Evaluering fra Europa-Parlamentet af EU's menneskerettighedspolitik og engagement i Centralasien

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    Evaluering fra Europa-Parlamentet af EU's menneskerettighedspolitik og engagement i Centralasien.pdf

    https://www.ft.dk/samling/20131/almdel/OSCE/bilag/28/1346122.pdf

    OSCEs Parlamentariske Forsamling 2013-14
    OSCE Alm.del Bilag 28
    Offentligt (02)
    EXPO/B/DROI/2013/21 March 2014
    PE 433.788 EN
    DIRECTORATE-GENERAL FOR EXTERNAL POLICIES OF THE UNION
    DIRECTORATE B
    POLICY DEPARTMENT
    STUDY
    EVALUATION OF THE EU'S HUMAN RIGHTS POLICIES AND
    ENGAGEMENT IN CENTRAL ASIA
    Abstract
    EU relations with the five Central Asian countries were upgraded in 2007 through the
    establishment of the ‘EU and Central Asia: Strategy for New Partnership’. This brought
    about hope for a meaningful and coherent EU engagement in the region. One of the EU’s
    main priorities in Central Asia is to advance and promote human rights, good
    governance, the rule of law, and democratisation. This objective has been supported by
    various policy and financial instruments. While the overall financial assistance, and in
    particular funding for democracy- and human rights-related projects, remains limited,
    the existing support has mostly sought to tackle technical problems in the judicial sector,
    including prison reform, leaving deeper shortcomings in the promotion and protection
    of human rights untouched. So far, the EU has had little impact on Central Asia’s human
    rights record, due to the region’s deeply embedded authoritarian rule, as well as the EU’s
    limited leverage and its own inconsistencies and inadequate follow-up in implementing
    values-related policies and projects.
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    2
    This study was requested by the European Parliament's Subcommittee on Human Rights.
    AUTHORS:
    Fundación para las Relaciones Internacionales y el Diálogo Exterior (FRIDE), SPAIN:
    Jos BOONSTRA (ed.) is senior researcher at FRIDE and EUCAM head of programme, SPAIN
    Tika TSERTSVADZE is FRIDE advocacy officer and EUCAM programme manager, SPAIN
    Vera AXYONOVA is a researcher at the Centre for Intercultural and European Studies at Fulda
    University of Applied Sciences and EUCAM associate researcher, GERMANY
    ADMINISTRATOR RESPONSIBLE:
    Benjamin REY
    Directorate-General for External Policies of the Union
    Policy Department
    WIB 06 M 81
    rue Wiertz 60
    B-1047 Brussels
    Editorial Assistant: Pia VANNESTE
    LINGUISTIC VERSION
    Original: EN
    ABOUT THE EDITOR
    Editorial closing date: 11 March 2014.
    © European Union, 2014
    Printed in Belgium
    ISBN: 978-92-823-5471-1
    Doi: 10.2861/55056
    The Information Note is available on the Internet at
    http://www.europarl.europa.eu/activities/committees/studies.do?language=EN
    If you are unable to download the information you require, please request a paper copy
    by e-mail : poldep-expo@europarl.europa.eu
    DISCLAIMER
    Any opinions expressed in this document are the sole responsibility of the author and do not
    necessarily represent the official position of the European Parliament.
    Reproduction and translation, except for commercial purposes, are authorised, provided the source is
    acknowledged and provided the publisher is given prior notice and supplied with a copy of the
    publication.
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    3
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    LIST OF FIGURES 4
    LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS 5
    EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 6
    1. PURPOSE AND SCOPE OF THE STUDY 7
    2. PRESSING HUMAN RIGHTS MATTERS IN CENTRAL ASIA 9
    2.1 KAZAKHSTAN 9
    2.2 KYRGYZSTAN 10
    2.3 TAJIKISTAN 10
    2.4 TURKMENISTAN 11
    2.5 UZBEKISTAN 12
    3. EU POLICY INSTRUMENTS AND HUMAN RIGHTS PROMOTION 13
    3.1 HUMAN RIGHTS DIALOGUES AND CIVIL SOCIETY SEMINARS 13
    3.2 EU STATEMENTS ON KAZAKHSTAN 15
    3.3 EU STATEMENTS ON KYRGYZSTAN 16
    3.4 EU STATEMENTS ON TAJIKISTAN 17
    3.5 EU STATEMENTS ON TURKMENISTAN 18
    3.6 UZBEKISTAN 19
    4. EU FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS AND HUMAN RIGHTS PROMOTION 21
    4.1 THE DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION INSTRUMENT (DCI) 21
    4.2 EUROPEAN INSTRUMENT FOR DEMOCRACY AND HUMAN RIGHTS (EIDHR) 26
    4.3 NON-STATE ACTORS AND LOCAL AUTHORITIES IN DEVELOPMENT (NSA-LA) 28
    4.4 INSTITUTION BUILDING AND PARTNERSHIP PROGRAMME (IBPP) 28
    4.5 INSTRUMENT FOR STABILITY (IFS) 29
    5. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THE EU 31
    5.1 POLICY INSTRUMENTS 31
    5.2 FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS 32
    6. CONCLUSION 34
    7. ANNEX I: EU PUBLIC STATEMENTS CONCERNING CENTRAL ASIA 35
    8. ANNEX II: OVERVIEW OF EIDHR GRANTS TO CENTRAL ASIA 38
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    4
    LIST OF FIGURES
    Figure 1: Thematic areas financed through the EIDHR in Kazakhstan in 2007 and 2009 .......................... 27
    Figure 2: Thematic areas financed through the EIDHR in Kyrgyzstan from 2007 to 2011.......................... 27
    Figure 3: Thematic areas financed through the EIDHR in Tajikistan in 2007, 2009, and 2010.................. 28
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    5
    LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
    AAP Annual Action Programme
    CBSS Country Based Support Schemes
    COHOM Council Working Party on Human Rights
    CoE Council of Europe
    CSO Civil Society Organisation
    DCI Development Cooperation Instrument
    DG DEVCO Directorate General for Development and Cooperation
    EEAS European External Action Service
    EIDHR European Instrument for Democracy and Human Rights
    EP European Parliament
    EU European Union
    EUCAM Europe-Central Asia Monitoring programme
    HRW Human Rights Watch
    IBPP Institution Building and Partnership Programme
    IfS Instrument for Stability
    ILO International Labour Organisation
    NGO Non-Governmental Organisation
    NSA-LA Non-State Actors and Local Authorities in Development
    OHCHR Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights
    OSCE Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe
    PCA Partnership and Cooperation Agreements
    PI Partnership Instrument
    SSR Security Sector Reform
    TACIS Technical Aid to the Commonwealth of Independent States
    UN United Nations
    UNDP United Nations Development Programme
    UPR Universal Periodic Review
    VC Venice Commission
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    6
    EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
    In 2007 the European Union (EU) launched ‘The EU and Central Asia: Strategy for New Partnership’, a
    regional non-legally binding framework document that defines the EU’s key priorities in the five Central
    Asian countries. Human rights, rule of law, good governance, and democratisation constitute the first of
    seven priorities outlined. The strategy has established regular human rights dialogues with the Central
    Asian states with the aim of enhancing cooperation over the issue and raising concerns, with a view to
    improving the human rights situation in the region. The EU also seeks to address human rights through
    public statements and ‘quiet diplomacy’ with the Central Asian states. In order to meet the established
    objectives, the EU provides assistance to Central Asian governments and civil society through the
    Development Cooperation Instrument (DCI), the European Instrument for Democracy and Human
    Rights (EIDHR), the Non-State Actors and Local Authorities in Development (NSA-LA), the Institution
    Building and Partnership Programme (IBPP), and the Instrument for Stability (IfS).
    The overall human rights situation in Central Asia has not improved over the last decade. On the
    contrary, several regimes have harnessed their rule through further restrictions on basic and universal
    freedoms. Kazakhstan, for instance, has not progressed in terms of human rights or democratic
    development regardless of the commitments it undertook in the run-up to its chairmanship of the
    Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in 2010. Kyrgyzstan is a positive exception,
    as the country went through considerable changes in 2010, adopting a new constitution and moving
    from a presidential to a parliamentary system. However, while the government seeks to implement
    democratic and economic reforms, concerns remain about human rights offences, largely related to the
    2010 ethnic clashes between the Kyrgyz and Uzbek populations in the south. Tajikistan is the poorest
    country in the region and faces instability and severe security challenges. The regime struggles to
    exercise control over the country and human rights violations are commonplace, ranging from offences
    committed by security forces to the curtailment of political and religious freedoms. Uzbekistan is a well-
    known human rights offender, especially after the 2005 Andijan events in which hundreds of civilians
    lost their lives. Uzbekistan’s human rights record is amongst the worst not only in Central Asia but also
    worldwide. Turkmenistan is extremely authoritarian and is considered one of the most closed countries
    in the world. Its human rights situation is problematic in all aspects, while the government remains
    unreceptive to any outside criticism.
    Against this background, it is extremely difficult for the EU to promote democracy and defend human
    rights. The EU has little leverage in the region. Unlike with the countries included in the Eastern
    Partnership (EaP), the EU can offer neither political and economic associations nor visa free travel to
    Central Asian countries. Moreover, Central Asia does not feature high on the European agenda. When it
    does receive attention, however, the EU seeks carefully to balance its values-promotion with its energy
    and security interests in the region. Whereas EU relations with Central Asia have expanded substantially
    since 2007, results in the field of human rights and democracy are minor. This applies to individual high-
    level human rights cases, as well as long-term democratic reform and an independent rule of law.
    This briefing paper presents six conclusions/recommendations to help strengthen EU policy and
    funding in the field of human rights in Central Asia, as well as concerning broader democracy
    promotion and the rule of law:
     The human rights dialogues should not be stand-alone events, but be part of a comprehensive
    EU engagement in Central Asia. At the same time, the civil society seminars, which so far have
    had different levels of impact in the Central Asian countries, need to be intensified in the
    countries where they can make a difference.
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    7
     The EU’s quiet diplomacy needs to be matched with public diplomacy: consistency, thorough
    follow-up, and streamlined approaches to the political situation on the ground need to be
    strengthened for the EU’s human rights policy to have a bearing on Central Asia.
     The EU should increasingly cooperate and coordinate with various regional and international
    organisations.
     Cooperation programmes on good governance, democracy, human rights, and the rule of law
    need to be extended beyond the governmental level and more civil society engagement is
    necessary to foster growth and influence of local civil societies.
     Grants to civil society organisations (CSO) in Central Asia should focus on fewer priority areas,
    while more emphasis needs to be placed on monitoring and evaluation projects that can boost
    European understanding of the human rights conditions in Central Asia and build local CSO
    capacities.
     Assistance to official institutions needs to be further country-tailored to ensure that programmes
    on judicial, prison or parliamentary reform, as well as broader human rights programmes, can
    have the desired short-term practical and long-term reform-oriented impact.
    In addition to the difficult context in which the EU has to operate, two aspects in particular help explain
    the EU’s lack of results in promoting human rights in Central Asia. First, EU public diplomacy tends to
    refer to human rights and democratic reform in general, rather than raising specific issues, while at the
    same time lacking coherence and follow-up. Consequently, hardly any specific human rights issue has
    been taken up seriously or has been solved. Second, overall financial assistance, and in particular in
    terms of democracy and human rights, is limited, not always well targeted, and frequently aimed at
    achieving quantifiable results rather than deep rooted democratic transformations. Prospects for
    democratic change and an improvement of human rights to meet international standards look dim in
    Central Asia. However, the EU could make a difference if it starts to apply better-tailored policy and
    financial instruments, has a consistent democracy and human rights agenda focused on concrete cases,
    and keeps long-term democratic reform in mind.
    1. PURPOSE AND SCOPE OF THE STUDY
    This briefing paper was commissioned by the European Parliament (EP), with a view to evaluate the EU's
    human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia. Since the adoption of the 2007 EU Strategy for
    Central Asia, no open evaluation of the EU’s support to human rights promotion and protection has
    taken place. Whereas the three EU Council/Commission progress reports mention human rights, a more
    in-depth assessment has been lacking; this especially applies to the EU’s financial instruments, of which
    most figures have not been publicly available. This study seeks to fill this gap by scrutinising the EU’s
    engagement to date, with a specific focus on post-2007 developments and on the support provided to
    Central Asia’s civil societies. Particularly, it assesses the performance of the EU’s financial and policy
    instruments in terms of their relevance to the human rights situation in the region and their ability to
    tackle core problems in the countries concerned.
