TASHKENT — Prisoners in Uzbekistan will be able to plead for reduced sentences if they read books selected by authorities to cultivate “correct spiritual and moral values,” officials said.
Lawmakers in the former Soviet republic passed a penal code amendment on Thursday introducing the scheme for around 13,500 inmates, all except for those sentenced to life imprisonment.
Read to reduce sentence, Uzbekistan tells prisoners
They will have to pick books “from a list approved by the Republican Center for Spirituality and Enlightenment (a state body), aimed at forming correct spiritual and moral values in convicts,” the Central Asian country’s Senate said.
Read to reduce sentence, Uzbekistan tells prisoners, This news data comes from:http://cc.771bg.com
“For each book read, the sentence can be reduced by three days, but not more than 30 days a year,” it added.
A special committee will verify whether the inmate has actually read the book.
The list of authorized books has not been made public.
Opening up to the world since the 2016 election of President Shavkat Mirziyoyev after a quarter-century of relative isolation, Uzbekistan has successfully attracted foreign investment and developed tourism.

But political opposition and civil society remain virtually nonexistent, while the press and economy are still largely controlled by the state.
Earlier this year, Uzbekistan, through its state news agency, said it was “working to ensure the rights and freedoms of convicts and to harmonize criminal legislation with the norms of international law.”
But in its 2025 report, Human Rights Watch said “torture and ill-treatment remain a serious problem,” and the United Nations Human Rights Committee has urged Uzbekistan to “eradicate” such practices.
Amnesty International has said it is alarmed that the Uzbek authorities have “continued to tighten their control over the right to freedom of expression.”
- Marcos soon to create commission to probe flood control projects
- Students, faculty file complaint against Universidad de Manila president
- Israel military says controls 40 percent of Gaza City
- Made in China? The remarkable tale of Venice's iconic winged lion
- Tourists dice with danger on Hanoi's train street
- ‘Gomez ignorant of how media works’
- Vico Sotto's viral post sparks ethics debate, elicits response from journalists
- NHA gives cash aid to families affected by calamity in Manila
- NKorea could produce ten to twenty nukes per year — SKorea leader
- No winner in lotto draws for Aug 30