Tajik Government Blames Banned Islamist Party For Deadly Attack On Foreign Cyclists

The Tajik government has accused the banned Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan (IRPT) of being behind an attack that killed four foreign cyclists, prompting a swift denial from the group.

The IRPT leadership called the allegation "baseless and irrational" in a statement on July 31, and the Islamic State (IS) group stepped up its claim of responsibility by releasing a video of what it said were the attackers pledging allegiance to the extremist organization.

A Central Asia analyst said that the assault, which killed two Americans, a Dutchman, and a Swiss citizen, appeared to have been "the first attack by IS in Tajikistan."

The deadly attack on a group of foreign cyclists on a remote mountain road on July 29 drew attention to Tajikistan, the poorest of the five former Soviet republics in Central Asia.

The Interior Ministry said in a July 31 statement that the attackers were led by an "active member" of the IRPT, citing what it claimed was the confession of a detained suspect.

The ministry identified the alleged leader as Hussein Abdusamadov, 33, and said that he "underwent training in Iran." It said the attackers planned to flee to Afghanistan.

Tajik authorities offered no immediate proof of the claims, which appeared to contradict a claim of responsibility issued by IS a day earlier.

The IRPT Supreme Council issued a statement denying what it said were the "baseless and irrational allegations" that it was involved, calling the accusations "shameless and illogical slander" and adding, "Unfortunately, the Tajik authorities, as always, have tried to use this human and national tragedy for political purpose and against...peaceful opponents."

"Once again our heartfelt condolences go to the families of the victims and to the countries that lost their citizens in this terrible incident," said the statement, which was e-mailed to RFE/RL. "At the same time, we repeatedly condemn this inhuman crime, considering it as opposite to human, national, and religious values."

IRPT leader-in-exile Muhiddin Kabiri told the Reuters news agency by telephone that the accusation "draws the attention away from the real criminals."

Human rights groups have condemned Tajikistan's treatment of the IRPT, which was branded a "terrorist organization" and banned in 2015. Relations with Tehran are tense.

IS claimed responsibility for the killings in a statement on its affiliated Amaq news agency on July 30, without providing details or evidence to back up its statement.

It described the attackers as "soldiers of the caliphate" -- wording it has frequently used in claims of responsibility for attacks in various countries.

On July 31, Amaq issued a video showing five males whom the SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors extremist activity, said it claimed carried out the attack.

In broken Russian, one of the men says that Tajikistan "has been occupied by infidels" and that it should "obey God."

After the five pledge allegiance to IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, he says in a mix of Russian, Arabic, and Tajik that their goal is to "establish the Almighty's rule on this land."

At least one of the five resembles one of three suspects whose photographs were released by Tajik authorities.

Kabiri told Reuters he was surprised the government appeared to ignore the IS claim.

Tajik authorities say four people were killed in the attack on a mountain highway in the Danghara district of the Khatlon region, about 150 kilometers south of the capital, Dushanbe.

Officials say at least one assailant with a gun and knife attacked the cyclists after some of them were run down by a car.

Three other foreigners -- one Dutch, one Swiss, and one French -- were injured.

The two Dutch victims were a couple identified by the media in the Netherlands as Rene Wokke, a 56-year-old man who was killed, and Kim Postma, a 58-year-old woman who was injured.

At least four people suspected of involvement in the attack were killed by officers, and five other suspects detained, Tajik police said.

Tajik authorities have imprisoned dozens of IRPT officials and members since 2015, when the party was designated a “terrorist organization” by the Supreme Court and banned.

The ban on the party and prosecution of its members have drawn criticism from international human rights groups and the UN.

Activists accuse President Emomali Rahmon's government of using the group as a scapegoat for unrest and attacks in the impoverished, predominantly Muslim country that borders Afghanistan.

Central Asia expert Edward Lemon, a research fellow at Columbia University, said that the government had linked alleged terror plots to IS in the past, "often presenting dubious evidence."

But with IS claiming responsibility and posting a video of the alleged attackers pledging allegiance, he said that "this does appear to be the first attack by IS in Tajikistan."

In an e-mail comment, Lemon said that while Tajik officials say about 1,100 citizens have travelled to Syria or Iraq to fight alongside IS since 2013 -- with most of them being killed and about 100 returning home following a government offer of amnesty -- the alleged attackers in the IS video did not appear to have done so.

"Rather they appear to be responding to calls by ISIS for their supporters to conduct attacks in the former Soviet Union," he said. "At present, the attack is an anomaly in a past that has been mired by political violence linked to local politics rather than transnational terrorism."

Before the 2015 ban, the IRPT had been the only legal Islamic party in any of the five former Soviet republics of Central Asia.

It was first banned in 1993 but was legalized again in 1998 after the end of the five-year Tajik civil war.

Tajik authorities have accused Iran of supporting militants and fomenting violence in the past.

In a state-TV documentary in 2017, the Interior Ministry accused Iran of backing high-profile killings in the wake of the civil war, including the assassination of former parliament chairman Safarali Kenjaev in 1999.

With reporting by Bruce Pannier, Merhat Sharipzhan, Reuters, and AFP