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(CONTINUED 1) 2021-2023 – COMPLAINT-STATEMENT: CRIMES OF USA FBI AGENTS AND THE WAY OF EVIDENCE

Понедельник, 15 Мая 2023 г. 21:16 + в цитатник
Shuhratjon AHMADJONOV

(CONTINUED 1) 2021-2023 – COMPLAINT-STATEMENT: CRIMES OF USA FBI AGENTS AND THE WAY OF EVIDENCE

PART 2. PURSUIT IN BOISE

PARAGRAPH 17. My general analysis of the events from January 2010 to April 2023 shows that FBI agents, together with members of the Uzbek National Security Service, began to organize provocations against me from the first days of my arrival in the United States. Between July 2010 and January 2012, I was illegally fired from my job three times in Boise, Idaho. I am sure that FBI agents were also behind these actions. Therefore, I decided to briefly write the circumstances of moving to the United States and persecution in the city of Boise (Idaho) in 2010-2012. This information will provide important information about the crimes of FBI agents against dissident residents of the United States, including refugees. After all, I am sending this complaint to both the President of the United States and the leaders of international human rights organizations.

PARAGRAPH 18. A little history from the events in Uzbekistan (from [10], [11]). On December 23, 2007, the next Presidential elections were held in Uzbekistan. A group of human rights activists, including me, on December 20, 2007, from 11.00 to 12.30 in Tashkent, held a picket in front of the building of the Chief Prosecutor's Office of Uzbekistan. After the picket, a group of four people in civilian clothes began watching me. They followed me until the evening. Then we spent the night in the car, where I went to spend the night with friends. They continued the pursuit all day on December 21st. They drove a white and gray Nexia car with state license plates 30 84-52 and 30 Q 84-67. From December 21 to 22, I spent the night at the office of the Human Rights Alliance of Uzbekistan at the address: Tashkent, st. Lashkarbegi, house 17. They came for me there and watched until the morning. In my opinion, they were employees of the National Security Service of Uzbekistan. Usually, they had the ID of an employee of the Counter-Terrorism Department. On the afternoon of December 22, 2007, one of them rudely insulted me, and the other tried to take my camera away. On December 23, 2007, one of the persecutors beat me severely.

On the morning of December 23, 2007, I came to the Parkentsky market in Tashkent. Three of yesterday's pursuers followed me with quick steps. Then it became clear that a fourth had joined them.

I left the store and walked to the right along a footpath about three meters wide. Walked five or six meters. Then an Uzbek man, about 27 years old, 175 cm tall, with an athletic build, quickly approached me from behind, grabbed me by the left side of my jacket, sharply turned me about 90 degrees and angrily, loudly saying: “Tugri yur, onangni palon qilai!” (“I say, walk straight, ... your mother!”) and with all his might he hit my chin with his fist with his left hand. The blow was completely unexpected for me, and I swayed, taking half a step back. I automatically wanted to cover myself with my other hand, but I didn’t have time. And at this time this sadist quickly, with all his strength, struck me with his fist on the chest a second time. The blow was strong, professional, apparently, he was involved in boxing. And I couldn’t resist and fell into the wet asphalt. I found myself in a semi-lying state. My bag flew out of my shoulder and flew away from me (later it turned out that the main zipper of the bag was faulty and one of the front pockets on the bottom was torn). The area was crowded. Then one Russian woman said something loudly and tried to stop and push this sadist away. The same woman extended her hand, helped me up from the ground and handed me a bag.

I stood up, and the people standing next to me asked: “Who is he and why did he hit you?” I turned back. Those four pursuers stood three or four meters from me. Three of them pointed their turned on cell phones in my direction and looked with a grin. The fourth one, that is, that sadist, was a little to the side. I replied: “I am a human rights activist. They are intelligence officers. They’ve been chasing me for four days,” and pointed to those four with his hand. The sadist wanted to get closer to me, apparently, he wanted to hit me again. But one of the three pursuers grabbed him by the shoulder, turned him and pushed him towards the clothing market. All four of them were waiting to see what I would do.

