indigenous cadres in these and other
industrial sectors, but the shortfall has had a strong impact.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Postcommunist Economic Reform
Uzbekistan
With the collapse of the Soviet Union, Uzbekistan faced serious
economic challenges: the breakdown of central planning from Moscow and
the end of a reliable, if limited, system of interrepublican trade and
payments mechanisms; production inefficiencies; the prevalence of
monopolies; declining productivity; and loss of the significant
subsidies and payments that had come from Moscow. All these changes
signaled that fundamental reform would be necessary if the economy of
Uzbekistan were to continue to be viable.
Traditionally a raw materials supplier for the rest of the Soviet
Union, Uzbekistan saw its economy hard hit by the breakdown of the
highly integrated Soviet economy. Factories in Uzbekistan could not get
the raw materials they needed to diversify the national economy, and the
end of subsidies from Moscow was exacerbated by concurrent declines in
world prices for Uzbekistan's two major export commodities, gold and
cotton.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Structural and Legal Reform of the Economy
Uzbekistan
From the time of independence, Uzbekistan's political leaders have
made verbal commitments to developing a market-based economy, but they
have proceeded cautiously in that direction. The first few years were
characterized mainly by false starts that left little fundamental
change. The initial stages of reform, instituted in 1992, were partial
price liberalization, unification of foreign-exchange markets, new
taxes, removal of import tariffs, and privatization of small shops and
residential housing. Laws passed in 1992 provided for property and land
ownership, banking, and privatization. Modernization of the tax system
began in 1992; the first steps were a value-added tax (VAT--see
Glossary) and a profits tax designed to replace income from the tax
structure of the Soviet period.
In its first effort at price liberalization in 1992 and 1993, the
government maintained some control on all prices and full control on the
prices of basic consumer goods and energy. A wide range of legislation
set new conditions for property and land ownership, banking, and
privatization--fundamental conditions for establishing a market
economy--but in general these provisions were limited, and they often
were not enforced. International financial institutions initially were
encouraged to believe that structural adjustments would be made in the
national economy to accommodate international investment, but later such
promises were rescinded. In 1994 the government maintained control of
levels of production, investment, and trade, just as Moscow had done in
the Soviet era. Several agencies, most notably the State Committee for
Forecasting and Statistics, the State Association for Contracts and
Trade, the Ministry of Foreign Economic Relations, and the Ministry of
Finance, inherited responsibility for planning, finance, procurement,
and distribution from the Soviet central state system. Economic policy
making remains based on a national economic plan that sets production
and consumption targets. State-owned enterprises remain in virtually all
sectors of the economy. In 1994 no laws had established standards for
bankruptcy, collateral, or contracts. But by 1995 Uzbekistan had made
some significant movement toward reform, which experts interpreted as a
possible harbinger of wider-ranging changes in the second half of the
decade.
Privatization
Privatization of the large state industrial and agricultural
enterprises, which dominated the economy in the Soviet era, proceeded
very slowly in the early 1990s. The initial stage of privatization,
which began in September 1992, targeted the housing, retail trade and
services, and light industry sectors to promote the supply of consumer
goods.
Beginning with the 1991 Law on Privatization, a number of laws and
decrees have provided the policy framework for further privatization. A
state privatization agency, established in 1992, set a goal of moving 10
to 15 percent of state economic assets into private hands by the end of
1993. Movement in that direction was slow in 1992, however, with only
about 350 small shops being privatized. In the same period, housing was
privatized at a somewhat faster pace by outright transfers or low-cost
sales of state housing properties. By 1994 about 20,000 firms in small
industry, trade, and services had been transferred from state ownership
to the ownership of managers and employees of the firms. Nearly all such
transfers were through the issuance of joint-stock shares or by direct
sale.
Agricultural privatization, which began in 1990, has moved faster.
Since the state began distributing free parcels of land that could be
inherited but not sold, the number of peasant farms has risen
dramatically (cotton-growing lands were excluded from this process).
Between January 1991 and April 1993, the number of private farms rose
from 1,358 to 5,800, promising a significant new contribution from
private farms to Uzbekistan's overall agricultural output (see
Agriculture, this ch.). Another government program, initiated in 1993,
transfers unprofitable state farms to cooperative ownership. A law
permitting the transfer of privately owned land was planned for 1995.
In the mid-1990s, the role of the state was gradually reduced in the
productive sectors, except for energy, public utilities, and gold. The
government's privatization program for 1994-95 emphasized the sale of
large and medium-sized state-owned construction, manufacturing, and
transportation enterprises. A set of guidelines for large-scale
privatization, which went into effect in March 1994, contained several
contradictory provisions that required clarification, and privatization
also was slowed by the need to change the monopoly structure of
state-owned enterprises before sale.
In mid-1995, the government reported that 69 percent of enterprises
(46,900 of 67,700) had been privatized. Most firms in that category are
relatively small, however, and all heavy industry remained in state
ownership at that stage. Although the government has promised
accelerated privatization of larger firms, experts did not expect the
slow pace to improve in the late 1990s.
Currency Reform
According to some experts, a turning point came in late 1993 after
Uzbekistan and Kazakstan were expelled from the ruble zone (see
Glossary), in which Uzbekistan had remained with vague plans to adopt an
independent national currency at some time in the future. Following the
example of Kyrgyzstan, which already had created its own currency the
previous May, in November 1993 Uzbekistan issued an interim som coupon.
