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Snuffysmith
Kyrgyz Opposition Seizes Government Buildings in Protest

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=C593D9:2F72C9D

At least 2,000 protesters control the regional administrative building
in the capital of Osh Kyrgyzstan's political opposition has taken
control of government headquarters in the country's second largest
city, Osh, as discontent over recent parliament elections grows.

By mid-day Monday, at least 2,000 protesters were in control of the
regional administrative building in Osh. Others gathered in the
central square, calling for President Askar Akayev's resignation.

Police did not intervene to stop the demonstrators, as they stormed
the complex in protest over recent opposition losses to the ruling
party in elections which were widely viewed as flawed by the West.

The director of Moscow's Heritage Foundation, Yevgeni Volk, says the
situation is volatile.

"Its still not very clear whether it will develop into a massive
protest and it will be successful or, at the present stage, the powers
will be able to suppress it," he said. "But, even if they succeed in
suppressing the movement, it doesn't mean that the problem will be
solved."

Mr. Volk says Kyrgyzstan's opposition is calling for urgent talks with
the Akayev government.
Snuffysmith
Will Kyrgyzstan's protests follow Ukraine's lead?
Unlike in the 'Orange Revolution,' violence has marred rallies
protesting allegedly flawed elections earlier this month. By Fred Weir
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0322/p07s02-wosc.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Resurgent Russia challenges US

International terrorism has been strengthened after three years of war as evidenced by the upsurge in terrorist strikes worldwide.

By Jephraim P Gundzik

Washington's "war on terrorism" is designed to militarily establish United States economic and geopolitical hegemony on a global scale. Rather than subduing Russia, the "war on terrorism" is encouraging Moscow to strengthen its relations with Washington's prominent foes. The war is also supercharging Russia's economy. Over the next four years, Russia will increasingly challenge the foreign policy goals of the Bush administration.
http://tinyurl.com/4thun
Snuffysmith
U.S. Using Anti-Terror War to Gain World Oil Reserves — Soviet Intelligence Chief:

Referring to his meeting with an unnamed al-Qaeda expert at the Rand Corporation, a nonprofit research organization in the U.S., Shebarshin said: “We have agreed that [al-Qaeda] is not a group but a notion.”
http://tinyurl.com/43zc2
Snuffysmith
Kyrgyz President Rules Out Use of Force Against Protesters

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=C5FB37:2F72C9D

Askar Akayev says opposition groups were deliberately stoking tensions

A poster of Kyrgyz President Askar Akayev burns in Osh,
KyrgyzstanKyrgyzstan's President Askar Akayev has ruled out imposing a
state of emergency to curb mass protests sparked by recent
parliamentary elections that opposition groups say were fraudulent.

Addressing a meeting of newly elected lawmakers Tuesday, Mr. Akayev
said opposition groups were, in his words, deliberately stoking
tensions in the country.

Earlier, his spokesman rejected vote-rigging allegations and accused
"criminals" of organizing the mounting demonstrations.

Kyrgyzstan's top election official also described the balloting as
"democratic and legitimate."

Monday, 2,000 opposition protesters took control of government
headquarters in the country's second-largest city, Osh.

Many of them were calling for President Akayez's resignation, despite
his pledge to investigate charges of electoral fraud and his offer to
hold talks with the opposition.



Some information for this report provided by AFP and AP.
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Kyrgyz Rivals Striving for Calm
--------------------

From Associated Press

March 23 2005

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan; President Askar A. Akayev said Tuesday that he would not impose a state of emergency, despite protests calling for his resignation over allegations of fraud in parliamentary elections.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/asiapcf/03/2...ction=cnn_world

Kyrgystan: 'No emergency powers'
Snuffysmith
http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/03/22/news/kyrgyz.html

Kyrgyz president sees criminal coup
Snuffysmith
Kyrgyz Leader Hints at Plot by West

By Peter Finn

MOSCOW, March 22 -- President Askar Akayev of Kyrgyzstan reacted defiantly Tuesday to anti-government protests that have swept the south of the Central Asian republic, charging in a speech to parliament that the "opposition is directed and funded from the outside."

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Kyrgyz Interior Minister Threatens Force as Protests Spread to Capital
--------------------

Riot police arrest 200 at rallies. Comments by Russia's defense minister are interpreted by some as a show of support for the president.

