People gather in front of a monument to Turkmenistan’s President Berdymukhamedov during its inauguration ceremony in Ashgabat. Turkmenistan unveiled the first monument to Berdymukhamedov yesterday – a gilded 6m statue of the leader on horseback perched on a white cliff, reflecting his flourishing personality cult in the reclusive gas-rich nation.

AFP
Ashgabat

The isolated Central Asian state of Turkmenistan has unveiled a massive gold statue of President Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov riding a horse in a move that echoes his predecessor’s cult of personality.
The 21m (69-foot) monument, located in the capital city of Ashgabat, depicts the president mounted on his favourite horse, Akkan (“White Khan”), and carrying a dove with his right hand.
Cast in bronze and covered in 24-carat gold leaf, it is the first such monument of the president of the energy-rich ex-Soviet country.
The 6m statue is called “The Protector”, Berdymukhamedov’s unofficial title.
Berdymukhamedov, a former dentist, came to power after the death of Saparmurat Niyazov, who built a gold statue of himself that rotated with the sun’s movements before he suffered sudden heart failure in 2006.
The statue was taken down several years after Niyazov’s death, but has since been moved to the outskirts of the capital.
Niyazov, known for his cult of personality, also renamed months after members of his family and wrote a “book of the soul” that all school children were expected to learn by heart.
At the unveiling of the new statue, which Berdymukhamedov did not attend, parliament speaker Akdja Nurberdieva said that it was the result of “multiple suggestions from simple people, work collectives and public organisations”, in order to mark the president’s “services to the homeland”.
The ceremony featured a rendition of the national anthem, soldiers taking an oath of loyalty to the president and a flock of white pigeons being released into the sky.
“All of us should thank the Almighty for the fact that our country is led by a wise statesman like the Protector,” said Nurali Gurbanov, 75, a pensioner attending the opening told AFP. “We associate his name with our happy life.”
Berdymukhamedov’s style of rule is not unique in Central Asia, where long-time autocrats such as Uzbekistan’s Islam Karimov, Kazakhstan’s Nursultan Nazarbayev and Tajikistan’s Emomali Rakhmon present their entrenched reigns as the only alternative to chaos and instability.
The lack of obvious candidates to succeed septuagenarians Nazarbayev and Karimov in particular has sparked fears of violent power struggles within the region’s elites when the strongmen eventually die.
But in Turkmenistan, whose population of around 5mn burns natural gas virtually free of charge in a state with the fourth largest reserves in the world, the transition from one all-powerful autocrat to another proved relatively seamless.
The parliament, which has no independent power, has bestowed titles on Berdymukhamedov in the same way it did for Niyazov.
Last year it named horse-lover Berdymukhamedov a “Master Jockey and Mentor”.
He was later recognised as a “People’s Horse Breeder” at a day of equestrian events in April, while his father, Myalikguli Berdymukhamedov, has also received numerous state honours.
In 2013, the president suffered a fall from his horse seconds after winning a race, clips of which have gained thousands of views on YouTube.
“The Protector” statue was unveiled to mark Ashgabat Day, a holiday celebrating the capital of 400,000 people that was recognised by the Guinness Book of Records in 2013 for housing “the highest density of white marble-clad buildings”.
“The monument of the Protector-Hero will perpetuate the memory of the heyday of the Turkmen state,” said Annadurdy Almamedov, a professor at the Academy of Arts of Turkmenistan, who was also present at the ceremony. “We are witnessing today those glorious pages of history.”
Turkmenistan is regularly blacklisted as one of Freedom House’s “Worst of the Worst” list of repressive countries for its lack of civil liberties.


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