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Kenzhebek Abishev (left to right), Almat Zhumaghulov, and Oralbek Omyrov appear in court in Almaty on October 4.
Kenzhebek Abishev (left to right), Almat Zhumaghulov, and Oralbek Omyrov appear in court in Almaty on October 4.

ALMATY, Kazakhstan -- The high-profile trial of three Kazakh men charged with propagating terrorism was adjourned after two of the defendants cut themselves with sharp metal objects in the courtroom in the city of Almaty.

Gulnara Zhuaspaeva, a lawyer for one of the defendants, told RFE/RL that Almat Zhumaghulov and Oralbek Omirov inflicted deep cuts to their arms after the judge rejected the defendants' motion to summon additional witnesses and experts to the stand.

The two defendants received medical treatment before the trial was adjourned until an unspecified date, Zhuaspaeva said.

Zhumaghulov, 44, Omirov, 48, and Kenzhebek Abishev, 52, were arrested in November 2017 and charged with propagating religious extremism and terrorism.

Zhumaghulov was also charged with inciting ethnic hatred.

All three are residents of Almaty, Kazakhstan’s largest city.

Investigators say the three men planned an armed holy war, or jihad, by propagating the ideas of the banned Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan (DVK) movement founded by Mukhtar Ablyazov.

Ablyazov, a fugitive tycoon, has been a vocal critic of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbaev and his government.

All three defendants pleaded not guilty when the trial started on October 1 and called the case against them politically motivated.

Only one of them, Zhumaghulov, said he shared the ideas of Ablyazov's DVK, which was branded an extremist organization and banned in Kazakhstan in March.

The Kazakhstan International Bureau for Human Rights considers Zhumaghulov, Omirov, and Abishev political prisoners.

Vyacheslav Maltsev (center) takes part in a Russian opposition rally in Moscow in May 2017.
Vyacheslav Maltsev (center) takes part in a Russian opposition rally in Moscow in May 2017.

Vyacheslav Maltsev, an outspoken Kremlin critic and leader of an outlawed Russian nationalist opposition movement, says he received political asylum in France.

In a video posted on YouTube on November 26, Maltsev said that the "political leadership of France has granted me political asylum."

Russian authorities charged Maltsev in absentia with publicly calling for extremist activities after he fled Russia in July 2017.

Hundreds of supporters of Maltsev and members of his Artpodgotovka (Artillery Bombardment) movement were detained on November 5, 2017, at rallies in Moscow and other Russian cities ahead of the centennial of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution.

Maltsev had declared the day the start of "new revolution" to topple President Vladimir Putin's government.

Artpodgotovka was banned in October 2017 by an order from a regional court in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk.

In his November 26 statement, Maltsev said he planned to fight the ban by filing a complaint with the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France.

He said that France had provided him with "legal, physical, and other types of protection."

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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