Oct 172018
 

After the capture of Central Asia, the communists of Moscow immediately divided the local Turkic population into separate nations with separate states, and separate Turkic languages were designed with new letters based on Cyrillic. All the natural resources of the region were taken over by the communist government of Moscow, and the local population was turned into completely dependent disunited employees. Any form of free association, even religious, was brutally suppressed by the communist regime of the USSR.

After the collapse of the USSR, the Communist Party of Uzbekistan, led by Islam Karimov, seized power in the country. The numerous opposition movement “Birlik” that was formed at that time was less organized. This opposition had few supporters of the liberal economic development of Uzbekistan with a priority of private ownership over state ownership, and there were many supporters of preserving in Uzbekistan the state domination over society and the authoritarian methods of governing the country. This was enshrined in the Constitution of the Karimov regime, preserved after the death of the dictator Karimov.

Therefore, in Uzbekistan, the Soviet model of the economy is still preserved in the government. The local national security service also dominates, which continued to implement the ideology of the KGB of the USSR and harshly suppressed any socio-economic associations of Uzbekistan’s inhabitants.

For example, in 2005, the socio-economic movement “Akromia” was severely suppressed in Uzbekistan. The participants of this movement independently formed a very effective network of economic cooperation and mutual assistance, very suitable for the densely populated regions of Uzbekistan.

The bloody events of 2010 in the Fergana Valley of Kyrgyzstan were also provoked by the special services of Uzbekistan to destroy a rapidly developing local independent Uzbek community. The Uzbeks in Kyrgyzstan, like other citizens of this country, received ownership of irrigated land and therefore began to develop into independent owners in a community of other owners. As a result, an independent economic community of Uzbeks was formed in Kyrgyzstan. This alarmed the Karimov regime, and its security services skillfully provoked bloody ethnic clashes in 2010, and this community of Uzbeks in Kyrgyzstan was destroyed.

In Uzbekistan, it is still possible to form a political nation of Uzbeks. To do this, it is necessary to change the state ideology of Uzbekistan and fix in it the priority of the property of numerous private entrepreneurs.

It is also necessary to organize the training of schoolchildren in Uzbekistan in law and political science for the formation of independent legal and political thinking.

Akhtam Shaymardan Bulgar                                                                                                      

California.

When working on this text was used translate.google.com

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.