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This Article is From Nov 12, 2015

Uzbekistan Frees Jailed Dissident After John Kerry Visit

Uzbekistan Frees Jailed Dissident After John Kerry Visit
File Photo of US Secretary of State John Kerry.
TASHKENT: Uzbekistan today freed one of its longest-serving political prisoners, a local human rights group said, shortly after US Secretary of State John Kerry visited the country.

Juraev, a 63-year-old ex-parliamentarian and a member of the banned Erk (Freedom) party, was jailed for 12 years in 1994 for "attempting to overthrow the constitutional order".

While he was in prison, his term was extended four times for alleged violation of prison rules.

"Murod Juraev was released today from a prison in the town of Chirchik near Tashkent. He is in high spirits after spending 21 years in jail," Vasila Inoyatova, who heads the Ezgulik (Kindness) rights group, told Reuters.

Ezgulik had several times urged the authorities to release Juraev because his health was deteriorating.

Uzbekistan's prisons service declined to say whether Juraev had been freed, saying such information was confidential. The Foreign Ministry could not immediately be reached for comment.

Inoyatova said international attention and voices from the European Union and the United States had helped to secure Juraev's release.

Trying to pursue a policy less dependent on its former imperial master Russia, Uzbekistan is attempting to improve ties with the West, which has criticised its poor track record on human rights while valuing it as a bulwark against Islamist militancy spilling over from Afghanistan.

Kerry held talks with the strongman president, Islam Karimov, this month as part of a tour of ex-Soviet Central Asia intended to affirm Washington's engagement in the strategically important region.

Senator Ben Cardin, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, had written to Kerry expressing "concern about the erosion of the democratic process and respect for human rights across Central Asia" and asking him to raise the issue of political prisoners, including Juraev.

The government responds to international criticism by saying it is under pressure to withstand religious extremism.
© Thomson Reuters 2015
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