    Section 2 provides an overview of the most pressing human rights concerns in each of the five Central
    Asian states. The analysis is based on views of Central Asian human rights activists; monitoring of media
    outlets; and a review of recent human rights reports by leading national and international human rights
    watchdogs (Freedom House, Human Rights Watch, and Amnesty International, as well as Central Asian
    human rights organisations and reports produced for the US Congress).
    Section 3 looks at the performance of EU policy instruments. The EU has several human rights tools in
    Central Asia, including decisions, council conclusions, restrictive measures (sanctions), statements and
    declarations, demarches, and political dialogues. As the use of these instruments generally does not
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    8
    envisage explicit objectives or benchmarks (with the exception of sanctions), it is difficult to assess their
    effectiveness in achieving specific human rights objectives. Moreover, some of these instruments, such
    as high-level political meetings or human rights dialogues, take place behind closed doors, as part of
    the EU’s quiet diplomacy, and thus the only sources of information about their use are EU public
    statements and press releases. EU statements and Council Conclusions adopted in 2007–13 were
    scrutinised (see Annex I) to evaluate the consistency of the EU’s messages and their follow-up. The
    analysis focuses predominantly on the EU’s approach and not on Central Asian governments’
    responses.
    In section 4, the EU’s financial instruments that apply to Central Asia and that could be used to support
    human rights are examined. The fields of democracy support, good governance, and rule of law are also
    taken into account due to their interconnectedness with human rights through EU funding. The section
    draws on data included in the EUCAM factsheet ‘Mapping EU development aid to Central Asia’,
    published in July 20131
    . Additional information was gathered through desk research and a series of
    interviews with EU officials in Brussels and EU delegations in Central Asia. Annex II includes EIDHR
    grants for the period 2007–11. The funded programmes are evaluated in terms of their relevance to the
    situation on the ground and their potential (or inability) to tackle the most pressing human rights
    concerns in Central Asia.
    A final section provides policy recommendations that could be used by the EU to strengthen its human
    rights promotion and protection efforts in Central Asia.
    This report is the result of a team effort by three researchers who are closely involved in FRIDE’s Europe-
    Central Asia Monitoring (EUCAM) programme. Through EUCAM, the authors made several trips to
    Central Asia and have carried out in-depth research and analyses on Central Asian political, economic
    and societal developments, as well as on international policies towards the region, in particular those of
    the EU and its member states. In this sense, the report builds on the knowledge acquired through
    interviews, meetings, and conferences over the last five years in Central Asia and Brussels, and on
    information gathered through desk research. For this specific briefing paper, additional written and
    personal interviews were held with EU officials in Brussels and at EU delegations in Central Asia, and
    with representatives from Central Asian and European human rights organisations. The authors would
    like to thank the interviewees for their valuable input. Responsibility for the arguments put forward in
    this study remains with the authors alone.
    1
    T. Tsertsvadze and J. Boonstra, ‘Mapping EU Development Aid to Central Asia’, EUCAM Factsheet 1, 18 July 2013, available
    at: http://www.eucentralasia.eu/uploads/tx_icticontent/EUCAM-FS-1-EN.pdf
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    9
    2. PRESSING HUMAN RIGHTS MATTERS IN CENTRAL ASIA
    2.1 Kazakhstan
    In Kazakhstan, human rights are foremost curtailed through state control over citizens and their
    participation in public life. This mainly applies to freedom of speech, press, assembly, religion, and
    association. It is accompanied by the lack of an independent judiciary, widespread corruption, and
    unlawful practices by law enforcement bodies, such as arbitrary arrests and detentions, torture, and
    infringements on citizens’ privacy rights. Kazakhstan’s steep economic growth over the past few years
    has brought some positive social and economic developments for the average population and has
    made the government more sensitive to outside criticism concerning its democratic and human rights
    credentials. But regime security still prevails and human rights offences are structural in nature.
    In 2010, Kazakhstan held the OSCE chairmanship, after making several commitments to implement
    political reforms to improve democratic governance and the electoral and judicial systems. However,
    efforts have been superficial and have not led to the establishment of a genuine system of checks and
    balances. The country’s political landscape remains dominated by President Nursultan Nazarbayev, who
    has been in power for over 20 years and since 2010 enjoys the status of ‘Leader of the Nation’.
    In preparation for the OSCE chairmanship, the government adopted a National Human Rights Action
    Plan for 2009–12. However, according to leading Kazakh human rights non-governmental organisations
    (NGOs), only about 23% of its recommendations have been implemented, while in some areas the
    human rights situation has even deteriorated2
    . Over the last few years, more restrictive legislation
    regarding national security, religion, and the Internet has been introduced. Meanwhile, the end of 2011
    was marked by a crackdown on oil workers’ protests in the western city of Zhanaozen, which left 14
    dead and over 100 injured and was characterised by observers as the country’s ‘worst violence since
    independence’3
    . A series of arrests, with multiple reports of abuse and torture in custody, followed. In
    early 2012, dozens of workers and activists were convicted for instigating violence, including opposition
    leader Vladimir Kozlov, who remained in prison at the time of writing. Freedom of expression was
    further tightened through the banning of several media outlets critical of the authorities’ actions in
    Zhanaozen.
    Currently, a number of Kazakhstani dissidents residing in Europe in self-imposed exile face potential
    extradition and prosecution on what are seemingly politically motivated charges4
    . Amongst them,
    Mukhtar Ablyazov, a former energy minister and banker and a long-time critic of President Nazarbayev,
    has been held in custody in France since July 2013. In January 2014, a French court ruled that he should
    be extradited to Russia or Ukraine, where he is also accused of embezzlement and financial fraud5
    .
    Ablyazov has appealed this ruling.
    2
    Final Review on Implementation of the National Action Plan for Human Rights for 2009-2012 by the Republic of
    Kazakhstan, available at: http://www.bureau.kz/news/download/362.pdf
    3
    J. Lillis, ‘Kazakhstan: Violence in Zhanaozen Threatens Nazarbayev Legacy’, Eurasianet, 21 December 2011, available at:
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/64745
    4
    A. Koj, ‘Kazakhstan using Interpol to chase dissidents in EU’, EUobserver, 4 September 2013, available at:
    HTTP://EUOBSERVER.COM/OPINION/121311
    5
    J.-F. Rosnoblet, ‘French court rule Kazakh dissident should be extradited’, NBC News, 9 January 2014, available at:
    http://www.nbcnews.com/id/54021053/ns/world_news-europe/#.Uv4vdYWt0Q0
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    10
    2.2 Kyrgyzstan
    Among the Central Asian republics, Kyrgyzstan is commonly seen as the most open to democratic
    reforms and to accepting universal human rights principles. The political course followed by the
    country’s leadership during the first years of independence allowed for the development of an
    independent media, civil society organisations and a relatively strong activist culture. After these initial
    liberal years, the tightening of citizens’ rights and freedoms, growing corruption, social disparities and
    elite rivalries in particular resulted in two government overthrows in 2005 and 2010. The latter led to the
    adoption of a new constitution and the introduction of Central Asia’s first parliamentary system.
    In June 2010, Kyrgyzstan witnessed deadly inter-ethnic clashes that brought to the surface long-existing
    tensions between the Kyrgyz and Uzbek communities in the south of the country. Some 470 people
    were reportedly killed, thousands wounded and over 400 000 displaced, with the Uzbek minority being
    the most affected. Kyrgyz security forces largely failed quickly to stop the outbreak of violence and
    reportedly took sides in the conflict. Their actions during and in the aftermath of the clashes were
    characterised by the use of illegal and abusive practices, including beatings, looting of houses, arbitrary
    ethnic-based arrests, and torture in custody6
    .
    Currently, the most pressing human rights issues are related to continued ethnic tensions, especially in
    the south of the country. These are accompanied by the denial of due process and the lack of
    accountability in judicial proceedings in connection to the 2010 events. The government’s inability to
    hold to account those responsible for the killings and destruction three years after the events
    undermines its legitimacy and popular trust in the existing justice system.
    Kyrgyz law provides for freedom of association and of expression. However, while the government
    generally respects these rights, occasional cases of pressure against NGOs, human rights activists, and
    journalists who write about sensitive issues (such as the 2010 ethnic conflict) or criticise certain public
    figures have been reported. In September 2010, Azimjan Askarov, a prominent human rights defender
    and a once outspoken critic of police brutality was convicted and sentenced to life in prison in a process
    marred with multiple violations. Despite numerous calls from international human rights organisations
    for the Kyrgyz authorities to review his case, the government remains unwilling. In this context, self-
    censorship due to fear of being targeted by state institutions is a recurrent issue7
    . A recent report by
    Human Rights Watch (HRW) has highlighted several cases of aggression and extortion by the police of
    gay and bisexual men in Kyrgyzstan; a phenomenon that is most likely commonplace in other Central
    Asian countries too8
    .
    2.3 Tajikistan
    Tajikistan is the poorest country in the region, and is particularly prone to conflict due to several
    security challenges, ranging from poverty to extreme Islamism and from authoritarian rule to porous
    borders with Afghanistan. The country went through a high-intensity civil war in the 1990s and in
    recent years has been startled several times by violent clashes, such as those in the Rasht Valley in
    2010 and in Gorno-Badakhshan province in 2012. The authorities’ response during these events was
    characterised by a lack of capacity and unlawful practices by the security forces, including
    6
    Report of the International Independent Commission of Inquiry into the Events in Southern Kyrgyzstan in June 2010, May
    2011, available at: http://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/Full_Report_490.pdf
    7
    J. Nichol, ‘Kyrgyzstan: Recent Development and U.S. Interests’, CRS Report for Congress, 30 August 2013, available at:
    http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/97-690.pdf
    8
    Human Rights Watch, ‘They said we deserved this. Police violence against gay and bisexual men in Kyrgyzstan’, January
    2014, available at: http://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/reports/kyrgyz0114_forUpload.pdf
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    11
    unauthorised detention and torture in custody. Moreover, the government has used the incidents to
    justify restrictions on basic freedoms such as those of movement, expression, religion, and assembly.
    Despite adopting some legislative changes in line with international standards in 2012–13 to end the
    use of torture in detention, law enforcement officials continue frequently to use coercive methods. In a
    recent report by the Tajikistan Coalition of NGOs, torture still figures among the country’s biggest
    human rights problems, followed by the lack of equal access to justice, the weak position of defence
    counsels, and the absence of fair trial9
    .
    While freedom of expression is guaranteed by law, the authorities control most of the media facilities,
    limiting the free flow of information when deemed necessary, and occasionally exercising pressure on
    government critics through the threat of prosecution and heavy fines10
    . Human rights groups and NGOs
    also sometimes experience constraints.
    The presidential elections held on 6 November 2013, in which President Emomali Rakhmon won a
    fourth seven-year term with 83% of the votes, were characterised by some restrictions on political
    freedoms. Prior to the elections, the government took measures to restrain open debate and crackdown
    on opposition party leaders11
    . Tajikistan remains the only country in the region with an officially-
    registered Islamic political party represented in parliament; a remnant from the civil war, established
    through a peace deal between the current leadership and Islamic and democratic opposition forces.
    Nevertheless, concerns remain about restrictions on the freedom of religion and limitations to religious
    education, especially after new legislation introduced in 2012 that allows for restrictions on different
    religious groups, including minority and non-traditional religions.
    2.4 Turkmenistan
    Turkmenistan is the most repressive state in Central Asia, and according to Freedom House, it is also
    among the ‘worst of the worst’ human rights abusers worldwide (12
    ). After some cosmetic
    improvements following the death of former President Saparmurat Niyazov in 2006, the regime’s
    human rights record has not seen any improvement in recent years. While the country remains closed
    to independent scrutiny, including by special rapporteurs from the United Nations (UN), few human
    rights watchdogs operating outside of Turkmenistan have the knowledge or the capacity to report
    regularly on the actual situation. According to their reports, the main problems include the use of
    unlawful practices, such as arbitrary arrests and torture by law enforcement agencies, and severe
    restrictions to civil and political rights, foremost freedoms of speech, press, assembly, association, and
    movement. Meanwhile, the enormous gas revenues collected by the regime have been used to the
    benefit of a small group of elites and large shallow building projects, not for the broader development
    of the country.
