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Saparmurat Niyazov

Saparmurat Atayevich Niyazov (Russian: Сапармурат Атаевич Ниязов; Turkmen: Saparmyrat Ataýewiç Nyýazow;[a] 19 February 1940 – 21 December 2006), also known as Türkmenbaşy,[b] was a Turkmen politician who ruled Turkmenistan from 1985 until his death in 2006. He was first secretary of the Turkmen Communist Party from 1985 until 1991 and supported the 1991 Soviet coup attempt. He continued to rule Turkmenistan for 15 years after independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.

Saparmurat Niyazov
Niyazov in 2002
1st President of Turkmenistan
In office
2 November 1990 – 21 December 2006
Prime MinisterHan Ahmedow (1990–92)
Vice President
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byGurbanguly Berdimuhamedow
Leader of the Democratic Party of Turkmenistan
In office
27 October 1991 – 21 December 2006
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byGurbanguly Berdimuhamedow
First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Turkmenistan
In office
21 December 1985 – 16 December 1991
Preceded byMuhammetnazar Gapurow
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Full member of the 28th Politburo
In office
14 July 1990 – 29 August 1991
Personal details
Born
Saparmyrat Ataýewiç Nyýazow

(1940-02-19)19 February 1940
Gypjak, Turkmen SSR, Soviet Union
Died21 December 2006(2006-12-21) (aged 66)
Ashgabat, Turkmenistan
Political partyTDP
(1991–2006)
Other political
affiliations
CPT
(1962–1991)
CPSU
(1962–1991)
SpouseMuza Melnikova[1]
Children
  • Myrat
  • Irina
Parents
EducationLeningrad Polytechnic Institute
ProfessionElectrical engineer
NicknameTürkmenbaşy
Military service
Allegiance Turkmenistan
Branch/service Armed Forces of Turkmenistan
RankGeneral of the Army[2]

Turkmen media referred to him using the title, His Excellency Saparmurat Türkmenbaşy, President of Turkmenistan and Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers.[3] His self-given title Türkmenbaşy, meaning Head of the Turkmen, referred to his position as the founder and president of the Association of Turkmens of the World.[4] In 1999, the Assembly of Turkmenistan declared Niyazov President for life of Turkmenistan.

In his time, he was one of the world's most totalitarian, despotic, and repressive dictators.[5][6] He promoted a cult of personality around himself and imposed his personal eccentricities upon the country, such as renaming Turkmen months and days of the week to references of his autobiography the Ruhnama.[7] He made it mandatory to read the Ruhnama in schools, universities and governmental organizations; new governmental employees were tested on the book at job interviews and an exam on its teachings was a part of the driving test in Turkmenistan. In 2005, he closed down all rural libraries and hospitals outside of the capital city Ashgabat, in a country where at that time more than half the population lived in rural areas,[8] once stating that, "If people are ill, they can come to Ashgabat."[9]

Under his rule, Turkmenistan had the lowest life expectancy in Central Asia. Global Witness, a London-based human rights organisation, reported that money under Niyazov's control and held overseas may be in excess of US$3 billion, of which between $1.8–$2.6 billion was allegedly situated in the Foreign Exchange Reserve Fund at Deutsche Bank in Germany.[10]

Background edit

Niyazov was born on 19 February 1940 in Gypjak (or Kipchak), just outside Ashgabat in the Turkmen SSR. He was a member of the influential Teke tribe of the Turkmens.[11] According to the official version of his biography, his father, Atamyrat Nyýazow, died in World War II fighting against Nazi Germany, while other sources contend that he dodged fighting and was therefore sentenced by a military court. His mother and two brothers were killed in the devastating 1948 Ashgabat earthquake. His mother, Gurbansoltan Eje, was part of the cult of personality later. He grew up in a Soviet orphanage before the state put him in the custody of a distant relative.[12][13][14]

After finishing school in 1959, he worked as an instructor in the Turkmen trade-union exploratory committee. He then studied at the Leningrad Polytechnic Institute, where in 1967 he received a diploma as an electrical engineer. After graduating, Niyazov went to study in Russia, but was expelled a few years later for academic failure.[1]

In 1962, Niyazov started his political career, becoming a member of the Communist Party. He quickly rose through the ranks, becoming First Secretary of the Ashgabat City Committee,[15] and First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Turkmen SSR in 1985. He gained this post after Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev had removed his predecessor, Muhammetnazar Gapurov, following a cotton-related scandal. Under Niyazov, the Turkmen Communist Party had a reputation as one of the most hardline and unreformed party organizations in the Soviet Union. On 13 January 1990, Niyazov became Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Turkmen SSR, the supreme legislative body in the republic. The post was equivalent to that of president.

Niyazov supported the Soviet coup attempt of 1991.[16] However, after the coup collapsed, he set about separating Turkmenistan from the dying Soviet Union. The Turkmen Supreme Soviet declared Turkmenistan independent and appointed Niyazov as the country's first president on 27 October 1991. On 21 June 1992 the Turkmenistani presidential election featured Niyazov as the sole candidate, and chosen as the country's first popularly elected president. A year later he declared himself Türkmenbaşy, meaning "Leader of all Turkmen".

In 1994 a plebiscite extended Niyazov's term to 2002 so he could oversee a 10-year development plan. The official results showed that 99.9% of voters approved this proposal.

On 28 December 1999, Parliament declared Niyazov President for life; parliamentary elections had been held a few weeks earlier for which the president had hand-picked all candidates.

Niyazov and his wife, Muza Melnikova, who was of Russian and Jewish descent, had a son (Murat) and a daughter (Irina).[citation needed]

Presidency (1990–2006) edit

 
Askar Akayev, Nursultan Nazarbayev, Niyazov, Islam Karimov during the CIS meeting c. 1991

Niyazov became president at the transition of Turkmenistan from a Soviet republic to an independent state. His presidency was characterised by an initial crumbling of the centralised Soviet model that in many respects was unsuited for a transition to smaller, separate states. There was outside concern about press freedom and to a lesser extent religious rights of minority religious groups. Niyazov made a personal attempt to create a cultural background for the new state of Turkmenistan by writing and promoting the Ruhnama, an autobiography meant to guide the people of Turkmenistan with his ideas and promote native culture (and by extension prohibiting foreign culture). He also took part in creating new holidays with a specific Turkmen nature and introduced a new Latin-based Turkmen alphabet to replace Russian Cyrillic. The Latin Turkmen alphabet consists of: Aa, Bb, Çç, Dd, Ee, Ää, Ff, Gg, Hh, Ii, Jj, Žž, Kk, Ll, Mm, Nn, Ňň, Oo, Öö, Pp, Rr, Ss, Şş, Tt, Uu, Üü, Ww, Yy, Ýý, Zz.[17]

Despite emphasizing a need to move from central planning to a market economy and to a full democracy during his reign, neither plan progressed. Yearly plans set forth by the government and a centralised economy gave little indication of moving away from state-dominated economics, and the dictatorial nature of many of his decrees and his declaring himself "President for Life" gave little hope as to much progress in these two areas.

