Last Updated: Friday, 26 May 2023, 13:32 GMT

Supreme court loses no time in upholding journalist's three-year jail sentence

Publisher Reporters Without Borders
Publication Date 10 August 2009
Cite as Reporters Without Borders, Supreme court loses no time in upholding journalist's three-year jail sentence, 10 August 2009, available at: https://www.refworld.org/docid/4a8518aac.html [accessed 29 May 2023]
DisclaimerThis is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States.

Reporters Without Borders deplores the Kazakh supreme court's decision on 11 August to uphold the three-year jail sentence passed just three days earlier on Ramazan Esergepov, the editor of the weekly Alma Ata Info. In a 9 August release, the press freedom organisation had called for Esergepov's conviction to be overturned.

"This disgraceful sentence should have been quashed because of all the irregularities during the trial," Reporters Without Borders said. "Esergepov was not convicted for divulging stage secrets but for criticising leading figures who illegally abuse their authority. The entire trial was rigged and the aim of the sentence was to silence the press in a country in the grip of corruption."

Recalling that the Kazakh government promised to embark on deep-seated democratic reforms for when it takes over the rotating presidency of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe next January, Reporters Without Borders points out that freedom of expression is one of the pillars of democracy.

"The government could have begun to implement these promises by quashing Esergepov's conviction," Reporters Without Borders said. "We urge the international community and the OSCE in particular to step up pressure on the government to free Esergepov."

The French foreign ministry has urged the Kazakh government to respects the commitments it made as an OSCE member.

Esergepov received the three-year sentence on 8 August after being convicted on charges of gathering and divulging classified documents.

10.08.2009 - Three years in jail for newspaper editor who exposed security agency's links with businessman

Reporters Without Borders is "appalled" by the three-year jail sentence which a court in the southern city of Taraz passed on Ramazan Esergepov, the owner and editor of the weekly Alma Ata Info, on 8 August on charges of gathering and divulging classified documents under articles 172 and 339 of the Kazakh criminal code.

The trial, which ended with Esergepov also being banned from publishing a newspaper for two years, had been held behind closed doors since it began on 23 April on the grounds that state secrets were involved. He was arrested last January after publishing a letter revealing the links between a businessman and the National Security Committee (KNB).

"This outrageous sentence ends a prosecution that was marred by irregularities from the outset," Reporters Without Borders said, urging the court that hears Esergepov's appeal to overturn his conviction on the grounds that it violates free expression and democracy.

"Esergepov was just doing his professional and civic duty by exposing the complicity between businessmen and the KNB," Reporters Without Borders said. "It is the KNB's representatives who should have been on trial, not the journalist."

Among the many serious irregularities was Esergepov's detention from the time of his arrest on 6 January until now and the authorities' refusal to let him see this family during these past seven months or receive appropriate medical attention his cardio-vascular problems.

All this violated article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which Kazakhstan ratified in 2006. Article 9, which concerns the rights of people being prosecuted, condemns arbitrary detention. Esergepov also had to defend himself during the trial, although the Kazakh constitution gives everyone the right to be defended by the lawyer of their choice.

The court also refused to hear key defence witnesses such as Rozlana Taukina, the head of Journalist in Danger, and Sergey Utkin, a legal expert who had examined the documents gathered and published by Esergepov and had concluded that they were not classified because they had not been included in any register of classified documents as required by Kazakh law.

Although it was the KNB that lodged a complaint against Esergepov with the Taraz court, the court allowed the KNB to act as expert witness in the case. The KNB was also represented by the lawyer of its choice, a right that Esergepov was denied.

Esergepov was arrested by KNB members while hospitalised in Almaty on 6 January. His arrest was prompted by a report he had published in his newspaper on 21 November 2008 under the headline "Who really runs our country, the president or the KNB?" It included a letter exposing the ties between businessman Sultan Makhmadov and KNB officials.

Esergepov, who always denied the charges, is planning to appeal.

Kazakhstan is scheduled to take over the rotating presidency of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe next year. It was ranked 125th out of 173 countries in last year's Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.

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