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Exporting Repression: Extraterritorial Practices and Central Asian Authoritarianism

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posted on 2025-07-31, 23:57 authored by DG Lewis
Post-Soviet authoritarian states view diaspora communities and political exiles as dangerous threats to their political dominance at home. Faced with political activism among their citizens abroad, they seek to expand their domestic modes of repression beyond their own borders. Central Asian states, such as Uzbekistan, have been particularly active in this regard, using a wide range of mechanisms to maintain political influence over citizens who have moved abroad. These activities pose a serious threat to the security of dissidents in exile, but also serve to export the dynamics of political repression around the world. EU states should resist unwarranted extradition requests and Interpol ‘Red Notices’ against political exiles, ensure that those seeking political asylum are fully protected and constrain foreign intelligence activities targeting activists, journalists and dissidents under their jurisdiction.

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© Foreign Policy Centre 2014 All rights reserved

Notes

This is the final version. Available from the Foreign Policy Centre via the link in this record.

Publisher

Foreign Policy Centre

Book title

Shelter from the Storm: The Asylum, Refuge and Extradition Situation Facing Activists from the Former Soviet Union in the CIS and Europe

Editors

Hug, A

Place published

London

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2019-03-05T14:12:09Z

FOA date

2019-04-04T23:00:00Z

Citation

In: Shelter from the Storm: The asylum, refuge and extradition situation facing activists from the former Soviet Union in the CIS and Europe, by Adam Hug

Department

  • Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology

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