After the beating, I felt bad and called an ambulance. Doctor Feruz Achilov, after listening to me and talking with the duty officer of the 5th substation, brought me to the Republican Scientific Center for Emergency Medical Care (RSCEM) (Tashkent, Farkhod St., building 2). Traumatologist F.I. Rashidov examined me and wrote the following diagnosis in the Medical History No. 15342, and also wrote the following diagnosis in the certificate: “Bruise of the soft tissues of the lower lip and chin, chest on the left.”

On December 31, 2007 at 11.30 am, accompanied by Major Zh. Riskulov, I went into the office of the head of the investigation department of the Khamza District Department of Internal Affairs, Major Abdukhakim Turgunov. He asked several questions. I briefly talked about what happened on December 23rd. As a result, they decided to open a criminal case. The case was transferred to the senior investigator of the Khamza District Department of Internal Affairs, Captain Yulia Ivanovna Iokhim. Y. Yochim asked a number of questions as a victim and wrote an interrogation report. I signed the interrogation report at 1:50 p.m. She said: “It’s a hanging case. I will soon move to Russia. That’s why this case was transferred to me.” ([10], [11])

PARAGRAPH 19. After the Presidential elections on December 23, 2007, the persecution of me intensified and there was a real threat of many years in prison and even my life. Therefore, on the night of October 11-12, 2008, I secretly left Tashkent for Andijan. There, on the afternoon of October 12, he crossed into Kyrgyzstan through the Dustlik (Friendship) border crossing. He lived in the city of Bishkek for three weeks and on November 4, 2008 left for the city of Almaty (Kazakhstan). Employees of the Almaty Representation Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) registered me as an "asylum seeker", and on February 23, 2009 - as a "refugee".

PARAGRAPH 20. I was granted political asylum by the US government in 2010 as a human rights activist and journalist. I arrived in Boise, Idaho on January 21, 2010. I was assisted by the international human rights organization International Rescue Committee (IRC - International Rescue Committee) when moving from Kazakhstan to the United States and a few months after the move. I thank the people and government of the United States, as well as the leadership of the UNHCR and the IRC, for granting me political asylum in the United States.

PARAGRAPH 21. At Boise Airport I was met by Uzbeks Mr. Abdulatif Kambarov (1962) and Mr. Tursunbai Utamuradov (1956-2012). They said the IRC had scheduled me to stay in their rented apartment. I agreed. Among the greeters was the IRC manager, Mr. Rabiou Manzo. He is from Niger. As a child, he lived in Ukraine for five years and in Russia for one year as a refugee and knew Russian well.

A new bed, bedding, soap, shampoo, towels, and something else was installed in the apartment for me. On the very first evening, Abdulatif set a condition: “We read namaz and pray five times a day. If you also pray five times a day, you will live with us. Otherwise, look for another apartment tomorrow.” That's religious freedom in the US. Washing of the hands, face and feet is required before each prayer. I didn’t have such an opportunity before, and therefore I prayed in the mosque on Fridays. I agreed.

A few days later they began to organize provocations against me. This two-room (with a three-room hotel) apartment was located in a one-story four-apartment building, which was located in the center of Boise, 200 meters from the governor's building of Idaho (apartment address: W Franklin St., Boise, Idaho (I don’t remember the house number)). The rent was $375 per month. In Boise, such an apartment paid a minimum of $525.

The entrance to the apartment was from the side of a small entrance street without a name and was dimly lit. A day later, several powerful lamps were installed and the passage was illuminated as during the day. And in Tashkent they also installed additional lighting, where I spent the night. This was done for the convenience of the arrival of the authorities for night drug interrogations. I realized that I ended up in a fake apartment of the the intelligence agencies. I thought that this was organized by the Uzbek National Security Service (NSS).