    Following the February 2012 presidential elections, in which incumbent President Gurbanguly
    Berdymukhamedov won with 97% of the votes, he continued to enjoy unlimited power and to build his
    personality cult. All spheres of public life are fully controlled by the government, with no effective
    political opposition, independent judiciary, or free civil society present. Imprisonment and
    9
    NGO Report on the Republic of Tajikistan’s Implementation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, July
    2013, available at: http://www2.ohchr.org/English/bodies/hrc/docs/NGOs/NGOsCoalition_Tajikistan_En.pdf
    10
    J. Nichol, ‘Tajikistan: Recent Development and U.S. Interests’, CRS Report for Congress, 25 September 2013, available at:
    http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/98-594.pdf
    11
    Human Rights Watch, ‘Tajikistan: End Crackdown Ahead of Election’, 22 October 2013, available at:
    http://www.hrw.org/news/2013/10/21/tajikistan-end-crackdown-ahead-election
    12
    Freedom House, Freedom in the World 2010, ‘Worst of the worst’, June 2010, available at:
    http://www.freedomhouse.org/sites/default/files/inline_images/Worst%20of%20the%20Worst%202010.pdf
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    12
    disappearances of political opponents and government critics are regularly reported. Torture and other
    abusive practices, including forced medical treatment, are allegedly widespread in detention facilities
    (13
    ). Human rights abuses by security and law enforcement officials are hardly ever investigated. The
    judicial sector is reputed to be corrupt and inefficient14
    .
    Freedom of assembly and association is heavily restricted. The activities of civil society actors that are
    not officially registered with the Ministry of Justice are considered illegal. Independent human rights
    NGOs are non-existent in the country. The authorities often decline permits to public meetings and
    demonstrations that are not initiated by the government.
    Broadcasting, print, and electronic media are almost entirely controlled by the authorities. While the
    December 2012 law on media formally prohibits state interference into the activities of media outlets, a
    system of ‘cross-censorship’ by various government agencies has developed, which severely limits
    freedom of press15
    .
    Restrictions on the freedom of movement have further intensified in recent years, highlighting the
    country’s international isolation (which is not that far from North Korea’s). The March 2012 law on
    migration increased government control over entry and exit from the country and provided a new tool
    for the authorities to prevent government critics from travelling abroad. In 2013, several people who
    had been previously prohibited from traveling abroad were allowed to leave the country. However,
    arbitrary travel bans, including for students studying at foreign universities, remain common practice16
    .
    2.5 Uzbekistan
    Along with Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan features on Freedom House’s list of the world’s most repressive
    countries. Its democracy and human rights record has deteriorated steadily since the 1990s,
    experiencing a peak of international criticism in the mid-2000s. For over 20 years, the country has been
    governed by President Islam Karimov, whose regime leaves little room for genuine citizen participation
    in politics. In 2005, Uzbekistan experienced a major incident of human rights violations during public
    protests in the eastern city of Andijan, when hundreds of people, largely unarmed civilians, were killed
    by government forces17
    . The events triggered EU sanctions against the state, which remained in force
    until late 2009.
    The regime’s strong grip combined with the lack of any genuine democratic procedures and a
    succession mechanism for aging leader Karimov could eventually lead to instability in the most
    populous country of the region. Uzbekistan has lost economic primacy to Kazakhstan, but it can still
    boast to have the largest security sector, including the largest armed forces, in the region.
    According to observers, the main human rights problems in Uzbekistan include the pervasive use of
    torture in the criminal justice system; the denial of due process and fair trial; severe restrictions on the
    13
    Amnesty International, ‘Continued clamp down on freedom of expression, association and assembly, arbitrary detention,
    torture, enforced disappearance, and still no access for international monitors’, Public Statement, 18 September 2013,
    available at:
    http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/EUR61/004/2013/en/937c0387-42e9-46bc-b87c-
    f115156ca7a7/eur610042013en.pdf
    14
    J. Nichol, ‘Turkmenistan: Recent Development and U.S. Interests’, CRS Report for Congress, 17 August 2012, available at:
    http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/97-1055.pdf
    15
    ‘Turkmen Laws are Strict but Censorship is Stricter’, Chronicles of Turkmenistan, 28 October 2013, available at:
    http://www.chrono-tm.org/en/2013/10/turkmen-laws-are-strict-but-censorship-is-stricter
    16
    Human Rights Watch, World Report 2014 – Turkmenistan, 21 January 2014, available at:
    http://www.refworld.org/docid/52dfdda814.html
    17
    Human Rights Watch, ‘Bullets Were Falling Like Rain. The Andijan Massacre, May 13, 2005’, June 2005,
    http://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/reports/uzbekistan0605.pdf
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    13
    freedom of religion, including continuous harassment of religious minority groups; and limitations of
    political and civil rights, such as freedom of expression, assembly, and association, with increasing
    pressure on civil society, opposition, and media18
    .
    While some steps towards improving the criminal justice system have been taken by the government
    (for instance, attempts to expand the use of habeas corpus), reforms remain superficial and their
    implementation poor. Detainees are rarely granted access to lawyers and the justice sector is non-
    transparent and corrupt. Government and security officials often engage in abusive practices with
    impunity. Politically-motivated prosecution and imprisonment continue to be reported by human
    rights organisations.
    Civil society activists, human rights advocates, and independent journalists regularly experience
    harassment and intimidation, which have intensified since 2005 as the government’s response to the
    criticism of its actions in Andijan. NGO activities remain heavily monitored and restricted, while the
    government seeks to establish its own sector of ‘NGOs’. Members of non-traditional religious
    associations and Muslim groups practicing their faith outside state control are constant targets of heavy
    fines, arbitrary detentions, and prosecution on the grounds of religious extremism.
    Uzbekistan’s economy is largely based on its cotton industry. Despite continuous international criticism,
    including from the European Parliament, state-sponsored forced and child labour in hazardous
    conditions, especially in the cotton sector, remains widespread. In 2012, the government officially
    prohibited the mobilisation of children under the age of 15 during harvest season – this is a positive
    sign, even though mainly prompted by fears of suffering economic losses in cotton exports in light of
    international pressure. However, forced mobilisation of adult state workers, students, and school
    children of around 16–17 years old has reportedly increased to compensate for the age restriction19
    .
    3. EU POLICY INSTRUMENTS AND HUMAN RIGHTS PROMOTION
    3.1 Human Rights Dialogues and Civil Society Seminars
    The EU has been holding bilateral human rights dialogues with Central Asian countries since 2007. Until
    now, four rounds have been held with Kyrgyzstan, five with Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan,
    and seven with Uzbekistan. The agenda of the dialogues usually includes between eight to ten issues.
    Among these are individual cases of pressure and prosecution of human rights activists, as well as
    broader country-specific human rights issues. The meetings are technical, focused on specific concerns,
    and held with the presence of experts from both sides. From the Central Asian side, meetings are
    chaired by the ministries of foreign affairs, accompanied by representatives of the ministries of justice
    and internal affairs, and in some cases the prosecutor’s office, prison authorities, and the ombudsmen.
    From the EU, senior officials of the European External Action Service (EEAS) are present.
    Before and after each dialogue round, the EEAS organises briefings for civil society organisations in
    Brussels. During such meetings, CSOs provide their input and are verbally informed about the main
    items discussed in the dialogue. Meetings with Central Asian CSOs are held on an ad hoc basis, and in
    most cases before the dialogue only.
    18
    See 2013 Report on Uzbekistan by Human Rights Watch, http://www.hrw.org/world-report/2013/country-
    chapters%20/112428
    19
    J. Nichol, ‘Uzbekistan: Recent Development and U.S. Interests’, CRS Report for Congress, 21 August 2013, available at:
    http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/RS21238.pdf
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    14
    According to the EU’s guidelines, a set of objectives for each country’s human rights dialogue is defined.
    In 2011, the EU also developed country-specific human rights strategies, but these documents have not
    been made public. Given the lack of available information about the topics discussed, the outcomes
    and impact of the dialogues are difficult to assess and largely depend on the opinions of those involved
    in the process, which might not be free of bias.
    The issues raised during the dialogues should be taken up at higher-level political meetings. However,
    the public statements reviewed below demonstrate that this might not always be the case. In the case
    that human rights issues are raised at those meetings, it is usually done in a careful manner as part of
    general calls for countries to improve their human rights situations. The EU’s guidelines and Strategic
    Framework and Action Plan on Human Rights and Democracy20
    further point to the need for an
    assessment of the dialogues by the Council’s Working Party on Human Rights (COHOM), in cooperation
    with the relevant geographical working groups. The evaluation should look at the human rights
    situation in a given country in relation to the objectives set by the EU before the start of a dialogue. In
    case of a negative assessment, the EU should readjust objectives or consider whether to continue the
    dialogue with the country in question. As of today, human rights dialogues have been discussed in the
    relevant council working groups and the formal assessments included in the EU’s guidelines should
    start in 2014.
    The civil society seminars held in-between official dialogue rounds offer a forum for Central Asian and
    European civil society to discuss country-specific human rights issues in the presence of EU
    representatives and government officials. Topics are decided between the EU and respective
    governments. Civil society recommendations elaborated at the seminars should be incorporated into
    the human rights dialogues.
    To date, the only two countries in Central Asia where the seminars have had some relevance to the
    dialogue with the government and the actual human rights situation are Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. The
    civil society seminar held in Kyrgyzstan in February 2012 recommended to the government the
    adoption and implementation of a law on ‘National Preventive Mechanism’ (against torture)21
    . Such a
    law was adopted by the Kyrgyz parliament on 7 June 2012. At the same time, a National Centre for the
    Prevention of Torture and a Coordination Council for the Prevention of Torture were established.
    Similarly, after the 2012 EU-Tajikistan civil society seminar on ‘Freedom from Torture or Cruel, Inhuman
    or Degrading Treatment or Punishment,’ Tajikistan adopted in the same year a law that classified torture
    as a criminal offence and developed a manual for judges and prosecutors regarding the investigation of
    cases related to torture or alleged inhumane treatment22
    . While these developments do indicate
    progress, in both instances the results achieved cannot be attributed exclusively to the EU’s human
    rights dialogues and civil society seminars. The issues discussed above had been previously raised
    within UN fora (during Universal Periodic Reviews – UPR). The EU-initiated dialogues have thus played a
    complementary, facilitating role in supporting other international actors in their attempts to improve
    human rights in Central Asia.
    In Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, the governments have agreed to conduct a dialogue with civil society on
    these sensitive matters, which is a positive step. Nonetheless, despite legislative changes evidence
    20
    Council of the European Union, ‘EU Strategic Framework and Action Plan on human Rights and Democracy’, 25 June 2012,
    available at: http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/131181.pdf
    21
    Final recommendations to the EU – Kyrgyzstan civil society seminar, 10 April 2012, available at:
    http://eeas.europa.eu/delegations/kyrgyzstan/press_corner/all_news/news/2012/news10042012_en.htm
    22
    P. Narvuzova, ‘Freedom from Torture in the Republic of Tajikistan’, The Coalition of Civil Society of Tajikistan against
    Torture, 3 October 2012, available at: http://www.osce.org/odihr/106546
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    15
    shows that torture and ill-treatment remain major human rights concerns in both countries. The EU has
    to ensure that these governments take the implementation part equally seriously. Here the Union can
    play a more prominent role, by raising the importance of implementing legislation both at high-level
    political meetings and at the subsequent human rights dialogues.
    Contrary to the seminars held in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, civil society in Kazakhstan was excluded
    from the selection process of the topics to be discussed in the 2011 EU-Kazakhstan civil society seminar.
    Under the title ‘Building Stronger Interaction between State and Civil Society as an Engine of Progress’,
    the meeting covered the rights of disabled people and gender issues, as well as dialogue with the
    government on those two questions. While the seminar took place in parallel to the ongoing oil
    workers’ strike in western Kazakhstan, this issue was not officially part of the agenda. The subsequent
    seminar organised in Astana in 2012 focused on the ‘Contribution of Civil Society to Judicial Reforms in
    Kazakhstan’. The topic bore relevance to the ongoing judicial reforms in the country, even though there
    were no government officials present. The major shortcomings of these two seminars were that in the
    first case, the selected topic was of lower relevance given the country’s actual problems. And in the
    second, while the topic was relevant, the Kazakh government took no interest in the event. Whether the
    recommendations from the 2012 seminar have been included in the human rights dialogues, especially
    in view of the ongoing judicial reform process, is not clear. The subsequent human rights dialogue took
    place only a year later, on 27 November 2013, and was preceded by another civil society seminar,
    involving local human rights organisations, which was held a day earlier23
    .
