DUSHANBE, March 11, 2013 Asia-Plus -- The letter with demand of resignation of head of Tajikistan’s penitentiary system, prosecutor in charge with overseeing observance of law by penitentiary institutions of Dushanbe and districts subordinate to the center and head of the Supreme Court of Tajikistan has been sent to President Emomali Rahmon and copies of the letter have been sent to the British Ambassador to Tajikistan Robin Jeremy Ord-Smith and the U.S Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Robert O. Blake.
More than 300 parents of people, who are serving their terms or died in Tajik jails, signed the letter demanding resignation of Izatullo Sharipov, head of Tajikistan’ penitentiary system.
The letter has reportedly been sent to Tajik President Emomali Rahmon and copies of the letter have been sent to the British Ambassador to Tajikistan Robin Jeremy Ord-Smith and the U.S Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Robert O. Blake.
The inmates’ relatives say the letter contains materials about cases of torture and beating in Tajik prisons and video track to support their allegations is attached.
The inmates’ relatives also demand resignation of Tolib Azimov, prosecutor in charge with overseeing observance of law by penitentiary institutions of Dushanbe and districts subordinate to the center and Nusratullo Abdulloyev, head of the Supreme Court of Tajikistan.
According to them, they have complained to them and sent dozens of letters to them but their complaints have reportedly been ignored.
We will recall that Tajikistan''s nongovernmental organization Coalition Against Torture issued a statement in November 2012 demanding investigations into the alleged mass beatings of prison inmates. According to the rights group, prison guards brutally beat at least 50 inmates after their transfer from a Dushanbe jail to a prison labor camp in Khujand, the capital of the northern province of Sughd.
The activists said that at least four of the beaten prisoners were witnesses in the September death of an inmate that had received heavy media coverage. The statement listed six other suspicious deaths in custody.
Meanwhile, Tajik penitentiary authorities played down the allegations of prison abuse. According to them, all the allegations about torture are a complete lie and have no basis whatsoever.





More than 2.7 million Tajiks visited Uzbekistan in 2025 for tourism, medical treatment, and education
Recruitment tender
Moody’s raises Tajikistan's credit rating to "B2" with stable outlook
The Line of Durand: How far will the armed conflict between Pakistan and Afghanistan go?
Dushanbe Water Conference 2026 to focus on water management, climate change, and innovation
Emomali Rahmon introduces staff changes in Supreme Court, prosecutor’s offices, and interior ministry
From which countries cars are imported into to Tajikistan?
Trump says he must be ‘involved’ in choosing Iran’s next supreme leader
Dushanbe to host Judo Grand Slam again
Record-breaking temperatures in Central Asia in February: rising risks of global warming
All news
Авторизуйтесь, пожалуйста