Economy edit

 
Saparmurat Niyazov is depicted on the 10,000 manat Banknote from 1996

Oil and gas edit

Turkmenistan has the second-largest oil reserves in the former Soviet Union, generating high revenue for the state. The government has used central planning, such as state control of production and procurement, direct bank credits with low interest rates, exchange rate restrictions, and price controls, since it existed as a Republic within the USSR.[18]

In the years following independence, Turkmenistan invested heavily in plants and machinery in an attempt to convert it from being primarily a supplier of petroleum to a more advanced economy; such investments included oil refineries and a polyethylene plant. In an interview with Rossiyskaya Gazeta newspaper, Niyazov claimed that Turkmenistan was able to process 85% of its domestic output. Additionally, numerous petroleum transportation projects were completed such as a pipeline from the Korpedje field to Kort-Koi in Iran.

In 1991 and 2001, Niyazov issued decrees making water, gas, electricity, and refined salt free to use for ten-year periods.[4]

In 2005, Niyazov appointed Gurbanmyrat Ataýew as Minister of Oil and Gas, succeeding Atamyrat Berdyýew.[19]

Agriculture edit

Turkmenistan's other primary resources are cotton and grain. Niyazov continued the old practice of demanding yearly quotas in agricultural output, and then blaming and/or sacking deputy ministers when quotas were not met.[20][21] Nevertheless, Turkmenistan had an emergent period during which there was heavy investment in plant and machinery so the country could change from a producer of raw cotton to a cotton processor. During Niyazov's presidency, a textile industry was founded in Turkmenistan.

Niyazov introduced the practice of "Melon Day", a harvest festival celebrated on the 2nd Sunday of August; unlike some of his other creations, the celebration of "Melon Day" has continued after his death.

Culture edit

 
Postage stamp of Niyazov and US president Bill Clinton, 1993

Niyazov put the revival of Turkmen culture as one of the top priorities in Turkmenistan's development. He introduced a new Turkmen alphabet based on the Latin alphabet to replace Cyrillic. The National Revival Movement, an organisation to promote Turkmen culture (Turkmen: "Galkynish"), was also founded.

In many respects, Niyazov's cultural ideas and changes were most visible to external viewers. His renaming of months, as well as most of the days of the week, to Turkmen heroes, poets, historical events,[22] family members and himself was an unexpected development. For example, September was renamed Ruhnama in honour of the book written by Niyazov (which he finished writing on 19 September 2001).[23] Not all the changes promoted Niyazov; October was renamed Garaşsyzlyk (Independence) to mark the state's founding on 27 October 1991, and November Sanjar in honour of Sultan Sanjar who led the Seljuqs to their last full flowering. The new names came into effect with the introduction of a new labor law which stated that "the dates of professional holidays are specified by decrees of the President of Turkmenistan". These names were later abolished by his successor Berdymukhamedov in April 2008.[7]

His father Atamyrat Nyýazow's Red Army service was used to shape how the country celebrates Victory Day on 9 May. Unlike other Central Asian countries, Turkmenistan under Niyazov put emphasis on the country's sacrifice during the Second World War. In 2005, Niyazov flew to Moscow to celebrate the diamond jubilee of the war's end, and just days prior, he congratulated Turkmen veterans of the war as well as Russian veterans on behalf of Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian veterans on behalf of Viktor Yushchenko.[24] Individually, Niyazov's father was awarded the honorary title of Hero of Turkmenistan in 1994 and in 2004, a division of the Turkmen Ground Forces was renamed after Atamyrat Nyýazow.[25] Today, the 22nd Motor Rifle Division "Atamyrat Niyazov" deployed in Serdar carries his name.[26]

Internal affairs edit

One of the earliest acts of Niyazov was to abolish the death penalty. He also granted official human rights to the people, though they were not respected in practice, with his government being criticized as one of the worst human rights violators in the world. Press freedom under Niyazov's leadership was much criticised as it was with other post-Soviet Central Asian states. The Turkmen media constantly doted on the president and helped build his cult of personality.

In 1998, Niyazov closed the Academy of Sciences of Turkmenistan. It was reopened in 2009 after his death by his successor Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow.

In January 2000, Niyazow inaugurated the Walk of Health to improve the health of his population and forced the members of the government to travel it once a year.

In May 2000, the government revoked all Internet licenses except for the state-owned Turkmen Telecom and in June 2001 shut down all Internet cafés.[27] By 2005, there were 36,000 Internet users in Turkmenistan, representing 0.7% of the population.[28]

In March 2004, 15,000 public health workers were dismissed including nurses, midwives, school health visitors and orderlies.[29] In February 2005, all hospitals outside Ashgabat were ordered to be closed, with the reason being that the sick should come to the capital for treatment.[30] All libraries outside of the capital were also closed, as Niyazov believed that the only books that most Turkmens needed to read were the Quran and his Ruhnama.[31]

In January 2006, one-third of the country's elderly had their pensions discontinued, while another 200,000 had theirs reduced. Pensions received during the prior two years were ordered to be paid back to the state.[32][33] The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Turkmenistan strongly denied allegations that the cut in pensions resulted in the deaths of many elderly Turkmens, accusing foreign media outlets of spreading "deliberately perverted" information on the issue.[34] On 19 March 2007, Niyazov's successor Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow reversed his decision by restoring pensions to more than 100,000 elderly citizens.[35]

Presidential pardons edit

In keeping with the predominantly Islamic nature of Turkmen society, Niyazov granted pardons each year on the Laylat al-Qadr (Night of Power) in the month of Ramadan.

For example, in 2005, 8,145 convicts were pardoned, including 229 foreign nationals.[36] In 2006 Turkmenistan set free 10,056 prisoners, including 253 foreign nationals from 11 countries. Niyazov said:

Let this humane act on the part of the state serve strengthening truly moral values of the Turkmen society. Let the entire world know that there has never been a place for evil and violence on the blessed Turkmen soil.[37]

