Structure
I. Preface 1
II. Introduction 3
1. ) The Umma-Concept 3
2. ) Islamic Movements in Central Asia: Between Nation and Umma 4
III. Roots, Emergence in Uzbekistan and
Ideology 5
1. ) Origins 5
2. ) Emergence in Uzbekistan 7
3. ) Introduction to the Ideology of the Liberation Party 8
IV. Organization and Political Methodology 11
1. ) Organization 11
2. ) Political Methodology 12
V. Attitude Towards Violence 14
V. Conclusion 16
II
Islamic Movements in Uzbekistan:
“Who is Hizb ut-Tahrir?”
I. Preface
"The riot was organized by the followers of the Akramia movement, which is a new part of the Hizb-ut-Tahrir movement. The organization's objectives are absolutely unacceptable for us. They are about hatred and the rejection of the secular way of development" Islam Karimov, 2005 1
Islam and Islamic movements have become a crucial political issue in Uzbekistan. Despite having taken some transitional democratic measures (opposition parties were granted legal status, an ombudsman was appointed, etc.), and even though President Karimov had shown an early interest in Western (and in particular European) institutional systems, it seems that over the past five years (since the bombing on 6 February 1999 in Tashkent) the democratic process in Uzbekistan has taken a step back to practices inherited from Soviet times. Freedom of expression is today severely restricted in Uzbekistan, with essentially no independent press. 2 Moreover political opposition became almost impossible. In the declaration by the Presidency on behalf of the European Union on the Parliamentary elections in Uzbekistan the EU noted with concern that only government-approved parties were registered for the 26 December 2004 Legislative Chamber Elections and that, over the last twelve months, three aspiring political parties were not permitted to register. 3 Much of the state’s repressive apparatus and many of the its negative economic policies have been attributed to the need to fight against Islamic extremist. 4 The most prominent Islamic groups in Uzbekistan are the
1 President Karimov´s statement to the press following the Andijan Massacre, for details on the events and the governments involvement see HRW, 2005: http://hrw.org/reports/2005/uzbekistan0605/
2 Eur. Com. 2004: http://europa.eu.int/comm/external_relations/uzbekistan/intro/
3 Eur. Com. 2005:
http://europa.eu.int/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=PESC/05/2&format=HTML&aged=0&language
4 for a detailed analyzes see ICG, 2003: Radical Islam in Central Asia: Responding to HuT ICG Asia
Report, No. 58 and Uzbekistan’s Reform Program: Illusion or Reality ? Asia Report, No. 46
1
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) and Hizb ut-Tahrir (HuT). 5 After much of the IMU (Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan) infrastructure and capacity was destroyed during the U.S.led military campaign in Afghanistan in 2001 its role in challenging the regime of President Karimov´s regime states has been taken over by the non-violent radical group Hizb ut-Tahrir. 6 Unlike the IMU, the HuT is a true transnational organization that consists of semiindependent branches, only some of which are in Central Asia. In Central Asia, it has been most active in Uzbekistan.
The purpose and the limit of this paper is to give an overview of the historical background, the ideology, the organisational structures and the aims of the Hizb ut-Tahrir. Special attention will be paid to its political methodology and its attitude towards violence, which is essential to understand and assess the role of Islamic movements such as Hizb ut-Tahrir Uzbekistan. Due to the government’s crackdown of the party, state propaganda, conflicting media reports lead by internal and external interest groups and the parties own propaganda agenda it is very difficult to find reliable information about the parties involvement in the region. However, the International Crisis Group (ICG) 7 is the trustworthiest source in this aspect since it has a regular and extended coverage of the area and its political situation with a special focus on the Islamic movements. In addition, they have on the spot teams with direct contact to locals which gives them additional credibility. The papers statements regarding the party’s activities in Uzbekistan are thus mostly based on ICG report about Hizb ut-Tahrir in Central Asia.
5 Halbach, 2002:1
6 Naumkin, 2003: 3 and 4
7 ICG, 2006: http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=1251&l=1
2
II. Introduction
1.) The Umma-Concept
“The Fatherland of a Muslim is the place where the Seriat prevails.”
M. Said Halim Pasa, 1917 8
Traditional Islamic states such as the Ottoman Empire were not based on the nation-state concept but on the Umma concept. The nucleus of the Islamic polity was the religio-political community which the Prophet founded and led in Medina - the “Umma dun al-nas,” the community distinguished from the rest of mankind. 9 The central idea of Islam was of a community of believers regardless of race or language; “Umma” refers to community of brothers in faith. The division between believer and unbeliever became and remained the fundamental division of mankind among the Muslim peoples. The world was divided into “Dar al-Islam,” the House of Islam, and the “Dar al-Harb,” the House of War, or lands under infidel rule. Then religion constituted the basis for one’s individual identity. 10 When the European powers referred for example to “Turkey” and the “Turks”, the Turks considered themselves as Muslims belonging to the “Umma.” They were subjects of the Sultan and the Caliph. Religious affiliation dominated the thinking of the Muslims. It was far more crucial than ethnic or national identity. 11 A trend, which obviously did not prevail during the postcolonial period. The traditional Umma came to a formal end with the abolishment of the Caliphate by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk on the 3 rd of March. 12 The practical end was a result of the post-colonial period where Nation states where founded all along the Muslim world following the European example and where the ruling elites fostered the establishment of national identities and allegiance on the expenses of trans-regional and trans-ethnic solidarity of the supranational Muslim community of the Umma.