By Kim Murphy
Times Staff Writer

March 24 2005

MOSCOW; A senior government official in Kyrgyzstan said Wednesday that authorities were prepared to use force against opposition leaders who have taken control of key southern cities, as riot police in the capital broke up protests demanding the resignation of President Askar A. Akayev.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
Kyrgyz Opposition Protesters Storm Government Headquarters

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=C69CC8:2F72C9D

Live televised reports from the scene showed chaotic scuffles between
pro-government and opposition supporters Anti-government demonstrators
have stormed presidential headquarters in Kyrgyzstan's capital,
Bishkek.  The opposition is pledging to hold new parliamentary
elections. 

Kyrgyz protesters hold an anti-President Askar Akayev poster, as they
rally in the southern town of Jalal-Abad, KyrgyzstanThousands of
opposition supporters have seized the seat of Kyrgyzstan's government,
meeting limited resistance from hundreds of police and interior
ministry troops.

The take-over was swift and chaotic, lasting little more than two
hours. Live televised reports from the scene showed scuffles between
pro-government and opposition supporters, armed with sticks and
stones, moments before the opposition entered the premises.

First reports say two demonstrators were injured, one seriously.

A short while later, one demonstrator was shown waving a national flag
from the second floor window of the building. Others threw desks,
chairs, and papers from nearby windows to thousands of cheering
opposition supporters below in the main square.

There has been no word from President Askar Akayev who is
reported to have fled the country.

Some reports from Bishkek say the opposition is holding talks inside
government headquarters. It is not immediately clear if they are
talking among themselves, or with the government or international
mediators.

The country's former prime minister, Kurmanbek Bakiev, who is emerging
as one of the key opposition figures during the demonstrations, has
announced that new elections will be held. That has been a key demand
of the opposition, which alleges massive vote rigging and fraud in the
recent elections. The fraud allegations have been backed up by
international observers.

But Mr. Bakiev says order must first be established and looting
stopped. He also says the opposition is now in control of national
television, but there is no way to immediately confirm that report,

Meanwhile, latest reports indicate the defense and security ministers,
earlier barred by the opposition from leaving the premises, have since
been freed.

Thursday's unrest in Bishkek came during the first major opposition
rally in the northern capital, which has always been viewed as an
Akayev stronghold.

Political analyst Andranik Migranyan told Russia's Echo Moscow radio
that the swift turn of events could spell the end of the Akayev regime
- but not necessarily.  But Mr. Migranyan says the opposition
must first settle on a leader, before making plans on how best to keep
the ethnically and economically-mixed country together.

Over the past week, the fractured Kyrgyz opposition has also taken
control of at least two of seven regional capitals, as well as other
smaller locales. Violence broke out during at least one of those
sieges.

There has been no official public reaction to the events from
neighboring Russia, which maintains a military base not far from the
Kyrgyz capital. But defense ministry spokesman Vyacheslav Sedov told
Interfax that Russian forces would remain neutral concerning the
ongoing political unrest.

Neighboring Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan are expressing rising concern
and calling for immediate negotiations between the government and
opposition. The fear among many in the region is that civil war could
erupt, if a negotiated settlement is not found.
Snuffysmith
Revolt returns to ex-Soviet sphere
Kyrgyzstan's president fled Thursday after opposition supporters seized
the nation's main seat of power. By Fred Weir
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0325/p06s02-wosc.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Breakthrough in Bishkek
The best thing America can do now for Kyrgyzstan is work
with democracies in Europe and elsewhere to help it move
toward a more stable democratic future.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/25/opinion/....html?th&emc=th
Snuffysmith
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?.../i131702S78.DTL

Rice: Kyrgyszstan Events May Be Good Thing
Snuffysmith
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/GC25Ag02.html

Ukraine's proliferation skeletons
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Kyrgyzstan Opposition Leader in Control
--------------------

By BAGILA BUKHARBAYEVA
Associated Press Writer

March 25 2005, 7:27 AM PST

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan -- Kyrgyzstan's triumphant opposition scrambled Friday to restore order in a capital described as "gone mad" with looting, and it named a rebellion leader as acting president after driving President Askar Akayev from power.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...opinternational
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Russia Fumbles, and Former Sphere of Influence Deflates
--------------------

Moscow has all but lost a hold on ex-Soviet states by underestimating the populace, analysts say.