Decrees and laws edit

  • Niyazov banned the use of lip syncing at public concerts in 2005 as well as sound recordings at "musical performances on state holidays, in broadcasts by Turkmen television channels, at all cultural events organized by the state... in places of mass assembly and at weddings and celebrations organised by the public," citing a negative effect on the development of musical arts incurred by the use of recorded music.[38][39]
  • Niyazov declared Turkmenistan a "neutral state" and said that the country would not participate in any UN peacekeeping operations.[citation needed]
  • Niyazov banished dogs from the capital Ashgabat because of their "unappealing odour"[39] and banned citizens from owning more than one cat or dog.[40]
  • According to the Ashgabat correspondent of Turkmenistan.ru, right-hand-drive imported cars converted to left-hand-drive were banned due to a perceived increased risk in accidents.[41]
  • Niyazov wrote the Ruhnama (meaning "the book of the spirit/soul"), and made it mandatory in all schools, in public offices and for obtaining a drivers license, and excerpts from the book were periodically read on Turkmen Television. Niyazov even tried to force Mufti Nasrullah ibn Ibadullah to preach the book in the Türkmenbaşy Ruhy Mosque.[42]
  • Niyazov ordered that all mountains and places in Turkmenistan be named after Turkmen heroes, poets and leaders.[citation needed]
  • Niyazov made the second Sunday of August "Melon Day" in honor of melons, one of his favorite foods, which he referred to as a "gift of God with a glorious history".[citation needed]
  • In August 2002, he ordered a renaming of months and days of the week.[citation needed]
  • He also abolished the Turkmen word for bread and replaced it with Gurbansoltan, his mother's name.[43][44]
  • Niyazov requested that a "palace of ice", or indoor ice skating rink, be built near the capital, so that those living in the desert country could learn to skate. The rink was built in 2008 and is located near the new Turkmen State Medical University.[45]
  • After having to quit smoking in 1997 due to his resultant heart surgery, he banned smoking in all public places and ordered all government employees to follow suit.[43] Chewing tobacco on Turkmen soil was later banned as well.[46]
  • He outlawed opera, ballet, circuses and philharmonic orchestras in 2001 for being "decidedly unturkmen-like".[47][48]
  • In February 2004, he decreed that men should no longer wear long hair or beards because of the apparent association with Islamic extremism.[49][40]
  • In March 2004, he fired doctors and gymnastics instructors and replaced them with military conscripts.[citation needed]
  • In March 2005, he ordered the closure of all hospitals outside Ashgabat, stating that the sick should go to the capital for treatment.[citation needed]
  • Niyazov also ordered the closure of all libraries outside the capital, stating that the reason was that ordinary Turkmens did not read anyway.[citation needed]
  • He banned the reporting and even mentioning of contagious diseases such as AIDS or cholera.[citation needed]
  • He banned news reporters and presenters from wearing makeup on television. According to some reports, he felt presenters should "appear natural" on-screen,[50] although others alleged that the reason was more eccentric, claiming he said he found it difficult to distinguish male anchors from female anchors.[43]
  • He also ordered that each broadcast begin with a pledge that the broadcaster's tongue would shrivel if he/she slanders the country, flag, and/or president.[51]
  • He banned car radios because he considered them to be "useless".[citation needed]
  • Gold teeth were discouraged in Turkmenistan after Niyazov suggested that the populace chew on bones to strengthen their teeth and lessen the rate at which they fall out. He said:

    I watched young dogs when I was young. They were given bones to gnaw to strengthen their teeth. Those of you whose teeth have fallen out did not chew on bones. This is my advice...[52]

  • In November 2005, he ordered that doctors should swear an oath to him instead of the Hippocratic Oath.[citation needed]
  • In December 2005, he banned video games because they were "too violent for young Turkmens".[citation needed] In the same month, he ordered the country's oil minister to learn English in 6 months or be fired.[citation needed]

Foreign policy edit

 
Niyazov with Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Moscow Kremlin, June 2000

Niyazov promoted a policy of strict neutrality in foreign affairs, refraining from seeking membership in NATO or GUAM and almost ignoring the CSTO. Turkmenistan has not participated in any United Nations peacekeeping missions. It has however become a member of Interpol.

The full independence of Turkmenistan was recognised by a UN General Assembly resolution "The permanent neutrality of Turkmenistan" of 12 December 1995. As a result, in 2005 Turkmenistan would downgrade its links with the Commonwealth of Independent States becoming only an associate member under article 8 of the CIS charter, as such it would not participate in any of the military structures of the CIS.

In 2006 the European Commission and the international trade committee of the European Parliament voted to grant Turkmenistan "most favoured nation" trading status with the European Union, widely seen as motivated by interest in natural gas, after Niyazov announced he would enter a "human rights dialogue" with the EU.[53]

In January 1996, Niyazov met with Sayid Abdulloh Nuri in Tehran to inform him that the attendees of a CIS summit in Moscow had agreed to renew the mandate of CIS peacekeepers in Tajikistan, which was going through a civil war at the time.[54]

Opposition edit

 
Uzbek president Islam Karimov, Russia's Vladimir Putin, Niyazov and Nursultan Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan in 2002

On 25 November 2002, Niyazov's motorcade was fired upon at about 7 a.m. in downtown Ashgabat as he was traveling to his office from his official residence in Arshabil. Niyazov claimed that it was an attempt at a coup, and as a result, the Turkmen government arrested thousands of suspected conspirators and members of their families. Among the figures who were arrested/purged were former Foreign Ministers Boris Şyhmyradow and Batyr Berdiýew, as well as Major Begench Beknazarov of the Turkmen Ground Forces and Chief of the General Staff Lieutenant General Serdar Charyyarov.[55] Critics claim the government staged the attempt to crack down on mounting domestic and foreign political opposition.[56] Ethnic Russians in Turkmenistan were disproportionately targeted in the aftermath.[57][58]

The summer of 2004 saw a leaflet campaign in the capital, Aşgabat, calling for the overthrow and trial of Niyazov. The authorities were unable to stop the campaign and the President responded by firing his Interior minister and director of the police academy on national television.[59] He accused the minister of incompetence and declared: "I cannot say that you had any great merits or did much to combat crime."

Niyazov later announced that surveillance cameras were to be placed at all major streets and sites in Turkmenistan, an apparent precaution against future attempts.[citation needed]

Cult of personality edit

 
Niyazov in profile on Turkmenistan army flag

Niyazov became a substitute for the vacuum left by the downfall of the communist system, with his image replacing those of Marx and Lenin. During his rule, Niyazov created a strong cult of personality around himself, which resembled the one around the Kim dynasty in North Korea. He renamed the town of Janga and city of Krasnovodsk after his nickname Türkmenbaşy, and renamed schools, airports, Ashgabat streets, and even a meteorite after himself and members of his family. The city of Kerki was renamed for his father, and city of Ýylanly for his mother. The doting actions of the official Turkmen media supported his cult of personality. The national anthem of Turkmenistan referred to him. According to the newspaper Neytralny Turkmenistan physicians were ordered to swear an oath to the President, replacing the Hippocratic Oath.[60]

Statues and portraits of him were put everywhere throughout the country. In Ashgabat, he erected a rotating, $12 million, golden statue of himself that always faces the sun.[61][62] Niyazov gave every citizen a watch with his portrait in its dial.