    So far, only one civil society seminar has been held in Uzbekistan, in 2008. The topic discussed, media
    freedom, turned to be a politically-sensitive issue and the seminar disappointing for both the EU and
    Uzbekistan. No further attempts were made to organise seminars in Uzbekistan or in Turkmenistan.
    The relevance and impact of the human rights dialogues and the accompanying civil society seminars
    have differed in each country. The leaderships in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan were willing to discuss rather
    sensitive topics with local civil society, and the meetings were followed by a few concrete legislative
    changes. The impact in the other three countries remains extremely limited, at best. The question
    remains whether this exercise will bear fruit in the long run. The EU and Central Asian states risk ending
    up in a situation where all parties are satisfied, having addressed human rights problems by means of
    quiet diplomacy but without advancing on actual reforms. In addition, there is a risk that the dialogues
    increasingly become ‘tick of the box’ exercises that separate deliberations on human rights from other
    policy areas such as security and energy cooperation. Complementing quiet diplomacy with public
    statements and a consistent follow-up on what has been previously discussed could be one way for the
    Union to demonstrate that it is serious about its values-based objectives in Central Asia.
    3.2 EU statements on Kazakhstan
    Recently two issues have featured prominently in the EU’s public statements vis-à-vis Kazakhstan: the
    Zhanaozen events of 16 December 2011, when around 14 unarmed protesters died after police
    dispersed the rally; and the ongoing negotiations over an EU-Kazakhstan Enhanced Partnership and
    Cooperation Agreement (PCA). The latter, as declared by the EU, is subject to human rights and
    democratisation advancements and is thus of particular relevance here.
    After the Zhanaozen events, the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security
    Policy, Catherine Ashton, made two statements calling for an ‘objective and transparent investigation of
    23
    EU-Kazakhstan Human Rights Dialogue, Press Release, Astana, 27 November 2013, available at:
    http://eeas.europa.eu/statements/docs/2013/131127_01_en.pdf
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    16
    events’. The EU also made a statement at the OSCE Permanent Council on 22 December 2011, calling‘to
    ensure that (investigations into the events) are conducted transparently and with full respect for human
    rights’. The EU delegation together with other international actors monitored the Zhanaozen trials.
    According to Freedom House, ‘(b)ased on trial observation and media reports, the proceedings were
    marred by credible allegations of torture that authorities refused to adequately investigate’24
    . In the
    trials, 34 out of 37 defendants were convicted.
    Meanwhile, in July 2011 a first round of talks on an enhanced PCA between the EU and Kazakhstan
    began. EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton made three statements in this regard. In the first two,
    she indicated that a successful conclusion depended on Kazakhstan undertaking political and
    democratic reforms. However, the third statement, made on 30 November 2012 after a meeting with
    President Nazarbayev in Astana, did not mention any of these issues and mostly focused on economics
    and trade, as well as security.
    These public statements show inconsistency and a lack of follow-up; not least because the issue of fair
    trial and transparent investigations of the Zhanozen events was not discussed and given that
    prosecutions of political opponents and silencing of media critical of the government have continued
    without the EU clearly speaking out on these matters. Regarding the PCA, talks continue behind closed
    doors and little is known on how the EU is conditioning progress in the negotiations.
    3.3 EU statements on Kyrgyzstan
    Concerning EU-Kyrgyzstan relations, this document focuses on public statements made after the
    various high-level meetings and statements related to the case of Uzbek human rights advocate
    Azimjan Askarov, who was sentenced to life imprisonment.
    Since 2007, there have been four Cooperation Council meetings between the EU and Kyrgyzstan. EU
    statements made after the three meetings that took place before the April 2010 events listed the issues
    discussed in a similar hierarchy: political reforms, rule of law, and human rights first; technical issues,
    such as regional cooperation, trade and economy second. Of these, the meeting that took place in
    February 2010, just before the events of April 2010 and the ethnic violence of June 2010, underlined the
    deteriorating situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms, and called on the Kyrgyz
    government to strengthen the administrative capacities of the judiciary. The following Cooperation
    Council meeting took place over three years later in November 2013. By this time, the EU’s view of the
    country’s human rights conditions was more positive and questions such as human rights, inter-ethnic
    reconciliation, and democracy were listed only in the second part of the statement, after political
    reform, economy, trade, energy, and transport.
    Azimjan Askarov’s life prison sentence, torture, and confiscation of property prompted a statement
    from the EU delegation in the country and from Catherine Ashton on 18 September 2010, in which she
    called for a fair trial and due process as necessary conditions for inter-ethnic reconciliation. However,
    despite the fact that Askarov remains imprisoned and the numerous calls from international
    organisations for his release and for a full and independent investigation of his case25
    , Catherine Ashton
    did not mention the issue in the public statement that followed her meeting with President Atambaev
    and Foreign Minister Abdyldaev during her visit to Bishkek in November 2012. In the following three
    high-level meetings between President Atambaev, foreign policy chief Ashton, European Council
    President Herman van Rompuy and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso in
    24 Freedom House, ‘Convictions in Zhanaozen Trial Trample Rule of Law’, 5 June 2012, available at:
    http://www.freedomhouse.org/article/convictions-zhanaozen-trial-trample-rule-law
    25
    Written interview with M. Rittmann, Central Asia Researcher, Human Rights Watch, 27 November 2013.
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    17
    September 2013, human rights, judicial reform, and inter-ethnic reconciliation were raised but none of
    the leaders mentioned the case of Askarov or any other specific human rights violations.
    Askarov’s case evidences Kyrgyzstan’s broad justice problems. The EU should carefully observe and
    where possible pressure the authorities on these particular cases26
    . In this instance, the EU could have
    done more via public statements, especially taken into account that during President Atambaev’s visit
    to Brussels in September 2013 Kyrgyzstan and the EU signed a financing agreement for EUR 13.5 million
    to promote respect for the rule of law and EUR 30 million in macro-financial assistance.
    3.4 EU statements on Tajikistan
    The EU-Tajikistan Partnership and Cooperation Agreement entered into force on 1 January 2010. High-
    level Cooperation Council meetings and the more technical Cooperation Committee meetings have
    been taking place thereafter. The issues raised at the three Cooperation Council meetings held so far
    include economic and social reforms, corruption, improving the investment climate and security, rule of
    law, human rights and democracy, and water, energy and the environment.
    Two other high-level meetings between President Rahmon and EU foreign policy chief Catherine
    Ashton took place in November 2012 during Ashton’s Central Asia trip and in April 2013 during
    Rahmon’s visit to Brussels. The 2012 bilateral meeting focused on the future of Afghanistan, energy,
    water, and economic reforms. Political reform, rule of law, and human rights were only mentioned in
    the last part of the statement issued after the meeting. Ashton also put emphasis on the closure of one
    of Tajikistan’s leading human rights organisations, the young lawyers association ‘Amparo’. This was the
    first time that a high-ranking EU diplomat mentioned a very specific case in a bilateral meeting with the
    Tajik leader. However, during her next meeting with the president, Ashton did not follow-up on this
    issue despite the fact that Amparo remained closed. While energy and water issues have stood central
    in most EU high-level statements on Tajikistan, human rights, freedom of media, religion and
    association are only mentioned in general terms. Traditional development aid issues, and political and
    practical cooperation override a focus on human rights in Brussels’ relationship with Dushanbe.
    The 2012 review of the EU’s policy towards Central Asia proposed the celebration of regular high-level
    security dialogues. So far, only one meeting has been held, in June 2013 in Brussels. These dialogues are
    regionally-focused and not particularly geared towards Tajikistan, although European and local security
    and stability concerns to a large extent relate to Tajikistan’s dire security situation. Not least because
    Tajikistan’s porous borders with Afghanistan have resulted in large-scale drug trafficking; weak control
    by the Tajik authorities over the territory; tensions with Uzbekistan over water resources; and potential
    instability as a result of poverty and lack of opportunity for a quickly growing and ever younger
    population. The EU did not take up human rights during the first meeting. The next High-Level
    Dialogue, which is expected to be held in 2014 in Tajikistan27
    , could offer an opportunity for the EU
    carefully to link security challenges to human rights problems, for instance by addressing Security
    Sector Reform (SSR).
    26
    Ibid.
    27
    EU-Central Asia High level Security Dialogue, 13 June 2013, available at:
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/137463.pdf
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    18
    The latter links reform in the security sector (police, armed forces, etc.) to strengthened democratic
    oversight of the security apparatus, including public scrutiny of the human rights aspects of police,
    military, and intelligence work28
    .
    3.5 EU statements on Turkmenistan
    The ratification of the EU-Turkmenistan Partnership and Cooperation Agreement has been stalled by
    the European Parliament for over 10 years; the reason for this is the country’s grim human rights
    situation. Nonetheless, the EU has been pursuing its quiet diplomacy, without publicly raising specific
    human rights issues in bilateral meetings, and has opted for an ‘open door’ policy in the hope that it will
    bring more results on human rights and more importantly, results for the EU’s strategic energy interests
    in the country. Turkmenistan harbours the world’s fifth-largest energy reserves and the EU’s interests
    there are largely driven by energy diversification motivations29
    . In 2011, European Commission
    President José Manuel Barroso and EU Energy Commissioner Günther Oettinger visited Turkmenistan.
    Energy security and the Trans-Caspian pipeline were the main points discussed.
    Compared to other Central Asian countries, considerably fewer bilateral meetings have taken place with
    Turkmenistan and fewer policy instruments have been used by the EU overall. Turkmenistan was the
    only country Catherine Ashton did not visit during her Central Asia tour in November 2012. She met
    with Turkmenistan’s Foreign Minister Meredov during his visit to Brussels in April 2013. The statement
    after the meeting underlined the importance of strengthening the rule of law and political reform in the
    country, and outlined the EU’s concerns with regard to Turkmenistan’s human rights situation.
    Given that the EU has not been very successful in terms of pursuing a coherent human rights public
    diplomacy even with energy-poor countries such as Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, it is even less likely that
    the Union will raise pressing human rights issues with Turkmenistan on a regular basis. When
    comparing EU policies towards Belarus, another former Soviet Union country known for its severe
    human rights violations, the difference of interests closer to home or in retrospect of other strategic
    interests is evident. Belarus cannot boast crucial energy resources but shares with Turkmenistan the
    same neglect for human rights. In Belarus, the EU pursues a policy of critical engagement30
    , and EU
    sanctions against the country have been in force since 201031
    . This is not to say EU policy towards
    Belarus has been more successful, but it does show the EU’s different approaches towards energy-rich
    and energy-poor countries.
    The EU has openly favoured a policy of engagement over isolation with Turkmenistan, which is largely
    determined by its strategic interests. Within this context, negligence of its normative agenda proves the
    lack of a long-term vision in Turkmenistan. Unless it improves its judicial, legal, and political framework
    of governance, and as long as it continues to depend on one-man’s will instead of on the law and
    international standards, Turkmenistan will not be able to become a reliable energy partner.
    28
    J. Boonstra, E. Marat and V. Axyonova, ‘Security Sector Reform in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and tajikistan. What role for
    Europe?’, EUCAM Working Paper 14, May 2013, available at: http://www.eucentralasia.eu/uploads/tx_icticontent/EUCAM-
    WP14-SSR-EN_01.pdf
    29
    J. Hale, ‘Real Costs of Turkmenistan’s Hydrocarbons’, Open Society European Policy Institute, November 2012, available at:
    http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/sites/default/files/turkmenistan-policy-brief-20121203.pdf
    30
    EEAS, ‘The European Union and Belarus’, Fact Sheet, 131029/01, Brussels, 29 October 2013, available at:
    http://eeas.europa.eu/statements/docs/2013/131029_01_en.pdf
    31
    Council of the European Union, ‘EU sanctions against Belarus extended’, Presse 445, 15513/13, Brussels, 29 October 2013,
    available at: http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/139261.pdf
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    19
    3.6 Uzbekistan
    EU-Uzbekistan bilateral relations are regulated by a Partnership and Cooperation Agreement in force
    since 1999. Two issues stand central in the relationship. First, forced and child labour in Uzbekistan’s
    cotton fields and international campaigning, in which the EU participates, against this practice. Second,
    Uzbekistan is the only Central Asian country where the EU has applied sanctions, as a result of the
    serious human rights violations during and after the Andijan events of May 2005.
