You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Turkmenbashi turns toes-up, Turkmenistan in turmoil
2006-12-21
He'll be missed...well only for his comic relief value. I think we'll work up a proper RB Viking funeral tonight for the man who named one of the days of the week after his Mom.
Turkmenistan's President-for-life Saparmurat Niyazov died on Thursday after 21 years of iron rule in which he crushed all dissent and made his Central Asian state one of the world's most isolated countries. He was 66. State television and government sources said Niyazov, who basked in a unique and bizarre personality cult while ruling a country with the world's fifth-biggest natural gas reserves, died overnight of cardiac arrest.

His funeral was set for December 24 and the government fixed December 26 for the desert state's highest representative body to meet to decide on a successor. Until then, Deputy Prime Minister Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov will be acting head of state. But Niyazov, who held all the top posts, left no designated heir and his sudden death raised concerns about the transfer of power in the ex-Soviet nation of 5 million, where foreign oil and gas companies are keen to invest in vast energy reserves.

Flags flew at half-mast from public buildings in the capital Ashgabat, a Soviet city grandly reconstructed to showcase Niyazov's power. Originally a Soviet apparatchik, Niyazov took the title of "Turkmenbashi (Head of the Turkmen) the Great" and had thousands of portraits and statues of him set up throughout the country. They include a revolving statue in gold leaf that rotates to face the sun in Ashgabat. He renamed the month of January after himself and his name was also given to a sea port, farms, military units and even a meteorite.

On Thursday, workers removed all New Year decorations from the streets, and television ran still images of a national flag in a black-bordered frame as an orchestra played solemn tunes. In an early statement eulogising Niyazov's achievements, the government suggested his tough and isolationist policies would be maintained. "The internal and external policies proclaimed earlier will be continued further," said the statement read on state television. "The nation must stay united and unshaken," it said.

Niyazov tolerated no dissent and was regularly criticised by Western human rights groups for flouting basic freedoms. Most civil society campaigners and critical journalists have been driven into exile or jailed, and rights groups have accused him of using torture against his opponents.

Turkmenistan-watchers were monitoring for any signs of trouble in the country, which borders Iran, that could affect its gas deliveries, much of which go to Ukraine via the Russian gas monopoly Gazprom. "If Niyazov's death results in political instability and social unrest, this may lead to the gas supply from Turkmenistan to RosUkrEnergo (Russian-Ukraine energy joint venture) and Ukraine being disrupted," said a research note from Deutsche UFG Bank in Moscow.

Berdymukhamedov, the new acting president, is said by the opposition to be related to Niyazov. He was earlier named to head a commission handling the funeral. In Soviet times, the person appointed to that task usually became the successor, but it was not clear if this precedent would be followed in Turkmenistan.

In an early reaction, exiled Turkmen opposition activists said they intended to immediately try to return home. "Our first task is to return to Turkmenistan within hours. We are discussing now how to do it. In Turkmenistan there is no opposition, they all sit in prisons or under home arrest. But outside the country opposition exists and it is coming back," one activist, Parakhad Yklymov, told Reuters by telephone from Sweden.

Russia said it hoped Turkmenistan would stick to Niyazov's course. "We count on the new Turkmenistan leaders continuing their course and further developing bilateral ties," top Kremlin aide Sergei Prikhodko told Itar-Tass news agency.
Posted by:ryuge

#9  Wayne's not dead...it just seems lik ehe is
Posted by: Frank G   2006-12-21 22:55  

#8  I read in another report today that one of the possible successors (although a dark horse) was Mr. T's son, Murat. Anyone we know?
Posted by: Sligum Whunter9034   2006-12-21 22:28  

#7  Egomaniacs everywhere will sorely miss their role model.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-12-21 19:05  

#6  Wayne Newton, Foster Brooks...we're losing all the giants...
Posted by: tu3031   2006-12-21 16:55  

#5  Lead poisoning, from the repeated application of 9 mm rounds to the head?

And, since he renamed the calendar, he obviously did not die on Thrusday.

Break out the popcorn.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins   2006-12-21 11:18  

#4  In the end, we all die of cardiac arrest. So, why did he die, really?
Posted by: Eric Jablow   2006-12-21 09:58  

#3  When the SU broke up, for the most part, each republic's communist party boss became the head of state.
Posted by: ed   2006-12-21 09:45  

#2  He was one wild and wacky dude. Among his other weirdnesses was to order his poetry inscribed along with Koranic verse on the walls of mosques, and to have an ice palace built in the middle of the hot desert lowlands.

Definitely touched with a bit of the Ludwig III virus.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2006-12-21 08:11  

#1  Turkmenistan's President-for-life Saparmurat Niyazov died on Thursday after 21 years of iron rule...

Huh? I thought Turkmenistan was a former Soviet Republic. That date puts the beginning of his rule to 1985, which means he was running the place BEFORE the collapse of the USSR.

What am I getting wrong?
Posted by: Rob Crawford   2006-12-21 07:34  

00:00