APRIL 25 2016, BISHKEK (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyzstan’s Supreme Court said it would consider revising a life sentence levied against Azimzhan Askarov, a civil activist, for inciting ethnic hatred, less than a week after the US had highlighted his case in its annual report on human rights around the world.
Last week, also, the UN’s Human Rights Committee called on Kyrgyzstan to release Askarov. The UN expert committee said Askarov “had been arbitrarily detained, held in inhumane conditions, tortured and mistreated, and prevented from adequately preparing his trial defence.”
Police arrested Mr Askarov in the aftermath of clashes in 2010 that toppled President Kurmanbek Bakiyev’s government. He was then cited as one of the organisers of the clashes.
The Supreme Court’s chair- woman, Ainash Tokbayeva, said the UN’s statement was enough to consider a revision of the ruling.
“Our Constitution obliges us to take measures to protect the rights and freedoms of Azimzhan Askarov in connection with the UN Committee on Human Rights’s findings,” media quoted her as saying.
“The Committee’s decision is the basis for the Supreme Court’s reconsideration of the criminal case.”
The UN criticism came just days after the US published a human rights report that slammed Kyrgyzstan as a country where police brutality and minority harassment were commonplace.
This triggered a sharp response from the Kyrgyz ministry of foreign affairs which called the US report hypocritical and politically motivated.
The row has damaged Kyrgyzstan-US relations. Any move to reduce or relax Askarov’s prison sentence would be viewed as an olive branch of sorts.
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(News report from Issue No. 278, published on April 29 2016)