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KYRGYZSTAN: Secret police deport Reform Adventist pastor
National Security Committee secret police deported 66-year-old Pastor Pavel Shreider on 9 April. "They put him in a car, took him to the land border and banned him from re-entering the country," an individual told Forum 18. He "would return if he could". He headed the now-banned True and Free Reform Seventh-day Adventist Church in Kyrgyzstan. He was born in Kyrgyzstan but holds a Russian passport. He is now seeking asylum elsewhere. The NSC secret police did not respond to Forum 18 on why they deported him.
Pastor Shreider was born in Kyrgyzstan but holds a Russian passport. He "would return if he could", the individual told Forum 18. He is now seeking asylum elsewhere (see below).
Pastor Shreider was arrested in November 2024. The Supreme Court in Bishkek changed the rest of his 3-year prison term to a fine of 3 months' average wage on 25 March 2026. He was freed the same day. He subsequently reluctantly paid the fine. He was due to pay for his own deportation, but the NSC secret police officers did not demand any money on deportation day (see below).
Forum 18 asked the NSC secret police in writing on 26 May why its officers had deported Pastor Shreider, given that he was born in Kyrgyzstan and has family in Kyrgyzstan. Forum 18 pointed out that his community has not attacked anyone and does not pose a danger to individuals. Forum 18 received no response (see below).
Forum 18 asked the National Agency for Religious Affairs and Interethnic Relations in writing on 26 March why Pastor Shreider was still being punished for exercising freedom of religion or belief and why he was to be deported from the country he was born in. Forum 18 received no answers to its questions (see below).
The NSC secret police arrested Pastor Shreider in Bishkek in November 2024. Officers searched his home and those of about 10 other church members. They seized thousands of books, including Bibles, as well as cash and mobile phones. The NSC returned the books in 2025 (see below).
After their arrest, NSC secret police officers tortured Pastor Shreider and another detained church member Igor Tsoy during interrogations. "I was given blows on my head, chest and given kicks in my spine from behind by five officers," Pastor Shreider wrote in a November 2024 complaint. No one has been punished for the torture (see below).
On 19 March 2025, Alamudin District Court in Chuy Region banned the True and Free Reform Adventist Church as an "extremist" religious organisation. In a 20-minute hearing on 4 August 2025, the Supreme Court in Bishkek rejected the Church's appeal against the ban. Indira Aslanova, Senior Expert of the Centre for Religious Studies, an independent organisation in Bishkek, described accusing the True and Free Adventists of "extremism" as "absurd" (see below).
On 10 July 2025, nearly three months after his criminal trial began, Bishkek's Birinchi May (Pervomaisky) District Court jailed Pastor Shreider for three years, to be followed by deportation. Bishkek City Court rejected his appeal on 25 October 2025. The Supreme Court decision of 25 March 2026 cannot be appealed further (see below).
Among other prisoners of conscience jailed for exercising freedom of religion or belief, 37-year-old Muslim prisoner of conscience Asadullo Madraimov was freed from prison on 25 March after completing his sentence. He was punished for criticising the authorities for closing Kara-Suu District's Al-Sarakhsi Mosque in the southern Osh Region. He visited his lawyer Khusanbai Saliyev in Osh days after his release. "He told me he has lost his health, and in our country, medical rehabilitation projects have been closed," Saliyev told Forum 18 (see below).
The National Security Committee (NSC) secret police has not responded to Forum 18's question as to whether a criminal case it opened in 2019 against so far unspecified members of the Jehovah's Witness national centre in Bishkek remains open or has been closed (see below).
NSC secret police officers have raided Council of Churches Baptist congregations, which like the True and Free Reform Adventist Church choose not to seek state registration. Police handed a second summary fine to the Pastor of the Bishkek congregation in April (see below).
Others jailed for exercising freedom of religion or belief
Muslim prisoner of conscience Asadullo Ibrakhimovich Madraimov (born 22 July 1988) was arrested in October 2023 and jailed for three years in February 2024. He was punished for criticising the authorities for closing Kara-Suu District's Al-Sarakhsi Mosque in the southern Osh Region. He was freed on 25 March 2026 at the end of his sentence. (Each day in pre-trial detention before a verdict comes into force counts as two days of a sentence.)
On 3 April, ten days after his release, Madraimov visited his lawyer Khusanbai Saliyev in Osh. "He told me he has lost his health, and in our country, medical rehabilitation projects have been closed," Saliyev told Forum 18 the same day.
