Turkmens resurrect late president's gold statue
By ALEXANDER VERSHININ, Associated Press
Dec 12, 2011 8:58 AM CST
Turkmenistan's President Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov, center left, inspects a guard of honor during a welcoming ceremony at parliament house in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2011. (AP Photo/Vincent Thian)   (Associated Press)

A golden rotating statue of Turkmenistan's late eccentric dictator adorned the skyline of the isolated energy-rich Central Asian nation's capital again Monday, one year after its was toppled as authorities sought to dismantle the leader's overwhelming personality cult.

The Arch of Neutrality topped by the monument to Saparmurat Niyazov was officially unveiled during a lights and firework display to mark the 16th anniversary of Turkmenistan's declaration of neutrality at the United Nations.

The tower was once a centerpiece of Ashgabat and the most distinctive monument built in honor of Niyazov, who died unexpectedly in 2006. Now, it stands several kilometers (miles) away, on the outskirts of the city.

Once-omnipresent reminders of Niyazov have gradually been removed as authorities seek to highlight the profile of current President Gurbanguli Berdymukhamedov. The mythology surrounding Niyazov has been gradually chipped away, only to make way for similarly slavish adulation for Berdymukhamedov.

In a vein reminiscent of Niyazov's title of Turkmenbashi, or father of all Turkmens, state media now routinely refers to Berdymukhamedov as Arkadag, which is Turkmen for protector.

Even so, authorities have so far largely refrained from aping the megalomaniacal excesses of the Turkmenbashi era. Niyazov renamed cities, streets, months, periodicals and public organizations after himself and family members and made a two-volume spiritual tome he wrote mandatory reading.

Restoring the golden statue, on top of an even taller tower that now soars 95 meters (312 feet), appears to suggest authorities are wary of jettisoning Niyazov's legacy wholesale.

Turkmenistan's declaration of neutrality in 1995 is a cornerstone of the diplomatically isolated ex-Soviet nation's foreign policy and is still hailed in state media as a major achievement of the Niyazov era.