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Russia's Vladimir Putin urges Islam Karimov's successors to continue his tough style of rule

Vladimir Putin's meeting was seen as a further strong hint that Shavkat Mirziyoyev is likely to succeed Islam Karimov as head of state in Uzbekistan

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Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) and Uzbek Prime Minister Shavkat Mirziyoyev arrive to lay flowers at the grave of late Uzbek President Islam Karimov in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, September 6, 2016.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday urged the successors to Uzbekistan's Islam Karimov to continue his policies - apparent encouragement for them to follow his authoritarian line and keep the lid on opposition at home.

Karimov, who died on September 2 at the age of 78 after more than quarter of a century at the helm, presented himself as a bulwark against a possible surge of Islamist militancy in his Central Asian state which borders Afghanistan. His tough anti-Islamist line enabled Karimov to manoeuvre successfully between Russia and the United States despite strong criticism by rights groups and misgivings among Western governments over his strong-arm tactics against dissenters at home.

"Of course, we hope that everything Islam Abduganiyevich (Karimov) had started will be continued," Russia's Rossiya-24 channel showed Putin telling Uzbek Prime Minister Shavkat Mirziyoyev during a visit to Uzbekistan. "On our part, we will do everything to support this path of mutual development and the people and leadership of Uzbekistan. You can fully count on us as your most reliable friends," said Putin who flew to Uzbekistan from China where he attended the G20 summit.

The Kremlin said in a brief statement that Putin visited Karimov's hometown of Samarkand where the Uzbek leader was buried and laid flowers on his grave together with Mirziyoyev. Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev represented Russia at the funeral of Karimov who died of a stroke.

The follow-up visit by Putin, which took place shortly after a visit to Uzbekistan by a senior US diplomat, highlighted the competition among world powers, including China, for influence in resource-rich and strategically-located Central Asia. Hours before Putin's arrival, Daniel Rosenblum, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Central Asia at the US Department of State, told reporters in Tashkent he had met Uzbek Foreign Minister Abdulaziz Komilov the previous evening.

Putin's meeting was seen as a further strong hint that Mirziyoyev, 59, is likely to succeed Karimov as head of state. Last week, he was appointed head of the commission that organised Karimov's funeral, a duty which in the Soviet culture of the region normally falls to the successor. Mirziyoyev, in turn, told Putin his visit "says a lot".

"Our external political relations with the Russian Federation are those of strategic partnership, and we will continue to develop that bridge which you had been building together with Islam Abduganiyevich for so many years in order not to break it, but to further solidify it," he said.

Karimov distanced Uzbekistan from Moscow in 2012 when Tashkent suspended its membership in the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organisation, which groups several ex-Soviet nations and is seen by some analysts as a regional counterbalance to NATO. But Uzbekistan, the region's most populous nation, remains heavily dependent on Russia economically. At least 2 million Uzbeks are estimated to work abroad, mostly in Russia, to provide for their families. 

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