PARAGRAPH 22. On February 1, 2010, I verbally addressed Mr. Rabiou Manzo about the provocations of two Uzbeks and asked for another apartment. But the problem of providing another apartment was not solved, and the provocations continued. Abdulatif Kambarov refused to provide a computer. Therefore, I wrote a complaint by hand in 25 pages about 17 provocations of two Uzbeks in an apartment. On February 26, 2010, the complaint was referred to Mr. Rabiow Manzo, and on April 1, 2010 to the Director of the IRC in Boise. On February 23, 2022, from 6:30 am to 2:00 pm, I searched for this complaint in my archive in the storage chamber (Extra Space Storage: 1001 N Fillmore St, Arlington, VA 22201). But I didn't find it. I believe the complaint was also stolen by an FBI agent and people associated with him during a clandestine and illegal search of my storage cell.

As a result, on February 26, 2010, I moved to another apartment where two brothers from Africa lived (F 3818, Nez Perce street, # 202 Boise, Idaho 83705). I lived with them in a separate room. On April 18, 2010, I moved into a separate apartment at 585 S. Curtis Rd., #8, Boise, Idaho 83705. On April 1, 2010, I signed paperwork with Boise management to rent this apartment for six months for a monthly payment of $525. [12]

PARAGRAPH 23. I became a member of the Boise Central Library on January 31, 2010 (715 S Capitol Blvd
Boise, ID 83702). I usually return late. It was early February 2010. A low table (khontahta) was set up in the living room and dinner was served around it. Before the end of dinner, at about 11 p.m., the main provocateur Abdulatif Kambarov came and sat opposite me. He came to Boise in 2006 among the Andijan refugees. He lived apart from them.

He had a phone in his hands. He and his henchman Tursunbai Utamuradov boasted that they had recently bought expensive modern two new telephones. He turned on, pressed some buttons of the phone, put it on the table between us and started a conversation.

He talked about work and said that there is work to do, mopping the floor and cleaning the toilet. I tried to be calm and asked, “Why are you telling me this? Did you also mop the floors and clean the toilet?” He replied: “I used to mop the floors and clean the toilet.” I said: “Everyone solves this problem himself. If he wants, he will wash the floors, clean the toilet, and so he will earn money. But I will not do such work. I will find my piece of bread in another way.” He went on with his offer. I told him: “This does not concern me. Let's close this topic."

Provocateur Abdulatif continued his proposal with a slight change: “Many people in the US start by mopping floors and cleaning toilets. You must also do this work." I got a little angry, but I answered calmly: “I did not come to the USA to wash floors and clean the toilet. I came to continue my action for the protection of human rights, in the field of journalism and democracy. With two university educations, I will find my piece of bread without washing the floors and cleaning the toilet, with the permission of Allah (God).” I had finished dinner by this time, took the kettle and bowl, got up, went into the kitchen and started cleaning them. [13]

But I could never imagine that this provocative proposal made at the beginning of February 2010 would be used against me in July 2010.

PARAGRAPH 24. On March 29, 2010, Gail Hawkins (Employment coordinator) interviewed me and filled out ten questionnaires.

On April 5, 2010, Jail Hawkins said: “In the US, there is a separate government program for the employment of people over 55 years old. This is what Experience Works does.” She introduced me to Mr. Gerry Autry, Employment and Training Coordinator and his supervisor, Mr. Lloyd Willamson, Supervisor. . But for a long time, there was no specific job offer.

PARAGRAPH 25. Question: Why did the FBI agents begin and continue to persecute and organize crimes against me for many years? In February 2013, I wrote a long article “What is the reason for the massacres in the USA?” and answered this question there as well (see [7]).

After the bloody tragedy of May 13-14, 2005 in Andijan (Uzbekistan), in the summer of 2006, 250 refugees received political asylum in the United States. Of these, 55 people lived in Idaho (USA). On the night of August 1, 2006, 33-year-old refugee Olimjon Sobirov, on the night of September 1, 2006, 29-year-old Zokhid Makhmedov died in his sleep from unknown and inexplicable causes in his home in Idaho. The causes of both deaths have not been disclosed until today – May 3, 2023.

