It’s
102 degrees out — too hot to do anything, so I stay inside and muse on
conditions in Uzbekistan, a poor country, where people profess to be very happy.
One guide, in a rare moment of candidness, said, “They are always watching.” I thought, “Big brother.” The travel industry, like the tobacco, cotton, banking, oil,
and transportation industries are firmly under the government's control. I snapped a
picture of the Bukhara airport terminal and an officer came rushing over with
his hands crossed and shaking his head, “No
picture.” I showed him the picture and deleted it. Taking pictures of
government buildings or transportation facilities is prohibited. It’s not even possible
to park near one of those spanking new government buildings. I asked if I could
at least see the grandfather’s (President Karimov’s) home. My guide said, “No. Security is too tight. It has to be that
way, because the grandfather has a lot of enemies.” “Who are his enemies?” “The
terrorists along the Afghan border and the opposition exiled somewhere in
Europe.” But everyone I meet adores the grandfather. “We are a peaceful stable country because of him,” he says, which I've been hearing ad
nausea. An eerie normality pervades the country like the calm before the
storm: people going about their business, farm workers schlepping bundles of
hay in donkey drawn carts, women in ankle length colorful synthetic dresses peddling fruits
and vegetables, men lingering in cafes and parks, families casually strolling
through the plaza at night, and folks everywhere saying hello. But something is
lacking. Where’s the distant lightening and thunder, I wonder. Where are the street
artists, the performers, the graffiti, the protest signs, the electioneering
billboards, the newsstands, the McDonalds, and the currency exchange kiosks? Yes, why do people think it
normal for the official currency rate to be 33% above the street rate?
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