In June 1937, Xoʻjayev, though still nominally head of the Uzbek government, was conspicuously absent when the Uzbek Communist Party held its Seventh Congress. He was not even elected a delegate. On 27 June, ten days after the congress ended, he was removed from office. He was arrested by 9 July 1937. In September, a member of the
Politburo,
Andrey Andreyev arrived in Tashkent to bring the
Great Purge to Uzbekistan, and on 8 September and seven others were denounced as "enemies of the people". Andrew D. W. Forbes writes that Xoʻjayev was also "accused of having buried his dead brother according to Islamic rites". In March 1938, Xoʻjayev and Ikramov were both arraigned at the
Trial of the Twenty-One in
Moscow. Though accused of acting together, their hostility was apparent in the courtroom, with each accusing the other of lying. Xoʻjayev "confessed" that in the early 1920s he had been a member of a secret pan-Turkic society,
Milli Ittikhad (National Unification) that wanted to preserve the Bukharan Republic as an independent buffer state, between Russia and the British Empire, that he had opposed the breakdown of Turkestan into four separate Soviet republics, of which Uzbekistan was one, and opposed the decision made in Moscow as part of the
first five-year plan to create a cotton monoculture in Uzbekistan's Ferghana Valley, and to being linked to the
Right Opposition. He was sentenced to death, and executed on 13 March 1938. He was buried at Kommunarka Cemetery in Moskva. ==Legacy==