Gulnara Karimova


Troubling reality behind facade of Uzbek ‘princess’

The glitter, glamour and philanthropy of Gulnara Karimova hides the truth of an Uzbekistan regime that engenders fear

Gulnara KarimovaGulnara Karimova has contributed to US foundation for Aids research amFAR, yet homosexuality is illegal in Uzbekistan. Photograph: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

If it wasn’t so bizarre and genuinely troubling, the extravagant character of Gulnara Karimova would almost be a tremendous joke. One of those hyper-real women that grace the pages of Tintin or Asterix in harem pants and jewels with secret compartments stuffed with poison. She may have been played by Fenella Fielding in Carry On Up the Ferghana, with Sid James as her disreputable father. But as the eldest daughter of the Uzbek dictator, Islam Karimov, and his presumptive heir there is nothing funny at all about Karimova.

Known as princess of the Uzbeks, Karimova does it all and has it all. Married at 19 to Mansur Maqsudi, a local Coca-Cola executive, her father made Coca-Cola the only soft drink of choice in Uzbekistan. Divorced a few years later, Karimova returned from the US to Tashkent with her two children. Karimova manages to combine various careers into her busy life – from serious politician and ambassador to pop diva via fashion designer and businesswoman. Recording under her father’s nickname for her, GooGoosha, her videos show her as an Arabian Nights fantasy princess bedecked in diamonds as big as the Kremlin against the skyline of Samarkand with a Lamborgini thrown in for good measure.

But this Kylie of the Steppes is also a creator of jewels for Chopard – though when I asked them for a comment they denied that she was continuing to work for them. She is the organiser of the Fund Forum – a festival for children that includes Cristiano Ronaldo and Samuel Eto’o as patrons. In fact, Karimova attracts all sorts of celebrities to her various causes: Kenzo, Rod Stewart and Julio Iglesias among others.

Her fabulous wealth, estimated at $570m, is reported to have come from her presidency of Uzdunrobita, the national Uzbek mobile phone network – a gift from her father who recently proclaimed her Uzbek ambassador to the UN office in Geneva and also ambassador to Spain. The Swiss have named her the 10th richest woman in Switzerland. Is there no end to this woman’s ambitions?

Apparently not. Last year she contributed to US foundation for Aids research amFAR, and was photographed at its huge charity event at the Cannes Film Festival with Sharon Stone and Bill Clinton. The event attracts A-list celebs such as George Clooney, Sir Elton John, Claudia Schiffer and Ringo Starr, and is to Cannes what the Vanity Fair event is to the Oscars.

On the committee is Karimova’s good friend and co-president of Chopard, Caroline Gruosi–Scheufele, who has asked the Uzbek princess to be a co-chair this year. The event was a glamorous one this year with performances by Mary J Blige and Alan Cumming. Karimova’s fellow chairs include Giorgio Armani, Emily Blunt, Harvey Weinstein and Elizabeth Taylor.

I suppose one could say all money is welcome in the fight against Aids, but will the guests at the chicest gala in Cannes know that homosexuality is illegal in Uzbekistan and punishable by three years in prison if you get caught? And that last autumn a Tashkent court sentenced 27-year-old Uzbek anti-Aids activist Maxim Popov to seven years imprisonment. The verdict claimed that Popov contradicted Uzbek traditions and culture by distributing a brochure about the need to use condoms and clean syringes to combat HIV.

Well amFAR knows, because on 10 May it signed a petition to the US and the UN asking them to put pressure on the Uzbek government to release Popov. Yet, on the same day, it announced the appointment of Karimova as co-chair of the Cannes event. Last week a dissident Uzbek newspaper wrote about amFAR’s curious relationship with Karimova and her name was removed immediately from its website, only to reappear the following day. Beyond its total disregard for HIV education is the appalling record of the Uzbek state on human rights abuses. The atrocities include not only accusations of boiling political prisoners in oil but also the massacre at Andijan that happened five years ago last week.

I was not at the gala on Thursday but can only hope the guests in their fine jewels and furs remembered Popov languishing in his cell in a Tashkent prison and all the other victims of Karimova’s father. In fact, I hope that they turn their backs on her and make her feel the fear and isolation felt by the Uzbek people, both at home and abroad.

4 thoughts on “Gulnara Karimova

  1. Gulnara Karimova is the same type of Daughter as any would be in the Third world. During the tenure of Benazir Bhutto Zardari was that Type, Now Gillani Son is famous for wheeling dealings. But Gulnara Karimova is in the news because some governments, and Paid Journalists and innocent Sincere Writers want to get some thing from President Karimov and they have Gulnara Karimova a scape goat.
    Uzbekistan is being ruled by President Islam Karimov and he has always stood against any pressure and has safeguarded the interest of his nation. Naturally interested Governments do not like that.
    I have personally admired Gulnara Karimova and has some times back dealt with some organizations controlled by her and has found their dealing and management system very professional. Writers are invited to Uzbekistan. They should travel to Uzbekistan and see with their own eyes the positive aspects of Uzbek Society. Buy a tour and come to our Paradise Uzbekistan

    1. It’s so funny to see positive comments about Gulnara Karimova. I wish people of Uzbekistan had a freedom of speech, they would blast their views and tell you who she and her farther really are.

      BUNCH OF DICTATORS !!!!!!

  2. Thank you for the article. I am from Uzbekistan and below you can see the usual staff we read about Gulnara Karimova, (or as she calls herself Gugusha and princess of Uzbekistan), written by journalists paid by her (like Paul Trustfull, Gennadij Something, etc):

    “She is not shy about speaking of herself as a beauty, but such is her official role, a role that is way more important than any position she has held. She is the daughter of her father, the daughter of the president of Uzbekistan, who was recently re-elected for a new term. He knows he can’t afford to show any weakness. Such is Karimov as a politician. Today, she is the face of Uzbekistan, and this is a small glamorous revolution. ”

    And this is is in the country where child labour is a part of the game (children are still in the cotton fields) , people like Popov are in jails, malnutrition is common, and the Karimovs are looting the country. G. is known for being the greediest of all, and as cruel as her father.

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