The permanent currency unit, the som, went into effect in the summer of
1994 (for value of the som--see Glossary). The introduction of the som
was followed by an improving domestic economic situation, including some
progress toward economic stabilization and structural reform. Beginning
in late 1994, the national economy achieved substantial price
liberalization, a reduction in subsidies, elimination of state orders on
most commodities, and some freeing of state controls in the agricultural
sector. In 1994 the som was one of the weaker new currencies in Central
Asia; it lost two-thirds of its value in the second half of 1994. By the
end of the year, however, inflation had leveled off, and the free-market
exchange rate of the som stabilized by January 1995. In July 1995, the
government announced plans to make the som fully convertible by the end
of the year. At the beginning of 1996, the som's value was thirty-six to
US$1.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Banking and Finance
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan began a movement toward a two-tier banking system under
the old Soviet regime. The new structure, which was ratified by the
Banking Law of 1991, has a government-owned Central Bank wielding
control over a range of joint-stock sectoral banks specializing in
agricultural or industrial enterprise, the Savings Bank (Sberbank), and
some twenty commercial banks. The Central Bank is charged with
establishing national monetary policy, issuing currency, and operating
the national payment system. In performing these operations, the Central
Bank manipulates as much as 70 percent of deposits in the more than
1,800 branches of the Savings Bank (all of which are state owned) for
its own reserve requirements. A National Bank for Foreign Economic
Affairs, established in 1991 as a joint-stock commercial bank, conducts
international financial exchanges on behalf of the government. The
national bank holds Uzbekistan's foreign currency reserves; in 1993 it
was converted from its initial status to a state bank.
In the mid-1990s, the banking structure in Uzbekistan was limited to
only a handful of primarily state-owned banks, and, compared with
Western banking systems, the commercial banking system was still in its
infancy. But the establishment in the spring of 1995 of Uzbekistan's
first Western-style banking operation--a joint venture between Mees
Pierson of the Netherlands and other international and Uzbekistani
partners--suggests that this sector, too, may have prospects for change.
The Uzbekistan International Bank that would result from the new joint
venture is intended primarily to finance trade and industrial projects.
The bank is to be based in Tashkent, with 50 percent of ownership shares
in Western hands. If successful, this and other similar ventures may
reward policy makers' cautious approach to reform by establishing an
infrastructure from which economic growth can begin.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Government
Uzbekistan
The movement toward economic reform in Uzbekistan has not been
matched by movement toward democratic reform. The government of
Uzbekistan has instead tightened its grip since independence, cracking
down increasingly on opposition groups, curbing basic human rights, and
making little attempt to develop democratic political norms and
practices. Although the names have changed, the institutions of
government remain similar to those that existed before the breakup of
the Soviet Union. The government has justified its restraint of personal
liberty and freedom of speech by emphasizing the need for stability and
a gradual approach to change during the transitional period, citing the
conflict and chaos in the other former republics (most convincingly,
neighboring Tajikistan). This approach has found credence among a large
share of Uzbekistan's population, although such a position may not be
sustainable in the long run.
Postindependence Changes
Despite the trappings of institutional change, the first years of
independence saw more resistance than acceptance of the institutional
changes required for democratic reform to take hold. Whatever initial
movement toward democracy existed in Uzbekistan in the early days of
independence seems to have been overcome by the inertia of the remaining
Soviet-style strong centralized leadership.
In the Soviet era, Uzbekistan organized its government and its local
communist party in conformity with the structure prescribed for all the
republics. The Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) occupied the
central position in ruling the country. The party provided both the
guidance and the personnel for the government structure. The system was
strictly bureaucratic: every level of government and every governmental
body found its mirror image in the party. The tool used by the CPSU to
control the bureaucracy was the system of nomenklatura , a list
of sensitive jobs in the government and other important organizations
that could be filled only with party approval. The nomenklatura
defined the Soviet elite, and the people on the list invariably were
members of the CPSU.
Following the failure of the coup against the Gorbachev government in
Moscow in August 1991, Uzbekistan's Supreme Soviet declared the
independence of the republic, henceforth to be known as the Republic of
Uzbekistan. At the same time, the Communist Party of Uzbekistan voted to
cut its ties with the CPSU; three months later, it changed its name to
the People's Democratic Party of Uzbekistan (PDPU), but the party
leadership, under President Islam Karimov, remained in place.
Independence brought a series of institutional changes, but the
substance of governance in Uzbekistan changed much less dramatically.
On December 21, 1991, together with the leaders of ten other Soviet
republics, Karimov agreed to dissolve the Soviet Union and form the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS--see Glossary), of which
Uzbekistan became a charter member according to the Alma-Ata
Declaration. Shortly thereafter, Karimov was elected president of
independent Uzbekistan in the new country's first contested election.
Karimov drew 86 percent of the vote against opposition candidate
Mohammed Salikh, whose showing experts praised in view of charges that
the election had been rigged. The major opposition party, Birlik, had
been refused registration as an official party in time for the election.
In 1992 the PDPU retained the dominant position in the executive and
legislative branches of government that the Communist Party of
Uzbekistan had enjoyed. All true opposition groups were repressed and
physically discouraged. Birlik, the original opposition party formed by
intellectuals in 1989, was banned for allegedly subversive activities,
establishing the Karimov regime's dominant rationalization for increased
authoritarianism: Islamic fundamentalism threatened to overthrow the
secular state and establish an Islamic regime similar to that in Iran.
The constitution ratified in December 1992 reaffirmed that Uzbekistan is
a secular state. Although the constitution prescribed a new form of
legislature, the PDPU-dominated Supreme Soviet remained in office for
nearly two years until the first parliamentary election, which took
place in December 1994 and January 1995.
In 1993 Karimov's concern about the spread of Islamic fundamentalism
spurred Uzbekistan's participation in the multinational CIS peacekeeping
force sent to quell the civil war in nearby Tajikistan--a force that
remained in place three years later because of continuing hostilities.
Meanwhile, in 1993 and 1994 continued repression by the Karimov regime
brought strong criticism from international human rights organizations.
