Friday, June 30, 2006

Wisdom from a Mother

When I first went to school, my mom gave me this piece of advice: One way to know where a person is at is by studying their friends. Who do they hang out with, who do they defend, and what kind of people are they??

If you were to apply that to President McChimpy on a worldwide scale, you would see a very long list of totalitarian governments. Possibly the worst of the lot would be Uzbekistan.

Ted Rall has this to report about our earstwhile ally:

Exceptionally violent and corrupt even by Central Asian standards, the government of Uzbekistan is proof that a ruler can remain in power despite the near-universal contempt of his subjects."

Karimov's police state is pervasive and brutal. Torture is endemic; the battered bodies of political prisoners are returned to their families showing clear proof that they have been boiled to death. Only one candidate, Abdulhasiz Dzhalalov, was allowed to run against the autocratic Karimov in the most recent presidential "election." Dzhalalov announced that he had voted for Karimov.

After 9/11, however, the U.S. ignored numerous reports of Uzbek atrocities--some authored by its own State Department--and began paying Karimov millions of dollars in exchange for hosting a permanent American military base on Uzbek soil. "The expanded relationship," writes The New York Times, "was both praised as realpolitik strategy and criticized as a shortsighted gesture of support for a dictator with a chilling human rights record."

Bush's pact with the devil came due on May 13, 2005, when thousands of protesters gathered in Bobur Square in the southern city of Andijon to complain about corruption, the shattered Uzbek economy and to demand the release of political prisoners. "We hoped the local government would come to hear our grievances," a man named Dolim told The Guardian. "People said even Karimov himself would come. We went because of unemployment, low salaries not paid, pensions not received."

Indeed, Karimov did go to Andijon--to personally supervise the massacre of the demonstrators.

Uzbek security forces firing automatic weapons killed an estimated one thousand people over the course of 90 minutes. "The dead were lying in front of me piled three-thick," said a survivor. "At one point, I passed out. When I regained consciousness, it was raining--on the ground, I could see water running with blood." He survived by hiding under corpses. "Dead people everywhere, and some alive, just moving. I felt sick, because of all the things splattered on my clothes. I went into the college and saw the armored personnel carriers moving over the bodies. They wanted to kill anyone who was wounded. Soldiers walked down the sidewalk, firing single shots at anyone moving."


If these are now our FRIENDS.....


Ted Rall's article is here

3 Comments:

Blogger andi said...

hey, SB. so where's the other story, you know, the one the MSM isn't reporting? all the good stuff coming out of Uzbekistan?

what? you say there really isn't much good stuff coming out of Uzbekistan? but how do you know, you're not there, right?

ANYWAY. i'm incredibly tired of this argument. i'm even getting it from my husband now and it's frankly pissing me off so much i can't have a reasonable conversation without getting my knickers in a twist about it.

it's as if the atrocities are balanced out by the good. 'cause you know, even if the good stuff is happening and does exist - the bad shit is still going on. and NOTHING can make that OK.

babbling. sorry.

hope you're feeling better.

11:55 AM, June 30, 2006  
Blogger TFLS said...

Sorry to hear you are still under the weather. A little suggestion on the meds - I'm allergic to synthetic codeine products (most people are my doctor tells me). So I need to take Benedryl with them to suppress the reaction. Without it, I itch like mad and get really nauseous and dizzy. I don't know if it would help - but sometimes a person really needs pain meds. Without the Benedryl I'd be screwed.

As for Uzbekistan - Bush is probably using their prisons to torture prisoners at. By the way - did you hear about those soldiers being charged with rape and murder in Iraq? Well - it was the same unit as those two American soldiers who were kidnapped and tortured to death. The military found out about the rape because a young soldier receiving council for the death of his comrades broke down and confessed. Evidently he thinks the two men who were kidnapped and killed were targeted because of the rape. The report I heard did not say if the men who were killed had participated in the rape/murder - just that they belonged to the same unit. If they were innocent – it makes what happened to them that much worse. Because it may never have occurred if not for the actions of their comrades in arms.

This is the legacy of George Bush. I blame him directly. He cozies up to rouge nations like Uzbekistan, ignores human rights abuses, condones torture - making it seem OK for our own soldiers in the field to commit similar atrocities. And what happens? We become even greater targets than we were before 9/11. The whole world has gone mad.

11:36 PM, June 30, 2006  
Blogger SB Gypsy said...

I directly blame Bush, and Cheney the more so, because I believe he is the instigator. Bush just strikes me as a lazy rich kid who is wholly out of his depth, and who has no morals at all. I thought the same as you when I realised that the two soldiers were in the same unit as the rapists. Not only is this war destroying Iraq, it's destroying our military, and it's destroying the moral fiber of our nation. I despair that these evil bastards will ever be brought to justice, and even if they were to be, it won't help the hundreds of thousands who have lost life property and have been maimed and tortured in the course of these oil wars. With all of our intelligence, the human race is like rats in a cage, tearing at each other rather than finding a way to share resources and technologies.

1:00 PM, July 01, 2006  

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