Islom Karimov

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Islom Abdug‘aniyevich Karimov
Islom Karimov

Incumbent
Assumed office 
December 29, 1991
(Acting President until January 22, 2008)
Prime Minister Abdulxashim Mutalov
O‘tkir Sultonov
Shavkat Mirziyoyev

In office
June 23, 1989 – December 29, 1991
Preceded by Rafiq Nishonov
Succeeded by Islom Karimov as President of Uzbekistan

Born 30 January 1938 (1938-01-30) (age 69)
Samarkand, Uzbek SSR
Soviet Union
Nationality Uzbek
Political party OKP
(before 1991)
FMDP
(1991-2007)
O’ZLIDEP
(since 2007)
Spouse Tatyana Karimova

Islom Abdug‘aniyevich Karimov (in cyrillic Uzbek: Ислом Абдуғаниевич Каримов ; in Russian: Ислам Абдуганиевич Каримов Islam Abduganiyevich Karimov) (born on 30 January 1938) has served as the President of Uzbekistan since 1991.

Karimov was born in Samarkand, Uzbek SSR, Soviet Union. He is half-Uzbek, from his father's side, and half-Tajik from his mother's side. He grew up in a Soviet state-orphanage. Later he studied engineering and economics in Tashkent.

Contents

Karimov became an official in the Communist Party of the USSR, becoming the party's First Secretary in Uzbekistan in 1989. On 24 March 1990 he became President of the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic. He declared Uzbekistan an independent nation on 31 August 1991. He won Uzbekistan's first presidential election on 29 December with 86% of the vote. The elections were called unfair, with state-run propaganda and a falsified vote count, although the opposing candidate and leader of the Erk (Freedom) Party, Muhammad Solih, had a chance to participate. Shortly after the elections, a harsh political clampdown forced opposition leaders into exile, while many have been issued long-term prison sentences and a few have disappeared.[citation needed]

In 1995, Karimov extended his term until 2000 through a widely criticized referendum, and he was re-elected with 91.9% of the vote on January 9, 2000. The United States said that this election "was neither free nor fair and offered Uzbekistan's voters no true choice"[1]. The sole opposition candidate, Abdulhasiz Jalalov, admitted that he entered the race only to make it seem democratic and he voted for Karimov. On January 27, 2002, Karimov won another referendum extending the length of presidential terms from five to seven years; Karimov's present term, formerly due to end in 2005, was subsequently extended by parliament, which scheduled the next elections for December 2007.

After the September 11, 2001 attacks Uzbekistan was considered a strategic ally in the United States' "War on Terrorism" campaign because of a mutual opposition to the Taliban. Uzbekistan hosted an 800-strong U.S. troop presence at the Karshi-Khanabad base, also known as "K2", which supported U.S.-led efforts in the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan.[2] This move was criticized by Human Rights Watch which said the U.S. government subordinated the promotion of human rights to assistance in the War in Afghanistan. U.S.-Uzbek relations deteriorated in May 2005 when the U.S. government criticized the Uzbek government's reaction to protests in Andijan. In July of 2005 U.S. military forces left Karshi-Khanabad.[3]

Karimov has mobilized against the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and Hizb-ut-Tahrir, Islamist organizations the government has designated as terrorist.[4]. The Uzbek government sentenced Tohir Yo‘ldosh and Juma Namangani, leaders of the IMU, to death in absentia.[5] Namangani died in Afghanistan in 2001 but Tohir Yo‘ldosh is still alive.[6]

Karimov is seeking another term in the December 2007 presidential election, despite arguments that he is ineligible due to the two-term limit on the presidency. On November 6, 2007, Karimov accepted the nomination of the Uzbekistan Liberal Democratic Party to run for a third term.[7] On November 19, the Central Election Commission announced the approval of Karimov's candidacy,[8] a decision that Karimov's opponents condemned as illegal.[9]

Following the election on December 23, preliminary official results showed Karimov winning with 88.1% of the vote, on a turnout rate that was placed at 90.6%. Observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe criticized the election as lacking a "genuine choice", although observers from the Commonwealth of Independent States and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization gave it a positive assessment.[10]

The international community has repeatedly criticized the Karimov administration's record on human rights and press freedom. In particular, Craig Murray, the British Ambassador from 2002 to 2004, wrote about financial corruption and human rights abuses during his term in office and later in his memoirs Murder in Samarkand [11], pointing to reports of boiling people to death. The United Nations found torture "institutionalized, systematic, and rampant" in Uzbekistan's judicial system.[12]

Karimov's wife, Tatyana Akbarovna Karimova, is an economist.[13] They have two daughters and three grandchildren. His elder daughter, Gulnara Karimova, serves as an advisor for Uzbekistan's ambassador to Russia and is believed to have built an extensive business empire that includes the largest wireless telephone operator in the country, night clubs, and a large cement factory.[14]

Preceded by
Rafiq Nishonov
General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Uzbek SSR
1989 – 1991
Succeeded by
party dissolved
Preceded by
Position created
President of Uzbekistan
1991–
Succeeded by
Incumbent
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