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Human Rights Watch urges to complete investigation into Azimzhan Askarov’s death

The international human rights organization Human Rights Watch published a statement, in which it urges to complete the investigation into the case of well-known human rights defender Azimzhan Askarov and to provide his family with redress.

As the statements says, Azimzhan Askarov should have turned 72 this year. He should be enjoying life with his wife, children, and grandchildren, happily painting landscapes and portraits. Instead, he died in prison three years ago, held on spurious charges. For this, no one has been held responsible.

The human rights defender had been serving a life sentence following an unfair trial on politically motivated charges relating to the June 2010 inter-ethnic conflict in southern Kyrgyzstan.

In March 2016, the United Nations Human Rights Committee found that Askarov had been arbitrarily detained and called for his immediate release. Kyrgyzstan’s government did not comply, in violation of its obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Kyrgyzstan’s prison service said Askarov died on July 25, 2020 of complications from COVID-19. However, Askarov’s health had deteriorated significantly during his imprisonment, and he became severely ill in the days before his death. Despite repeated requests from Askarov’s lawyers, as well as various international bodies, prison authorities refused to release Askarov on humanitarian grounds.

As the human rights organization says, an investigation into his death was rife with procedural violations and conflicts of interest, and the authorities closed the case in June 2021.

After repeated appeals and mounting pressure from national and international human rights organizations, the investigation was reopened in September 2021. However, Bir Duino, a human rights organization representing Askarov’s widow, Khadicha Askarova, told Human Rights Watch there has been no public report outlining the investigation’s findings and that authorities returned the case to prison authorities, raising concerns about the investigation’s fairness.

Askarov’s arbitrary arrest, unfair trial, and mistreatment in prison reflect Kyrgyzstan’s broader politicization of justice.

Human Rights Watch

«Two dozen activists, journalists, and politicians are currently being tried behind closed doors for involvement in a peaceful protest over water resource management. They’ve been in pretrial custody since October 2022. A spate of new legislative proposals aims to crack down on media and civil society,» the statement says.

In February, Kyrgyzstan became a member of the UN Human Rights Council, pledging to strengthen cooperation with international human rights mechanisms. To meet its commitment, the Kyrgyz government should respect the Human Rights Committee’s decision, quash Askarov’s conviction, complete an effective and impartial investigation into his death, and provide his family appropriate redress.

«But if it’s serious about righting the wrongs done to Azimzhan Askarov, the government should urgently release all those wrongly imprisoned for exercising their fundamental rights,» Human Rights Watch stresses.

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