Kazakhstan says 164 people were killed in week of unrest

Authorities in Kazakhstan have said 164 people were killed in the unrest that rocked the country in the past week, including three children.




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Photograph: Vasily Krestyaninov/AP

The health ministry said 103 of the deaths were in Almaty, the country’s largest city and the centre of the violence.

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After the worst violence in independent Kazakhstan’s 30-year history, the situation in Almaty and other cities was largely calm on Sunday. Authorities said they had recovered control and life would slowly get back to normal in the coming days. In Almaty, authorities announced some public transport would resume on Monday.

However, the deputy defence minister, Sultan Gamaletdinov, said on Sunday that a “counterterrorist operation” was still underway and would continue “until the terrorists are completely eliminated and the constitutional order is restored in the Republic of Kazakhstan”.

The number of those detained by police continues to rise, with the office of Kazakhstan’s president giving a latest figure of 5,800.

The protests began last Sunday in the west of the country, over a steep rise in fuel prices, and quickly spread to Almaty and other cities, driven by years of pent-up frustration. On Wednesday, violent clashes began, with groups of men seizing the airport and storming government buildings. Many on the ground reported that organised, violent groups seemed to take over the protest.

On Friday, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev gave a hardline address in which he said he had ordered law enforcement bodies to shoot to kill, without warning, and said Almaty had been attacked by a group of 20,000 “bandits and terrorists”.

Erzhan Kazykhan, a presidential adviser, made a video address in English on Sunday, accusing some in the west of misinterpreting the events. “Regretfully peaceful demonstration in Almaty and some other regions were hijacked by perpetrators and both local and external terrorist groups speaking foreign languages,” he said.

Authorities have not yet released any evidence to show the involvement of either “terrorists” or foreign forces. On Sunday, local television showed a video confession of a bruised man, who said he had been paid to travel from neighbouring Kyrgyzstan and take part in violence. However, viewers in Kyrgyzstan quickly identified him as a well-known jazz musician who frequently toured Kazakhstan, and expressed doubts he could have been a rioter.

Reports of possible infighting within the Kazakhstani elites driving part of the violence appear to be more plausible. Karim Masimov, the head of the security services and a former prime minister, was first removed from office and then arrested during the week on suspicion of treason. No details have been released of what Masimov is alleged to have done.

Some sources have pointed to recent disagreements between Tokayev and figures close to his predecessor Nursultan Nazarbayev, who ruled the country from independence in 1991 until 2019 and handpicked Tokayev as his successor. Nazarbayev holds the honorific title of Leader of the Nation, and the country’s capital was renamed Nur-Sultan in his honour in 2019. He was removed by Tokayev as head of the National Security Council this week.

Many of the protesters chanted “old man, out!” in reference to Nazarbayev, while in the city of Taldykorgan a statue of him was pulled down. Anger has focused on the considerable wealth amassed by his family and his continuing influence over the political scene.

Nazarbayev’s press secretary has claimed the previous president is in the country and is backing Tokayev, but Nazarbayev has not spoken or appeared in public since the unrest began.

On Wednesday, Tokayev called on a Russia-led military alliance, the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) to introduce troops into the country. This was agreed on in a matter of hours, and a force reportedly numbering about 2,500 mostly Russian troops is operating in the country. Tokayev, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and the leaders of the other CSTO nations – Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Armenia and Tajikistan – are due to hold a video conference on Monday.

Source: Thanks msn.com