Niyazov simultaneously cut funding to and partially disassembled the education system in the name of "reform", while injecting ideological indoctrination into it by requiring all schools to use his own book, the Ruhnama, as their primary text. He also made it mandatory to read the Ruhnama in schools, universities and governmental organizations, new governmental employees were tested on the book at job interviews and an exam on its teachings was a part of the driving test in Turkmenistan. Turkmen State University even had a "Department of the Holy Ruhnama of Türkmenbaşy, the Great", and Ruhnama Studies were pursued as a major research agenda in the country, often at the cost of academic disciplines.[63] Niyazov claimed those who read it thrice were destined for heaven.[64][65][66] Like Kim Il Sung, there is even a creation myth surrounding him.[67][68]

During Niyazov's presidency there was no freedom of the press nor was there freedom of speech. This further meant that opposition to Niyazov was strictly forbidden and major opposition figures were imprisoned, institutionalized, deported, or fled the country, and their family members were routinely harassed by the authorities.[69] A silhouette of Niyazov was used as a logo on television broadcasts.[70] The eccentric nature of some of his decrees, and the vast number of images of the president led to the perception, especially in western countries, of a despotic leader, rich on oil wealth glorifying himself whilst the population gained no benefit. For these, and other reasons, the US government said that by the time he died, "Niyazov's personality cult ... had reached the dimensions of a state-imposed religion."[71]

Death edit

 
Mausoleum of Saparmurat Niyazov

On the afternoon of 21 December 2006, Turkmen state television announced that President Saparmurat Niyazov had died of a sudden heart attack in the early morning hours at around 01:10 local time at his residence, the Türkmenbaşy Palace, age 66.[72][73] One month prior to his death, Niyazov had publicly announced that he had been taking heart medication for the past few years for an unidentified cardiac condition. The Turkmen Embassy in Moscow later confirmed this report.

Because Niyazov named no successor, according to the law of the Constitution of Turkmenistan, Öwezgeldi Ataýew, the Chairman of the Assembly, would assume the presidency. Deputy Prime Minister Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow was named as head of the commission organizing the state funeral. However, Ataýew was arrested on 21 December 2006 and Berdimuhamedow was subsequently named acting president. Berdimuhamedow and the Halk Maslahaty announced on 26 December 2006 that the next presidential elections would be held on 11 February 2007 to elect Niyazov's successor.[74] On 11 February 2007, Berdimuhamedow was elected with 89% of the vote, and was sworn in as president immediately afterwards.[75]

The circumstances of Niyazov's death have been surrounded by some media speculation. Some Turkmen opposition sources also claim that Niyazov died several days before the officially announced date of 21 December.[76]

Foreign news reports also claimed that Niyazov also suffered from ischemic heart disease and kidney failure due to being overweight and overindulgence of alcohol.[1]

Funeral and burial edit

 
Tomb of Niyazov in Ashgabat

Niyazov was buried in his ready-prepared tomb in Kipchak Mosque on 24 December at his home village of Gypjak, approximately 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) west of Ashgabat. Prior to being moved to the village, Niyazov's body lay in state in an open coffin in the presidential palace from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm.[77] Many mourners, including foreign delegations, passed by the coffin in a three-hour period. Many of the ordinary citizens wept dramatically as they walked, some even clinging to the coffin and fainting.[78] The Turkmen Air Force patrolled the funeral cortege as part of the farewell of the Armed Forces of Turkmenistan. A prayer took place before the burial, with the Chief Mufti reading Jyn Aza.[77] As he was buried, the national anthem was played accompanied by a 21-gun salute, symbolizing the number of years during which he was in power.[79]

Funeral attendees edit

Legacy edit

 
Golden statue of Saparmurat Niyazov in Ashgabat

After Niyazov's death, his successor as president, Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow, began to remove some eccentric features of Niyazov's personality cult. In 2008, less than two years after Niyazov's death, the names of months and days of the week changed by Niyazov were restored,[88] and reference in the National Anthem of Turkmenistan to Niyazov was replaced with "the people".[89] By that year, the old Constitution of Turkmenistan, adopted during Niyazov's presidency and codifying Niyazov's primacy, was replaced, and the government launched a democratization program.

Berdimuhamedow also trimmed official references to Niyazov's biographical book, Ruhnama, in Spring 2007, and around 2009–10, television broadcasts of Ruhnama stopped.[90] By 2011, Berdimuhamedow's government rescinded the requirement to pass a secondary-school examination on the book[91] and in 2014, it was finally declared that Turkmenistani universities would no longer test applicants on their knowledge of the book.[92][93] Displaying and keeping the book alongside the Quran in mosques were also stopped, except in Türkmenbaşy Ruhy Mosque.

Some statues and portraits placed around the country were also removed. The Arch of Neutrality, the rotating golden statue of Niyazov, was moved from downtown Ashgabat to the southern edge of the city on 26 August 2010. Newly issued Turkmenistani manat banknotes did not feature his portrait.

However, Saparmurat Niyazov has remained a celebrated figure in Turkmenistan. His birthday is designated as a national day (not an official holiday), called "Türkmenbaşy Remembrance Day". Some of his creations remain unchanged, including the celebration of Melon Day.

Several places still bear his name, including the city of Türkmenbaşy and the nearby town of Türkmenbaşy, as well as several villages.[94] In November 2022, however, the cities of Niyazov, Gurbansoltan Eje, and Serdar were renamed.[95] A park in Turkey is named after him. The Turkmen Agricultural University is named after him, as is the Great Saparmurat Türkmenbaşy Military Institute.

Niyazov had two children, both of whom have maintained distance from politics after their father's death.[96]

References edit

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Notes edit

Further reading edit

  • Theroux, Paul. "The Golden Man: Saparmurat Niyazov's Reign of Insanity". The New Yorker, 28 May 2007, pp. 54–65.

External links edit

  • Saparmurat Niyazov reading a poem (in Turkmen)
  • Turkmenistan News/ Archiv Saparmurat Niyazov's (in English)
  • Numerous articles
  • Ruhnama – Book by Türkmenbaşy (online in English)
  • Transcript of 2004 profile from news program 60 Minutes.

