growth. Karakalpak activists have been targeted by Uzbek security services in order to silence
dissent, including dissent from the Karakalpak diaspora, which has led to more intense
out-migration of Karakalpaks from Karakalpakstan. Uzbekistan authorities continue to arbitrarily
detain Karakalpak activists stemming from the 7 June 2022 protests, such as the prominent
lawyer and community leader Dauletmurat Tajimuratov. Abroad, Uzbekistan maintains close ties
with the security services in Kazakhstan, often collaborating with their neighbor state to harass
and/or silence outspoken members of the Karakalpak diaspora there, forcing Karakalpaks to seek
safety further abroad.
All of these policies have led to the weakening of social and economic dynamism among the
Karakalpak people, which we believe is part of a pattern of structural genocide coordinated and
supported by the central government authorities, who are pursuing a monoethnic nation-building
project.
In this context of state repression, the Lemkin Institute hopes that international actors can place
pressure on the government of Uzbekistan to:
● Adhere to the Constitution with reference to the sovereignty of the “Republic of
Karakalpakstan” and the rights guaranteed therein;
● Allow for the self-determination of the Karakalpak people as held in the Constitution and
enshrined in the UN Charter, while including ethnic Karakalpak officials in all decision
making pertaining to Karakalpakstan;
● Affirm the rights of all minority populations in Uzbekistan, with the Karakalpak and
Roma people being of principle concern, protecting the cultures, languages, and human
rights of minority populations;
● Expand economic opportunities in Karakalpakstan by investing in modernized
infrastructure, creating the conditions for domestic and international investment, and
ensuring that the benefits of development are shared with the local economy – this must
include robust and engaged attention paid to the ecological and economic disaster that is
the retreat of the Aral Sea.