[Congressional Record Volume 148, Number 98 (Thursday, July 18, 2002)]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Page E1297]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NEW ALLIES, OLD FORMULA
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HON. NORMAN D. DICKS
of washington
in the house of representatives
Thursday, July 18, 2002
Mr. DICKS. Mr. Speaker, I rise to express my deep concern about the
undemocratic and totalitarian actions of the President of Kazakhstan,
Nursultan Nazarbayev. He has recently banned several opposition
parties, arrested and exiled their leaders, and has made the formation
of new parties virtually impossible. He has shut down many newspapers
and television stations in Kazakhstan, preventing its citizens from
having a free press. Furthermore, President Nazarbayev has reportedly
placed $1 billion dollars of oil revenue into a secret Swiss bank
account.
This behavior should not be tolerated and I believe it is important
at this time to focus international attention on this situation.
President Nazarbayev needs to allow for all legitimate opposition
parties and their leaders to run for public office and allow for all
exiled political leaders to return to Kazakhstan. He must also allow
for a free press, the foundation of any democracy. President Nazarbayev
should be held accountable for widespread corruption, including the
placement of government funds into secret Swiss bank accounts. I am
asking that we insert into the Record a July 12th editorial written by
the Washington Post Editorial Board which more fully describes the
injustices currently occurring in Kazakhstan. [the article follows]
[The Washington Post--Friday, July 12, 2002]
New Allies, Old Formula
As the United States rushed to strengthen ties to the
countries of Central Asia after Sept. 11, one question that
quickly arose was whether the new military agreements and
economic packages would serve only to bolster the repressive
rule of the region's autocrats or whether U.S. influence
would also be used to bring about political and economic
reform. Some 10 months later the first answers are in, and
they are at best mixed. The region's most repressive ruler,
Islam Karimov of Uzbekistan, has also proved to be the one
most eager to forge a close relationship with Washington;
consequently, his government has responded to concerted
pressure from the Bush administration with a few modest
concessions and promises of more. Elsewhere, however, a
couple of new allies may have concluded that their new
utility as U.S. security partners empowers them to repress
their domestic opponents all the more forcefully.
Nursultan Nazarbayev, the president of Kazakhstan,
certainly seems untroubled by any imperative to accept
Western norms of democracy or human rights. Though his huge,
oil-rich country once appeared to be leading the former
Soviet republics of the region in reforming the old system,
it has, since Sept. 11, moved steadily in the opposite
direction. Mr. Nazarbayev, a former member of the Soviet
Politburo who took over Kazakhstan when it became independent
and has ruled it ever since, did not take kindly to the
formation of an opposition party by former government
officials late last year. He arrested and tried several of
its leaders, and recently he had his rubber-stamp parliament
pass a new law making the legal formation of such parties
virtually impossible. The president also did not like reading
reports in the Kazakh media about a secret Swiss bank account
in which he deposited $1 billion in oil revenue. A score of
newspapers and an equal number of television stations have
been forced to shut down in recent months, and a number of
journalists have been attacked or threatened.
Mr. Nazarbayev has arrogantly dismissed U.S. complaints
about his behavior, just as he has waved off suggestions that
he consider allowing more democracy. Instead, he seems to be
modeling himself on the longtime U.S. allies in the Persian
Gulf. Rather than reform, he signs drilling and pipeline
deals that will allow his country to rake in billions in oil
income; rather than respect human rights, he offers
cooperation with the U.S. military. Just this week his
government formalized an agreement with the Bush
administration that will allow emergency landings and
refuelings for U.S. military planes at Almaty's international
airport.
Bush administration officials say they understand that
accepting a relationship on such terms is more than a
political embarrassment. ``Authoritarian governments and
largely unreformed economies,'' Deputy Assistant Secretary of
State Lynn Pascoe told a recent congressional hearing,
``create the conditions of repression and poverty that could
well become the breeding grounds for further terrorism.'' The
question, then, is how to break the old model that Mr.
Nazarbayev would renew. As in the Persian Gulf, admonitions
from ambassadors, and even rhetoric from the White House,
will not be enough; Mr. Nazarbayev must understand that his
country's relationship with the United States depends on
political change. Does the Pentagon really need another
landing arrangement in Central Asia? If such agreements were
withheld--or frozen--Mr. Nazarbayev and other Central Asian
dictators would be quick to get the message.
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