Tajik independent journalist and ex-leader of the Tajik team for KVN, Khayrullo Mirsaidov, says that he now lives in Europe and is engaged in journalism.

According to him, his lawyers have filed cassation in the Supreme Court asking to review his case and acquit him.  

“The charges brought against me are unfounded.  I do not believe that the Supreme Court will acquit me but I am ready to appeal to the United Nations in order to prove my innocence,” Mirsaidov told Asia-Plus by phone.

Khayrullo Mirsaidov says that he now lives in Europe and is engaged in journalism.  “I live in Europe and collaborate with leading media.  I write my reports in Russian and I study English,” he noted.

Recall, Mirsaidov was sentenced to eight months in prison for breaching a court order and illegally leaving the country.  He was sentenced in absentia by the Khujand city court on January 11, 2019. 

Meanwhile, Khayrullo Mirsaidov says he has left Tajikistan due to security reasons.  Besides, he considers that he will have more opportunities outside Tajikistan to earn money to pay the fine imposed on him.  

Mirsaidov was released from prison in August 2018, after his 12-year sentence was converted to an $8,500 fine and community service in a case widely seen as politically motivated.

He was ordered to pay the state 20 percent of any official salary he receives in Tajikistan for the next two years.

Mirsaidov's December 2017 arrest on financial charges brought condemnation from domestic and international groups -- including Reporters Without Borders, the National Association of Independent Mass Media in Tajikistan, Human Rights Watch, and Amnesty International.

Mirsaidov said the charges were filed in retaliation for his critical reporting about government corruption.

His arrest came shortly after he had published an open letter accusing senior officials of corruption in his native Sughd province.

Amnesty International at the time described him as "a prisoner of conscience who is being punished solely for exercising his right to freedom of expression."

He was sentenced on July 11 after being found guilty of embezzling and misusing state funds and of making false reports to police.

After his release under international pressure in August, Mirsaidov said he was unhappy with the court's ruling and insisted he should be acquitted of all charges, rather than having to face a fine and restrictions on his ability to earn a living in the future.

Mirsaidov is an independent journalist and a former correspondent of Asia-Plus and Germany's Deutsche Welle radio.

He also led the Tajik team for KVN, a stand-up comedy competition that originated among university students in the Soviet Union and is still popular in many former Soviet republics.