Russian Court Sentences Two Crimean Tatars To Lengthy Prison Terms

Vadim Bektemirov was sentenced to 11 years in prison. (file photo)

ROSTOV-ON-DON, Russia -- A court in Russia has sentenced two Crimean Tatars to lengthy prison terms on charges of being members of a banned Islamic group amid an ongoing crackdown on the ethnic group.

The Southern District Military Court in the southwestern city of Rostov-on-Don on February 11 sentenced Zekirya Muratov and Vadim Bektemirov to 11 1/2 and 11 years in prison, respectively, after finding them guilty of being members of the Hizb ut-Tahrir group.

The two pleaded not guilty.

Muratov and Bektemirov were arrested in July 2020 in Crimea, which Russia has illegally annexed from Ukraine, along with five other Crimean Tatars. They were charged with being linked to Hizb ut-Tahrir, an Islamic group banned in Russia but not in Ukraine.

Ukrainian Ombudswoman Lyudmyla Denisova wrote on Telegram that Russian police had detained three Crimean Tatar journalists -- Amar Abulgaziyev, Rustem Useynov, and Ali Suleymanov -- who came to the trial of Muratov and Bektemirov on February 11.

Denisova condemned the sentencing and detainment of Ukrainian citizens by Russia.

"By its activities, the country-occupier, the Russian Federation, is violating norms of international law, the [European] Convention on Human Rights, and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights," Denisova wrote, calling on the international community to "force Russia to stop unfounded detentions and rigged trials of illegally jailed Ukrainian citizens."

Two days earlier, four Crimean Tatars were arrested in Crimea on a charge of organizing the activities of Hizb ut-Tahrir.

SEE ALSO: Ukrainian Ombudswoman Condemns Russia's Arrest Of Four Crimean Tatars In Crimea

Since Russia seized Crimea in 2014, Russian authorities have prosecuted dozens of Crimean Tatars for allegedly belonging to the Islamic group.

Moscow's takeover of the peninsula was vocally opposed by many Crimean Tatars, who are a sizable minority in the region.

Exiled from their homeland to Central Asia under the Soviet dictatorship of Josef Stalin during World War II, many Crimean Tatars are very wary of Russia and Moscow's rule.