Yesterday Akun turned up at the 4th clinical hospital in Bishkek and asked for medical assistance, Dzholdoshbek Buzurmankulov, the Interior Ministry's press secretary announced on Thursday.
Doctors found not significant injuries on his body and assessed his state as stable.
The rights campaigner claims that he was kept prisoner in a basement in a village in the Chuisk region. So far nothing is known about demands of his unknown abductors. The police are studying his evidence.
Akun disappeared on November 16. He says that that day he intended to meet special services' representatives at a central crossroads in Bishkek.
Opposition parties and movements of Kyrgyzstan accused the country's law-enforcers of kidnapping. But the National Security Service and the Interior Ministry officially announced they were not involved. Their spokesmen maintained they had no reason to meet Akun, all the more so in the street.
Some independent political experts in Kyrgyzstan believe that Akun could have organized this abduction to attract interest to himself. Three years ago, during mass protests in the Dzhala-Abad region, he "disappeared" for several days. Later it became known that his cousin had taken him to Bishkek.
Four years ago Akun ran for presidency and came in last, sixth, with about 3 percent of votes.