Talented journalist Synthia Sewell wrote a long article "Mysterious deaths" ("Mysterious deaths") about the mysterious death of two horsemen and Uzbek refugees in the United States. She published it on March 30, 2008 in Idaho's central newspaper, the Idaho Statesman (see [14]). This newspaper has been published since 1864.

I found this article in the Boise City Library on April 15, 2010. I published it on Internet sites in four versions, that is, in Uzbek in two versions - in Cyrillic and Latin, as well as in English and Russian in April-May 2010 ([15]).

PARAGRAPH 26. Some important passages from the article [15].

“During his investigation into Zohid Makhmedov’s death, Meridian police Detective Mike Lock talked to Rene Hage from World Relief, the agency that helped the Makhmedovs resettle here. She would not talk about the Uzbeks with the Statesman, citing privacy concerns, but she told Lock the Uzbek embassy was calling for all Andijan refugees to return home, saying, “[W]hen they refuse, there are consequences like something bad could happen to your family.” [15]

“And adding to Akram Makhmedov’s frustration and the aura of intrigue surrounding the events, the Meridian police report contains references to the FBI. The coroner’s office and others said they were interviewed by the FBI. The FBI, though, adamantly denies it conducted an investigation into the deaths.

“We don’t have an investigation. We didn’t have an investigation, and we never have,” said John Morton, supervisory senior resident agent in the Boise office." [15]

“Of the 250 Andijan refugees who spent more than a year in refugee camps in Kyrgyzstan and Romania before being relocated to the U.S., between one-third and one-half have since returned to the country from which they fled." [15]

In 2010, I spoke several times with Akr Makhmedov, the brother of Zohid Makhmedov. He was indignant: “Why did the FBI take the criminal case from the police about the death of two Uzbek refugees?” At that time, I could not answer this question. Now I can answer: apparently the FBI agents did not want or were afraid to solve this crime, especially if a similar case arose.

PARAGRAPH 27. An important fact: dictator Islam Karimov (1938-2016) awarded the first deputy chairman of the National Security Service (SNB) of Uzbekistan, Lieutenant-General Shukhrat Gulyamov (1966), with the honorary title of Hero of Uzbekistan in 2007 ([16]).

I wrote about the crimes and fate of Shukhrat Gulyamov in paragraph 30. The NSS has not caught a single spy in the many years of Uzbekistan's independence. And then Mr. Shukhrat Gulyamov receives the honorary title of Hero of Uzbekistan from the hands of President Islam Karimov. In my opinion, the dictator President Islam Karimov awarded him for "the successful operation to return many Andijan refugees from the United States in 2006-2007." Mostly women and children of Andijan refugees returned from the USA. As a result, refugees from Andijan were taken hostage by the National Security Service of Uzbekistan because of their returned wives and children. They even closed their websites and stopped all criticism of the dictatorial regime of Uzbekistan, headed in those years by Islam Karimov. All this was achieved through a mysterious death, or rather the murder of two Uzbek refugees with an interval of one month with the help of an unknown poison.

“On August 10, 2017, the Supreme Military Court (Tribunal) of the Republic of Uzbekistan sentenced Shukhrat Gulyamov to life imprisonment with the condition of compensation for financial damage in the amount of one and a half billion dollars inflicted on the state.” [16]

In my opinion, tens of millions of dollars of that one and a half billion dollars were brought into the US through various legal and illegal channels and used to bribe, bribe and encourage theft, robbery, poisoning and other types of crime.

In my opinion, some agents and leaders of the FBI knew about the dangerous criminal actions of the Uzbek National Security Service in the United States. But they constantly cooperated with the employees of the Uzbek National Security Service, and not for free. Indeed, without such cooperation, it was impossible to kill two Uzbek refugees in the United States with an interval of one month ...