In March 1995, Karimov took another step in the same direction by
securing a 99 percent majority in a referendum on extending his term as
president from the prescribed next election in 1997 to 2000. In early
1995, Karimov announced a new policy of toleration for opposition
parties and coalitions, apparently in response to the need to improve
Uzbekistan's international commercial position. A few new parties were
registered in 1995, although the degree of their opposition to the
government was doubtful, and some imprisonments of opposition political
figures continued.
The parliamentary election, the first held under the new
constitution's guarantee of universal suffrage to all citizens eighteen
years of age or older, excluded all parties except the PDPU and the
progovernment Progress of the Fatherland Party, despite earlier promises
that all parties would be free to participate. The new, 250-seat
parliament, called the Oly Majlis or Supreme Soviet, included only
sixty-nine candidates running for the PDPU, but an estimated 120 more
deputies were PDPU members technically nominated to represent local
councils rather than the PDPU. The result was that Karimov's solid
majority continued after the new parliament went into office.
<"45.htm">The Constitution
<"46.htm">Local Government
<"47.htm">Political Parties
<"48.htm">The Media
<"49.htm">Human Rights
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The Constitution
Uzbekistan
From the beginning of his presidency, Karimov remained committed in
words to instituting democratic reforms. A new constitution was adopted
by the legislature in December 1992. Officially it creates a separation
of powers among a strong presidency, the Oly Majlis, and a judiciary. In
practice, however, these changes have been largely cosmetic. Uzbekistan
remains among the most authoritarian states in Central Asia. Although
the language of the new constitution includes many democratic features,
it can be superseded by executive decrees and legislation, and often
constitutional law simply is ignored.
The president, who is directly elected to a five-year term that can
be repeated once, is the head of state and is granted supreme executive
power by the constitution. As commander in chief of the armed forces,
the president also may declare a state of emergency or of war. The
president is empowered to appoint the prime minister and full cabinet of
ministers and the judges of the three national courts, subject to the
approval of the Oly Majlis, and to appoint all members of lower courts.
The president also has the power to dissolve the parliament, in effect
negating the Oly Majlis's veto power over presidential nominations in a
power struggle situation.
Deputies to the unicameral Oly Majlis, the highest legislative body,
are elected to five-year terms. The body may be dismissed by the
president with the concurrence of the Constitutional Court; because that
court is subject to presidential appointment, the dismissal clause
weights the balance of power heavily toward the executive branch. The
Oly Majlis enacts legislation, which may be initiated by the president,
within the parliament, by the high courts, by the procurator general
(highest law enforcement official in the country), or by the government
of the Autonomous Province of Karakalpakstan. Besides legislation,
international treaties, presidential decrees, and states of emergency
also must be ratified by the Oly Majlis.
The national judiciary includes the Supreme Court, the Constitutional
Court, and the High Economic Court. Lower court systems exist at the
regional, district, and town levels. Judges at all levels are appointed
by the president and approved by the Oly Majlis. Nominally independent
of the other branches of government, the courts remain under complete
control of the executive branch. As in the system of the Soviet era, the
procurator general and his regional and local equivalents are both the
state's chief prosecuting officials and the chief investigators of
criminal cases, a configuration that limits the pretrial rights of
defendants.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Local Government
Uzbekistan
The country is divided into twelve provinces (wiloyatlar ;
sing., wiloyat ), one autonomous republic (the Karakalpakstan
Republic), 156 regions, and 123 cities. In Uzbekistan's system of strong
central government, local government has little independence. The chief
executive of each province and of Tashkent is the hakim , who
is appointed by the president. Although these appointments must be
confirmed by local legislative bodies that are elected by popular vote,
the power of the president is dominant. The Autonomous Republic of
Karakalpakstan also officially elects its own legislature; the chairman
of the legislature serves as the republic's head of state and as a
deputy chairman of the national parliament. But in the autonomous
republic, too, government officials are generally powerless against
Tashkent. Indeed, Karakalpak officials often are not included even in
meetings of heads of state to discuss the fate of the Aral Sea, which is
located within Karakalpakstan.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Political Parties
Uzbekistan
Through the early 1990s, the government's stated goal of creating a
multiparty democracy in Uzbekistan went unrealized. When independence
was gained, the Communist Party of Uzbekistan was officially banned, but
its successor, the PDPU, assumed the personnel, structure, and political
domination of its predecessor. Since forcing out a small number of
deputies from opposition parties, PDP members have complete control of
the Supreme Soviet, and most members of other government bodies also are
PDP members. The only other legal party in Uzbekistan, the Progress of
the Fatherland Party, was created by a key adviser to President Karimov,
ostensibly to give the country a semblance of a multiparty system; but
it differs little in substance from the PDP.
Of the several legitimate opposition parties that emerged in
Uzbekistan before the collapse of the Soviet Union, none has been able
to meet the official registration requirements that the government
created to maintain control and exclude them from the public arena. The
first opposition party, Birlik, was created in 1989, primarily by
intellectuals and writers under the leadership of the writer Abdurakhim
Pulatov (see The 1980s, this ch.). The movement attempted to draw
attention to problems ranging from environmental and social concerns to
economic challenges, and to participate in their solution. The main
weakness of Birlik was that it never was able to present a united front
to the government. Soon after the party's establishment, a group of
Birlik leaders left to set up a political party, Erk (Freedom), under
the leadership of Mohammed Salikh. The Uzbek government was able to
exploit the disunity of the opposition and eventually to undermine their
position. Following the establishment of independent Uzbekistan, the
Karimov regime was able to suppress both Birlik and Erk. Both parties
were banned officially; Erk was reinstated in 1994.
Other parties include the Movement for Democratic Reforms, the
Islamic Rebirth Party (banned by the government in 1992), the Humaneness
and Charity group, and the Uzbekistan Movement. A former prime minister
(1990-91) and vice president (1991) of Uzbekistan, Shukrullo Mirsaidov,
created a new party, Adolat (Justice) in December 1994. Like Birlik and
Erk, the new party calls for liberal economic reforms, political
pluralism, and a secular society, but experts describe its opposition to
the government as quite moderate. Nevertheless, Adolat has not been able
to operate freely.
