DUSHANBE: A woman leaves a voting booth after casting her ballot in Tajikistan’s parliamentary election.—AFP
DUSHANBE: A woman leaves a voting booth after casting her ballot in Tajikistan’s parliamentary election.—AFP

DUSHANBE: Voting was under way in Tajikistan on Sunday in parliamentary polls that President Emomali Rakhmon’s ruling party is expected to sweep, with only one genuinely critical party taking part and the former main opposition banned.

The elections are the first in the country’s post-Soviet history without the Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajiki­stan, a moderate faith-based party which was once the main opposition but was outlawed in 2015 and the target of a harsh crackdown ever since.

The country’s Central Election Commission said just over 75 per cent of the electorate had cast votes as of 1000 GMT, comfortably beyond the 50pc threshold required for the commission to validate an election.

Rakhmon voted for “a worthy candidate” at a polling station in the capital Dushanbe on Sunday morning, the state agency Khovar reported.

While Rakhmon’s People’s Democ­ratic Party of Tajikistan is set for a big win, other competing parties from the outgoing legislature — including the Agrarian Party, the Party of Economic Reform and the Socialist Party — are all widely seen as proxies that endorse his nearly three-decade rule.

Only one identifiable opposition party is competing in Sunday’s ballot — the Social Democratic Party of Tajikistan, which has never entered parliament. The People’s Democratic Party of Tajikistan currently dominates the chamber, holding 51 seats out of 63.

Polling stations close at 1500 GMT and preliminary results are expected on Monday.

As voting began Sunday, Mukha­bbat Rakhimova, a teacher in the capital Dushanbe, said it was symbolic that she was casting her vote in a school that had been converted into a polling station.

“I want the lawmakers we elect to make their own big contributions to education,” Rakhimova told AFP.

‘Pre-agreed limits’

The last elections in 2015 marked a turning point for Tajikistan, a landlocked Muslim-majority country reliant on former overlord Russia for security and next-door China for loans and investment.

That year, the Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan failed to make parliament for the first time since the end of a five-year civil war that pitted Islamists, democrats and regional forces against troops loyal to Rak­hmon, costing tens of thousands of lives.

A peace deal was brokered to end the fighting in 1997, with ally Russia acting as a guarantor, and the opposition guaranteed a role in politics.

But within months of falling short of the parliamentary threshold, the party was deemed extremist and banned. Eleven members of its political council were jailed.

The UN Working Group on Arbi­trary Detention has determined that the members were arrested “for their exercise of freedom of expression and freedom of assembly,” and demanded their release.

Since the party was outlawed, the 67-year-old Rakhmon has strengthened his control over the country. In 2016, he oversaw a referendum that allowed him to rule indefinitely.

Some analysts tip his son, Rustam Emomali, currently serving as Mayor of Dushanbe, to succeed him in the near future.

Shokir Hakimov, the Social Democ­ratic Party of Tajikistan’s deputy chairman, told AFP that its lack of seats is “not because we lack a base” but because of a “lack of political will, poor electoral legislation and falsifications.” The other small parties on the ballot, he said, are “artificially created political structures, which play by the rules of the nomenklatura and keep criticism to within pre-agreed limits.” The build-up to Sunday’s vote saw well-known journalist and government critic Daler Sharipov jailed as part of a wave of over a hundred arrests that began at the end of last year.

Authorities have said the sweep is targeting the Muslim Brotherhood movement, another banned group.

In the capital Dushanbe, leaflets of candidates standing in single member districts were visible on bus stops, while giant banners advertising the election loom over thoroughfares.

In a city centre market, a 39-year-old trader called Mansour said he planned to vote, and hoped that his district candidate would tackle the “mindless increase in taxes.”

“Every year hundreds of small traders are forced to close their businesses at the markets, because taxes are pushed up,” Mansour said in an interview ahead of the vote.

Published in Dawn, March 2nd, 2020

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