Some agents and leaders of the FBI have continued and continue dangerous cooperation with employees and leaders of the NSS (since 2017, this service is called the State Security Service - SSS). This is evidenced by 19 thefts and 4 robberies organized against me from November 2012 to June 2021.

I lived for more than thirteen years and experienced constant surveillance, provocations, nightly drug interrogations of FBI agents with the use of sedatives and made sure that FBI agents and people associated with them use sedatives a lot in their criminal actions. I am convinced that the criminals used against Olimjon Sobirov and Zokhid Makhmedov also a sedative, along with an unknown poison. For this reason, they both died in their sleep and the nearby wives did not know their dying state ...

Perhaps an unknown poison made up both components, that is, it put to sleep, and acted as a deadly poison. After all, the secret laboratories of the special services are still creating new and improved poisons ...

PARAGRAPH 28. Every year on June 20, World Refugee Day is celebrated. Every year on the nearest Saturday in downtown Boise, a celebration and various events are organized. On May 17, 2010, I wrote to the Director of the IRC in Boise, Ms. Leslye Boban, requesting permission to prepare for a display of human rights posters, including the article “Mysterious deaths” on June 19 (Saturday), 2010 in honor of World Refugee Day. She replied: “There is freedom of speech in the USA. Therefore, permission can not be asked. But I want to warn you: if you demonstrate this article in downtown Boise, you could get into a lot of trouble." I answered this way: “If we now remember the unjustly dead in prisons and the tormented prisoners, then years will pass and someone will also remember us. If we are afraid and do not remember them, then the descendants will not remember us either,” and showed them and himself with his hand. That day my words were translated by Mr. Rabiou Manzo.

PARAGRAPH 29. For World Refugee Day, I prepared ten posters on the topic of human rights and refugees. On June 19, 2010, on one large stand, he showed a three-fold enlarged newspaper article "Mysterious deaths" in English. Residents and visitors to Boise read this article and the article on punitive psychiatry with great interest. I wrote on another stand about punitive psychiatry used in the US and other countries, about the Uzbek journalist Jamshid Karimov (1967), the nephew of the then President of Uzbekistan Islam Karimov (1938-2016), who since September 20, 2006 was imprisoned in a psychiatric hospital in Samarkand (he was released in February 2017). Some respectable men were constantly watching me and my stands, but they did not make any comments to me.
155154986_10QOCHQINfoto4 (525x700, 120Kb)
Photo 8. Ms. Heide Carlfen - manager of Olimjon Sobirov (1977-2006). She saw the article “Mysterious deaths” and a photo of Olimjon and Zohijon and said: “Olimjon was a good person...”. City of Boise (Idaho). June 19, 2010. Photo of the author.
155154959_10QOCHQINfoto3 (700x525, 103Kb)
Photo 9. An American reads a poster about punitive psychiatry. A photo of Jamshid Karimov and an article are visible on the stand. City of Boise (Idaho). June 19, 2010. Photo of the author.

PARAGRAPH 30. I arrived in the morning on bus number 6 with ten stands. But on the way back, the driver did not let me into the bus with stands, although the bus was half empty. I had to take a detour, changing two buses, then walked the last three stops, loading ten stands on myself.

PARAGRAPH 31. After the publication of article [15] on the websites, on March 3, 2011, an Uzbek refugee, US citizen Fazliddin Yakubov (1959) called from the state of Ohio (USA). He was shot at from two sides nine times, three bullets hit him at a gas station on World Refugee Day - June 20, 2008. He was seriously injured in the hospital and was in a coma for 53 days (!). High-class US surgeons saved his life. But even they could not extract one of the bullets and Fazliddin still lives with one bullet inside.

Fazliddin Yakubov told me with great bitterness that he had not yet been given a disability and more than one dollar of a pension. I asked him to write to me in detail about this and promised him to solve this problem. Literally two days later, a man came to him and promised to make a pension, as well as pay the pension for previous years. Those who listened in on our telephone conversation, perhaps the FBI agent knew that I, as a human rights activist and independent journalist, would take up this problem, publish an article and write to various higher authorities up to the President of the United States. Therefore, they immediately began to issue a pension to him and began to pay for the previous two years.