In 1995 opposition parties continued to be divided among themselves,
further diluting their potential effectiveness, and many of the leaders
have been either imprisoned or exiled. In mid-1995, Mohammed Salikh was
in Germany; Abdurakhim Pulatov was in exile in Turkey; and his brother
Abdumannob Pulatov, also active in the opposition and a victim of brutal
government oppression, took refuge in the United States.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The Media
Uzbekistan
Despite the fact that the constitution explicitly bans censorship,
press censorship is routine. In 1992 twelve daily newspapers, with a
total circulation of 452,000, were published. In 1993 the government
required all periodicals to register, and the applications of all
independent titles were denied. In early 1996, no independent press had
emerged, and all forms of information dissemination were monitored
closely. The largest daily newspapers were Khalk Suzi (People's
World), the organ of the Oly Majlis; Narodnoye Slovo , a
Russian-language government daily; Pravda Vostoka , an organ of
the Oly Majlis and the cabinet, in Russian; and Uzbekiston Adabiyoti
va San'ati (Uzbekistan Literature and Art), the organ of the Union
of Writers of Uzbekistan. The only news agency was the
government-controlled Uzbekistan Telegraph Agency (UzTAG).
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Human Rights
Uzbekistan
Despite extensive constitutional protections, the Karimov government
has actively suppressed the rights of political movements, continues to
ban unsanctioned public meetings and demonstrations, and continues to
arrest opposition figures on fabricated charges. The atmosphere of
repression reduces constructive opposition and freedom of expression,
and continues to distort the political process, even when institutional
changes have been made. In the mid-1990s, legislation established
significant rights for independent trade unions, separate from the
government, and enhanced individual rights; but enforcement is uneven,
and the role of the state security services remains central (see
Internal Security, this ch.).
Amnesty International, the Human Rights Watch, and the United States
Department of State consistently have identified the human rights record
of Uzbekistan as among the worst in the former Soviet Union. With the
exception of sporadic liberalization, all opposition movements and
independent media are essentially banned in Uzbekistan. The early 1990s
were characterized by arrests and beatings of opposition figures on
fabricated charges. For example, one prominent Uzbek, Ibrahim Bureyev,
was arrested in 1994 after announcing plans to form a new opposition
party. After reportedly being freed just before the March referendum,
Bureyev shortly thereafter was arrested again on a charge of possessing
illegal firearms and drugs. In April 1995, fewer than two weeks after
the referendum extending President Karimov's term, six dissidents were
sentenced to prison for distributing the party newspaper of Erk and
inciting the overthrow of Karimov. Members of opposition groups have
been harassed by Uzbekistan's secret police as far away as Moscow.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Foreign Relations
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan's location, bordering the volatile Middle East, as well as
its rich natural resources and commercial potential, thrust it into the
international arena almost immediately upon gaining independence. During
the early 1990s, wariness of renewed Russian control led Uzbekistan
increasingly to seek ties with other countries. Indeed, little over a
year after independence, Uzbekistan had been recognized by 120 countries
and had opened or planned to open thirty-nine foreign embassies. Experts
believed that in this situation Uzbekistan would turn first to
neighboring countries such as Iran and Turkey. Although the cultural
kinship and proximity of those countries has encouraged closer
relations, Uzbekistan also has shown eagerness to work with a range of
partners to create a complex web of interrelationships that includes its
immediate Central Asian neighbors, Russia and other nations of the CIS,
and the immediate Middle Eastern world, with the goal of becoming an
integral part of the international community on its own terms.
Relations with ...
<"51.htm">Central Asian States
<"52.htm">Russia and the CIS
<"53.htm">The Middle East and Pakistan
<"54.htm">China
<"55.htm">Western Europe and Japan
<"56.htm">The United States
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Central Asian States
Uzbekistan
Chief among Uzbekistan's foreign policy challenges is establishing
relations with the other Central Asian states, which at the beginning of
the 1990s still were simply neighboring administrative units in the same
country. The ties that emerged between Uzbekistan and the other Central
Asian states in the first years of independence are a combination of
competition and cooperation.
Because they have similar economic structures defined by a focus on
raw material extraction and cotton and by the need to divide scarce
resources such as water among them, the inherent competition among them
contains the potential for enormous strife. This condition was
emphasized, for example, in May 1993, when Uzbekistan halted the flow of
natural gas to Kyrgyzstan in response to that country's introduction of
a new currency.
The potential for strife is exacerbated by the perception of the
other Central Asian states that Uzbekistan seeks to play a dominant role
in the region. As the only Central Asian state bordering on all the
others, Uzbekistan is well placed geographically to become the dominant
power in the region. And Uzbekistan has done little to contradict the
notion that it has historically based claims on the other Central Asian
states: as the historical center of the Quqon and Bukhoro khanates, for
example, Uzbekistan believes that it can claim parts of Kyrgyzstan,
Turkmenistan, and Kazakstan. Uzbekistan's large and relatively
homogeneous population provides it a distinct advantage in exerting
control over other republics. Uzbeks also constitute a significant
percentage of the populations of the other Central Asian states. For
example, roughly one-fourth of Tajikistan's population is Uzbek, and
large numbers of Uzbeks populate southern Kyrgyzstan and southern
Kazakstan. And Uzbekistan's active role in aiding the communist
government of Imomali Rahmonov to defeat its opposition in the
long-standing civil war in Tajikistan has demonstrated that it is well
prepared to use its own armed forces--which are the best armed in
Central Asia--to promote its own strategic interests (see The Armed
Forces, this ch.). The government of Uzbekistan already has declared its
right to intervene to protect Uzbeks living outside its borders.