By Kim Murphy
Times Staff Writer

March 26 2005

MOSCOW; The revolt in Kyrgyzstan that toppled Russia's strongest ally in Central Asia was the result of the latest in what analysts say is an astonishing and painful series of diplomatic missteps by Moscow.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...0,6084870.story
Snuffysmith
--------------------
New Leader Seeks to Calm Kyrgyzstan
--------------------

Bakiyev is named acting president and election is planned for June. Police aided by ex-protesters.

By David Holley
Times Staff Writer

March 26 2005

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan; Kyrgyzstan's new leaders moved swiftly Friday to assert power a day after taking the reins of government, while police and former protesters worked together to guard against renewed looting in this Central Asian nation's capital.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
http://jang.com.pk/thenews/mar2005-daily/2...05/world/w4.htm

Belarus opposition demands president's resignation
Snuffysmith
Kyrgyzstan Tense After Night of Looting

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=C7648F:2F72C9D

VOA's Lisa McAdams gives on-the-scene report of current situation
in Bishkek Tensions continue after a night of unrest in Bishkek, the
capital of the former Soviet Republic of Kyrgyzstan. A lot of
comparisons have been made between the uprising over the alleged
electoral fraud in Kyrgyzstan and the earlier revolutions sparked by
disputed elections in Ukraine and Georgia. But during 24 hours, VOA
Moscow bureau chief  Lisa McAdams witnessed the one key
difference in Bishkek's revolution - looting and violence.

"I happened to arrive at the height of the looting and sporadic
gunfire that was erupting late Friday on the central streets near the
presidential palace - not far from my hotel.

Taxi and bus service was halted to the largely darkened airport, with
drivers saying they were too afraid to be out on the roads. So, I
spent the night in the near-abandoned airport.

Law enforcement officers, opposition volunteers pursue looters at
shopping center on main street, Beta Stores in BishkekShortly after
dawn, I managed to catch a ride into the city, where I saw evidence of
wide-scale looting. The entire last half of the 40-minute ride I saw
nothing but smashed shop windows on both sides of the road. The
biggest targets were food and electronic goods stores.

There was no sign of any police or people.

A tense calm is reported Saturday, with gangs of citizen watch groups
reportedly roaming the streets to try and encourage calm, as another
night in the so-called Garden City on the Silk Road approaches."
Snuffysmith
Ousted Kyrgyz President Arrives in Moscow

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=C78355:2F72C9D

Askar Akayev fled; March 24, as opposition supporters stormed
government buildings and took control of the capital

Askar Akayev (File photo)Russian President Vladimir Putin has
reportedly offered his help to the new Kyrgyz leadership. Meanwhile,
reports in Moscow say that ousted Kyrgyz President Askar Akayev has
taken refuge in Russia.

Kyrgyzstan's interim leader, Kurmanbek Bakiyev, says he spoke to the
Russian leader on the phone, and was offered help.

Mr. Bakiyev says the Russian president expressed interest in what was
happening in Kyrgyzstan, and asked if any help from Russia was needed
to stabilize the situation. Mr. Bakiyev said he was grateful to the
Russian leader for showing concern and extending the hand of
friendship to Kyrgyzstan's new leadership.

Vladimir PutinSpeaking in Yerevan, Armenia, on Friday, Vladimir Putin
said the opposition leaders in Kyrgyzstan who have formed an interim
government were known well in Russia, as they have worked in
Kyrgyzstan's government in the past, and have contributed to
developing relations between Moscow and Bishkek. He said Russia was
ready to do everything to further develop the relations between the
two nations.

Mr. Putin also said that the change of power in the central Asian
nation was a result of weak leadership and multiple social and
economic problems in the country.

The Russian leader said he was sorry that, once again, in the
territory of the former Soviet Union, political questions are
solved, "in an unlawful way," and are accompanied by what he
called pogroms and human casualties. He called for Kyrgyzstan's
interim leaders to bring the situation in the country under control.

The Russian president also said that ousted Kyrgyz President Askar
Akayev was welcome to come to Russia.