PARAGRAPH 32. FBI agents intensified their pursuit of me after publishing on websites and displaying a newspaper article “Mysterious deaths” about the mysterious death of two Uzbek refugees. Later, I was illegally fired from my job three times. I wrote about it in my 17 articles ([12]-[13], [17]-[29]). Here I will briefly write how I was fired three times from a job in which FBI agents actively participated.

PARAGRAPH 33. In July 2010, I got a job at Thrift Story (Thrift Story. Store address: 5823 West Franklin Rd. Boise, ID 83709). I came to work on the morning of July 28, 2010. The manager gave me a bathrobe and escorted me to the store yard. He asked all the things that are in the boxes to be thrown into the inside of a large container and sweep the yard. I finished this work within an hour and a half. I reported to the store manager, Mr. Robert Gillespie, of the completion of the yard work. He told one of his employees. That worker escorted me to the hall and wanted to give me a mop and a bucket. I told him: “I am no wash floor” (“I will not wash the floor”). He went out into the big hall of the store and said about my refusal. I told the director: “I am no wash floor, no clean restroom. It is no contract. Other jobs, please.” After all, they did not agree with me about this and did not conclude a contract.

The director wrote on paper: “Take the rest of today off. I need to speak with Experience Works” (“Take a rest today. I need to speak with Experience Works”). I said "Okay" and went home. July 29, 2010 at 8:45 came to work in the store. The manager said, "There is no work." This is how my first job in the USA ended.

PARAGRAPH 34. I've picketed several times in front of the Idaho State Capitol building. Photo 10 shows my picket on November 1, 2010. On the poster he wrote: “(I) 19 months the unemployed. I the refugee. Help me to find work” (“(I am) unemployed for 19 months. I am a refugee. Help me find a job”)
156770176_100_0138 (525x700, 125Kb)
Photo 10. Shukhratjon Akhmadjonov during the picket. Boise city. November 1, 2010. Photo of the author.

PARAGRAPH 35. Also, the FBI began a lot of inspections in the office of the International Rescue Committee (IRC - International Rescue Committee) in Boise in 2010. Apparently, the FBI agents were looking for compromising evidence against me and the leaders of the IRC. As a result, Leslye Boban, the director of the IRC office in Boise, who had worked here for 23 years, was fired. Here is such a freedom of speech in the United States in the execution of agents and leaders of the FBI ...

Colleagues at IRC had a lot of respect for Ms. Leslie Boban. Therefore, her director's post was empty for many months and no one wanted to take this chair. The director of the IRC of the neighboring state would arrive in his own car, sign the necessary documents, and leave within a few months.

Ms. Julianne Donnelly Tzul became the new director of the Boise IRC office in February 2011, a position she still holds today. You can read my opinion about it in paragraphs 47-52.

PARAGRAPH 36. I wrote a complaint to the management of Experience Works and sent it by mail (in the P.S. article [27]). On November 2, 2010, Ms. Stephanie Cabral, Director of Operations California /Idaho \1443 Main St, Ste. 102\ Napa, CA 94559, Phone: 707 927-1542, arrived in Boise from Napa, California. An interesting conversation took place in the EW office for 45 minutes. I, Ms. Stephanie Cabral, Mr. Lloyd Williamson and the interpreter, Mr. Yura Malakhov, took part in the conversation. Ms. Stephanie Cabral at the end of the conversation instructed Lloyd Williamson: to help find a job for me.

On November 23, 2010, I was hired by the Society of St. Vincent de Paul (address: 6464 W. State St. Boise, ID 83714). A Bosnian refugee and I repaired household electrical appliances and devices there, including vacuum cleaners, air conditioners, irons, coffee makers, table lamps, lamps, Christmas tree and musical electronic toys, and others. They were then put up in the shop for sale. Usually, various equipment and household appliances were brought to the warehouse by car. Each department loaded into carts and drove to their department. A group of refugees, including me, worked as a volunteer 20 hours a week, that is, 4 days for 5 hours. We were paid by the Experiense Works organization at a minimum rate of $7.25 per hour. Here I would like to thank Ms. Stephanie Cabral for her help and assistance in getting me a job in November 2010.

