The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention has found that the Government of Tajikistan violated international human rights law by imprisoning anti-corruption activist Saidnuriddin Shamsiddinov. Responding to a legal petition filed by Freedom Now and the international law firm Proskauer Rose LLP, the UN concluded that Shamsiddinov was imprisoned for exercising his right to freedom of expression.
“We welcome the decision by the Working Group which recognizes that Saidnuriddin Shamsiddinov has been persecuted for exposing government corruption,” said Freedom Now Legal Officer Adam Lhedmat. “We call on the Tajikistani government to comply with the decision and release Saidnuriddin immediately.”
Prior to his arrest, Shamsiddinov worked as a bailiff for the court system in the Khatlon region in Tajikistan. He left this position in 2017 after becoming frustrated over harassment for bribes and other forms of corruption. After he left this position, he worked to become a lawyer and human rights activist.
Shamsiddinov became a member of the Campaign for Human Rights (CHR) in 2019, an NGO that promotes human rights in Tajikistan, in part, by revealing government corruption and misinformation. Shamsiddinov drew the attention of authorities after he began to file complaints against officials involved in corruption regarding the distribution of personal protective equipment during the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic. In apparent retaliation, Tajik authorities brought a litany of criminal charges against Shamsiddinov. He was charged with making a “knowingly false denunciation” for comments that he made on his personal Facebook page about allegations of corruption committed by Tajik officials. He was also charged with embezzlement on allegations that he misappropriated funds as a bailiff, despite the fact that he had undergone internal audits and been found to have not misappropriated any funds. In addition, he was charged with malicious evasion of child support, against his ex-wife’s wishes, and he was charged with illegal provision of a land plot after authorities allegedly found a mistake in the land registry for a piece of land that Shamsiddinov sold in December 2019.
In August 2020, Shamsiddinov was convicted on all counts and sentenced to eight years in prison. Furthermore, in November 2021, authorities tried and convicted Shamsiddinov of participation in a terrorist group, alleging that he was involved with the banned Tajik political party, Group 24. Both Shamsiddinov and Group 24 both deny any connection to one another. He was ultimately sentenced to a total of nine years and six months in prison.