Another member of the Al-Sarakhsi Mosque community, Mamirzhan Tashmatov, was freed from prison in May 2024.
In July 2023, a court jailed Protestant Aytbek Tynaliyev for 6 months for allegedly "inciting religious enmity" for social media posts sharing his faith.
On 4 December 2019, the National Security Committee (NSC) secret police opened a criminal case against so far unspecified members of the Jehovah's Witness national centre in Bishkek under Article 313, Part 2, Point 2 of the Criminal Code then in force. This punishes "Incitement of racial, ethnic, national, religious or inter-regional enmity (discord) conducted by a group of people in a prior conspiracy" with jail terms.
Forum 18 asked the NSC secret police in writing on 26 March 2026 (re-sent on 26 May):
- Whether the criminal case is continuing or has been closed;
- If it has been closed, when it was closed; and
- Why local Jehovah's Witnesses have not been kept informed of the course of this criminal investigation.
Forum 18 had received no response by the end of the working day in Bishkek of 27 May.
Forum 18 asked the National Agency for Religious Affairs and Interethnic Relations in Bishkek in writing on 26 March 2026 why the regime jails individuals – including Madraimov, Tashmatov and Tynaliyev – for exercising freedom of religion or belief. Forum 18 had received no answer to its question by the end of the working day in Bishkek of 27 May.
True and Free Reform Seventh-day Adventist Church among banned communities
The Church – which is led by Pastor Pavel Shreider - chooses not to seek state registration. Exercising freedom of religion or belief without state registration is illegal and punishable.
The Church can no longer meet for worship because of the ban. It previously met in its place of worship in the village of Lenin in Alamudun District of Chuy Region, just north of Bishkek. Officials have not seized the place of worship.
The regime has previously banned Ahmadi Muslims, and cancelled the state registration or a Falun Gong association.
The NSC secret police raided the Bishkek congregation of the Council of Churches during a harvest festival worship meeting in September 2025 and police summarily fined two congregation leaders. Officers again raided the church's Sunday meeting for worship on 19 April 2026. Police handed a summary fine to the Pastor. NSC secret police officers have visited at least one other Council of Churches congregation in 2026 (see forthcoming F18News article).
Regime crushes True and Free Reform Adventist Church
The NSC secret police later returned the 2,196 books they confiscated during the November 2024 raids. The NSC handed back about 80 per cent of the books in spring 2025. It returned the rest in September 2025.
After their arrest, NSC secret police officers tortured Pastor Shreider and another detained church member Igor Tsoy during interrogations. "I was given blows on my head, chest and given kicks in my spine from behind by five officers," Pastor Shreider wrote in a November 2024 complaint to the then National Centre for the Prevention of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment in Bishkek. Officers "hit me with an iron pipe to force me to confess that I committed crimes".
NSC secret police officers used a stun gun to try to coerce Tsoy to write a statement against Pastor Shreider, causing multiple injuries. However, Tsoy refused to do so.
The then National Centre for the Prevention of Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment claimed that the torture cannot be corroborated. Officials who participated in the arrest and investigation of Pastor Shreider denied that officers tortured Pastor Shreider and church member Tsoy.
Church members complained in writing to the United Nations in Geneva in December 2024 about the raids on their community, the detentions and torture, church members told Forum 18.
Under the United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, Kyrgyzstan is obliged both to arrest any person suspected on good grounds of having committed, instigated or acquiesced to torture "or take other legal measures to ensure his [sic] presence", and also to try them under criminal law which makes "these offences punishable by appropriate penalties which take into account their grave nature".
Court bans True and Free Reform Adventists as "extremist"
Indira Aslanova, Senior Expert of the Centre for Religious Studies, an independent organisation in Bishkek, told Forum 18 in July 2025 that accusing the True and Free Adventists of "extremism" is "absurd".
On 4 August 2025, Kyrgyzstan's Supreme Court in Bishkek rejected the appeal against the ban. "The whole process took 20 minutes when the Judges decided to go into their chamber for discussion and they came out in a couple of minutes and announced that they upheld the previous decision," Church members told Forum 18. The Supreme Court upheld the ban permanently, and there is no possibility of challenging it in Kyrgyzstan.
In September 2025, church members lodged a further appeal to the United Nations Human Rights Committee in Geneva, church members told Forum 18.
As of 27 May 2026, the True and Free Adventist Church does not appear on the list of banned "destructive, extremist and terrorist organisations" on the website of the National Agency for Religious Affairs and Interethnic Relations. Nor does it appear on a list on the website of the National Security Committee (NSC) secret police.
