- Sanjar Umarov
Sanjar Guiess Umarov (born
April 7 ,1956 ) is a prominent Uzbek politician and businessman. He is the chairman ofSunshine Uzbekistan , the main party in opposition to presidentIslom Karimov 's authoritarian rule. He was arrested in October 2005 forembezzlement —charges his supporters say are politically motivated—and went on trial in January 2006.Umarov was born in
Tashkent , Uzbekistan, as the middle child of five in a large family of intellectuals. His father, Guiess Ekub Umarov, was a physicist; his mother, Nabira Shamsieva, was a university English instructor. Umarov attended theTashkent University of Irrigation and Mechanization of Agriculture , earning abachelor's degree inelectrical engineering . Following this, he served as anintercontinental ballistic missile technician atBauman's Technical University inMoscow . He went on to theTashkent Polytechnic Institute for aPhD ; his dissertation, defended in1982 , was on applications ofsolar energy .Upon earning his degree, Umarov gained a position at
Algeria University inBiskra ,Algeria , teachingphysics andengineering . He returned to Uzbekistan in 1988, where he participated in the establishment of Uzbekistan's first business school in 1989.Following his return, he became interested in the possibilities of
mobile phone s in the newly independent states of the formerSoviet Union , and founded telecommunications companyUzdunrobita in February 1991, with the backing of investors from theUnited States . Following Uzdunrobita's success, Umarov went on to found a number of other businesses in Uzbekistan; in addition to telecommunications, he concentrated on companies related toagriculture ,petroleum , andnatural gas . He became particularly known for his close ties with western investors, and worked largely to facilitate foreign investment.In March 2005, inspired by the overthrow of
Kyrgistan 's authoritarian leaderAskar Akayev in theTulip Revolution , Umarov and a group of other intellectuals and businessmen united into the opposition groupSunshine Uzbekistan , of which Umarov became the chairman. This led to a rocky few months of confrontation with Karimov's government, with Umarov gaining prominence after theAndijan massacre in May 2005.In October 2005, he was arrested on charges of embezzlement and
money laundering . His supporters allege that these charges are politically motivated, pointing to the fact that his arrest came shortly after he sent a letter to Parliament advocating reforms. Umarov's lawyer further claims to have found him naked and incoherent during a visit to his jail cell, and supporters allege that he was drugged.Human rights group s accuse Uzbekistan's government of regularly drugging prisoners to extract confessions, an allegation the government denies.Umarov's trial began in January 2006, and he was convicted in March 2006 of heading a criminal group laundering money through offshore companies, tax avoidance, and hiding foreign currency. He was sentenced to 14 years in prison (reduced to 10 years under an amnesty agreement) and over US$8 million in fines.
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Nadira Khidoyatova References
* Release Sanjar Umarov official website. [http://www.sanjarumarov.com Release Sanjar Umarov official website] .
* BBC News. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4660934.stm Uzbek opposition leader on trial] . January 30, 2006.
* Sunshine Uzbekistan. [http://www.sunshineuzbekistan.org/bio-eng.htm Biography of Sanjar Umarov] . Accessed January 30, 2006.
* Tribune-uz. [http://www.tribune-uz.info/eng/interview/?id1=4818 Sanjar Umarov, leader of Sunshine Uzbekistan] (interview). June 23, 2005.
* BBC News. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4778526.stm Uzbekistan jails opposition chief] . March 6, 2006.
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