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Kyrgyz journalist Zulpukar Sapanov (file photo)
Kyrgyz journalist Zulpukar Sapanov (file photo)

A court in Bishkek has freed a Kyrgyz journalist who had been sentenced to four years in prison for a book he wrote.

The Bishkek City Court on September 29 changed Zulpukar Sapanov's sentence to a suspended one, allowing the journalist to leave the courtroom.

The ruling came 17 days after a district court in Bishkek ruled that Sapanov's book, Kydyr Sanjrasy (Kydyr's Name Origin), contains content that "diminishes the role of Islam as a religion and creates a negative attitude toward Muslims."

The four-year sentence issued against Sapanov on September 12 sparked an outcry by rights defenders in Kyrgyzstan and abroad.

Kyrgyz Ombudsman Kubat Otorbaev called the September 12 ruling "a return to the time of inquisition."

Sapanov insists that his book aimed to compare traditional faiths and beliefs in Kyrgyzstan with pre-Islamic religions in other Turkic-speaking Central Asian countries.

Sapanov’s supporters say he should be protected by the Kyrgyz constitution, which guarantees freedom of expression and freedom of faith.

Russia’s Lenta.ru online news site says an unknown assailant has thrown improvised firebombs into the company’s main office in Moscow.

Lenta.ru reported on September 29 that the attack took place overnight.

It said assailants broke several window panes in the attack and painted graffiti on the outside of the building – including text that read: "You Are Lying, Lenta," and a Nazi swastika.

The report said nobody was injured in the attack

Moscow police confirmed the arson attack, saying that one person threw a Molotov cocktail through the office window and ran away.

Lenta.ru posted video footage from a security camera that showed a young man throwing two bottles with a flaming liquid at the front of the building.

It also posted photographs of the damage showing broken windows covered in soot from flames.

But a wooden table that contained equipment just inside the window was not burned.

Police said an investigation has been launched.

Lenta.ru is owned by Rambler Media Group and is one of the most popular independent Russian language resources online.

Based on reporting by Lenta.ru. Meduza, and Interfax

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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