saparmurat, niyazov, nyýazow, redirects, here, other, people, with, same, surname, niyazov, surname, city, daşoguz, province, nyýazow, turkmenistan, turkmenbasi, redirects, here, other, uses, türkmenbaşy, saparmurat, atayevich, niyazov, russian, Сапармурат, Ат. Nyyazow redirects here For other people with the same surname see Niyazov surname For the city in Dasoguz Province see Nyyazow Turkmenistan Turkmenbasi redirects here For other uses see Turkmenbasy Saparmurat Atayevich Niyazov Russian Saparmurat Ataevich Niyazov Turkmen Saparmyrat Atayewic Nyyazow a 19 February 1940 21 December 2006 also known as Turkmenbasy b was a Turkmen politician who ruled Turkmenistan from 1985 until his death in 2006 He was first secretary of the Turkmen Communist Party from 1985 until 1991 and supported the 1991 Soviet coup attempt He continued to rule Turkmenistan for 15 years after independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 TurkmenbasySaparmurat NiyazovNiyazov in 20021st President of TurkmenistanIn office 2 November 1990 21 December 2006Prime MinisterHan Ahmedow 1990 92 Vice PresidentAta Caryyew Orazgeldi Aydogdyew Gurbanguly BerdimuhamedowPreceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byGurbanguly BerdimuhamedowLeader of the Democratic Party of TurkmenistanIn office 27 October 1991 21 December 2006Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byGurbanguly BerdimuhamedowFirst Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of TurkmenistanIn office 21 December 1985 16 December 1991Preceded byMuhammetnazar GapurowSucceeded byOffice abolishedFull member of the 28th PolitburoIn office 14 July 1990 29 August 1991Personal detailsBornSaparmyrat Atayewic Nyyazow 1940 02 19 19 February 1940Gypjak Turkmen SSR Soviet UnionDied21 December 2006 2006 12 21 aged 66 Ashgabat TurkmenistanPolitical partyTDP 1991 2006 Other politicalaffiliationsCPT 1962 1991 CPSU 1962 1991 SpouseMuza Melnikova 1 ChildrenMyratIrinaParentsAtamyrat Nyyazow father Gurbansoltan Niyazowa mother EducationLeningrad Polytechnic InstituteProfessionElectrical engineerNicknameTurkmenbasyMilitary serviceAllegiance TurkmenistanBranch serviceArmed Forces of TurkmenistanRankGeneral of the Army 2 Turkmen media referred to him using the title His Excellency Saparmurat Turkmenbasy President of Turkmenistan and Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers 3 His self given title Turkmenbasy meaning Head of the Turkmen referred to his position as the founder and president of the Association of Turkmens of the World 4 In 1999 the Assembly of Turkmenistan declared Niyazov President for life of Turkmenistan In his time he was one of the world s most totalitarian despotic and repressive dictators 5 6 He promoted a cult of personality around himself and imposed his personal eccentricities upon the country such as renaming Turkmen months and days of the week to references of his autobiography the Ruhnama 7 He made it mandatory to read the Ruhnama in schools universities and governmental organizations new governmental employees were tested on the book at job interviews and an exam on its teachings was a part of the driving test in Turkmenistan In 2005 he closed down all rural libraries and hospitals outside of the capital city Ashgabat in a country where at that time more than half the population lived in rural areas 8 once stating that If people are ill they can come to Ashgabat 9 Under his rule Turkmenistan had the lowest life expectancy in Central Asia Global Witness a London based human rights organisation reported that money under Niyazov s control and held overseas may be in excess of US 3 billion of which between 1 8 2 6 billion was allegedly situated in the Foreign Exchange Reserve Fund at Deutsche Bank in Germany 10 Contents 1 Background 2 Presidency 1990 2006 2 1 Economy 2 1 1 Oil and gas 2 1 2 Agriculture 2 2 Culture 2 3 Internal affairs 2 3 1 Presidential pardons 2 3 2 Decrees and laws 2 4 Foreign policy 3 Opposition 4 Cult of personality 5 Death 6 Funeral and burial 6 1 Funeral attendees 7 Legacy 8 References 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Saparmurat Niyazov news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Niyazov was born on 19 February 1940 in Gypjak or Kipchak just outside Ashgabat in the Turkmen SSR He was a member of the influential Teke tribe of the Turkmens 11 According to the official version of his biography his father Atamyrat Nyyazow died in World War II fighting against Nazi Germany while other sources contend that he dodged fighting and was therefore sentenced by a military court His mother and two brothers were killed in the devastating 1948 Ashgabat earthquake His mother Gurbansoltan Eje was part of the cult of personality later He grew up in a Soviet orphanage before the state put him in the custody of a distant relative 12 13 14 After finishing school in 1959 he worked as an instructor in the Turkmen trade union exploratory committee He then studied at the Leningrad Polytechnic Institute where in 1967 he received a diploma as an electrical engineer After graduating Niyazov went to study in Russia but was expelled a few years later for academic failure 1 In 1962 Niyazov started his political career becoming a member of the Communist Party He quickly rose through the ranks becoming First Secretary of the Ashgabat City Committee 15 and First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Turkmen SSR in 1985 He gained this post after Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev had removed his predecessor Muhammetnazar Gapurov following a cotton related scandal Under Niyazov the Turkmen Communist Party had a reputation as one of the most hardline and unreformed party organizations in the Soviet Union On 13 January 1990 Niyazov became Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of the Turkmen SSR the supreme legislative body in the republic The post was equivalent to that of president Niyazov supported the Soviet coup attempt of 1991 16 However after the coup collapsed he set about separating Turkmenistan from the dying Soviet Union The Turkmen Supreme Soviet declared Turkmenistan independent and appointed Niyazov as the country s first president on 27 October 1991 On 21 June 1992 the Turkmenistani presidential election featured Niyazov as the sole candidate and chosen as the country s first popularly elected president A year later he declared himself Turkmenbasy meaning Leader of all Turkmen In 1994 a plebiscite extended Niyazov s term to 2002 so he could oversee a 10 year development plan The official results showed that 99 9 of voters approved this proposal On 28 December 1999 Parliament declared Niyazov President for life parliamentary elections had been held a few weeks earlier for which the president had hand picked all candidates Niyazov and his wife Muza Melnikova who was of Russian and Jewish descent had a son Murat and a daughter Irina citation needed Presidency 1990 2006 editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Askar Akayev Nursultan Nazarbayev Niyazov Islam Karimov during the CIS meeting c 1991Niyazov became president at the transition of Turkmenistan from a Soviet republic to an independent state His presidency was characterised by an initial crumbling of the centralised Soviet model that in many respects was unsuited for a transition to smaller separate states There was outside concern about press freedom and to a lesser extent religious rights of minority religious groups Niyazov made a personal attempt to create a cultural background for the new state of Turkmenistan by writing and promoting the Ruhnama an autobiography meant to guide the people of Turkmenistan with his ideas and promote native culture and by extension prohibiting foreign culture He also took part in creating new holidays with a specific Turkmen nature and introduced a new Latin based Turkmen alphabet to replace Russian Cyrillic The Latin Turkmen alphabet consists of Aa Bb Cc Dd Ee Aa Ff Gg Hh Ii Jj Zz Kk Ll Mm Nn Nn Oo Oo Pp Rr Ss Ss Tt Uu Uu Ww Yy Yy Zz 17 Despite emphasizing a need to move from central planning to a market economy and to a full democracy during his reign neither plan