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Muhammadali Hayit in April 2007
Muhammadali Hayit in April 2007

Human Rights Watch and eight other rights groups have urged the Tajik government to immediately release a gravely ill political activist who claims to have been tortured.

During a visit on March 9, Muhammadali Hayit showed his wife "injuries on his forehead and stomach that he said were caused by beatings from prison officials to punish him for refusing to record videos denouncing Tajik opposition figures abroad," the groups said in a March 20 statement.

The statement quoted Savrinisso Jurabekova as saying her husband had told her that "he was not getting adequate medical care, and they both fear he may die in prison as a result of the beatings."

Hayit, 62, was arrested in September 2015 on what human rights activists called politically motivated charges and sentenced to life in prison in June 2016 following a closed trial.

He had been deputy head of the banned Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan (IRPT).

The political activist is currently being held at a detention center in the capital, Dushanbe.

"We ask diplomatic representatives on the ground in Dushanbe to seek permission to visit Hayit and other prisoners of concern and press for their immediate release," according to Nadejda Atayeva, president of the Association for Human Rights in Central Asia.

Marius Fossum, Central Asia representative of the Norwegian Helsinki Committee, said that Tajikistan's human rights situation "has been spiraling downward rapidly, and Washington, Brussels, and all actors should consider enacting targeted punitive measures unless immediate human rights improvements are made."

The other groups are the Association for Central Asian Migrants, Freedom House, Freedom Now, Global Advocates, Human Rights Vision Foundation, and International Partnership for Human Rights.

The IRPT, long an influential party with representatives in the government and parliament of Tajikistan, was labeled a terrorist group and banned in 2015.

Dozens of IRPT officials and supporters have been prosecuted and many of them imprisoned, drawing criticism from human rights groups.

The party's founder, Umarali Quvatov, was assassinated in Istanbul in March 2015.

A recent poll found Pakistan the sixth-most-dangerous country in the world for women.
A recent poll found Pakistan the sixth-most-dangerous country in the world for women.

A student in Pakistan has has been accused of stabbing and killing a professor for allegedly planning a party to which both men and women would be invited.

The student, Khateeb Hussain, was arrested on March 20 after being held at the scene of the incident by fellow students.

Police said he would be charged with murder.

English professor Khalid Hameed, of Sadiq Egerton College in the eastern city of Bahawalpur, was preparing a farewell party for his students when Hussain allegedly attacked him with a dagger, a police official said.

"Apparently the accused has no link to any religious group, but we are investigating his past and the reasons behind his mind-set," local police spokesman Farhan Hussain said.

A police report quoted the accused as saying that "the gender mix reception is against the teachings of Islam, and I had warned him to stop it."

Hameed died of his injuries at a local hospital.

The director of the college, Wali Muhammad, told Reuters news agency that the college had a majority-female student population, with 4,000 women studying alongside 2,000 men. The slain professor was due to retire in four months.

Religion and gender issues are volatile topics in Pakistan, where many Islamic fundamentalists view women's rights as heretical.

In 2018, a Thomson Reuters Foundation poll found Pakistan the sixth-most-dangerous country in the world for women.

Based on reporting by Reuters and AFP

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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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