Forum 18 asked the National Agency for Religious Affairs and Interethnic Relations in Bishkek in writing on 26 March whether the True and Free Adventist Church is still banned and, if so, why. Forum 18 pointed out that the Church is not listed on the National Agency website as banned. Forum 18 had received no answer to its questions by the end of the working day in Bishkek of 27 May.
Arrested Pastor Shreider transferred to prison medical unit because of brain damage
From his arrest in November 2024, Pastor Pavel Shreider was held for 10 months under NSC secret police supervision at Prison No. 21 in Bishkek.Major Azat Kudaybergenov, Chief of Prison No. 21, told Pastor Shreider's family on 22 September 2025 that he had been "examined multiple times by doctors at Institution No. 21, and diagnosed with traumatic brain injury (TBI) with cephalic syndrome. Stage 2 cerebrovascular insufficiency of mixed origin, with cognitive impairment."
The family told Forum 18 that they believe that "several factors" may have contributed to Pastor Shreider's condition. "Firstly, he is of an older age. The prison regime is not conducive for his body movement or exercise and his blood circulation is bad. Secondly, he probably has stress every day because of his arrest. And lastly and maybe most importantly, he was beaten by the police officers when he was arrested and given blows to his head."
On 25 September 2025, the prison authorities transferred Pastor Shreider to the medical unit of Prison No. 31. On 14 October 2025, the prison authorities began the process of transferring Pastor Shreider back to Prison No. 21 in Bishkek. But the state of his health prevented this. Later in 2025, he was transferred to Prison No. 27 in Moldovanovka near Bishkek.
Pastor Shreider's conviction, first unsuccessful appeal
Pastor Shreider's post-prison deportation was ordered on the basis of Article 70 of the Criminal Code: "After serving their sentence, a foreign citizen or stateless person shall be deported from the Kyrgyz Republic in accordance with the procedure established by international treaties that have entered into force in accordance with the legislation of the Kyrgyz Republic."
Pastor Shreider was born in the village of Orlovka (now Ak-Dobo) in Talas Region of Soviet Kyrgyzstan. He was living in Russia at the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991 and gained Russian citizenship.
Pastor Shreider's defence lawyer Akmat Alagushev lodged an appeal against his conviction and jail term to Bishkek City Court on 7 August 2025. On 23 October 2025, the Court left Pastor Shreider's sentence unchanged.
Supreme Court changes Shreider's jail term to a fine, deportation order unchanged
After Bishkek City Court rejected Pastor Shreider's first appeal, he lodged a final appeal to the Supreme Court in Bishkek.On 25 March 2026, a panel of three Judges at the Supreme Court left Pastor Shreider's conviction unchanged, including the deportation order, according to the initial decision seen by Forum 18.
However, the Supreme Court changed the remainder of Pastor Shreider's prison term to a fine of 150,000 Soms. This represents about three months' average local wage for those in formal work. The hearing was open and family and church members were able to attend.
Officials prepared documentation and released Pastor Shreider from Prison No. 27 in Moldovanovka near Bishkek later on 25 March.
"He has no alternative but to pay the fine," an individual who knows Pastor Shreider told Forum 18 in March. "He has both internal and international Russian passports – they have confiscated both of them. They are keeping him under watch. He can't remain here [in Kyrgyzstan]."
Pastor Shreider reluctantly paid the fine on 9 April, hours before NSC secret police officers deported him. Only then did Supreme Court officials hand over the full 25 March written decision.
Forum 18 asked the National Agency for Religious Affairs and Interethnic Relations in Bishkek in writing on 26 March why Pastor Shreider was still being punished for exercising freedom of religion or belief and why he was to be deported from the country he was born in. Forum 18 had received no answer to its questions by the end of the working day in Bishkek of 27 May.
NSC secret police deports Pastor Shreider
On 9 April, officers who said they were from the National Security Committee (NSC) secret police deported Pastor Pavel Shreider. "They phoned him in the morning instructing him to be ready for deportation that day," someone who knows him told Forum 18 on 21 May. Officers arrived by car to deport him in the afternoon."They put him in a car, took him to the land border and banned him from re-entering the country," the individual told Forum 18. "There were no deportation documents and they put no mark in his [Russian] passport."
Pastor Shreider's wife Nelya was not ordered deported, but chose to leave the country separately the same day.
Pastor Shreider was due to pay for his own deportation, but the NSC secret police officers did not demand any money on deportation day.