progressed Yearly plans set forth by the government and a centralised economy gave little indication of moving away from state dominated economics and the dictatorial nature of many of his decrees and his declaring himself President for Life gave little hope as to much progress in these two areas Economy edit nbsp Saparmurat Niyazov is depicted on the 10 000 manat Banknote from 1996Oil and gas edit Turkmenistan has the second largest oil reserves in the former Soviet Union generating high revenue for the state The government has used central planning such as state control of production and procurement direct bank credits with low interest rates exchange rate restrictions and price controls since it existed as a Republic within the USSR 18 In the years following independence Turkmenistan invested heavily in plants and machinery in an attempt to convert it from being primarily a supplier of petroleum to a more advanced economy such investments included oil refineries and a polyethylene plant In an interview with Rossiyskaya Gazeta newspaper Niyazov claimed that Turkmenistan was able to process 85 of its domestic output Additionally numerous petroleum transportation projects were completed such as a pipeline from the Korpedje field to Kort Koi in Iran In 1991 and 2001 Niyazov issued decrees making water gas electricity and refined salt free to use for ten year periods 4 In 2005 Niyazov appointed Gurbanmyrat Atayew as Minister of Oil and Gas succeeding Atamyrat Berdyyew 19 Agriculture edit Turkmenistan s other primary resources are cotton and grain Niyazov continued the old practice of demanding yearly quotas in agricultural output and then blaming and or sacking deputy ministers when quotas were not met 20 21 Nevertheless Turkmenistan had an emergent period during which there was heavy investment in plant and machinery so the country could change from a producer of raw cotton to a cotton processor During Niyazov s presidency a textile industry was founded in Turkmenistan Niyazov introduced the practice of Melon Day a harvest festival celebrated on the 2nd Sunday of August unlike some of his other creations the celebration of Melon Day has continued after his death Culture edit nbsp Postage stamp of Niyazov and US president Bill Clinton 1993Niyazov put the revival of Turkmen culture as one of the top priorities in Turkmenistan s development He introduced a new Turkmen alphabet based on the Latin alphabet to replace Cyrillic The National Revival Movement an organisation to promote Turkmen culture Turkmen Galkynish was also founded In many respects Niyazov s cultural ideas and changes were most visible to external viewers His renaming of months as well as most of the days of the week to Turkmen heroes poets historical events 22 family members and himself was an unexpected development For example September was renamed Ruhnama in honour of the book written by Niyazov which he finished writing on 19 September 2001 23 Not all the changes promoted Niyazov October was renamed Garassyzlyk Independence to mark the state s founding on 27 October 1991 and November Sanjar in honour of Sultan Sanjar who led the Seljuqs to their last full flowering The new names came into effect with the introduction of a new labor law which stated that the dates of professional holidays are specified by decrees of the President of Turkmenistan These names were later abolished by his successor Berdymukhamedov in April 2008 7 His father Atamyrat Nyyazow s Red Army service was used to shape how the country celebrates Victory Day on 9 May Unlike other Central Asian countries Turkmenistan under Niyazov put emphasis on the country s sacrifice during the Second World War In 2005 Niyazov flew to Moscow to celebrate the diamond jubilee of the war s end and just days prior he congratulated Turkmen veterans of the war as well as Russian veterans on behalf of Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian veterans on behalf of Viktor Yushchenko 24 Individually Niyazov s father was awarded the honorary title of Hero of Turkmenistan in 1994 and in 2004 a division of the Turkmen Ground Forces was renamed after Atamyrat Nyyazow 25 Today the 22nd Motor Rifle Division Atamyrat Niyazov deployed in Serdar carries his name 26 Internal affairs edit One of the earliest acts of Niyazov was to abolish the death penalty He also granted official human rights to the people though they were not respected in practice with his government being criticized as one of the worst human rights violators in the world Press freedom under Niyazov s leadership was much criticised as it was with other post Soviet Central Asian states The Turkmen media constantly doted on the president and helped build his cult of personality In 1998 Niyazov closed the Academy of Sciences of Turkmenistan It was reopened in 2009 after his death by his successor Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow In January 2000 Niyazow inaugurated the Walk of Health to improve the health of his population and forced the members of the government to travel it once a year In May 2000 the government revoked all Internet licenses except for the state owned Turkmen Telecom and in June 2001 shut down all Internet cafes 27 By 2005 there were 36 000 Internet users in Turkmenistan representing 0 7 of the population 28 In March 2004 15 000 public health workers were dismissed including nurses midwives school health visitors and orderlies 29 In February 2005 all hospitals outside Ashgabat were ordered to be closed with the reason being that the sick should come to the capital for treatment 30 All libraries outside of the capital were also closed as Niyazov believed that the only books that most Turkmens needed to read were the Quran and his Ruhnama 31 In January 2006 one third of the country s elderly had their pensions discontinued while another 200 000 had theirs reduced Pensions received during the prior two years were ordered to be paid back to the state 32 33 The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Turkmenistan strongly denied allegations that the cut in pensions resulted in the deaths of many elderly Turkmens accusing foreign media outlets of spreading deliberately perverted information on the issue 34 On 19 March 2007 Niyazov s successor Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow reversed his decision by restoring pensions to more than 100 000 elderly citizens 35 Presidential pardons edit In keeping with the predominantly Islamic nature of Turkmen society Niyazov granted pardons each year on the Laylat al Qadr Night of Power in the month of Ramadan For example in 2005 8 145 convicts were pardoned including 229 foreign nationals 36 In 2006 Turkmenistan set free 10 056 prisoners including 253 foreign nationals from 11 countries Niyazov said Let this humane act on the part of the state serve strengthening truly moral values of the Turkmen society Let the entire world know that there has never been a place for evil and violence on the blessed Turkmen soil 37 Decrees and laws edit Niyazov banned the use of lip syncing at public concerts in 2005 as well as sound recordings at musical performances on state holidays in broadcasts by Turkmen television channels at all cultural events organized by the state in places of mass assembly and at weddings and celebrations organised by the public citing a negative effect on the development of musical arts incurred by the use of recorded music 38 39 Niyazov declared Turkmenistan a neutral state and said that the country would not participate in any UN peacekeeping operations citation needed Niyazov banished dogs from the capital Ashgabat because of their unappealing odour 39 and banned citizens from owning more than one cat or dog 40 According to the Ashgabat correspondent of Turkmenistan ru right hand drive imported cars converted to left hand drive were banned due to a perceived increased risk in accidents 41 Niyazov wrote the Ruhnama meaning the book of the spirit soul and made it mandatory in all schools in public offices and for obtaining a drivers license and excerpts from the book were periodically read on Turkmen Television Niyazov even tried to force Mufti