Two Karakalpak Activists Facing Extradition To Uzbekistan Released From Kazakh Detention

Aqylbek Muratbai is a leader of the Karakalpak diaspora in Kazakhstan.

Kazakh authorities have released from detention two Karakalpak activists who face extradition to Uzbekistan, where supporters say they would be at serious risk of politically motivated prosecution and torture over last year's mass protests in the Karakalpakstan region.

Kazakhstan-based Karakalpak activist Aqylbek Muratbai told RFE/RL on September 15 that Koshkarbai Toremuratov and Zhangeldy Zhaksymbetov had been released two days earlier after spending exactly one year in detention awaiting a Kazakh court decision on their possible extradition to Uzbekistan.

Kazakh law does not allow individuals awaiting extradition to be held for more than one year.

Last month, Kazakh authorities rejected asylum requests by Toremuratov and Zhaksymbetov, who appealed the decision. It may take up to one year for the appeals to be considered by Kazakhstan's Supreme Court.

"Uzbekistan's extradition request remains valid.... We hope that [Toremuratov and Zhaksymbetov] will be allowed to leave Kazakhstan for a third country," Muratbai said.

Toremuratov and Zhaksymbetov were arrested in September 2022 at the request of Uzbek officials, who accused the two men of undermining of Uzbekistan's constitutional order.

In January, an Uzbek court sentenced 22 Karakalpak activists to prison terms on charges including undermining the constitutional order for taking part in the mass protests in Karakalpakstan in July 2022.

In March, another 39 Karakalpak activists accused of taking part in the protests in the region's capital, Nukus, were convicted, with 28 of them sentenced to prison terms of between five and 11 years. Eleven defendants were handed parole-like sentences.

SEE ALSO: Life Changes For Karakalpaks In Kazakhstan Since Deadly Crackdown In Homeland

Uzbek authorities say 21 people died in Karakalpakstan during the protests, which were sparked by the announcement of a planned change to the constitution that would have undermined the region's right to self-determination.

However, the Austria-based Freedom for Eurasia human rights group said last month that at least 70 people were killed during the unrest.

The violence forced President Shavkat Mirziyoev to make a rare about-face and scrap the proposal.

Mirziyoev accused "foreign forces" of being behind the unrest, without further explanation, before backing away from the proposed changes.

Karakalpaks are a Central Asian Turkic-speaking people. Their region used to be an autonomous area within Kazakhstan before becoming autonomous within the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic in 1930 and then part of Uzbekistan in 1936.