Pastor Shreider "would return if he could", the individual told Forum 18. He is now seeking asylum elsewhere.
Forum 18 asked the National Security Committee in writing on 26 May why its officers had deported Pastor Shreider, given that he was born in Kyrgyzstan and has family in Kyrgyzstan. Forum 18 pointed out that his community has not attacked anyone and does not pose a danger to individuals. Forum 18 had received no response by the end of the working day in Bishkek of 27 May.
UN Special Rapporteurs' concern over Adventists' torture, arrests, prosecution
The Special Rapporteurs also noted the 19 March 2025 court ruling banning the True and Free Reform Adventist Church as "extremist".
"While we do not wish to prejudge the accuracy of these allegations, we wish to express our serious concerns regarding the arrest, detention and prosecution of Mr. Pavel Schreider, along with the alleged use of torture and other ill-treatment against Messrs. Pavel Schreider, Igor Tsoi, Sergei Sharvan, and Yuri Pauls," the Special Rapporteurs wrote. They pointed out that "If the above allegations would prove to be accurate, they would be in contravention" of various articles of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).
"Serious allegations of torture and ill-treatment have been made with regard to Mr. Schreider and the other male members of the congregation during their detention," the Special Rapporteurs told the regime. "It is reported that the male and female members of the group witnessed SNCS officers striking the heads and bodies of the seven male members of the group, including Mr. Schreider, Mr. Pauls, Mr. Igor Tsoi, Mr. Peter Petkau, all of whom reported ill-treatment in detention. It is reported that Mr. Schreider and Mr. Tsoi were additionally subjected to strangulation with cellophane bags and the use of tasers."
The Special Rapporteurs asked the regime for further information or comments on their actions against the True and Free Adventists and about Pastor Shreider's current state of health. They also asked how Pastor Shreider's prosecution and the court-imposed ban on the Church are "compatible with the international human rights obligations", including under the ICCPR. They also asked what measures had been taken to "investigate the credible accusations" of torture against the four Church members.
Regime's response to UN Special Rapporteurs claims actions "in accordance with national law", international treaties
The regime's 20 September 2025 response to the UN Special Rapporteurs merely recounted the prosecution case against Pastor Shreider and the ban on the Church. It insisted that "the ban on the activities of the aforementioned association and the criminal prosecution of its individual members are carried out in accordance with national law and the international treaties to which the Kyrgyzstan is a party".The regime's response also dismissed concerns about Pastor Shreider's health condition in prison. (END)
More reports on freedom of thought, conscience and belief in Kyrgyzstan
For more background, see Forum 18's Kyrgyzstan religious freedom survey
Forum 18's compilation of Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) freedom of religion or belief commitments
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31 March 2026
KYRGYZSTAN: Freed, fined, to be deported
66-year-old Pastor Pavel Shreider of the now-banned True and Free Reform Seventh-day Adventist Church is awaiting deportation at his own expense. He was freed from prison on 25 March after the Supreme Court changed his jail term to a fine of 3 months' average wage. Officials have seized his passports. "He has no alternative but to pay the fine," an individual told Forum 18. Muslim prisoner of conscience Asadullo Madraimov was freed from prison on 25 March after completing his sentence for criticising the closure of his mosque.
14 October 2025
KYRGYZSTAN: Did torture cause jailed Reform Adventist pastor's brain damage?
65-year-old True and Free Reform Adventist Pastor Pavel Shreider – serving a 3-year jail term – is in a prison medical unit after relatives raised concerns about brain damage apparently caused by torture. He has been "diagnosed with traumatic brain injury" resulting in "cognitive impairment", Major Azat Kudaybergenov, Chief of Prison No. 21 where he was held for 10 months, wrote to the family. Five United Nations Special Rapporteurs asked the regime about "arrests, detentions and alleged torture" of church members, Pastor Shreider's criminal prosecution, and banning of the Church as "extremist".
10 October 2025
KYRGYZSTAN: Secret police raid, police fine Baptists for "illegal" worship meeting
Ten months after NSC secret police officers raided members of the True and Free Reform Adventist Church (which a court later banned), on 14 September NSC officers raided the harvest festival worship meeting of Bishkek's Council of Churches Baptist congregation. They likewise choose to meet without state registration. Officers seized religious literature for "expert analysis". Police summarily fined the pastor and deacon two weeks' average wages each. Five United Nations Special Rapporteurs wrote to the regime in July reiterating concerns about "the legal framework governing freedom of religion or belief".