Nasrullah ibn Ibadullah to preach the book in the Turkmenbasy Ruhy Mosque 42 Niyazov ordered that all mountains and places in Turkmenistan be named after Turkmen heroes poets and leaders citation needed Niyazov made the second Sunday of August Melon Day in honor of melons one of his favorite foods which he referred to as a gift of God with a glorious history citation needed In August 2002 he ordered a renaming of months and days of the week citation needed He also abolished the Turkmen word for bread and replaced it with Gurbansoltan his mother s name 43 44 Niyazov requested that a palace of ice or indoor ice skating rink be built near the capital so that those living in the desert country could learn to skate The rink was built in 2008 and is located near the new Turkmen State Medical University 45 After having to quit smoking in 1997 due to his resultant heart surgery he banned smoking in all public places and ordered all government employees to follow suit 43 Chewing tobacco on Turkmen soil was later banned as well 46 He outlawed opera ballet circuses and philharmonic orchestras in 2001 for being decidedly unturkmen like 47 48 In February 2004 he decreed that men should no longer wear long hair or beards because of the apparent association with Islamic extremism 49 40 In March 2004 he fired doctors and gymnastics instructors and replaced them with military conscripts citation needed In March 2005 he ordered the closure of all hospitals outside Ashgabat stating that the sick should go to the capital for treatment citation needed Niyazov also ordered the closure of all libraries outside the capital stating that the reason was that ordinary Turkmens did not read anyway citation needed He banned the reporting and even mentioning of contagious diseases such as AIDS or cholera citation needed He banned news reporters and presenters from wearing makeup on television According to some reports he felt presenters should appear natural on screen 50 although others alleged that the reason was more eccentric claiming he said he found it difficult to distinguish male anchors from female anchors 43 He also ordered that each broadcast begin with a pledge that the broadcaster s tongue would shrivel if he she slanders the country flag and or president 51 He banned car radios because he considered them to be useless citation needed Gold teeth were discouraged in Turkmenistan after Niyazov suggested that the populace chew on bones to strengthen their teeth and lessen the rate at which they fall out He said I watched young dogs when I was young They were given bones to gnaw to strengthen their teeth Those of you whose teeth have fallen out did not chew on bones This is my advice 52 In November 2005 he ordered that doctors should swear an oath to him instead of the Hippocratic Oath citation needed In December 2005 he banned video games because they were too violent for young Turkmens citation needed In the same month he ordered the country s oil minister to learn English in 6 months or be fired citation needed Foreign policy edit nbsp Niyazov with Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Moscow Kremlin June 2000Niyazov promoted a policy of strict neutrality in foreign affairs refraining from seeking membership in NATO or GUAM and almost ignoring the CSTO Turkmenistan has not participated in any United Nations peacekeeping missions It has however become a member of Interpol The full independence of Turkmenistan was recognised by a UN General Assembly resolution The permanent neutrality of Turkmenistan of 12 December 1995 As a result in 2005 Turkmenistan would downgrade its links with the Commonwealth of Independent States becoming only an associate member under article 8 of the CIS charter as such it would not participate in any of the military structures of the CIS In 2006 the European Commission and the international trade committee of the European Parliament voted to grant Turkmenistan most favoured nation trading status with the European Union widely seen as motivated by interest in natural gas after Niyazov announced he would enter a human rights dialogue with the EU 53 In January 1996 Niyazov met with Sayid Abdulloh Nuri in Tehran to inform him that the attendees of a CIS summit in Moscow had agreed to renew the mandate of CIS peacekeepers in Tajikistan which was going through a civil war at the time 54 Opposition edit nbsp Uzbek president Islam Karimov Russia s Vladimir Putin Niyazov and Nursultan Nazarbayev of Kazakhstan in 2002On 25 November 2002 Niyazov s motorcade was fired upon at about 7 a m in downtown Ashgabat as he was traveling to his office from his official residence in Arshabil Niyazov claimed that it was an attempt at a coup and as a result the Turkmen government arrested thousands of suspected conspirators and members of their families Among the figures who were arrested purged were former Foreign Ministers Boris Syhmyradow and Batyr Berdiyew as well as Major Begench Beknazarov of the Turkmen Ground Forces and Chief of the General Staff Lieutenant General Serdar Charyyarov 55 Critics claim the government staged the attempt to crack down on mounting domestic and foreign political opposition 56 Ethnic Russians in Turkmenistan were disproportionately targeted in the aftermath 57 58 The summer of 2004 saw a leaflet campaign in the capital Asgabat calling for the overthrow and trial of Niyazov The authorities were unable to stop the campaign and the President responded by firing his Interior minister and director of the police academy on national television 59 He accused the minister of incompetence and declared I cannot say that you had any great merits or did much to combat crime Niyazov later announced that surveillance cameras were to be placed at all major streets and sites in Turkmenistan an apparent precaution against future attempts citation needed Cult of personality edit nbsp Niyazov in profile on Turkmenistan army flagNiyazov became a substitute for the vacuum left by the downfall of the communist system with his image replacing those of Marx and Lenin During his rule Niyazov created a strong cult of personality around himself which resembled the one around the Kim dynasty in North Korea He renamed the town of Janga and city of Krasnovodsk after his nickname Turkmenbasy and renamed schools airports Ashgabat streets and even a meteorite after himself and members of his family The city of Kerki was renamed for his father and city of Yylanly for his mother The doting actions of the official Turkmen media supported his cult of personality The national anthem of Turkmenistan referred to him According to the newspaper Neytralny Turkmenistan physicians were ordered to swear an oath to the President replacing the Hippocratic Oath 60 Statues and portraits of him were put everywhere throughout the country In Ashgabat he erected a rotating 12 million golden statue of himself that always faces the sun 61 62 Niyazov gave every citizen a watch with his portrait in its dial Niyazov simultaneously cut funding to and partially disassembled the education system in the name of reform while injecting ideological indoctrination into it by requiring all schools to use his own book the Ruhnama as their primary text He also made it mandatory to read the Ruhnama in schools universities and governmental organizations new governmental employees were tested on the book at job interviews and an exam on its teachings was a part of the driving test in Turkmenistan Turkmen State University even had a Department of the Holy Ruhnama of Turkmenbasy the Great and Ruhnama Studies were pursued as a major research agenda in the country often at the cost of academic disciplines 63 Niyazov claimed those who read it thrice were destined for heaven 64 65 66 Like Kim Il Sung there is even a creation myth surrounding him 67 68 During Niyazov s presidency there was no freedom of the press nor was there freedom of speech This further meant that opposition to Niyazov was strictly forbidden and major opposition figures were imprisoned institutionalized deported or fled the country and their family members were routinely harassed by the authorities 69 A silhouette