At the same time, however, economic and political exigencies have
also required close cooperation between Uzbekistan and the other Central
Asian states. The near collapse of their respective economies and the
need to reduce their economic dependence on Russia have also encouraged
ties among the Central Asian republics, including Uzbekistan. Isolated
from Moscow in some ways and manipulated by Moscow in others, Uzbekistan
has found it especially advantageous to enhance relations with Kazakstan
and Kyrgyzstan. In January 1994, following their formal departure from
the ruble zone in November 1993, Kazakstan and Uzbekistan agreed to
create their own economic zone to allow for free circulation of goods,
services, and capital within the two republics and to coordinate
policies on credit and finance, budgets, taxes, customs duties, and
currency until the year 2000. Although many other former republics had
made similar statements of intent, this marked the first firm economic
agreement between two former republics within the CIS.
Since its signing, this agreement has expanded its coverage for the
two charter nations and by the addition of a third signatory,
Kyrgyzstan. In April 1994, the agreement was extended among all three
former republics to abolish all customs controls; and in July 1994, the
leaders of the three states met in Almaty to agree to a program of
greater economic integration in what they have identified as their
"Unified Economic Space." This agreement produced the first
steps toward a modicum of institutional change, such as the creation of
a Central Asian Bank and an interstate council to formalize bilateral
ties. It also marked a commitment for further expansion of direct ties.
Renewed cooperation between Uzbekistan and the other Central Asian
states also has been evidenced in areas such as joint efforts to address
the Aral Sea problem. For some time even before the breakup of the
Soviet Union, conferences and declarations by leaders in Central Asia
had called for more cooperation among the five Central Asian republics
to resolve the problem of the Aral Sea and regional use of water
resources. In December 1992, with World Bank (see Glossary) support,
President Karimov took the lead in proposing the creation of a strong,
unified interstate organization to resolve the problems of the Aral Sea.
The heads of state of all of the Central Asian republics have met
several times to coordinate activities, and all members pledged roughly
1 percent of their respective GDPs toward an Aral Sea fund. Although
compliance has varied, this type of constructive and unified approach to
a mutual problem remained theoretical in the early 1990s.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Russia and the CIS
Uzbekistan
Equally unclear is the long-term direction of Uzbekistan's relations
with Russia. Having had independence thrust upon them by events in
Moscow in 1991, the new Central Asian states, Uzbekistan among them,
pressed to become "founding members" of the CIS on December
21, 1991. It was clear that none of the countries in that group could
soon disentangle the complex of economic and military links that
connected them with the Slavic members of the new CIS, and especially
with Russia. In Uzbekistan's case, this limitation was characterized
mainly by the significant Russian population in Uzbekistan (at that
time, nearly 2 million people in a population of 22 million), by certain
common interests in the region, and by the close entanglement of the
Uzbek economy with the Russian, with the former more dependent on the
latter.
Since achieving independence, Uzbekistan's foreign policy toward
Russia has fluctuated widely between cooperation and public condemnation
of Russia for exacerbating Uzbekistan's internal problems. Serious
irritants in the relationship have been Russia's demand that Uzbekistan
deposit a large portion of its gold reserves in the Russian Central Bank
in order to remain in the ruble zone (which became a primary rationale
for Uzbekistan's introduction of its own national currency in 1993) and
Russia's strong pressure to provide Russians in Uzbekistan with dual
citizenship. In 1994 and 1995, a trend within Russia toward reasserting
more control over the regions that Russian foreign policy makers
characterize as the "near abroad," boosted by the seeming
dominance of conservative forces in this area in Moscow, has only
compounded Uzbekistan's wariness of relations with Russia.
In its period of post-Soviet transformation, Uzbekistan also has
found it advantageous to preserve existing links with Russia and the
other former Soviet republics. For that pragmatic reason, since the
beginning of 1994 Uzbekistan has made particular efforts to improve
relations with the other CIS countries. Between 1993 and early 1996,
regional cooperation was most visible in Tajikistan, where Uzbekistani
troops fought alongside Russian troops, largely because of the two
countries' shared emphasis on Islamic fundamentalism as an ostensible
threat to Central Asia and to Russia's southern border. And 1994 and
1995 saw increased efforts to widen economic ties with Russia and the
other CIS states. Economic and trade treaties have been signed with
Russia, Ukraine, Moldova, Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan, and Kazakstan, and
collective security and/or military agreements have been signed with
Russia, Armenia, and other Central Asian states. Largely because of its
important role in Uzbekistan's national security, Russia has retained
the role of preferred partner in nonmilitary treaties as well).
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The Middle East and Pakistan
Uzbekistan
Because of Uzbekistan's long historical and cultural ties to the
Persian, Turkish, and Arab worlds, its immediate neighbors to the
south--Iran, Pakistan, and Turkey--were the natural direction for
expanded foreign relations. Although cultural relations with formerly
dominant Iran and Turkey ended with the Soviet Revolution in 1917,
Uzbekistan's relations with its southern neighbors increased
dramatically after independence. Iran and Turkey have been especially
active in pursuing economic projects and social, cultural, and
diplomatic initiatives in Uzbekistan. Turkey was the first country to
recognize Uzbekistan and among the first to open an embassy in Tashkent.
The Turks made early commitments for expansion of trade and cooperation,
including the promise to fund 2,000 scholarships for Uzbek students to
study in Turkey. Uzbekistan also has been the recipient of most of the
US$700 million in credits that Turkey has given the new Central Asian
states.
