The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has urged Kyrgyz authorities to drop the prosecution of 11 current and former staff members from the anti-corruption investigative group Temirov Live and release those in custody.
The CPJ made the call after prosecutors asked a court in Bishkek on September 26 to convict the reporters on charges of "creating an organized criminal group" and "calling for mass riots," which the defendants and their supporters have rejected as politically motivated.
"The conviction of even a single one of the 11 Temirov Live investigative journalists on such clearly contrived and retaliatory charges would deal a further severe blow to Kyrgyzstan's international reputation," said CPJ's Europe and Central Asia program coordinator Gulnoza Said.
"Kyrgyz prosecutors should drop charges against 11 current and former members of Temirov Live, release those remaining in detention, and lift the travel bans against others. The government must stop its relentless campaign against the outlet and its founder, Bolot Temirov."
The journalists went on trial on June 7.
Four of them -- Makhabat Tajibek-kyzy, Azamat Ishenbekov, Aktilek Kaparov, and Aike Beishekeeva -- have been held in pretrial detention since January 16.
The other seven, Maksat Tajibek-uulu, Akyl Orozbekov, Jumabek Turdaliev, Joodar Buzumov, Saparbek Akunbekov, Saipidin Sultanaliev, and Tynystan Asypbekov, were transferred to house arrest amid an outcry from domestic and international human rights groups over the case.
The verdicts and sentences in the case are expected on October 3.
On the day prosecutors requested prison terms for the defendants, a ceremony was held in Prague at which one of the accused, Aike Beishekeeva, was named as the winner of the Gratias Tibi award of Prague-based Clovek v Tisni (People In Need) rights group.
The annual award is given to people younger than 30 for their contributions to defending human rights worldwide.
The founder of Temirov Live investigative group, journalist Bolot Temirov, was deported from Bishkek to Moscow in November 2022 after a court ruled that he illegally obtained Kyrgyz citizenship.
Temirov, who held Kyrgyz and Russian passports, rejected the accusation and insisted the probe against him was launched after he published the results of an investigation suggesting corruption among top Kyrgyz officials.
Kyrgyzstan's free press and civil society have traditionally been the most vibrant in Central Asia, but that has changed amid a deepening government crackdown.
In early April, President Sadyr Japarov signed into law a controversial bill that allows authorities to register organizations as "foreign representatives," which critics say mirrors a repressive Russian law on "foreign agents" similar to one Moscow uses to muzzle independent journalism and NGOs.