Jan 272012
 

Dear Friends,

I am please to inform you that in response to a petition filed by Freedom Now, the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention has issued an opinion that the detention of Akzam Turgunov by the Government of Uzbekistan is arbitrary and in violation of international law. Below, please find Freedom Now’s press release commenting on the opinion. For a pdf of the Working Group’s full opinion, please click here.

In addition, Freedom Now’s Executive Director Maran Turner published an op-ed, available here, in today’s Philadelphia Inquirer calling on the United States to raise individual cases like Mr. Turgunov’s even as it increases strategic engagement with Uzbekistan.

For further information or comment, please contact me at pgriffith@freedom-now.org or +1.202.223.3733.

Sincerely,
Patrick Griffith
Freedom Now
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January 27, 2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


Contact: Patrick Griffith
+1 202.223.3733
pgriffith@freedom-now.org

 

 

United Nations Declares Continued Detention of Akzam Turgunov Arbitrary; Calls for Release

Washington, D.C.: In response to a petition filed by Freedom Now, the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention has issued an opinion that the detention of Akzam Turgunov by the Government of Uzbekistan is arbitrary and a violation of international law. The UN Working Group—an independent panel of human rights experts from around the world calls for his release.

 

In July 2008, Mr. Turgunov—an experienced Uzbek opposition leader and human rights advocate—was investigating police corruption in the town of Manget and working as a lay public defender on behalf of a woman in a divorce settlement dispute. Police in Manget arrested Mr. Turgunov in response to this work on spurious extortion charges. While holding Mr. Turgunov without access to a lawyer, an interrogator poured boiling water on Mr. Turgunov’s neck and back. The government sentenced Mr. Turgunov to 10 years in prison after a procedurally deficient trial where the court denied him the right to confront his accuser. Now at the age of 60, Mr. Turgunov is detained at a prison camp where he is forced to work in a brick-making factory.

 

In its opinion, the Working Group recognized that the extortion charges against Mr. Trugunov were a fabricated means to punish him for exercising his fundamental rights to freedom of opinion, expression, association, and political participation. It held that “the Government used an involvement of Mr. Turgunov in the resolution of a settlement in civil matters to prosecute and punish him for his human rights and political activities.” The Working Group found that the “non-observance of the international norms relating to the right to a fair trial… in this case [were] of such gravity as to give the deprivation of liberty an arbitrary character.” The Working Group also noted that authorities failed to adequately investigate the mistreatment of Mr. Turgunov and called on the government to “release Mr. Turgunov and accord him an enforceable right to compensation.”

 

“We reiterate the Working Group’s demand that Mr. Turgunov be released,” said Maran Turner, Executive Director of Freedom Now. “The international community must now join the United Nations in condemning the Uzbek government’s flagrant disregard of its obligations under international law and raise Mr. Turgunov’s case at every opportunity.”

 

Freedom Now serves as international pro bono legal counsel to Mr. Turgunov.

 

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-- 
Patrick Griffith
Freedom Now
1776 K Street N.W. 8th Floor 
Washington, D.C. 20006
o: +1 202 223 3733
m: +1 202 423 7925
f: +1 202 223 1006
www.freedom-now.org

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