of Niyazov was used as a logo on television broadcasts 70 The eccentric nature of some of his decrees and the vast number of images of the president led to the perception especially in western countries of a despotic leader rich on oil wealth glorifying himself whilst the population gained no benefit For these and other reasons the US government said that by the time he died Niyazov s personality cult had reached the dimensions of a state imposed religion 71 Death edit nbsp Mausoleum of Saparmurat NiyazovOn the afternoon of 21 December 2006 Turkmen state television announced that President Saparmurat Niyazov had died of a sudden heart attack in the early morning hours at around 01 10 local time at his residence the Turkmenbasy Palace age 66 72 73 One month prior to his death Niyazov had publicly announced that he had been taking heart medication for the past few years for an unidentified cardiac condition The Turkmen Embassy in Moscow later confirmed this report Because Niyazov named no successor according to the law of the Constitution of Turkmenistan Owezgeldi Atayew the Chairman of the Assembly would assume the presidency Deputy Prime Minister Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow was named as head of the commission organizing the state funeral However Atayew was arrested on 21 December 2006 and Berdimuhamedow was subsequently named acting president Berdimuhamedow and the Halk Maslahaty announced on 26 December 2006 that the next presidential elections would be held on 11 February 2007 to elect Niyazov s successor 74 On 11 February 2007 Berdimuhamedow was elected with 89 of the vote and was sworn in as president immediately afterwards 75 The circumstances of Niyazov s death have been surrounded by some media speculation Some Turkmen opposition sources also claim that Niyazov died several days before the officially announced date of 21 December 76 Foreign news reports also claimed that Niyazov also suffered from ischemic heart disease and kidney failure due to being overweight and overindulgence of alcohol 1 Funeral and burial edit nbsp Tomb of Niyazov in AshgabatNiyazov was buried in his ready prepared tomb in Kipchak Mosque on 24 December at his home village of Gypjak approximately 7 kilometres 4 3 mi west of Ashgabat Prior to being moved to the village Niyazov s body lay in state in an open coffin in the presidential palace from 9 00 am to 12 00 pm 77 Many mourners including foreign delegations passed by the coffin in a three hour period Many of the ordinary citizens wept dramatically as they walked some even clinging to the coffin and fainting 78 The Turkmen Air Force patrolled the funeral cortege as part of the farewell of the Armed Forces of Turkmenistan A prayer took place before the burial with the Chief Mufti reading Jyn Aza 77 As he was buried the national anthem was played accompanied by a 21 gun salute symbolizing the number of years during which he was in power 79 Funeral attendees edit nbsp Hamid Karzai President of Afghanistan 80 nbsp Andranik Margaryan Prime Minister of Armenia 80 nbsp Artur Rasizade Prime Minister of Azerbaijan 81 nbsp Gennady Novitsky Chairman of the Council of the Republic of Belarus 82 nbsp Tang Jiaxuan State Councilor of China and Special Envoy of President Hu Jintao 83 84 nbsp Zurab Noghaideli Prime Minister of Georgia 80 nbsp Saifuddin Soz Minister of Water Resources of India and envoy of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh 85 86 nbsp Parviz Davoudi Vice President of Iran nbsp Manouchehr Mottaki Minister of Foreign Affairs of Iran 80 nbsp Nursultan Nazarbayev President of Kazakhstan 80 nbsp Shaukat Aziz Prime Minister of Pakistan 80 nbsp Mikhail Fradkov Prime Minister of Russia 80 nbsp Grigory Karasin Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of Russia 82 nbsp Alexei Miller CEO of Gazprom 82 nbsp Emomali Rahmon President of Tajikistan 80 nbsp Abdullah Gul President of Turkey nbsp Recep Tayyip Erdogan Prime Minister of Turkey 80 nbsp Viktor Yanukovych Prime Minister of Ukraine 80 nbsp Richard Boucher Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs 87 Legacy edit nbsp Golden statue of Saparmurat Niyazov in AshgabatAfter Niyazov s death his successor as president Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow began to remove some eccentric features of Niyazov s personality cult In 2008 less than two years after Niyazov s death the names of months and days of the week changed by Niyazov were restored 88 and reference in the National Anthem of Turkmenistan to Niyazov was replaced with the people 89 By that year the old Constitution of Turkmenistan adopted during Niyazov s presidency and codifying Niyazov s primacy was replaced and the government launched a democratization program Berdimuhamedow also trimmed official references to Niyazov s biographical book Ruhnama in Spring 2007 and around 2009 10 television broadcasts of Ruhnama stopped 90 By 2011 Berdimuhamedow s government rescinded the requirement to pass a secondary school examination on the book 91 and in 2014 it was finally declared that Turkmenistani universities would no longer test applicants on their knowledge of the book 92 93 Displaying and keeping the book alongside the Quran in mosques were also stopped except in Turkmenbasy Ruhy Mosque Some statues and portraits placed around the country were also removed The Arch of Neutrality the rotating golden statue of Niyazov was moved from downtown Ashgabat to the southern edge of the city on 26 August 2010 Newly issued Turkmenistani manat banknotes did not feature his portrait However Saparmurat Niyazov has remained a celebrated figure in Turkmenistan His birthday is designated as a national day not an official holiday called Turkmenbasy Remembrance Day Some of his creations remain unchanged including the celebration of Melon Day Several places still bear his name including the city of Turkmenbasy and the nearby town of Turkmenbasy as well as several villages 94 In November 2022 however the cities of Niyazov Gurbansoltan Eje and Serdar were renamed 95 A park in Turkey is named after him The Turkmen Agricultural University is named after him as is the Great Saparmurat Turkmenbasy Military Institute Niyazov had two children both of whom have maintained distance from politics after their father s death 96 References edit a b c Naslednikom Turkmenbashi mozhet stat sledovatel moskovskoj prokuratury Kp ru in Russian Komsomolskaya Pravda 22 December 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and Opportunities Education Equity Economy vol 8 Cham Springer International Publishing pp 71 91 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 50127 3 5 ISBN 978 3 030 50127 3 S2CID 226746701 archived from the original on 18 November 2023 retrieved 5 July 2021 Districts in Turkmenistan OpenStreetMap Wiki wiki openstreetmap org Archived from the original on 5 January 2020 Retrieved 15 February 2023 Gurbansoltan Eje was named in honor of Niyazov s mother and Serdar leader in Turkmen referred to Niyazov himself Postanovlenie Medzhlisa Milli Gengesha Turkmenistana Turkmenistan Zolotoj vek 10 November 2022 archived from the original on 11 November 2022 retrieved 15 February 2023 Prezident Turkmenii Saparmurat Niyazov Ya pokinu post glavy gosudarstva eshe pri zhizni Izvestiya Archived 6 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine IzvestiaNotes edit 8ɑpɑmɯˈɾɑt ɑˈtɑjɛbɪtʃ nɯˈjɑdob lit Head of the Turkmen Further reading editTheroux Paul The Golden Man Saparmurat Niyazov s Reign of Insanity The New Yorker 28 May 2007 pp 54 65 Rasizade Alec Turkmenbashi and his Turkmenistan Contemporary Review Oxford October 2003 volume 283 number 1653 pp 197 206 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saparmyrat Nyyazow Saparmurat Niyazov reading a poem in Turkmen Turkmenistan News Archiv Saparmurat Niyazov s in English Numerous articles Ruhnama Book by Turkmenbasy online in English Transcript of 2004 profile from news program 60 Minutes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saparmurat Niyazov amp oldid 1217843683, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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