[1] After having publicly accused the Tajik leader for the murder of Kuvvatov, Kabiri left the country, amid rumours that he would be arrested and that his party would be banned.
The court stated that the party had been found to be linked to ISIS and had participated in an armed attack on a police station during the night of 3-4 September 2015, led by the Deputy Minister of Defense, Abduhalim Nazarzoda.
[5] In July 2016, the Minister of Internal Affairs of Tajikistan, Ramazon Rahimzoda, announced that Interpol had agreed to issue a Red Notice arrest warrant for Muhiddin Kabiri, as he was wanted for "terrorism, organization of a criminal society and fraud".
[7] On 27 January 2019, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty published an interview with Muhiddin Kabiri, in which he answered in writing from his hideaway to written questions sent to him.
In this interview, he strongly denied that IRPT had any connections to ISIS or Abduhalim Nazarzoda, and that the disastrous election result in 2015 was due to large scale voting fraud, part the Tajik ruler Emomali Rahmon's systematic plan to remove all opposition politicians.