"I call on Russia authorities not to deport @novaya_gazeta uzbek journalist #AliFeruz," Desir wrote on Twitter.
I call on Russia authorities not to deport @novaya_gazeta uzbek journalist #AliFeruz
— Harlem Désir (@harlemdesir) August 2, 2017
Earlier in the day, the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, Nils Miuznieks, also called on Russia not to deport Nurmatov and to ensure that he is provided with all the necessary procedural safeguards in the context of the administrative proceedings. According to Miuznieks, Nurmatov "will most probably face criminal charges in Uzbekistan and incur the risk of ill-treatment."
Nurmatov has been illegally staying in Russia since 2011, while in 2012 he lost his Uzbek passport and has never applied for a new one, a police source told Sputnik. Besides, Nurmatov has reportedly been working in Novaya Gazeta without a work permit since 2015.
According to a source in law enforcement agencies, in 2008, Nurmatov was held on the case of recruitment to the Takfir wal-Hijra Islamist group (banned in Russia). Aleksei Nikitin, resident of the Russian city of Tambov, who was sentenced for terrorism by the Oktyabrsky District Court in 2009, stated that it was Nurmatov who had drawn him into extremist activities, being a recruiter into illegal armed groups.