    The case of forced and child labour spurred international attention in 2007 after a BBC documentary,
    leading to repeated calls from Uzbek and international civil society groups for European and the US
    governments to take action. A number of specific actions by international governmental and non-
    governmental actors have been carried out. In this regard, the EU, and in particular the European
    Parliament, have played a key role. In 2011, the EP voted (603 to 8 votes) not to include trade in cotton
    and other textiles into the EU-Uzbekistan PCA32
    . As a result of this and continued international pressure
    and criticism, the Uzbek government has taken a few steps, including the ratification of international
    labour conventions on child labour – Convention No. 182 and No. 138 (in 2008 and 2009, respectively) –
    and allowing International Labour Organisation (ILO) monitors to observe the 2013 cotton harvest.
    After the 2013 ILO mission, the Government of Uzbekistan expressed willingness to continue
    cooperating with the ILO and to address child and forced labour and other fundamental workers’ rights
    issues33
    . The results of this campaign to date indicate that persistent and coordinated efforts by
    international actors can bring medium- and long-term results. The EU should remain engaged in
    international efforts as well as with the Uzbek government to eliminate once and for all such practices in
    the country.
    EU sanctions were imposed in 2005. These included an embargo on arms exports and military training;
    a visa ban targeting individuals directly responsible for the disproportionate use of force in Andijan; and
    a suspension of technical cooperation meetings under the PCA (the high-level political dialogue under
    the PCA remained in place). The following conditions were imposed for the lifting of sanctions:
     to conduct transparent trials of those accused of organising the Andijan protests;
     to stop detention and harassment of those who questioned the Uzbek authorities’ version of the
    Andijan events;
     to cooperate with the internationally-appointed rapporteur to investigate the Andijan events;
     to implement international obligations in relation to human rights and fundamental freedoms;
     to allow unimpeded access by the relevant international bodies (ICRC) to prisoners;
     to engage with the UN Special Rapporteurs on Torture and Freedom of Media;
     to let NGOs, including Human Rights Watch, operate without restrictions (and allow accreditation
    of the new HRW country director);
     to release human rights advocates and stop harassment; and
    32
    Other international efforts included repeated reports from human rights organisations and concerns expressed by the ILO
    supervisory body since 2005. As a result Uzbek cotton was listed on the US department of Labour list of goods produced
    with the use of child and forced labour. The US government’s Trafficking in Persons Report highlighted Uzbekistan as a
    worst case of state system of forced labor and placed Uzbekistan on a list of sanctionable countries. Over 130 major brands
    and retailers publicly committed to avoid using Uzbek cotton until forced labor of children and adults is ended. The
    Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) National Contact Point in France condemned the trade of
    cotton produced by forced child labor.
    33
    Written interview with the Cotton Campaign Manager, January 2014.
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    20
     to implement reforms in the judiciary, law enforcement and police34
    .
    Until 2010, the Council reviewed the fulfilment of these conditions on an annual basis. Despite the fact
    that most conditions remain unfulfilled, the sanctions were gradually lifted and eventually completely
    removed, ending with the conclusion of the arms ban in 2009. Initially, the International Committee of
    the Red Cross was allowed access to prisons (but it ended its activities in Uzbekistan in April 2013)35
    , a
    number of human rights defenders were released, and changes in legislation (such as the abolishment
    of the death penalty and the introduction of habeas corpus) took place36
    .
    The last Council Conclusions on Uzbekistan were issued on 25 October 2010. Even though by then
    sanctions had already been completely lifted, the conclusions still outlined a number of areas about
    which the EU remained concerned, including the release of all human rights defenders, allowing for civil
    society organisations to operate, cooperation with the relevant UN bodies, guaranteeing freedom of
    speech and media, and the implementation of international conventions against child labour. Since
    then, there has been no follow-up to evaluate the level of compliance by the Uzbek government.
    On 30 January 2011, Uzbek President Islam Karimov met with European Commission President Jose
    Manuel Barroso and Energy Commissioner Gunther Oettinger in Brussels. During the meeting, an
    agreement on the establishment of an EU delegation in Tashkent was reached and the two sides signed
    a Memorandum of Understanding on Energy. In a statement issued after the meeting, President Barroso
    mentioned three individual cases and called for the release of all political prisoners, as well as the
    accreditation of a Human Rights Watch representative in Uzbekistan (37
    ). In March 2011, two months
    after Karimov’s visit to Brussels, the Uzbek authorities shut down the HRW office in Tashkent. From the
    individual cases mentioned by Barroso, only one person has been released under a suspended
    sentence; the other two remain in prison.
    During her visit to Tashkent in November 2012, Catherine Ashton met with President Karimov. In a
    statement issued after the meeting, the high representative underlined regional challenges linked to
    the developments in Afghanistan and water management, the importance of judicial reform, and the
    role of civil society in this regard38
    . However, she did not mention any of the issues included in the 2010
    Council Conclusions neither did she follow-up publicly on the issues previously taken up by Barroso.
    During the sanctions period, several human rights advocates were released from prison. Yet the
    sanctions have not brought about concrete results in terms of tackling other pressing human rights
    shortcomings on the ground or helping victims of the Andijan massacre. The fact that sanctions were
    lifted without Uzbekistan fulfilling most of the conditions proves the EU’s inconsistency and lack of
    willingness. Overall, however, it can be said that EU sanctions have been both ineffective and successful.
    They were successful in achieving the release of Umida Niyazova from custody, a well-known human
    34
    The list of sanctions as well as other information in this paragraph was compiled from EU public statements on Uzbekistan
    (see annex I) as well as from V. Axyonova, ‘The European Union’s Democratization Policy for Central Asia: Failed in Success or
    Succeeded in Failure?’ Stuttgart: 2014 (forthcoming).
    35
    In 2008, an agreement was reached to allow the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to resume visits in Uzbek
    prisons, but in April 2013 the ICRC terminated the visits. According to ICRC director general, Yves Daccord, ‘Visits must have
    a meaningful impact on detention conditions, and dialogue with the detaining authorities must be constructive. And that's
    not the case in Uzbekistan’.
    36
    Human Rights Watch ‘No One Left To Witness’, 13 December 2011, available at:
    http://www.hrw.org/reports/2011/12/13/no-one-left-witness
    37
    European Commission, ‘Statement of European Commission President José Manuel Barroso following his meeting with
    the President of Uzbekistan Islam Karimov’, Press Release, MEMO/11/40, Brussels, 24 January 2011, available at:
    http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_MEMO-11-40_en.htm
    38
    European Commission, ‘Remarks by High Representative Catherine Ashton at the end of her visit to Uzbekistan’, Press
    Release, MEMO/12/926, Tashkent, 29 November 2012, available at: http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_MEMO-12-
    926_en.htm
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    21
    rights defender, who afterwards received asylum in Germany. But more importantly, the sanctions were
    ineffective in the sense that the Uzbek government did not meet key demands, including allowing an
    independent international investigation into the Andijan events. At the time of writing, there were still
    almost 10 000 persons convicted on politically-motivated charges of alleged extremism and anti-
    constitutional activity in Uzbekistan. The overall number of political prisoners in Uzbekistan is larger
    than in all the former Soviet Union countries combined39
    .
    4. EU FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS AND HUMAN RIGHTS PROMOTION
    The promotion of human rights, rule of law, good governance, and democratisation is the first among
    the seven priorities set in the 2007 EU Strategy for Central Asia. In this sense, the EU has supported
    cooperation programmes through various financial instruments. Assistance has been provided both to
    governments and to the non-governmental sector.
    The financial instruments applicable to Central Asia include the Development Cooperation Instrument,
    which is complemented by several thematic instruments and programmes. The main EU instrument
    specifically targeting human rights is the European Instrument for Democracy and Human Rights, which
    provides support to civil society organisations. Additionally, the Non-State Actors and Local Authorities
    in Development programme aims to support local participation in development and improve
    governance, and the Instrument for Stability addresses global security and development challenges,
    especially in emerging crises and post-crisis situations. During the period covered in this study (2007–
    13), Uzbekistan was the only Central Asian country that still benefitted from assistance under the
    Institution Building and Partnership Programme (IBPP), formerly part of TACIS. The latter preceded the
    current DCI.
    4.1 The Development Cooperation Instrument (DCI)
    Among the most pressing human rights issues in all Central Asian countries, the lack of independence
    of the judiciary, arbitrary detentions, the absence of due process, and torture in detention facilities are
    prevalent. However, the extent of these problems and the frequency of human rights violations vary
    across countries. The EU has provided different amounts of assistance through DCI, IfS and EIDHR to
    Central Asian states to address these questions.
    Total DCI allocations from 2007, including many other priorities, ranging from security to education and
    from poverty reduction to water management, were distributed as follows: an estimated EUR 56.70
    million for Kazakhstan, EUR 106.15 million for Kyrgyzstan, EUR 100.20 million for Tajikistan, EUR 28.46
    million for Turkmenistan, and EUR 38.6 million for Uzbekistan40
    . The focus of EU assistance was on
    Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, the poorest countries in the region. As part of the overall bilateral support,
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan received assistance for judicial and criminal justice system
    reforms, including reform of the prison system and parliamentary reform. Turkmenistan received
    assistance to strengthen national capacities to promote human rights. In Tajikistan, the EU mainly
    funded socio-economic projects and public financial management through a sector budget support
    programme. Tajikistan is the only Central Asian country in which the EU did not implement any
    government support programme related to human rights or democratisation throughout the period
    covered by this study. This could be explained by the fact that specific priorities for channelling
    39
    Written interview with S. Swerdlow, Human Rights Watch, Central Asia Researcher, 18 November 2013.
    40
    Tsertsvadze and Boonstra 2013, op. cit.
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    22
    development assistance are agreed between the EU and respective governments, and these priorities
    have tended to focus on socio-economic issues.
    From 2007, the EU supported reform of the judicial sector in Kazakhstan, with a total of EUR 15.5 million.
    This includes a project in 2007-8 that sought to strengthen the judiciary, and one in 2012 to support
    judicial reform41
    . Kazakhstan’s interest to reform the judiciary is partly due to the fact that economic
    development and full integration into the world market, to which Kazakhstan strongly aspires, requires
    an independent judiciary and functioning legal system. The EU’s cooperation projects funded under DCI
    aimed to help Kazakhstan’s aspirations in this regard.
    Projects in Kazakhstan Amount allocated
    by the EU(in EUR)
    Objectives
    Support to Strengthen the
    Judiciary
    3.5 million  Develop sectoral strategy for the
    justice system.
     Strengthen capacities of the
    judiciary in specific areas.
     Support the government’s policy
    aimed at improving the balance
    between judges, lawyers, and
    prosecutors.
     Improve the investment climate
    for local and foreign investors
    through judicial reform.
    Support for Judicial Reform 12 million  Strengthen rule of law and
    judiciary reform by supporting the
    implementation of the national
    policy of humanisation of the
    justice system.
     Enhance the protection of
    individual rights, in particular in
    the criminal justice system.
     Foster approximation towards
    European and international
    standards.
    41
    Additionally, in 2011 EUR 0.5 million from the Instrument for Stability (IfS) was allocated to the Council of Europe to
    support ‘the Independent Electoral Commission to develop and consolidate capacity for future elections; see European
    Commission, ‘2011 Annual Report on the Instrument for Stability’, Report from the Commission to the European Parliament,
    the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions, COM(2012) 405 final,
    Brussels, 24 July 2012, available at:
    http://eeas.europa.eu/ifs/docs/ifs_annual_report_2011_en.pdf
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    23
    While the objectives set for these two programmes are relevant to the problems faced by Kazakhstan’s
    judicial sector, the results to date have been poor. The Zhanaozen trials clearly showed that judicial
    independence is still not guaranteed and that the Soviet legacy of excessive state power and harsh
    sentencing remains commonplace in Kazakhstan. The separation of powers is incomplete and vertical
    governance is deeply rooted in the country’s political culture, while public trust in the judiciary remains
    low.
    In Kyrgyzstan, the EU provided a total of EUR 16 million for good governance projects (through DCI and
    IfS). This includes support for prison reform, and promotion of respect for the rule of law, with particular
    emphasis on fostering transparency and accountability. Compared to its neighbours, Kyrgyzstan’s
    political leadership has shown more willingness and interest to implement democratic reforms and is
    more open to dialogue with civil society. So far, Kyrgyzstan has received the largest amounts in DCI and
    IfS assistance for democracy-related projects.
    Projects in Kyrgyzstan Amount allocated
    by the EU (in EUR)
    Objectives
    Support for Prison Reform 2.5 million  Improve institutional capacity of the
    prison administration to manage
    prisons effectively, in line with UN
    standards and norms.
