Turkmenistan Helsinki Foundation logo

Turkmenistan Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights

Turkmenistan

Turkmenistan: Activist’s Family Barred from Travel Abroad.

Turkmenistan: Activist’s Family Barred from Travel Abroad.

Brother of Exiled Rights Defender Halted at the Airport

Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch joint press release

(Berlin, May 20, 2014) – Turkmenistani authorities have barred the family of one of the country’s most prominent human rights defenders from traveling abroad, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and the Bulgarian Helsinki Committee said today. The Turkmenistani government should immediately end its longstanding practice of banning government critics and their family members from foreign travel, the groups said.

On April 10, 2014, Turkmenistani authorities barred Ruslan Tukhbatullin from flying to Istanbul to visit his brother, Farid. Farid Tukhbatullin is the head of the Turkmen Initiative for Human Rights, one of the most prominent human rights groups working on Turkmenistan. He has lived in exile in Austria since 2003, after he was released from prison in Turkmenistan. He had been convicted of politically motivated charges and pressured by the authorities to leave the country.

“Preventing people from traveling abroad for no valid reason is a violation of freedom of movement and a relic of Soviet-era repression,” said Rachel Denber, deputy Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “By banning Ruslan Tukhbatullin from traveling, Turkmenistani authorities are obviously trying to retaliate against his brother for his human rights work.”

On April 10, Ruslan Tukhbatullin was to fly from Ashgabat to Istanbul with his daughter. Border police cleared his daughter, but after examining Tukhbatullin’s passport, they told him he was not allowed to leave the country, and that he and his 9-year-old son are on a list of people banned from foreign travel. The border police told him he would have to ask the Migration Service for an explanation. He wrote to the State Migration Service on April 21 asking for an explanation but has not received a reply.

It is not the first time Turkmenistani authorities have targeted Farid Tukhbatullin’s family and friends to pressure him to stop his human rights work. In 2010, authorities began questioning former classmates and teachers of Tukhbatullin’s sons, who also live in exile. At least three were threatened with treason charges if they maintained ties with the family. In 2005, Ruslan Tukhbatullin, an army officer, was pressured into resigning his military post and job with the draft board, after being warned that he would be dismissed unless his brother “kept his head down.”

Toward the end of April, the local military draft board, where Ruslan Tukhbatullin had worked, summoned him to “re-inspect” his documents on file about his work.

“The timing of this draft board’s summons clearly suggests they are looking for bogus reasons to retroactively justify the authorities’ decision to ban him from foreign travel,” Denber said.

The Turkmenistani government uses an informal and arbitrary system of travel bans to routinely restrict foreign travel for people associated with the political opposition, relatives of exiled dissidents, and the like, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International said. While a handful of people previously banned from foreign travel were permitted to travel abroad in 2013, others were not, including family members of political prisoners. Students studying abroad also frequently face obstacles leaving Turkmenistan trying to return to their studies.

“The authorities of Turkmenistan continue to impose arbitrary and informal limits on the freedom of movement despite its international human rights obligations, said John Dalhuisen, Europe and Central Asia programme director at Amnesty International. “The Turkmenistani government can and should do the right thing, and let Ruslan Tukhbatullin and his family travel freely abroad.”

For more Human Rights Watch reporting on Turkmenistan, please visit:

http://www.hrw.org/europecentral-asia/turkmenistan

For more information, please contact: In Moscow, for Human Rights Watch, Rachel Denber (English, Russian, French): +1-917-916-1266 (mobile); or +7-916-913-6239 (mobile); or denberr@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter: @Rachel_Denber In London, for Amnesty International, Lydia Aroyo (English, Russian): +44-(0)-7771-796-350 (mobile); or +44-(0)-20-7413-5599; or laroyo@amnesty.org

Public Document **************************************** For more information please call Amnesty International’s press office in London, UK, on +44 20 7413 5566 email: press@amnesty.org twitter: @amnestypress International Secretariat, Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW, UK

Latest News

Туркменистан - запрет на выезд/Türkmenistan - syýahat gadagançylygy
Туркменистан - запрет на выезд/Türkmenistan - syýahat gadagançylygy
Хроника Туркменистана: «Утверждая, что в стране все прекрасно, вы обманываете и себя, и народ». Обращение Солтан Ачиловой к руководству Туркменистана.
Хроника Туркменистана: «Утверждая, что в стране все прекрасно, вы обманываете и себя, и народ»....
Uzbekistan: International human rights organisations call on President Mirziyoyev to veto “undesirable” foreigners law
Uzbekistan: International human rights organisations call on President Mirziyoyev to veto...
U.S. Department of State: 2024 Trafficking in Persons Report: Turkmenistan
U.S. Department of State: 2024 Trafficking in Persons Report: Turkmenistan
Crude Accountability: New Report Alert: “Politically Motivated? The Story of Dmitry Leus”
Crude Accountability: New Report Alert: “Politically Motivated? The Story of Dmitry Leus”