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Asia / European Union / Turkmenistan
Thursday 7 July 2011 by International Partnership for Human Rights (IPHR) , Netherlands Helsinki Committee , Turkmen Initiative for Human Rights
6 July 2011
EU-Turkmenistan Human Rights Dialogue:
EU Should Call for Concrete Steps to Improve Civil Society Situation in Turkmenistan
Brussels, Vienna, The Hague 6 July 2011. Turkmen Initiative for Human Rights, International Partnership for Human Rights and the Netherlands Helsinki Committee urge the EU to raise concerns about persecution of civil society in an open and frank way during human rights talks with the Turkmen government this Friday. The EU should also make clear that failure to ensure real progress on this and other human rights issues will impact continued EU engagement with the country.
The EU has been holding annual Human Rights Dialogues with Turkmen authorities since 2008. A new round will take place in Brussels on 8 July. This meeting comes at a time when efforts to enhance EU-Turkmenistan relations are under way.
An Interim EU-Turkmenistan Trade Agreement (ITA) entered into force last August and is now in the process of being replaced by a broader Partnership and Cooperation Agreement (PCA) similar to those the EU has concluded with other countries. However, a vote on the PCA in the European Parliament has been postponed to September pending an investigation of the agreement’s human rights dimension. This decision was made after a parliament delegation visited Turkmenistan in late April and reported a lack of progress on key human rights criteria previously identified by the parliament. The parliament’s assent is needed to ratify the PCA.
Like other human rights NGOs, our organizations believe that the EU should require the Turkmen government to demonstrate concrete human rights improvements before moving ahead with the PCA. Given Turkmenistan’s dismal human rights record, ratification may otherwise signal that the EU is not serious in its efforts to promote human rights in this country and undermine the PCA’s human rights clause right from the start. This clause states that respect for human rights is an “essential element” of the agreement and allows either party to take “appropriate measures” in case of a breach of obligations by the other party. A similar clause included in the ITA has not been visibly enforced.
While Turkmenistan has seen a number of reform initiatives since current President Berdimuhamedov took office in 2007, most of these have only amounted to window-dressing with little practical impact. As a result, the human rights situation has remained largely unchanged. The environment for civil society remains extremely repressive and the rights to freedom of expression, association and assembly continue to be seriously curtailed.
As highlighted in a briefing note to the EU prepared by our organizations, no independent human rights NGOs are still able to work openly in Turkmenistan. Representatives of civil society who speak up about human rights problems or challenge government policies in other ways are intimidated and harassed by security services. They and their relatives are held under surveillance, summoned for interrogation in the form of “preventive discussions”, prohibited from traveling abroad, arrested, prosecuted and forcibly placed in psychiatric care.
Any attempts by civil society members to stage public protests are suppressed by authorities.
Recent examples of harassment include the following cases:
For more detailed information, as well as recommendations for measures the EU should request to improve the civil society situation in Turkmenistan, see our briefing note.