     Achieve a healthier working and living
    environment in prisons, contributing
    to the prevention of disease and the
    promotion of mental and physical
    health.
    Promotion of Respect for
    Rule of Law
    13.5 million  Assist in strengthening respect for the
    rule of law by promoting transparency,
    accountability, and anti-corruption
    measures.
     Strengthen public oversight functions.
     Increase efficiency, independence,
    professionalism, and capacities of the
    judiciary.
     Strengthen media and civil society to
    keep institutions accountable.
     Empowerment for unimpeded access
    to justice
    Here European funding focused on the conditions in prisons and detention facilities, asthis remains one
    of the most pressing human rights concerns in Kyrgyzstan, leading primarily to the draft of a prison
    reform strategy and legislation. Other outcomes include training of prison staff; a needs-assessment to
    upgrade sanitary and health conditions in four prisons; and vocational training on various skills for
    prisoners in several facilities. The EU will need to engage further in this area in order to secure a long-
    term impact, including strategy implementation, new legislation, and addressing severe shortcomings
    in the prison system (torture and ill-treatment).
    The objectives set in the second cooperation project that deals with respect for the rule of law also
    match the problems faced by Kyrgyzstan. Implementation is set to begin in 2014. The success of this
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    24
    project will depend on its ability to mix deep legislative and practical reform with public awareness. The
    level of involvement of civil society and media will also be a determining factor in terms of planning,
    implementation, and evaluation. A preliminary allocation of EUR 3 million for civil society involvement
    has been envisaged from an overall budget of EUR 13.5 million.
    EU human rights and democracy assistance for Turkmenistan from 2007 consisted of one project to
    strengthen national capacities so as to promote and protect human rights, which is implemented in
    cooperation with UNDP/OHCHR42
    . Upon request of the Turkmen government, the EU committed a
    further EUR 2.3 million to a project aimed at supporting the development and modernisation of the
    Turkmen parliament43
    . However, the signing of the financing agreement and the implementation of the
    project has been delayed since 2010 by Turkmenistan for unknown reasons, and it is unclear whether it
    will be implemented at all.
    Projects in Turkmenistan Amount allocated
    by the EU (in EUR)
    Objectives
    Strengthening National
    Capacities to Promote and
    Protect Human Rights
    2 million  Engage the government to
    comply with international
    human rights standards.
     Improve knowledge and
    capacity on human rights.
    Key deliverables of the human rights project include the opening of three human rights resource
    centres in Ashgabat, Mary, and Dashoguz, with the aim of providing students, teachers, and other
    citizens with information about human rights. In addition, two study visits were organised to Poland
    and to Croatia, so that officials from the Turkmen parliament and the foreign and justice ministries
    could become acquainted with European practices. A workshop for Turkmen journalists was also
    organised.
    Considering its immediate outputs, the project can be considered as a success. However, Turkmenistan
    continues to be one of the most repressive states and human rights abusers worldwide. In a country
    where disappearances, arbitrary arrests, torture, and forced medical treatment of critics are common
    practices, the opening of a human rights centre heavily controlled by the state is only a very small step
    towards improving Turkmenistan’s human rights record. It is difficult to assess if such centres in fact
    contribute to genuine awareness of Turkmen citizens and perhaps to foster a slightly more positive
    disposition of the government towards human rights, or if the project is simply a window-dressing
    measure by the Turkmen government to boost its image without makingany substantive changes.
    In Uzbekistan, the EU allocated EUR 12 million in total to human rights and democratisation. The largest
    project relates to criminal judicial reform. The activities under this project include the formulation of a
    long-term strategy for criminal justice reform, needs-assessments for the training of judges,
    prosecutors, police, and prison personnel, ‘including but not exclusively covering human rights issues’,
    training courses, seminars, study tours, and equipment necessary for the functioning of a research
    centre44
    . Given the deep-rooted problems of the Uzbek criminal justice system, the objectives outlined
    42
    Draft Commission Decision, 2007, http://ec.europa.eu/europeaid/documents/aap/2007/ec_aap-2007_tm_en.pdf
    43
    Support to the development and modernization of the parliament of Turkmenistan, DCI-ASIE/2010/022-185, available at:
    http://ec.europa.eu/europeaid/documents/aap/2010/af_aap_2010_tkm.pdf
    44
    Support to criminal Judicial Reform in Uzbekistan, DCI-ASIE/2009/020-509, available at:
    http://ec.europa.eu/europeaid/documents/aap/2009/af_aap_2009_uzb.pdf
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    25
    in the table below are highly relevant. The activities envisaged also seem feasible. Yet again, despite the
    huge investment, actual reform, legislative changes in accordance to international standards, and the
    enactment of already existing laws are hardly addressed in the implementation phase and are unlikely
    to be met with enthusiasm by the Uzbek authorities. The project is thus likely to focus above all on
    technical improvement and less so on deeper reform of the criminal justice system.
    Projects in Uzbekistan Amount allocated
    by the EU (in EUR)
    Objectives
    Criminal Judicial Reform 10 million  Strengthen the separation of
    powers thereby reinforcing
    constitutional independence of
    judges and prosecutors.
     Enact primary legislation,
    regulations, internal rules, and
    codes of conduct that meet best
    international standards.
     Support the development of
    independent council by lawyers to
    accused persons.
     Introduce modern training
    techniques and e-learning tools.
     Facilitate access to legal
    information to all stakeholders and
    the public.
    Further Strengthening of
    the Bi-Cameral
    Parliamentary System and
    Networking with Regional
    Assemblies
    2 million  Increase the effectiveness of the
    legislative process.
     Create an electronic network for
    better information-sharing
    between the two chambers of
    parliament and regional
    assemblies of parliamentarians
    (and procurement of necessary IT
    equipment).
     Increase the awareness of the
    Uzbek society about the role of the
    parliament.
    The smaller project supported with DCI funds in Uzbekistan focuses on strengthening the parliament
    and its links with regional assemblies. It is a follow-up of two previous EU initiatives in the area.
    Financing of such projects needs a careful case-by-case approach, which takes into account the
    country’s context. How much can be expected of parliamentary support in a country that is
    authoritarian, shows no inclination towards democratic reform, and where parliament merely fulfils a
    rubber-stamp role? In fact, such projects might only serve as propaganda for the incumbent
    government to show it is interested in reform and has a functioning legislature, while in practice this is
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    26
    clearly not the case. Parliamentary support programmes to foster the legislative’s oversight role and
    effectiveness in holding the government to account are worthwhile only if the recipient country
    genuinely wishes to reform its governance procedures. Uzbekistan’s current circumstances (just as in
    Turkmenistan, which has shelved a similar EU project) do not allow for this, thus making of this project a
    largely tick-of-the-box democracy promotion exercise.
    Overall, EU DCI cooperation programmes in Central Asia mostly cover judicial and parliamentary reform
    and human rights promotion with a rather heavy technical emphasis, focusing on training or the
    provision of equipment. However, given the limited amount of funds and the unwillingness of the
    governments to embark on real reforms, the assistance does little more than scratch the surface. Radical
    changes, maybe with the exception of Kyrgyzstan, are not expected in the coming years. The EU should
    thus seek engagement with the regimes, urging for deeper reforms and setting clear targets for
    concrete and practical improvements. The EU will also need better to coordinate and plan internally.
    Most of the programming and financing are shaped by the Commission’s DG DEVCO, which is not
    always included in planning and determining EU priorities in Central Asia, a process led by the EEAS.
    This is one of the reasons for the existing gap between the expected political impact of EU assistance
    envisaged in the EU’s strategic documents and the actual technical implementation of cooperation
    programmes. A miss-match between the EEAS’s policy objectives and DEVCO’s developments goals
    hampers identification of worthwhile projects, as well as the achievement of concrete results.
    4.2 European Instrument for Democracy and Human Rights (EIDHR)
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan. and Tajikistan have been the primary beneficiaries of EIDHR Country Based
    Support Schemes (CBSS) (for a list of grants see Annex II). Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan were targeted
    by the EIDHR only through a few regional projects funded under global calls and implemented by larger
    international NGOs or inter-governmental organisations. This is partly because there are hardly any
    human rights NGOs in those countries and partly due to the absence of fully-fledged EU delegations
    that could manage programmes on the ground45
    .
    Since 2007, the EU committed an estimated EUR 2.36 million under EIDHR to Kazakhstan, EUR 2.7
    million to Kyrgyzstan, and EUR 2.7 million to Tajikistan.
    In Kazakhstan, grants were allocated to fewer areas, focussing on government transparency and
    accountability, monitoring of human rights policies and awareness raising, labour rights, mass media
    and vulnerable groups. 52% of the total allocation was devoted to a project aimed at monitoring
    human rights policies and raising awareness.
    45
    The opening of the EU delegation in Uzbekistan was agreed upon in 2011 and became operational in 2012. In
    Turkmenistan, only a Europa House with three staff members has been present since 2008.
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    27
    Figure 1: Thematic areas financed through the EIDHR in Kazakhstan in 2007 and 200946
    In Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, funds were spread over a wide variety of areas, making it hard to assess
    whether any strategic priorities were taken into account when allocating grants. In Tajikistan, EIDHR
    funds were spread over 12 different areas, from violence against women to political parties and
    elections, while in Kyrgyzstan eight different areas were funded. For the two most pressing human
    rights areas – protecting minorities in the post-conflict situation and torture prevention in the police
    and prison system – 17 and 21% were provided, respectively.
    Figure 2: Thematic areas financed through the EIDHR in Kyrgyzstan from 2007 to
    2011
    46
    According to official documents, funds under the CBSS were allocated to Kazakhstan in 2008-10 and in 2012, as detailed in
    Tsertsvadze and Boonstra 2013, op. cit. However, projects funded in 2007 and 2009 by the EIDHR are publicly available at:
    http://eeas.europa.eu/delegations/kazakhstan/documents/funding_opportunities/grants_awarded_under_2011.pdf and
    http://eeas.europa.eu/delegations/kazakhstan/documents/funding_opportunities/contract_award_2009_en.pdf
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    28
    Figure 3: Thematic areas financed through the EIDHR in Tajikistan in 2007, 2009,
    and 2010
    The EIDHR CBSS provides support to local civil society organisations. While narrowing down priorities
    and thus spending more money on strategically important issues would bring more coherence, it is also
    important that civil society receive grants in similar areas where government-to-government
    cooperation programmes are implemented. This will give a chance to civil society to engage in the
    same areas and provide wider awareness raising, monitoring, and evaluation activities.
    4.3 Non-State Actors and Local Authorities in Development (NSA-LA)
    The Non-State Actors/Local Authorities in Development programme has only been implemented in
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan. Since 2007, Kazakhstan received EUR 3.15 million, Kyrgyzstan
    EUR 3.75 million, and Tajikistan EUR 3.3 million47
    . The primary beneficiaries were civil society groups and
    local authorities, such as city or district administrations. In all three countries, NSA-LA largely
    concentrated on development issues without a particular focus on human rights. In Kazakhstan, NSA-LA
    financed projects related to civil society capacity building, involvement of people with HIV in public life,
    people with disabilities, and poverty reduction of children deprived of parental care48
    . In Kyrgyzstan,
    major areas financed through NSA-LA included capacity building for farmers, improving rural living
    standards, involvement of civil society in self-governing organs, and the role of women in poverty
    reduction49
    . In Tajikistan, projects were financed in social dialogue, social protection, environment,
    primary education, local civil society capacity building, and increasing food safety in rural areas50
    .
    4.4 Institution Building and Partnership Programme (IBPP)
    In 2007–12, the IBPP was only implemented in Uzbekistan. The purpose of the programme was to
    empower local civil society organisations and promote their participation in policy-making. Formerly
    part of TACIS, the programme operated on the basis of Annual Action Programmes (AAPs), which were
    subject to financing agreements between the EU and the recipient country. Due to inability to sign such
    47
    Numbers are drawn from the Annual Acton Programmes and ‘Mapping EU Development Aid to Central Asia’, EUCAM
    Factsheet 1, 18 July 2013, available at: http://www.eucentralasia.eu/uploads/tx_icticontent/EUCAM-FS-1-EN.pdf
    48
    ‘Grant contracts awarded during 2009 (Kazakhstan)’, available at:
    http://eeas.europa.eu/delegations/kazakhstan/documents/funding_opportunities/contract_award_2009_en.pdf
    49
    Information based on files provided by the EU delegation in Kyrgyzstan.
    50
    Information based on files provided by the EU delegation in Tajikistan.
