IWPR Home institute for war & peace reporting
   
 Advanced Search
building peace and democracy through free and fair media

Home
Programmes
Afghanistan
Afghan Recovery Report
Africa
Zimbabwe Crisis Reports
Caucasus
Caucasus Reporting Service
Cross Caucasus Network
Central Asia
Reporting Central Asia
News Briefing Central Asia
Human Rights Reporting
Central Asia Radio
International Justice
ICC - Africa Update
ICTY - Tribunal Update
Face à la Justice - RD Congo
Facing Justice - Uganda
On the Scale - Darfur
Iran
Mianeh Reports
Iraq
Iraqi Crisis Report
Pakistan
Open Minds
Philippines
Human Rights Reporting
Syria
Syria News Briefing
Multimedia
Resources
Books
Training
IWPR Comment
Kurt Schork Awards
Photo Galleries
Sahar Fund
Past Programmes
Past Publications
CIJ Trial Reports Archive
Links
RSS Feeds
Other IWPR sites
Academy
Mianeh
Open Minds Pakistan
Regional Media Network
Rights Reporting
IWPR on acebook
witter
 



 NBCentralAsia   English   Russian   Uzbek   Turkmen
NBCentralAsia draws together a diverse network of journalists to provide daily news analysis
NOTE TO READERS Established in 2006, News Briefing Central Asia was conceived as a news analysis and comment service drawing on the expertise of a broad range of political observers across the region to contribute to greater public awareness of issues affecting the region. The stories produced were taken up in large numbers by local media outlets.

The project halted in September 2007 but with new funding the service is resuming, covering only Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan for the moment. IWPR is actively seeking further support to take forward the next stage of this innovative web-based news analysis service.
 
Uzbekistan

 

Government Clamps Down on Cotton Pickers

Russian   Uzbek

20-Sep-07


Uzbekistan’s National Security Service has been ordered to join the uniformed police in supervising the autumn cotton harvest. NBCentralAsia analysts see this as a sign that the government is tightening up controls ahead of a December presidential election.

The Fergana.ru agency reported on September 14 that the National Security Service or SNB was on hand to ensure university students and secondary school children turned out for the harvest.

A new system is in place where harvesters are organised into groups which have a policeman and someone from the prosecution service attached to them to ensure they do their work.

Students and schoolchildren have always been used as free labour for the cotton harvest, but while the police presence is nothing new, the deployment of SNB officers is.

A student from Andijan told Fergana.ru that policemen were collecting people like him and sending them off to the fields.

“They have special people with them who photograph us to ensure no one skips off work. Bogus sick-notes don’t help any more,” said the student.

Uzbekistan is the world’s second largest exporter of raw cotton, selling 1.5 million tons on the global market every year.

Popular unrest sparked mainly by spiralling consumer prices cannot be ruled out, analysts say. And Uzbekistan is due to hold a presidential election in December.

“The tightening up is obvious to see,” said one observer in the Fergana Valley. “They have no other option – they need to maintain tight control to make sure disgruntled members of the public don’t take it into their heads to interfere with one of the country’s most valuable assets.”

By contrast, NBCentralAsia analyst Shahriyor Rahimov argues that the authorities’ real aim is to prevent people going off and working in Kazakstan, where cotton pickers earn much more.

Manual pickers earn the equivalent of between five and seven US cents for every kilogram of cotton they gather, although the authorities have promised to increase this rate by 20 per cent this year. Currently, though, the rate works out at 50 to 70 dollars a ton, compared with an export price of 1,000 dollars a ton earned by the state.

The cotton crop currently covers 1.4 million hectares of land, and this year’s harvest is expected to be around one million tons.

At an international cotton and textiles conference in Tashkent last week, Uzbekistan signed export contracts for around 600,000 tons of raw cotton.

(NBCentralAsia draws comment and analysis from a broad range of political observers across the region.)



to top
NBCA home


© Institute for War & Peace Reporting
48 Gray's Inn Road, London WC1X 8LT, UK
Tel: +44 (0)20 7831 1030    Fax: +44 (0)20 7831 1050

The opinions expressed in IWPR Online are those of the authors and do not
necessarily represent those of the Institute for War and Peace Reporting.

Registered as a charity in the United Kingdom (charity reg. no: 1027201, company reg. no: 2744185)