A few words about FBI agents. At the trade organization Society of St. Vincent de Paul employed about fifteen people of middle and older age. A young man of 25-27 years old showed up and started working there two or three days after I started working. I felt how he was trying to watch me and collect information about me. He was often in the kitchen, where employees usually had lunch. Once among the repaired things was a toy laughing monkey. After switching on, the monkey began to roll on the floor from side to side and laughed contagiously. I saw such a toy in the movies and then I liked it. I went to the appraiser and said that I want to buy it. She appreciated and I paid at the cashier.

I decided to show it to other work colleagues and brought it into the kitchen. Turned it on and put it on the floor. The monkey began to laugh contagiously and roll on the floor. Suddenly, the male informer got up from his chair, abruptly approached and kicked the toy. The monkey flew off a little to the side and continued to laugh contagiously. He angrily began to stomp with one foot and tried to crush the toy. The monkey was spinning and he couldn't hit. He started to get even angrier. I bent over and picked up the monkey from the floor, and went to my workplace. After all, for several months of observation, he did not find compromising material on me. And then I brought a laughing monkey. Apparently he thought that I brought it specifically to laugh at him.

One or two months passed and another young man of 23-25 years old appeared in our trade organization. They often talked together. I saw a second male snitch on the day of piercing my bicycle tube at the store on January 7, 2011. I will write about this in paragraphs 229-232.

PARAGRAPH 37. I worked normally and almost without remarks for more than seven months. On July 12, 2011, I was fired from my job for half a day. The real reason was the following.

On August 23, 2010, Uzbek TV journalists Saodat Amonova (1972) and Malohat Eshonkulova (1966) spoke at a press conference in Tashkent and spoke about censorship, parochialism, abuse and theft of public funds at the National Television and Radio Company of Uzbekistan. On August 23, 2010, they addressed the then President of Uzbekistan, Islam Karimov, via Ozodlik (Freedom) radio. There was no answer.

On December 5, 2010, both journalists published an Appeal to International Organizations. On December 6 (Monday), 2010, they held a picket at Mustakillik Square in Tashkent. On December 9, they were fired from their jobs. They went to court. But the court took the side of the television leadership. From May 27, 2011, they wrote 56 appeals to President Islam Karimov. There was no answer.

On June 27, 2011 they held a picket in front of the building of the President's Office. They were brought to court and fined a large sum. They went on a political hunger strike.

In defense of brave journalists, I wrote a long article “Saodat va Malohatga maslakhatim” (“My advice to Saodat and Malokhat”) consisting of paragraph 26 (see [30]). I wrote in paragraph 21 about the fate of the journalist Jamshid Karimov (1967), the nephew of President Islam Karimov. The dictator president, with the help of the leadership of the National Security Service (SNB) of Uzbekistan, arrested him on September 11, 2006. They used punitive psychiatry against him and hid him in the Samarkand psychiatric hospital. By that time, he had been there for more than five years. (Jamshid was released from the Samarkand psychiatric hospital in February 2017 after the death of President Islam Karimov.)

At the end of the article [30], I advised Saodat and Malohat to leave Uzbekistan as refugees and continue their journalistic activities abroad. I published a large article [30] on www.turonzamin.org and www.muvozanat.info on July 12, 2011, and on July 13 on www.yangidunyo.com Naturally, the article greatly irritates both the dictator Islam Karimov and the leadership of the National Security Service (NSS) of Uzbekistan. I think I was fired from my job on July 12, 2011 at the request of the NSS leadership and their staff in the US with the help and intervention of an FBI agent.