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    29
    an agreement with Uzbekistan in 2008 according to the established procedures, the European
    Commission re-committed the earlier allocated amount of EUR 2.2 million in 201051
    . This resulted in the
    continuation of the programme in Uzbekistan. Since the launch of the programme in 2002, over 20 IBPP
    projects have been implemented by European and Uzbek CSOs52
    . These have focused mainly on
    providing basic services or economic opportunities to local communities. Human rights issues, such as
    women’s and children’s rights and the rights of disabled persons have only been indirectly addressed.
    Independent human rights NGOs (which are rare in Uzbekistan) are not among the beneficiaries.
    4.5 Instrument for Stability (IfS)
    Kyrgyzstan is the only country in Central Asia that received funding under the IfS in 2008 and later in
    2010, as part of assistance for reconciliation following the 2010 ethnic violence. As the tables below
    indicate, allocations were divided between purely technical support (IT equipment and transport) and
    support for judiciary and constitutional reform. Whereas the Kyrgyz authorities show a clear inclination
    towards reform, the effectiveness of the actual implementation of judicial reform cannot be taken for
    granted. For instance, violations of human rights norms by law enforcement agencies in the
    investigation process and at trials have largely not been acknowledged or investigated by the
    authorities to date53
    .
    All numbers in EUR
    Instrument for Stability 2008 – Kyrgyzstan
    Name of the Project
    Support to Judiciary Reform in Kyrgyzstan 2 219 491
    Support to Judiciary Reform – Supplies of transport equipment 97 200
    Support to Judiciary Reform – Supplies of IT equipment 52 756
    Support to the Constitutional Reform 1 500 000
    TOTAL 3 869 447
    51 V. Axyonova, ‘EU Human Rights and Democratisation Assistance to Central Asia: In Need of Further Reform’, EUCAM
    Policy Brief 22, January 2012, available at:
    http://www.europarl.europa.eu/meetdocs/2009_2014/documents/droi/dv/10_eucam_/10_eucam_en.pdf
    52 European Commission, EuropeAid Development and Cooperation Directorate General, ‘Institution Building and
    Partnership Programme (IBPP): Civil Society Projects in Uzbekistan’, June 2012, available at:
    http://ec.europa.eu/europeaid/where/asia/country-cooperation/uzbekistan/documents/ibpp_brochure_july_2012_en.pdf
    53
    Human Rights Watch, ‘Distorted Justice’, 8 June 2011, available at: http://www.hrw.org/node/99472/section/3
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    30
    Instrument for Stability 2010 – Kyrgyzstan Democratisation and
    Stabilisation package
    Name of the Project
    Social Stabilisation through Reconstruction of Destroyed Houses 1 600 000
    Civil Monitoring for Human Rights Protection and Conflict Prevention 1 600 000
    Community Security Initiative 750 000
    Institutional Support for the Implementation of the New Legal Framework 1 100 000
    Political Leadership for Democratic Transition 346 525
    Support Media Reform and Strengthening Conflict – Sensitive Reporting 300 000
    TOTAL 5 696 525
    Given, on the one hand, ongoing problems such as access to justice, negligence to investigate
    violations conducted by law enforcement officers, and ethnic-based discrimination, and on the other,
    the declared openness of the political elites in Bishkek to cooperate on concrete democracy issues, the
    EU should not settle down for the technical achievements of these particular cooperation programmes.
    Leaving reform to a technical level provides only quick-fixes, with poor deliverables for the overall
    judicial system. The EU certainly has more fertile ground for progress in this area in Kyrgyzstan, but
    should address the core underlying aspects of reform that lie foremost in legislation and actual practice
    in applying independent rule of law.
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    31
    5. RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THE EU
    5.1 Policy instruments
     The human rights dialogues should not be stand-alone events, but be part of a comprehensive
    EU engagement in Central Asia. At the same time, the civil society seminars, which so far have
    had different levels of impact in the Central Asian countries, need to be intensified in the
    countries where they can make a difference.
    In order to maximise the chances of the human rights dialogues bringing about concrete outcomes, it is
    essential that the EU spells out, clearly and publicly, what specific reform steps it expects Central Asian
    governments to take as part of a successful relationship with the EU54
    . Defining specific objectives and
    expectations would also make it easier to evaluate results.
    While the added value of the dialogues may be disputed, the civil society seminars have proved to be
    valuable tools in facilitating dialogue between non-state actors and the government in some of the
    Central Asian states. So far, the dialogues have been most productive in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, while
    Kazakhstan provides space for constructive discussions, although the government tends to avoid
    debating the most pressing issues with civil society. The seminars provide a forum for human rights
    actors to voice their concerns in an official setting and thus empower their position vis-à-vis the
    government. Moreover, in the long run, the seminars may help develop a culture of communication
    and exchange of views between governments and civil society on rather sensitive issues.
    Organising bilateral civil society seminars in Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan is hardly possible, as previous
    experiences have shown. Academics and civil society representatives from these countries could be
    invited to (inter)regional fora, with NGOs from the EU as well as from Russia and other former Soviet
    countries. Such informal fora have already been established, for instance the Civic Solidarity Platform or
    the annual OSCE Parallel Civil Society Conference. Coordinating EU efforts with such initiatives with a
    view to support (inter)regional civil society exchanges and continuing the practice of bilateral seminars
    with Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan seems to be the best way to proceed.
     The EU’s quiet diplomacy needs to be matched with public diplomacy: consistency, thorough
    follow-up, and streamlined approaches to the political situation on the ground need to be
    strengthened for the EU’s human rights policy to have a bearing on Central Asia.
    The EU can only successfully promote human rights in Central Asia if it is responsive to political
    developments and sends consistent messages through its various policy tools. So far, the EU has proved
    rather evasive in taking up critical issues in its declarations and official statements, while human rights
    concerns often remain off the agenda at high-profile political meetings that focus more on security or
    trade. This probably also applies to the EU-Central Asia High-Level Security Dialogues, which so far has
    only been held once and did not link security to human rights. European actors need to ensure that
    human rights issues are not discussed exclusively in the framework of the human rights dialogues and
    only generally mentioned in other fora. This is not to discard the value of quiet diplomacy, but more
    responsiveness to human rights violations in Central Asian countries through open statements needs to
    be ensured, otherwise the EU’s credibility as a values-based community could be undermined.
     The EU should increasingly cooperate and coordinate with various regional and international
    organisations.
    54
    Interview with V. Szente Goldston, advocacy director for Europe and Central Asia, Human Rights Watch, 4 October 2013.
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    32
    The anti-torture legislative changes effected in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan were the result of a two-way
    approach: within UN fora as part of the UPR and through the EU’s human rights dialogues. The
    international campaign to end forced and child labour in Uzbekistan’s cotton fields and its outcomes to
    date also demonstrate that coordinated action can bring specific medium- and long-term results. In
    these cases, changes have taken place at the legislative level in respective Central Asian countries,
    although still a lot has to be done to ensure actual improvements in terms of implementation. Where
    possible, the EU should increasingly join forces with other regional and international organisations on
    specific topics in Central Asian countries, foremost with the UN, the OSCE and the Council of Europe
    (CoE). Cooperation with the latter offers a good opportunity for coordinated and enhanced
    advancement of democracy and the rule of law. The EU and the CoE’s Venice Commission already
    worked together in Central Asia through the EU’s regional Rule of Law initiative (2009–11). Increased
    cooperation with the OSCE’s human dimension activities, foremost in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan where
    the OSCE is well represented and established, could also potentially work as a force multiplier.
    5.2 Financial instruments
     Body Cooperation programmes on good governance, democracy, human rights, and the rule of
    law need to be extended beyond the governmental level and more civil society engagement is
    necessary to foster growth and influence of local civil societies.
    Currently, the largest part of mainstream DCI assistance is channelled to governments, leaving civil
    society actors in Kyrgyzstan’s case for instance with less EIDHR and NSA/LA funds or IfS assistance. This
    allows the regimes to define the priority areas, leading to a situation where human rights and good
    governance programmes are either not funded by the EU or are confined to a technical level, leaving
    legislative and policy changes unaddressed. The involvement of civil society actors in the planning,
    implementation, and evaluation of programmes aimed at government reform may help bridge this gap.
    In the countries where independent civil society organisations can operate and do have capacities to
    work with EU funding (Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan), it would be advisable to increase support to human
    rights projects implemented by non-governmental actors or those envisaging cooperation between
    independent human rights NGOs and state authorities. In cases where the absorption capacity of local
    CSOs are limited (Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan), project implementation and management
    could be taken over by larger international NGOs in cooperation with local partners, as long as these
    projects have local capacity building elements incorporated.
     Grants to civil society organisations in Central Asia should focus on fewer priority areas, while
    more emphasis needs to be placed on monitoring and evaluation projects that can boost
    European understanding of the human rights conditions in Central Asia and build local CSO
    capacities.
    Considering the modest amounts of EU assistance allocated to Central Asia, the EU would best
    concentrate its efforts on key problems, including through follow-up of previous projects that proved to
    be successful and thematically relevant. The EU delegations, together with the EEAS and the
    Commission’s DG DEVCO, need to identify key areas for support, taking into account relevant assistance
    provided by other international actors in order to avoid duplication. In view of the currently insufficient
    coordination among the various EU institutions, especially EEAS and DG DEVCO, it is important that the
    latter be included in defining priority areas and in the strategic planning of EU financial support to
    Central Asia from the outset.
    In Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, financing human rights projects to be implemented by local and
    foreign NGOs continues to be practically impossible, due to the extremely difficult conditions for the
    few local NGOs that are active in those countries. In Uzbekistan, a small opening has been offered in
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    33
    areas that do not directly challenge the government’s authority, such as projects that address women’s
    rights or rights of the disabled. Concerning Kazakhstan, a continuation and intensification of monitoring
    and evaluation projects would certainly make sense. This practice could easily be extended to
    Kyrgyzstan, taking into account the many reforms that the government plans to undertake. In Tajikistan,
    perspectives for human rights projects are fairly broad, but the capacity of local NGOs is very limited;
    capacity building around monitoring projects, as well as carefully chosen practical projects, should be in
    the cards.
     Assistance to official institutions needs to be further country-tailored to ensure that programmes
    on judicial, prison or parliamentary reform, as well as broader human rights programmes, can
    have the desired short-term practical and long-term reform oriented impact.
    Financing government-implemented programmes on judicial reforms, strengthening capacity of
    national parliaments, prison reform or broader human rights programmes needs to be assessed more
    closely taking country-specific circumstances into account. In Central Asia – where regimes see
    democratic reform as a threat to their existence – such projects are often the lowest common
    denominator on which the EU and local governments can agree. Frequently these projects only scratch
    the surface through technical assistance and some training, but do not have any bearing on deeper
    problems. In each particular case, the EU will need carefully to assess the costs and benefits. In this
    sense, the EU could for instance conclude that assistance rendered to Uzbekistan is costly while the
    benefits in terms of concrete reforms are minor or non-existent. As long as there is no genuine will
    towards democratic reform in Uzbekistan, support to a rubber-stamp parliament is unlikely to have the
    desired impact. Establishing human rights resource centres in Turkmenistan is a step forward, but to
    make sure that benefits outweigh costs the EU will need to stay on the ball and ensure that the centres
    actually contribute to awareness raising among the population and do not become advertisement
    posters of EU efforts or of Turkmenistan’s human rights achievements. If no satisfactory agreement with
    governments can be reached, then it is better to abstain from funding such projects and seek to invest
    in other fields such as educational programmes instead.
    As of 2014, Kazakhstan will no longer receive DCI assistance. Instead, it will benefit from the Partnership
    Instrument (PI), designed for upper-middle income countries with which the EU aims to advance its
    interests and address global challenges. Nonetheless, Kazakhstan’s judiciary and democratic institutions
    will need further reform. The EU could provide twinning programmes and expertise to address deeper
    shortcomings in the judiciary and democratic institutions, as well as the human rights situation. In
    Kyrgyzstan, continuing assistance to judicial reforms is most promising. However, here the EU could
    also fail to tackle core human rights issues if it does not follow a hands-on approach. When providing
    assistance for judicial reforms, the EU needs to ask for specific deliverables such as the re-opening of
    post June-2010 court cases in order to investigate torture and ill-treatment by law enforcement
    personnel. The EU should condition its assistance to Kyrgyzstan, for judicial reform as well as sectoral
    budget support for socio-economic programmes to specific human rights related deliverables. Should
    the EU decide also to render support to Tajikistan in the field of human rights, it will need to tie such
    assistance closely to the already existing sectoral budget support, while setting clear objectives and
    making use of the experience gained in Kyrgyzstan.
