In a hard-hitting report on Uzbekistan's rights record, the UN Committee Against Torture yesterday criticised the former Soviet republic for brushing off widespread human rights violations.
"When it comes to the practise of torture, Uzbekistan is one of the countries where torture occurs systematically," said committee member George Tugushi.
"And it's quite unusual when you have a country and you have numerous, credible reports of some serious, systemic issues when it comes to torture and other human rights issues, and you see that somehow the state party is not willing to admit any of those problems," said Tugushi, who is also the human rights ombudsman for Georgia.
His regime has been labelled by international rights campaigners as one of the most repressive on the planet.
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Quoting from the report on Uzbekistan's respect for international anti-torture rules, Felice Gaer, deputy head of the committee, said the strength of the language was "quite unusual".
"The committee is concerned about numerous, ongoing and consistent allegations that torture and ill-treatment are routinely used by law enforcement, investigative, and prison officials," Gaer, a US human rights expert, told reporters in Geneva.
The report demanded "prompt, impartial and effective investigations into all allegations of torture and ill-treatment and prosecute and punish all those responsible".
It also called for a "zero-tolerance approach to the continuing problem of torture, and to the practise of impunity", and said top officials should "publicly and unambiguously condemn torture".
The committee said Uzbekistan had "limited and obstructed" any independent probes into the crushing of protests in May 2005 in the city of Andijan, which the government said left 187 people dead but which campaigners said cost at least 700 lives.
The situation has worsened since Uzbekistan was last in the committee's spotlight in 2007, Gaer said.
She noted that a string of Uzbek activists who tried to expose abuses had faced regime reprisals.