Arrested, threatened, beaten: The Uzbekistan activist who won't give up
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Elena Urlaeva holds up poster saying "We demand an investigation into torture"
Elena
Urlaeva was reportedly subjected to sexual violence by the Uzbek
authorities, after years of arrests and beatings. The BBC profiles an
activist renowned for her bravery.
It's early morning in a town
near the Uzbek capital Tashkent and a large group of local teachers are
queuing for a line of buses to take them to work. Among them is Elena Urlaeva, Uzbekistan's veteran rights activist and thorn in the side of the authorities. The
teachers are not heading for schools and nurseries, but to nearby
cotton fields, and Ms Urlaeva is trying to document the practice of
forced labour in the cotton industry. The 58-year-old who heads
the unregistered Human Rights Alliance of Uzbekistan is one of the few
remaining independent rights defenders in a country tightly controlled
by long-term authoritarian leader Islam Karimov. Ms Urlaeva is a
regular observer of the cotton harvest, a vital cash crop, and on this
morning she's chatting to teachers, trying to gather information about
the mobilisation of government workers to do unpaid "voluntary" work. What
happened next is based on her own account. The events cannot be
verified, but are in keeping with what has happened to her and other
activists in the past. Workers during the 2014 Uzbek cotton harvest, photographed by Elena Urlaeva
Invasive search
Ms Urlaeva says that when she started taking pictures, plain-clothed officers approached her and demanded her memory card. It's not in Ms Urlaeva's character to comply with officials easily. So she ran for it. She
was caught and taken to the local police station where an officer
accused her of destabilising the country and selling off state secrets.
He hit her on the head. Such treatment was not new to Ms Urlaeva
who has endured many similar encounters and whom international rights
groups have called the "bravest woman in Uzbekistan". But what happened next was far worse. Doctors from a rapid psychiatric unit arrived at the request of the police and sedated her with three injections, she says. The
body search that followed was described by the lobby group Human Rights
Watch as a "double cavity search": Ms Urlaeva was held down by several
people and the most intimate parts of her body were subjected to
inspections. When that did not produce a result she was taken for an X-ray. The humiliation didn't stop there. Ms Urlaeva was refused permission to use the toilet and was told to go outside. "We
will film you," she says she was told. "If you complain about what
happened here we will put the footage of your bare backside all over the
internet." The brutality of the treatment Ms Urlaeva says she received has shocked her supporters. International
rights groups from Amnesty International to Human Rights Watch reported
her ordeal. The US and the European Union also expressed their concern. But the report doesn't come as a surprise. Uzbekistan's cotton industry is notorious for using coerced labour
Persistence
Ms
Urlaeva has probably done more than anyone to observe, document and
expose Uzbekistan's state-sponsored forced labour system, which has been
condemned by international human rights groups and the International
Labour Organization. "The Uzbek government uses forced labour,
including child labour to harvest a crop from which only the elite
profit," Andrew Stroehlein from Human Rights Watch says. "She was
investigating this corrupt and abusive practice of forced labour." Ms
Urlaeva's persistent work contributed to an international campaign
which ultimately led major global brands to join a boycott of Uzbek
cotton. As a result, Uzbekistan began to eliminate at least the
practice of child labour in the harvest with teachers, doctors and civil
servants now making up the numbers. Elena Urlaeva's journey as a
human rights activist began almost 20 years ago when she helped her
brother who was caught up in a child custody case. It was the
first time she fell foul of the authorities. She was charged with
hooliganism and fired from her job with the state broadcasting company. Charges
of hooliganism, detention and forced sectioning in psychiatric
hospitals are well documented methods used by the authorities to silence
and intimidate dissidents and activists - practices rolled over from
the Soviet era. Ms Urlaeva has suffered all of them. She
has been arrested, beaten, threatened - and was held in psychiatric
institutions on many occasions amounting to many months of forced
treatment and medication. Ms Urlaeva has campaigned against rights abuses for the best part of 20 years
In early 2015, Urlaeva signed an open letter to
President Karimov, asking him not to stand for re-election
She's campaigned on numerous
issues, from opposing the destruction of homes for public building
projects, to highlighting corruption, torture and false imprisonment. There
seems to be almost no cause she won't pick up. This year she campaigned
against the re-election of President Karimov. And on the 70th
anniversary of the end of World War Two she interviewed veterans to
highlight poor living conditions. Her work, documenting abuses
with photographs or first-hand interviews with relatives of victims, has
been a rare source of information for human rights organisations as
well as the media. In a country where public protests are unheard
of, she has held numerous mini-demonstrations - often alone, holding a
self-made placard. She's been whisked away many times - sometimes she's been stopped at her own front door. Her
family has been put under pressure too. Ms Urlaeva's 11-year-old
adopted son has suffered bullying at school and has been beaten up near
his home by teenagers set up to ambush him. After every attack Ms
Urlaeva has come back - although not always stronger. Her health has
suffered, but not it seems her determination. In the latest
correspondence following her ordeal Elena Urlaeva wrote that she was
undergoing medical treatment for her injuries and looking for a lawyer
to "take on her abusers". "When I finish with the treatment I will continue my fight against modern day slavery," she wrote. In recent weeks she has since been arrested once more but is currently out of custody