8 Quoted in Lewis, 1961: 323
9 Ibid: 328
10 Berkes, 1964: 9
11 Kirisce, 1997: 6
12 Mango, 1999: 404
3
2.) Islamic Movements in Central Asia: Between Nation and
Umma
According to Roy and Abou Zahab in their book about Islamic networks, 13 two major trends have emerged as part of Islamic militancy in the Muslim world and especially in Central Asia: One is Islamo-nationalism. The other is termed International Salafiyism. In terms of the first trend, it is asserted that many of the mainstream Islamic movements have shifted from a struggle in the name of a supranational Muslim community into a kind of Islamic nationalism. These activists want to be fully recognized as legitimate actors on the domestic political scene, recognize the nation and the state and often identify with both, and have largely given up the supranational agenda that was part of their ideology. These Islamonationalist movements want the Shariat (Islamic law) to be taken into account, but they want it to be taken into account as part of state law. They recognize that there should be state institutions, such as a parliament and elections. 14 In Central Asia, the prototype of a new defined Islamo-Nationalist party is the Islamic Renaissance Party in Tajikistan. 15 The second trend mentioned is the emergence of International Salafism. While the denomination of the former group is self-explaining the term Salafism 16 needs some descriptors: As part of their official doctrine, the Salafis do not recognize or acknowledge interpretations of different schools of Islam that emerged and plead for a strict and literal interpretation of the Koran struggling for the establishment of Muslim life similar to that which prevailed according to their interpretation at the time of the Prophet. 17 The Salafist movements have their origins in Saudi-Arabia. The kingdom’s dominant school of Islam is often called Wahhabism by non-Saudis, in reference to Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab, an eighteenth-century desert preacher who allied himself with the al Saud family when it first established political control over the Arabian Peninsula, and whose descendants are still among Saudi Arabia’s most important official clergy. Many Saudis reject the term “Wahhabism” as pejorative; they regard Wahhab’s ideas as Islam itself, properly interpreted, and they argue that no other label is required. Some Saudis acknowledge their country’s dominant theology as a distinct school of Islamic thought, but they will typically refer to this school as Salafism, a term that refers to the beliefs and practices of the earliest followers of
13 Abou Zahab & Roy, 2002: 5-8
14 Roy, 2002: http://bcsia.ksg.harvard.edu/publication.cfm?program=CSP&ctype=event_reports&item_id=74
15 Abou Zahab & Roy, 2002: 6, 11-12
16 from the Arabic word Salaf which means ancestor
17 Roy, 2002: http://bcsia.ksg.harvard.edu/publication.cfm?program=CSP&ctype=event_reports&item_id=74
4
Islam. 18 The different International Salafiyist movements belonging to this fraction are absolute in their believe in the Umma concept. They do not accept national boundaries or ethnic or national interest group and refuse geographic limitations even if they are only active in one country or region. 19 Hizb ut Tahir (The Party of Islamic Liberation) which calls for an establishment of an Islamic Caliphate across the Middle East and Central Asia stands apart from better known radical Salafist movements like the Taliban and Al-Queida by its opposition to the use of violence. However, its views remain highly radical, advocating the overthrow of governments throughout the Muslim world and their replacement by a common Islamic state in the form of a (re-) created Caliphate.
III. Roots, Emergence in Uzbekistan and Ideology
1.) Origins
The founding of Hizb ut-Tahrir (HT) is deeply connected with the Israeli-Palestine Conflict and thus the personal history of its founder Sheikh Taqiuddin an-Nabhani al-Falastani. Born in Haifa in 1909 he was educated at the Al-Azhar University and Dar ul-Ulum University in Cairo, Egypt. He served as a judge in various courts in Lebanon and Palestine, and also taught at the Islamic University in Amman, Jordan. An-Nabhani established the movement in the Jordanian-ruled East Jerusalem suburb of Bayt ul-Maqdis in 1952 or 1953. Other known HT founders include Khaled Hassan, a founding member of the Palestine Liberation Organization’s (PLO) militant Fatah faction, and Sheikh Assad Tamimi, Islamic Jihad’s spiritual leader. 20
Like the better known pan-Arab movement the Baath party, Hizb ut-Tahrir took on characteristics of a modern political party with a party programme and structures. It is important to be aware that before 1924, there was nothing resembling a modern political party in the Islamic world. 21
18 Coll, 2005: http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/051212fa_fact
19 Abou Zahab & Roy, 2002: 6
20 Baran, 2004: 16
21 Haqqani, 2004: 34
5
Quote paper:
Franco Burgio, 2006, Islamic Movements in Uzbekistan: Who is Hizb-ut-Tahrir?, Munich, GRIN Publishing GmbH
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