Gender: Male
Perpetrator: Uzbekistan
Religion or Belief: Muslim – Sunni
Reports of Torture: No
Reports of Medical Neglect: No
Sentence: Reduced to 7 Years, 6 Months' Imprisonment (Originally 15 Years' Imprisonment)
Date of Detainment: March/26/2016
Current Status: Released
Religious Leader: No
Most Recent Type of Abuse: Imprisonment
Reason for Persecution: Adherence to a Religious Figure Possession of Religious Materials Religious Activity
Nature of Charges: Banned Organization Extremism Spreading Propaganda & False or Misleading Ideas, Information, or Materials Treason & Sedition
Alisher Muminov was imprisoned for his religious activity.
On March 26, 2016, authorities arrested Muminov, a resident of Margilon, in Tashkent and charged him with “attempts to overthrow the constitutional order” (Arts. 159-1, 159-3) and an unspecified subsection of Article 244 UCC for allegedly distributing banned religious literature, among other allegations. Some of the evidence security services alleged to be “extremist” found on Muminov’s phone were poems of the popular religious figure, poet, and sportscaster Hayrullo Hamidov and recordings of the popular imam Abdulloh Domla. Muminov told relatives he was forced to sign a confession and was not provided access to a lawyer.
On an unspecified date, Muminov was initially sentenced in a closed door trial to 15 years in prison, which was reduced after intervention by the Office of the Ombudsperson for Human Rights to a shorter sentence of seven years and six months.
Muminov has served prison time in Jaslyk (2016–2019), followed by the Pap Prison in Namangan and Hasanboy Resettlement Colony.
In September 2022, it was reported that Muminov had been released.