Although initially apprehensive about the spread of an Iranian-style
Islamic fundamentalist movement in Central Asia, Uzbekistan also has
found mutual economic interests with Iran, and the two have pursued
overland links and other joint ventures. Relations with Pakistan have
followed suit, with particular commercial interest in hydroelectric
power, gas pipelines, and other projects. And a meeting of the heads of
state of Pakistan, Iran, and Turkey in Turkmenistan in early 1995
underscored the continuing interest of those countries in the Central
Asian region as a whole.
One forum that has emerged as a potentially important structure for
cooperation among these countries has been the Economic Cooperation
Organization (ECO--see Glossary), a loose regional economic organization
to foster trade and cooperation among its members in the Middle East and
South Asia. Although during its almost two decades of existence ECO has
achieved little concrete economic cooperation, in November 1992 the
inclusion of the five new Central Asian states, Afghanistan, and
Azerbaijan brought significant efforts to reinvigorate the organization.
At a meeting in Quetta, Pakistan, in February 1993, an ambitious plan
was announced to create a new regional economic bloc among ECO's members
by the year 2000. The plan calls for expanding ties in all economic
sectors, in training, and in tourism; setting up an effective
transportation infrastructure; and ultimately abolishing restrictions
limiting the free flow of people and commodities. Energy trade also is
to be expanded through the laying of oil and gas pipelines and power
transmission lines throughout the region. Given ECO's past performance,
however, in 1996 the potential for fulfillment of such plans was quite
unclear.
Trade and cooperation agreements have also been signed with Saudi
Arabia, Jordan, and other Middle Eastern states. The pragmatic rather
than religious background of such endeavors is underscored by
Uzbekistan's rapidly expanding ties with Israel, a nation that shares
none of the history and culture of Uzbekistan. Following a visit of
Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres to Uzbekistan in July 1994, Israel
and Uzbekistan signed agreements expanding commercial relations,
protecting foreign investments and the development of business ties,
aviation links, and tourism. In the early 1990s, Israel's long
participation in Uzbekistani irrigation projects has been supplemented
by aid projects in health care, industry, and the two countries' common
battle against radical Islamic groups.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - China
Uzbekistan
China also has sought to develop relations with Central Asia. This
was highlighted in May 1994, by the visit of the Chinese premier, Li
Peng, to Tashkent. Since 1991 China has become the second largest
trading partner in Central Asia after Russia. During Li Peng's visit,
Uzbekistan and China signed four agreements designed to increase trade,
including the granting of a Chinese loan to Uzbekistan, the
establishment of air freight transport between the two countries, and
the Chinese purchase of Uzbekistani cotton and metals. The two countries
also agreed to settle all territorial disputes through negotiation, and
they found common territory in their desire to reform their economies
without relinquishing strict political control. At the same time,
however, policy makers in Uzbekistan also view China as one of
Uzbekistan's chief potential threats, requiring the same kind of
balanced approach as that adopted toward Russia. Indeed, despite the
large volume of trade between China and Central Asia, China is lowest on
the list of desired trading partners and international donors among
Uzbekistan's population. In a 1993 survey, only about 3 percent of
respondents believed that China is a desirable source of foreign
financial assistance.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Western Europe and Japan
Uzbekistan
In the first four years of independence, the West occupied an
increasing place in Uzbekistan's foreign policy. As relations with its
immediate neighbors have been expanding, pragmatic geopolitical and
economic considerations have come to dominate ethnic and religious
identities as motivations for policy decisions. This approach has
increased the interest of the Uzbekistani government in expanding ties
with the West and with Japan.
In the early 1990s, Uzbekistan became a member of the United Nations,
the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF--see Glossary), the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE, formerly the
Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe, CSCE--see Glossary),
the North Atlantic Cooperation Council, and a number of other
international organizations. In that context, Uzbekistan is the
beneficiary of several aid projects of varying magnitudes. The World
Bank has designed missions and projects totaling hundreds of millions of
dollars for such programs as the Cotton Sub-Sector Development Program
to improve farm productivity, income, and international cotton marketing
conditions and a program to address the problems of the Aral Sea. In
April 1995, the World Bank allocated US$160 million in credit to
Uzbekistan. In February 1995, the IMF approved a loan to support the
Uzbekistani government's macroeconomic stabilization and systemic reform
program. The first installment of the loan, roughly US$75 million, will
be funded over a ten-year period; the second installment is to follow
six months later, provided the government's macroeconomic stabilization
program is being implemented. The European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD) likewise approved several million dollars for
projects in Uzbekistan. These signs of greater involvement by the
international community in Uzbekistan are largely stimulated by the
political stability that the government has been able to maintain and in
disregard of the human rights record, but many investors still are
cautious.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - The United States
Uzbekistan
The United States recognized Uzbekistan as an independent state in
December 1991; diplomatic relations were established in February 1992,
following a visit by Secretary of State James Baker to the republic, and
the United States opened an embassy in Tashkent the following month.
During 1992, a variety of United States aid programs were launched.
Operation Provide Hope delivered an estimated US$6 million of food and
medical supplies for emergency relief of civilians affected by the Tajik
civil war; the Peace Corps sent its first group of about fifty
volunteers to Uzbekistan; an agreement with the Overseas Private
Investment Corporation (OPIC) began encouraging United States private
investment in Uzbekistan by providing direct loans and loan guarantees
and helping to match projects with potential investors; and humanitarian
and technical assistance began to move to a wide range of recipients. In
1993 the United States granted Uzbekistan most-favored-nation trade
status, which went into force in January 1994. In March 1994, a
bilateral assistance agreement and an open lands agreement were signed.
In 1995 a variety of investment and other treaties were under
discussion, and several United States non-governmental organizations
were initiating joint projects throughout Uzbekistan.
In the first two years of Uzbekistan's independence, the United
States provided roughly US$17 million in humanitarian assistance
andUS$13 million in technical assistance. For a time, continued human
rights violations in Uzbekistan led to significant restrictions in the
bilateral relationship, and Uzbekistan received significantly less
United States assistance than many of the other former Soviet republics.
