Verdict In Kazakh Murder Trial Expected Next Week

Opposition supporters holding Sarsenbaev's portrait after his killing in February (RFE/RL) TALDY QORGAN, August 23, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- The verdict in the murder trial of opposition leader Altynbek Sarsenbaev will be made public next week, RFE/RL's Kazakh Service reports.
Presiding Judge Lukmat Merekenov today adjourned the proceedings, saying the court would reconvene on August 31 for the final verdict.

Sarsenbaev and two of his aides were found dead in the Almaty region in February.

Friends and relatives believe the Naghiz Ak Zhol (True Bright Path) party leader was murdered for political reasons and say government officials higher that the 10 defendants on trial plotted his assassination.

The two main defendants in the trial are Yerzhan Utembaev, a former Senate official, and Rustam Ibragimov, a former security officer.

The state prosecutor has asked that both men be sentenced to death and that another eight defendants receive prison terms of between seven and 20 years.

Utembaev and Ibragimov deny the charges.

(with Interfax-Kazakhstan, Kazakhstan Today)

Kazakhstan's Fallen Opposition

Kazakhstan's Fallen Opposition
Slain Kazakh journalist Askhat Sharipzhanov (undated RFE/RL file photo)

February 13, 2006: Altynbek Sarsenbaev -- a leader of the Kazakh opposition, co-chairman of the Naghyz Aq Zhol party, former minister of information, former Kazakh ambassador to Russia, former secretary of Kazakhstan's Security Council -- is found dead with his bodyguard and his driver, shot to death, execution style, with their hands bound behind their backs.

November 11, 2005: Zamanbek Nurkadilov-- prominent Kazakh politician, former mayor of Almaty, former Minister of Extraordinary Situations, and since a vocal critic of President Nursultan Nazarbaev since March 2004 -- is found shot to death, with two shots in his chest and one in his head. Kazakh authorities officially rule the case a suicide.

June 2, 2005: Batyrkhan Darimbet -- opposition journalist and editor in chief of the weekly AZAT -- is killed in what is officially reported as a traffic accident. Relatives and activists assert that it was a political killing.

December 19, 2004: Erzhan Tatishev -- head of Kazakhstan's largest bank, TuranAlemBank -- is killed in what was officially described as a hunting accident. Kazakh political observers allege that it was a premeditated assassination.

July 20, 2004: Askhat Sharipzhan-- independent journalist and political commentator for NAVI online -- dies of injuries sustained several days earlier in what was officially reported as a hit-and-run accident. Relatives and colleagues believe it was an assassination.

November17, 2002: Independent journalist Nuri Muftakh is killed in what is officially reported as a traffic accident. Colleagues and activists regard the death as suspicious.

January 4, 2002: Human rights activist Aleksei Pugaev is found dead, the victim of a hit-and-run car accident. Colleagues regard the circumstances as suspicious and no one is ever arrested in connection with the death.

(compiled by RFE/RL's Kazakh Service)


RELATED ARTICLES

Sarsenbaev Murder Trial Begins

Kazakh President Tries To Calm Growing Political Crisis

Kazakhstan: A Shaken System

Nazarbaev Landslide Buries Future Problems

Nazarbaev Touts Stability In Run-Up To Election


ARCHIVE

To view an archive of RFE/RL's coverage of Kazakhstan, click here.



SUBSCRIBE

For weekly news and analysis on all five Central Asian countries by e-mail, subscribe to "RFE/RL Central Asia Report."