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    34
    6. CONCLUSION
    The EU’s 2007 Central Asia Strategy has so far brought limited results in improving rule of law, good
    governance, democracy, and human rights in the region. It lacks clearly defined objectives, which
    makes it harder to assess the EU’s engagement.
    Two factors in particular help explain the lack of results in promoting human rights in Central Asia. First,
    EU public diplomacy tends to refer to human rights and democratic reform in rather general terms,
    instead of raising specific issues, while at the same time lacking coherence and follow-up.
    Consequently, only few specific human rights issues have been taken up seriously or have been solved.
    Second, overall financial assistance, and in particular in terms of democracy and human rights, is
    limited, not always well targeted, and frequently aimed at achieving more quantifiable results than
    deep rooted democratic transformations. To date, this approach has led to a situation where a number
    of programmes in judicial, prison or parliament reform only tackle shortcomings on the surface, failing
    to trigger any meaningful long-term changes.
    Prospects for democratic change and an improvement of human rights to meet international standards
    look dim in Central Asia. However, the EU could make a difference if it applies better tailored policy and
    financial instruments, has a consistent democracy and human rights agenda focused on concrete cases,
    and keeps long-term democratic reform in mind.
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    35
    7. ANNEX I: EU PUBLIC STATEMENTS CONCERNING CENTRAL ASIA
    Kazakhstan
    Statement by the spokesperson of the EU High Representative Catherine Ashton on the events in the
    Zhanaozen district of Kazakhstan, Brussels, 17 December 2011,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/127032.pdf
    Statement by High Representative Catherine Ashton following her meeting with the Minister of Foreign
    Affairs of Kazakhstan, Mr. Yerzhan Kazykhanov, Brussels, 2 February 2012,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/127813.pdf
    EU statement on the events in western Kazakhstan, OSCE Permanent Council 895, Vienna, 22 December
    2011,
    http://eeas.europa.eu/delegations/kazakhstan/documents/press_corner/statement_zhanaozen_en.pdf
    Statement by the High Representative Catherine Ashton on EU-Kazakhstan relations, Brussels, 19 July
    2011,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/123941.pdf
    Statement by High Representative Catherine Ashton following her meeting with the Minister of Foreign
    Affairs of Kazakhstan, Mr. Yerzhan Kazykhanov, Brussels, 2 February 2012,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/127813.pdf
    Remarks by High Representative Catherine Ashton following her meeting with the President of
    Kazakhstan, Astana, 30 November 2012,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu//uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/133929.pdf
    Kyrgyzstan
    9th
    meeting of Cooperation Council between the EU and the Kyrgyz Republic, Brussels, 13 February
    2007,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/en/er/92765.pdf
    10th
    meeting of the Cooperation Council between the EU and the Kyrgyz Republic, Brussels, 22 July
    2008,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_Data/docs/pressdata/en/er/101917.pdf
    11th
    meeting of the Cooperation Council between the EU and the Kyrgyz Republic, Brussels, 23 February
    2010,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cmsUpload/113006.pdf
    12th meeting of the Cooperation Council between the EU and the Kyrgyz Republic, Brussels, 21
    November 2013,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/139665.pdf
    Statement by High Representative Catherine Ashton at the end of her visit to Kyrgyzstan, 27 November
    2012,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_Data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/133872.pdf
    Statement by the spokesperson of EU High Representative Catherine Ashton following her meeting
    with the President of the Kyrgyz Republic, 17 September 2013,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/138758.pdf
    Remarks by President of the European Council Herman Van Rompuy after his meeting with the
    President of Kyrgyzstan Almazbek Atambaev, 17 September 2013,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/en/ec/138749.pdf
    Statement by President Barroso following his meeting with Almazbek Atambaev, President of the
    Kyrgyz Republic, 17 September 2013,
    http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_SPEECH-13-715_en.htm
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    36
    Tajikistan
    EU-REPUBLIC OF TAJIKISTAN COOPERATION COUNCIL, First meeting, Brussels, 13 December 2010,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/en/er/118431.pdf
    Second meeting of the Cooperation Council between the European Union and the Republic of
    Tajikistan, Brussels, 27 February 2012,
    http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_PRES-12-69_en.htm
    Third meeting of the Cooperation Council between the European Union and the Republic of Tajikistan,
    Brussels, 1 October 2013,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/en/er/138875.pdf
    First Meeting of the Cooperation Committee between the European Union and the Republic of
    Tajikistan, Dushanbe, 16 March 2011,
    http://eeas.europa.eu/delegations/tajikistan/press_corner/all_news/news/2011/20110316_01_en.htm
    Remarks by High Representative Catherine Ashton following her meeting with the President of
    Tajikistan, Dushanbe, 29 November 2012,
    http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_MEMO-12-927_en.htm
    Statement by EU High Representative Catherine Ashton following her meeting with Tajik President
    Emomali Rahmon, Brussels, 9 April 2013,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_Data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/136700.pdf
    Turkmenistan
    Statement by EU High Representative Catherine Ashton following her meeting with Turkmen Foreign
    Minister Rashid Meredov, Brussels, 9 April 2013,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_Data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/136701.pdf
    EU Commission President Barroso visits and Turkmenistan EU Energy Commissioner Günther Oettinger,
    Ashgabat, 17 January 2011,
    http://www.europahouse-
    tm.eu/files/EU%20Commission%20President%20Barroso%20visits%20Turkmenistan_Europa%20House
    _TK_%20ENG_January_2011.pdf
    Uzbekistan
    Council conclusions on Uzbekistan – 2675th General Affairs and External Relations Council meeting,
    Brussels, 18 July 2005,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cmsUpload/UZBEKISTAN6912rev1.pdf
    EU Council Conclusions on Uzbekistan, Luxembourg, 3 October 2005,
    Council Conclusions on Uzbekistan, GAERC, 5 March 2007,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cmsUpload/UZBEKISTAN6912rev1.pdf
    Council Conclusions on Uzbekistan 2824th External Relations Council meeting, Luxembourg, 15-16
    October 2007,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/ueDocs/cms_Data/docs/pressData/en/gena/96513.pdf
    Council Conclusions on Uzbekistan, 2897th External Relations Council meeting, Luxembourg, 13
    October 2008,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cmsUpload/103295.pdf
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    37
    Conclusions on Uzbekistan 3041st Foreign Affairs Council meeting, Luxembourg, 25 October 2010,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_Data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/117329.pdf
    Statement of European Commission President José Manuel Barroso following his meeting with the
    President of Uzbekistan Islam Karimov, Brussels, 24 January 2011,
    http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_MEMO-11-40_en.htm
    Remarks by High Representative Catherine Ashton at the end of her visit to Uzbekistan, Tashkent, 29
    November 2012,
    http://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_Data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/133899.pdf
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    38
    8. ANNEX II: OVERVIEW OF EIDHR GRANTS TO CENTRAL ASIA
    All amounts in EUR.
    Kazakhstan
    EIDHR 2007 Kazakhstan (published on 24 October 2008)
    Name of the Project
    Increase life quality by protecting our rights 236 625.45
    Legal protection on the labour market today is your decent old ages
    tomorrow
    198 001.84
    Improvement and reformation of legislation on
    publishing activity and allied industries in Kazakhstan
    97 373.33
    Enhancing the capacity of civil society to disseminate human rights
    Information in the Kazakh language
    156 064.00
    The international standards about mass media and national legislation 68 438.94
    Development of effective legal and social
    instruments for protection of the vulnerable groups’ civil and human rights in
    Kazakhstan
    97 079.90
    Educational legal trainings in response to human trafficking 213 088.00
    Open budget Kazakhstan 130 374.72
    TOTAL 1 197 046.18
    EIDHR 2009 Kazakhstan (published on 28 April 2010)
    Name of the Project
    Monitoring the National Human Rights Action Plan by
    Kazakhstan for 2009-2012 implementation progress
    240 000.00
    National Action Plan for Human Rights in the Republic of Kazakhstan:
    increasing public awareness and monitoring of its implementation
    274 452.39
    TOTAL 514 452.39
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    39
    Kyrgyzstan
    EIDHR 2007 Kyrgyzstan
    Name of the project
    Support Centre for National Minority Rights 63 889
    Project for Inclusion of the Human Rights in Kyrgyz Police 68 000
    Bir-Duyno One World Kyrgyzstan 45 326
    Improving the lives of people with disabilities 107 518
    Increase of efficiency of national mechanism on gender equality achievement 52 801
    National video dialogue network 149 994
    EU Civil Society Dialogue on Human Rights 119 373
    TOTAL 606 901
    EIDHR 2008-2009 Kyrgyzstan
    Name of the Project
    Torture prevention and support to victims of torture in Kyrgyzstan 95 000
    Youth rights inclusion and political engagement in southern Kyrgyzstan 187 305
    Cooperation of civil society and military institution as a guarantee of human
    rights observance in the military team
    113 536
    Empowerment of NGOs working in the field of children’s rights in Kyrgyz
    republic
    281 250
    Strengthening of dialogue between NGOs and the public sector on social
    protection of vulnerable people in Kyrgyzstan
    209 452
    Monitoring of custody conditions and right of incarcerated elderly people and
    organisations of social work with convicted elderly
    162 628
    National video dialogue network 226 352
    TOTAL 1 275 523
    Policy Department DG External Policies
    40
    EIDHR 2010-2011 Kyrgyzstan
    Name of the Project
    Helping women by helping men: media campaign on domestic violence
    prevention
    85 400
    Institutional support to implementation of the regional strategy (2010-2012)
    on gender equality achievement in Issyk-Kul Oblats
    48 570
    The right to life without violence in old age 159 347
    Empowering civil society actors in Kyrgyzstan to become effective and
    influential contributors to the process of democratising policing and other
    security related issues
    209 950
    TOTAL 503 267
    Tajikistan
    EIDHR 2007 Tajikistan
    Name of the Project
    League of Women Lawyers – Join efforts to prevent torture in Tajikistan 66 549
    RURAL DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVES – People’s involvement in torture
    prevention
    45 758
    NIHOL – Contribution to development of the legal security capacity of women
    against violence
    50 000
    NASLI NAVRAS – Children as partners for child rights monitoring in Tajikistan 80 000
    PROGRESS – Awareness raising and elimination of trafficking in human being
    victims in Sughd region of the Republic of Tajikistan
    37 950
    Bureau for Human Rights – Human Rights Journalists Network 64 695
    CONSUMERS UNION OF TAJIKISTAN – Promoting people-centred consumer
    policy framework in energy sector of Tajikistan
    83 994
    RUSHD – Enhancing the capacity of political parties in Khatlon region for
    electoral observation
    87 570
    BUNEDKOR – Country’s women for democratic elections in Tajikistan 55 560
    JAHON – Strengthening democracy and governance process by increasing
    women’s empowerment in politics
    87 000
    TOTAL 659 076
    Evaluation of the EU's human rights policies and engagement in Central Asia
    41
    EIDHR 2009 Tajikistan
    Name of the Project
    NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF POLITICAL SCIENTISTS OF TAJIKISTAN – Fair
    Parliamentary Elections-2010
    170 056.00
    GROUP OF INITIATIVE VOLUNTEERS – Soghd Youth Initiatives 92 869.11
    RURAL DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVES – People's involvement in torture
    prevention-2
    124 448.00
    Mission OST – Enabling civil society to promote the rights of people with
    disabilities
    224 408.00
    INTERNATIONAL ALERT LBG – Dialogue for a policy on the relationship
    between the secular state and religion
    243 244.00
    TOTAL 855 025.11
    EIDHR 2010 Tajikistan
    Name of the Project
    NIHOL – Strengthening national and international framework for protection of
    socio-economic rights of rural women, including rights of unofficial wives
    106 491.00
    BHR – Promotion interests of displaced related to the construction of Rogun
    HPP
    90 172.00
    ZDOROVIE – Your rights and capabilities 30 992
    MUNIS – Day shelter for exposed girls 70 247
    INTERNATIONAL ALERT LBG – Mainstreaming of youth policy against
    radicalism (MYPAR)
    104 141
    WELTHUNGERHILFE – Enforcing democratic structures and the rule of law in
    irrigation management
    239 797.00
    HANDICAP INT – Empowering representative organisations of persons with
    disabilities in Tajikistan to effectively promote the equal participation of
    persons with disabilities and their human rights in the development of
    Tajikistan
    241 844
    TOTAL 883 684.00