Because Uzbekistan was slow to adopt fundamental economic reforms,
nonhumanitarian United States assistance was largely restricted to
programs that support the building of democratic institutions and market
reform. By the end of 1995, however, United States-Uzbekistan relations
were improving, and significantly more bilateral economic activity was
expected in 1996.
Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan - Bibliography
Uzbekistan
Abduvakhitov, Abdujabar. "Independent Uzbekistan: A Muslim
Community in Development." Pages 293-306 in Michael Bourdeaux, ed.,
The Politics of Religion in Russia and the New States of Eurasia.
Armonk, New York: M.E. Sharpe, 1995.
Akbarzadeh, Shahram. "Nation Building in Uzbekistan," Central
Asian Survey [Abingdon, United Kingdom], 15, March 1996, 23-32.
Alikhanov, B. B., and S. S. Tursunov, Ekonomicheskiye problemy
okhrany okruzhayushchey sredy v usloviyakh Uzbekistana (Economic
Problems of Environmental Protection in the Conditions of Uzbekistan).
Tashkent: State Committee on Hydrology, 1990.
Allworth, Edward, ed. Central Asia: 120 Years of Russian Rule.
Durham: Duke University Press, 1989.
Azv'yalova, L.V., O.A. Agafonova, and L.A. Semakina. Zagryazneniye
atmosfery Sredney Azii tyazhelymi metallami (Atmospheric Pollution
by Heavy Metals in Central Asia). Tashkent: State Committee on
Hydrology, 1991.
Bacon, Elizabeth E. Central Asians under Russian Rule.
Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1980.
Banuazizi, Ali, and Myron Weiner, eds. The New Geopolitics of
Central Asia and Its Borderlands. Bloomington: Indiana University
Press, 1994.
Bartol'd, Vasilii Vladimirovich. Turkestan Down to the Mongol
Invasion. London: Luzac, 1968.
Bohr, Annette. "Health Catastrophe in Karakalpakstan," Report
on the USSR [Munich], 1, July 21, 1989, 37-38.
Bourdeaux, Michael, ed. The Politics of Religion in Russia and
the New States of Eurasia. Armonk, New York: M.E. Sharpe, 1995.
Brown, Bess. "National Security and Military Issues in Central
Asia." Pages 234-52 in Bruce Parrott, ed., State Building and
Military Power in Russia and the New States of Eurasia. Armonk, New
York: M.E. Sharpe, 1995.
Brown, Bess. "Three Central Asian States Form Economic
Union," RFE/RL Research Report [Munich], 3, No. 13, April
1, 1994, 33-35.
Carlisle, Donald S. "Power and Politics in Soviet Uzbekistan:
From Stalin to Gorbachev." Pages 93-130 in William Fierman, Soviet
Central Asia: The Failed Transformation. Boulder, Colorado:
Westview Press, 1991.
Colton, Timothy J., and Robert C. Tucker, eds. Patterns in
Post-Soviet Leadership. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1995.
Critchlow, James. Nationalism in Uzbekistan. Boulder,
Colorado: Westview Press, 1991.
Dannreuther, Roland. Creating New States in Central Asia.
Adelphi Paper No. 288. London: Brassey's for International Institute for
Strategic Studies, 1994.
Davis, Christopher M. "Health Care Crisis: The Former Soviet
Union," RFE/RL Research Report [Munich], 2, No. 40,
October 8, 1993, 35-43.
Drobizheva, Leokadia, et al., eds. Ethics Conflict in the
Post-Soviet World: Case Studies and Analysis. Armonk, New York: M.
E. Sharpe, 1996.
Economist Intelligence Unit. Country Report: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyz
Republic, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan [London], No. 1,
1996.
The Europa World Year Book 1993, 2. London: Europa, 1993.
The Europa World Year Book 1994, 2. London: Europa, 1994.
The Europa World Year Book 1995, 2. London: Europa, 1995.
The Europa World Year Book 1996, 2. London: Europa, 1996.
Fane, Daria. "Ethnicity and Regionalism in Uzbekistan:
Maintaining Stability Through Authoritarian Control." Pages 271-302
in Leokadia Drobizheva, et al., eds. Ethnic Conflict in the Post-
Soviet World: Case Studies and Analysis. Armonk, New York: M.E.
Sharpe, 1996.
Ferdinand, Peter, ed. The New States of Central Asia and Their
Neighbors. New York: Council on Foreign Relations Press, 1994.
Feshbach, Murray, and Alfred Friendly, Jr. Ecocide in the USSR:
Health and Nature under Siege. New York: Basic Books, 1992.
Fierman, William. "Independence and the Declining Priority of
Language Law Implementation in Uzbekistan." Pages 205-30 in Yaacov
Ro'i, ed., Muslim Eurasia: Conflicting Legacies. London: Frank
Cass, 1995.
Fierman, William, ed. Soviet Central Asia: The Failed
Transformation. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1991.
Hale, Henry. "Islam, State-building, and Uzbekistan Foreign
Policy," Pages 136-72 in Ali Banuazizi and Myron Weiner, eds., The
New Geopolitics of Central Asia and Its Borderlands. Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1994.
Henley, John S., and George B. Assaf. "Re-Integrating the
Central Asian Republics into the World Economy," Intereconomics,
30, September-October 1995, 235-45.
Horton, Scott, and Tatiana Geller. "Investing in Uzbekistan's
Natural Resources Sector," Central Asia Monitor, 1996, No.
1, 25-35.
Horton, Scott, and Tatiana Geller. "Secured Transactions in
Uzbekistan," Central Asia Monitor, 1996, No. 2, 21-7.
Institute for National Strategic Studies. Strategic Assessment
1995: U.S. Security Challenges in Transition. Washington: GPO,
1995.
