Gender: Male
Current Location: CEP 4, Navoi
Perpetrator: Uzbekistan
Religion or Belief: Muslim – Sunni
Health Concerns: Heart disease, schizophrenia
Reports of Torture: Yes
Reports of Medical Neglect: No
Sentence: 5 Years, 6 Months' Imprisonment
Date of Detainment: December//2018
Date of Sentencing: January//2020
Current Status: Not Released
Religious Leader: No
Most Recent Type of Abuse: Imprisonment
Reason for Persecution: Religious Activity Religious Freedom Advocacy
Nature of Charges: Treason & Sedition
Kadyr Yusupov was mistreated in prison for fighting for prisoner religious freedom rights and his religious activity.
In or around December 2018, authorities arrested Yusupov, who served as Uzbekistan’s permanent representative to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and deputy ambassador to the United Kingdom, shortly after he attempted suicide. Security officials interrogated Yusupov while he was hospitalized, and it is unclear if he was fit for questioning and whether anything he said while recovering could legally be used as evidence. Yusupov suffers from schizophrenia. Following his arrest, Yusupov was held incommunicado for over four months at the Tashkent security services' pre-trial detention center. He was repeatedly denied access to counsel and subjected to severe psychological torture, including threats of harm and rape to his immediate family members.
In January 2020, Yusupov was convicted of treason (Art. 157) and sentenced to five years and six months in prison following a closed trial. The purported basis for his conviction was a confession he purportedly made from his hospital bed outside the presence of counsel.
In April 2020, Yusupov raised concerns that prisoners were being denied the right to observe the Ramadan fast to the head of the prison. He additionally raised questions about difficult working conditions at the prison factory. In retaliation, prison officials placed Yusupov and other prisoners in solitary confinement for 15 days where he was kept in highly unsanitary conditions. Yusupov told relatives that his solitary confinement cell contained mice and dirt, and that he was fully covered in feces by the time he was removed 15 days later. In protest of his mistreatment, he went on hunger strike for five days.
In the second half of 2021, Yusupov was reportedly beaten by prisoners in two separate incidents, with prison authorities allegedly depriving him of proper medical care.
Yusupov’s family has been denied visitation with him on several occasions since the start of his detention.
Yusupov is currently serving his sentence in CEP 4 in Navoi.
In June 2021, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention released an opinion, declaring Yusupov's imprisonment arbitrary and calling for his immediate release.
USCIRF Spotlight Podcast November 2021
International Partnership for Human Rights, Tweet, November 5, 2021
USCIRF Report Uzbekistan’s Religious and Political Prisoners October 2021
Gender: Male
Perpetrator: Uzbekistan
Religion or Belief: Muslim – Sunni
Reports of Torture: Yes
Reports of Medical Neglect: No
Sentence: 11 Years' Imprisonment
Date of Detainment: April/1/2015
Date of Sentencing: September//2015
Current Status: Released
Religious Leader: No
Most Recent Type of Abuse: Imprisonment
Reason for Persecution: Religious Activity
Nature of Charges: Unknown
Otabek Irgashev was imprisoned for his religious belief and activity.
On April 1, 2015, officers arrested Irgashev and his father in Bukhara, charging them first with administrative offenses and then later with extremism-related offenses. Irgashev's mother, Zumrat Irgashev, reports that both Irgashev and his father were subjected to severe torture in custody between April and September 2015, during their trial period. Security services officers allegedly attempted to coerce them into signing false confessions of financing terrorism.
In September 2015, a Tashkent Court sentenced Irgashev to 11 years, his father to 15 years, and his brother to 12 years in prison on unspecified charges. According to Zumrat, all three were subjected to torture during pre-trial detention.
In September 2022, it was reported that Irgashev had been released.
Related Cases: Mukhitdin Irgashev, Sardorbek Irgashev
Oct 15, 2021
Cemeteries are sacred sites that are of great spiritual, cultural, and historical significance to many religious and ethnic groups. These holy sites are governed by religious laws and customs that dictate the location of, the appearance of, and the activities and behaviors allowed on the burial grounds. Despite laws aimed to protect these sites, cemeteries around the world catering to a variety of religious groups are targets for defilement, which includes vandalism such as spray paint, theft, or smashed headstones. In other cases, whole graveyards are exhumed or razed in preplanned operations.
Last month USCIRF published a new factsheet on this topic that outlines international human rights law that defines the obligations of countries to protect these sites.
USCIRF Vice Chair Nury Turkel joins us on today’s episode to discuss the targeted destruction by non-state actors and state-sponsored entities of religious communities’ cemeteries in several countries around the world, including his native China.
Click here to read USCIRF’s Factsheet on the Destruction of Cemeteries
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