14 girls disappeared from one village of Uzbekistan. Police are inactive

14 girls disappeared from the village of Chorshanbe (Shakhrisab district in Uzbekistan). Law enforcement agencies not only don’t take active steps to find girls, but also put pressure on their parents.

On June 22, 13-year-old Sevinch Razzakova left home and disappeared. Her mother, Mukaddam Saparova, having arrived from Russia two days later, began to search daughter independently. Her appeal to law enforcement did not give any results. “I have 14 statements of children’s disappearance. Wait your turn,” an internal affairs officer said to Saparova.

The operative-search measures were begun just at the beginning of September, after one of the Uzbek editions published material about the disappearance of the girl and the complete inaction of law enforcement agencies.

On September 8, Mukaddam Saparova, in a conversation with an ACCA journalist, confirmed that the Prosecutor’s office and the police began to search for her daughter, but in a peculiar way.

“I’ve been interviewed dozens of times. They ask the same questions, look for information discrediting me. I immediately wrote a statement upon arrival, but local police did not pay any attention to it,” the mother of the disappeared girl told ACCA.

According to her, she is under great pressure from the Prosecutor’s office. They are trying to prove that it was the mother’s absence that made her daughter leave home. “At the last visit to the local police department, Uzbek police deleted the messenger and important contacts in the smartphone,” she said.

Now the social network has launched an information campaign in support of Sevinch’s search. Uzbek media did not respond to the fact of the girls’ disappearance. Television of Kashkadarya region showed only the photos of Sevinch, reproaching her mother for not informing them about the incident in time.

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