Karpat, Kemal. "The Foreign Policy of the Central Asian States,
Turkey, and Iran," OSCE Bulletin, 3, No. 1, Winter
1994-95, 17-30.
Konyukhov, V.G. Ekologicheskaya obstanovka v Uzbekistanskoy SSR i
mery po yeye uluchsheniyu (The Ecological Situation in the Uzbek
SSR and Measures to Improve It). Tashkent: State Committee on
Environmental Protection, 1990.
Lawyers' Committee for Human Rights. Freedom of Association Project. Karimov's
Way: Freedom of Association and Assembly in Uzbekistan. Briefing
Paper No. 1. New York: 1994.
Lubin, Nancy. Central Asians Take Stock. Washington: United
States Institute of Peace Press, 1995.
Lubin, Nancy. "Islam and Ethnic Identity in Central Asia: A View
from Below." Pages 53-70 in Yaacov Ro'i, ed., Muslim Eurasia:
Conflicting Legacies. London: Frank Cass, 1995.
Lubin, Nancy. Labour and Nationality in Soviet Central Asia: An
Uneasy Compromise. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985.
Lubin, Nancy. "Leadership in Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan: The
Views of the Led." Pages 217-34 in Timothy J. Colton and Robert C.
Tucker, eds., Patterns in Post-Soviet Leadership. Boulder,
Colorado: Westview Press, 1995.
Lubin, Nancy. "Uzbekistan." Pages 289-306 in Philip R.
Pryde, ed., Environmental Resources and Constraints in the Former
Soviet Republics. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1995.
Lubin, Nancy. "Uzbekistan: The Challenges Ahead," Middle
East Journal, 43, No. 4, Autumn 1989, 619-34.
Micklin, Philip. "The Aral Sea Crisis: Introduction to the
Special Issue," Post-Soviet Geography, 33, No. 5, May
1992, 269-82.
Nichol, James. "Central Asia's New States: Political
Developments and Implications for U.S. Interests," CRS Issue
Brief, July 31, 1996.
Nichol, James. "Uzbekistan: Basic Facts," CRS Report
for Congress, May 28, 1996.
1995 Britannica Book of the Year. Chicago: 1995.
Olcott, Martha Brill. Central Asia's New States: Independence,
Foreign Policy, and Regional Security. Washington: United States
Institute of Peace Press, 1996.
Olcott, Martha Brill. "The Myth of 'Tsentral'naia Aziia'," Orbis,
38, No. 3, Summer 1995, 549-66.
Polat, Abdumannob. "Uzbekistan: Does the Government Want a
Dialogue with the Opposition," Caspian Crossroads, Winter
1995, 26-28.
Posner, Michael. Human Rights and Legal Issues in Uzbekistan.
New York: Lawyers' Committee for Human Rights, 1993.
Pryde, Philip R., ed. Environmental Resources and Constraints in
the Former Soviet Republics. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press,
1995.
Ro'i, Yaacov, ed. Muslim Eurasia: Conflicting Legacies.
London: Frank Cass, 1995.
Rubinstein, Alvin Z. "The Geopolitical Pull on Russia," Orbis,
38, No. 3, Summer 1995, 567-84.
Rumer, Boris Z. Soviet Central Asia: A "Tragic
Experiment." Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989.
Sagers, Matthew J. "News Notes," Post-Soviet Geography,
33, No. 3, 1992, 190.
Staar, S. Frederick. "Making Eurasia Stable," Foreign
Affairs, 75, January-February 1996, 80-92.
The Statesman's Year-Book 1993-1994. Ed., Brian Hunter. New
York: St. Martin's Press, 1993.
The Statesman's Year-Book 1994-1995. Ed., Brian Hunter. New
York: St. Martin's Press, 1994.
The Statesman's Year-Book 1995-1996. Ed., Brian Hunter. New
York: St. Martin's Press, 1995.
United Nations. Department for Economic and Social Information and
Policy Analysis. Demographic Yearbook 1993. New York, 1995.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Handbook of
International Economic Statistics 1995. Washington: GPO, 1995.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency. The World Factbook
1994. Washington: GPO, 1994.
United States. Central Intelligence Agency. Uzbekistan: An
Economic Profile. Springfield, Virginia: National Technical
Information Service, 1993.
United States. Department of State. Bureau of International Narcotics
Matters. International Narcotics Strategy Report March 1996.
Washington: GPO, 1996.
"Uzbekistan," Central Asia Monitor, 1996, No. 3,
entire issue.
Uzbekistan. State Committee on Projections and Statistics. Chislennost',
sostav i dvizheniye naseleniya Respubliki Uzbekistan (The Size,
Composition, and Movement of the Population of the Republic of
Uzbekistan). Tashkent: 1992.
Uzbekistan. State Committee on Projections and Statistics. Okhrana
zdorov'ya v respublike Uzbekistana (Health Protection in the
Republic of Uzbekistan). Tashkent: 1991.
Vaisman, Demian. "Regionalism and Clan Loyalty in the Political
Life of Uzbekistan." Pages 105-22 in Yaacov Ro'i, ed., Muslim
Eurasia: Conflicting Legacies. London: Frank Cass, 1995.
World Bank. Statistical Handbook 1995: States of the Former USSR.
Washington: 1995.
World Bank. Uzbekistan: An Agenda for Economic Reform.
Washington: 1993.
World Radio TV Handbook 1996. Ed., Andrew G. Sennitt.
Amsterdam: Billboard, 1996.
(Various issues of the following periodicals also were used in the
preparation of this chapter: Central Asian Monitor ; Christian
Science Monitor ; Foreign Broadcast Information Service, Daily
Report: Central Eurasia ; Jamestown Foundation, Monitor
and Prism; New York Times ; Transition ; and Washington
Post .)
Uzbekistan