The body of Tajik prominent poet Bozor Sobir will be repatriated from the United States to Tajikistan on May 14 an he will buried next to another prominent Tajik poet Loiq Sherali at Luchob cemetery in Dushanbe.  

Bozo Sobir’s widow, Gulchehra Sobir, and his daughter Shogouna Sobir will arrive in Dushanbe to say final farewell to the poet.     

Bozor Sobir died at a hospital in Seattle, the United States on May 1, aged 79 after a long illness.  He had been hospitalized in early April with lung problems, she said.

Tajik President Emomali Rahmon ordered diplomats to arrange the repatriation of Sobir's body for burial in Dushanbe.

Born in the village of Sufiyon in Fayzobod district on November 20, 1938, Bozor Sobir received his early education in the Fayzobod district before graduating from the Faculty of Tajik Philology at Tajik National University in 1962.

He had worked for the magazines Maorif va Madaniyat (Education and Culture) and Sadoyi Sharq (Voice of the East).

Bozor Sobir gained prominence and popularity in the 1970s and '80s for his poetry in Tajikistan, then a Soviet republic.

Bozor Sobir's poems were translated into English, German, Spanish, and Russian, as well as several other languages of the former Soviet republics.  Books of his poetry were also issued in Afghanistan and Iran.

With the advent of glasnost he became actively involved in the political and cultural movements for an independent national identity.  Four major collections of his verse were published in the 2000s.

Bozor Sobir was once a leading member of the Democratic Party of Tajikistan.   He resigned from the party in November 1992 reportedly because of disagreement with the party leadership.

On March 26, 1993, Bozor Sobir was arrested at the Dushanbe airport, where he had gone reportedly to send a parcel to his son who was living that time in Moscow.

On April 5, 1993, Bozor Sobir was charged with public calls to overthrow the government, hostage-taking, and inciting social discord.   Sobir denied the charges, calling them politically motivated.  He spent nine months in pretrial detention facility but was released with the help of international human rights organizations and in December 1994, he left Tajikistan for the United States, where he resided for 19 years before he returned to Tajikistan in May 2013.