In response to the statement "To clear Uzbek cotton from stains of forced child labor!" signed by a group of civil society activists and well-known human rights defenders, and a public statement by Nadejda Atayeva, a human rights activist whose organization (AHRCA) was behind the campaign to boycott Uzbek cotton, in which she stated that the exploitation of child labor by Uzbek authorities in
cotton picking must stop, Uzbek law enforcement agencies began to exert pressure on the participants of the action who resided in Uzbekistan and on relatives of political emigrants. The initiators of the action - political immigrants began to receive a message about threats of seizure of the property remaining in the country, their relatives were being detained for several hours and forced to provide contact information to relatives living abroad. Despite the continuous pressure from Uzbek authorities Atayeva on behalf of the Association continues to inform the international community regarding the situation surrounding cotton production in Uzbekistan. The next wave of activists fleeing the region began when political emigrants came to a rally on the occasion of the arrival of
Islam Karimov in Brussels. The statement of the AHRCA "The
Council of the European Union opens the door to dictators?" sparked a new wave of pressure on activists who supported the joint appeal "Free Europe opens its arms to bloody dictators?" After the release of the "Open Letter to the President of the Czech Republic, Miloš Zeman on the forthcoming visit of the
President of Uzbekistan Islam Karimov", made by thirteen human rights organizations exerted external pressure to cancel Karimov's visit to Prague and received public support. Participants in the project "Art and Human Rights" of the Association for Human Rights in Central Asia in those days published a poster "Islam Karimov, not in Prague, but in The Hague", which was widely distributed in social networks and the media. On the pages of AHRCA in social networks there were comments of anonymous provocative nature. On September 3, 2016, Euronews broadcast an interview with the president of the Association for Human Rights in Central Asia, Nadejda Atayeva, who regretted that Islam Karimov managed to escape punishment for crimes that were committed under his leadership in Uzbekistan. In response, massive harassment began against her. Her home address was published on the Internet by provocateurs and she received hundreds of threats of reprisal on her addresses. She filed a complaint in this regard to the commissariat in the place of her residence.
Andijan events and the reaction of the international community Information that the Uzbek authorities deliberately destroy evidence of the death of civilians, began to arrive regularly. The country enforced limited freedom of movement, and Andijan became a closed city. Arrests of human rights activists, supporting the European Union's demand for an international investigation into the Andijan events with the participation of independent experts and journalists began. The immediate witnesses of the bloodshed continued to disappear. Diplomats, representatives of the
European Commission, members of the European Parliament in the first days after the Andijan tragedy immediately responded to requests from representatives of the organization for help. For several months, the EU was negotiating with the Uzbek authorities about an international investigation into the Andijan events with the participation of independent experts. In response to the refusal of the Uzbek government, the EU imposed sanctions. The position of the United Europe gave hope that the democratic world can influence the despotic regime of Karimov. But three years later, the European Union abolished most of the sanctions, leaving only an embargo on the sale of weapons to Uzbekistan. It was stated that the lifting of sanctions and the intensification of the dialogue on human rights will lead to positive developments in this area. With Shavkat Mirziyeev coming to power, the government of Uzbekistan started fulfilling the requirements of the European Union, launched in 2009 with the lifting of sanctions in 2009 and the resolution of the European Parliament adopted in October 2014. == References ==