PARAGRAPH 38. Vincent de Paul came a man a little taller than me - about 182 cm, about 30 years old. He said that goods had been brought to the warehouse and should be brought to his department. I, as usual, loaded it into a cart and brought it to my workplace. And then, as usual, he began to clean and repair them. The man demanded to work quickly.

On the morning of July 12, 2011, I went to work as usual at the Society of St. Vincent de Paul. That man was there. The head of the trade organization, Ms. Mardi Kline, said that I was fired from my job. I asked a question about the reason. She said: “You put the equipment on the aisle. The passage is an emergency passage." Although in the continuation of the passage to the emergency door there were two work chairs of two employees. But they were not accused of anything, and I was fired from my job. This man was standing next to Ms. Mardi Kline and he demanded that I quickly pack my things and leave. In my opinion, he was an FBI agent and carried out an order to fire me from work. This is how I got fired from my job for the second time involving an FBI agent.

PARAGRAPH 39. On August 17, 2011, I went to the Idaho Department of Labor and presented my complaint to the employee. She read and advised these complaints to be filed with The Idaho Human Rights Commission (IHRC). She gave her address: 317 West Main St. Boise, Idaho 83735-0660. Website: www.humanrights.idaho.gov

I came to the Idaho Human Rights Commission. There he spoke with Ms. Cara Weech, Civil Rights Investigator; Tel. (208) 334-2873, Ext. 4224; Fax: (208) 334-2664 Cara.Weech@ihrc.idaho.gov). I gave her my complaint in English and Russian. In my complaint, I qualified my unexpected dismissal as discrimination. Case opened E-0811-066; 38C-2011-00562. On August 25, 2011, I received a response letter (see photo 11).
2012CARAweechXAT1 (532x700, 100Kb)
Photo 11. Response letter from Civil Rights Investigator Ms. Kara Z. Wich. August 24, 2011.

«IDAHO DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
IDAHO HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Mr. Shuhratjon Ahmadjonov
585 S. Curtis Rd. Apt. 8
Boise, ID 83705

Re: Shuhratjon Ahmadjonov vs. Society of St. Vinsent of Paul, SW ID District Council
Complaint No: E-0811-066; 38C-2011—00562

Dear Mr. Ahmadjonov

Please be advised that the above referenced matter has been assigned to Sarah Mae Fisher Sr. Civil Rights Investigator, for processing. The Respondent was sent of copy the charge on this same date and a response should be in our office approximately 30 days from the date of receipt. Once Respondent’s answer is received, a copy will be forwarded to you. Please do not feel intimidated or overwhelmed by the response. We will ask you to look it over carefully, and to follow the instructions the investigator will provide to you at that time.

For your information, I have attached a copy of the Commission’s administrative process flow chart. One option offered by the Commission is mediation. Mediation is a voluntary process wherein the parties discuss the dispute to see if an agreement to settle their differences can be worked out. If you are interested in using this service, be sure to tell your investigator.

It may take the Commission up to twelve months to complete the case processing, so you must remember to maintain contact with the Commission and advise us of any changes to your contact information. If we are unable to locate you, it could result in the closure of your charge.

Please be advised that the files of the Commission are not open to the public at large. However, this case file is available to both parties during regular business hours with the expection of any notes or documents regarding confidential negotiations created during the course of mediation.

If you have any questions regarding your charge, do not hesitate to contact Ms. Fisher.

Sincerely,

Cara Z. Weech
Civil Rights Investigator»

PARAGRAPH 40. On September 25, 2011, through the Idaho Human Rights Commission, I received a 2.5-page explanatory note with many false statements from the head of the Society of St. Vincent Paul Ms. Mardi Kline-Barr. I wrote a long reply letter in response to Ms. Mardi Kline's explanatory note. On December 19 (Monday), 2011, I came to the HRC and handed over to Ms. Pamela Paks, Director of the Idaho Human Rights Commission (see [25]-[26]). The result of this complaint is written in paragraph 64.

TO BE CONTINUED
Рубрики:  2023: KOMPLAINT-STATEMENT

 

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