Mr. Akayev fled the country on March 24, as opposition supporters
stormed government buildings and took control of the capital, Bishkek.
On Saturday, the Interfax news agency reported, the Kremlin confirmed
that the ousted Kyrgyz leader had arrived in Russia. Mr. Akayev has
said that he is still Kyrgyzstan's legitimate president. Kurmanbek
Bakiyev, the opposition leader appointed by parliament to lead an
interim government, said he would run in a June election to replace
Mr. Akayev as president.
Snuffysmith
For Russians, Police Rampage Fuels Fear

By Peter Finn

BLAGOVESHCHENSK, Russia -- In this town in central Russia, last Dec. 10 was a cold, snowless Friday opening the holiday weekend when Russia celebrates its constitution. The rights enshrined in that document, as well as many residents of Blagoveshchensk, were about to take a beating.

At 11 p.m., the main street, a long drag of crumbling apartment blocks and street-level stores, seemed eerily quiet to Anastasia Rozhenkova when she emerged from a friend's apartment. In the darkness, Rozhenkova, 19, hurried to a store to buy some cigarettes while her husband lingered over his farewells.

"From nowhere, people wearing black masks grabbed me and twisted my hands behind my back," Rozhenkova recounted in an interview. "They pushed me onto the ground and kicked me."

In those first moments, Rozhenkova said, she didn't know if she was being mugged by thieves or kidnapped by terrorists: "I was in shock, terrified." But as she was dragged to a nearby bus, her lip and nose swelling from the kicks, her calves and thighs burning from baton strikes, Rozhenkova realized she was not in the hands of bandits.

She had been arrested.

Between Dec. 10 and Dec. 14, hundreds of Blagoveshchensk residents were arrested and beaten by local police and masked special forces from the regional Interior Ministry, according to people and officials here. The sweep, designed to crack down on what the authorities said were assaults on police officers and a spiking crime rate in the town of 30,000 people, turned into a police riot.

The violence ranks among the most graphic illustrations of the failure of Russian police to embrace the rule of law since the fall of the Soviet Union, and the state's inability or unwillingness to impose it on them. The abuses have fueled a profound crisis of public confidence in the criminal justice system, at a time when the government of President Vladimir Putin seeks to galvanize citizens to fight terrorism, crime and corruption.

The events in Blagoveshchensk have drawn widespread condemnation, led to the dismissal of three senior police officers and a prosecutor, and prompted local and federal investigations. Nine police officers have been charged with abuse of power.

"The necessity of conducting such an operation was not in doubt, but the way the operation was executed was really bad," said Ruslan Sharafutdinov, a spokesman for the Interior Ministry in the Republic of Bashkortostan, where the city is located. "What I mean to say is that they overdid it."

The regional prosecutor's office has accepted more than 200 complaints from residents and so far has found that 120 residents are "injured parties" entitled to legal redress, according to the Interior Ministry. Most of those detained, like Rozhenkova, were held for one night.
A Not Uncommon Story
For human rights groups and legal scholars, Blagoveshchensk is unusual only for its scale and the fact that the regional Interior Ministry admitted to widespread violations. Every year, in huge numbers, Russians are beaten, tortured and sometimes killed by the police, according to reports by human rights and government agencies, opinion polls and revelations from high-profile cases.

According to a nationwide survey published this month by the Levada Center in Moscow, 71 percent of respondents said they didn't trust the police at all while 2 percent thought the police act within the law. That number approaches zero when people working in law enforcement and their families are factored out of those likely to have been surveyed. In a separate poll this month by the Public Opinion Foundation, 41 percent of Russian respondents said they lived in fear of police violence.

"The violations are so gross and the problem is so deeply penetrated that it's going to take years to correct," said Vladimir Lukin, Russia's ombudsman and a former ambassador to the United States.

Police brutality extends well beyond the breakaway republic of Chechnya, where widespread human rights violations have been documented in 10 years of armed conflict.

In the Volga River city of Nizhniy Novgorod in 2002, for instance, Dmitry Ochelkov, 26, said police had covered his face with a gas mask with the air supply cut off, according to the human rights group Committee Against Torture, a U.N. body. Activists say this is a fairly common interrogation practice known as the "little elephant."

In the republic of Tatarstan in 2003, a number of juvenile offenders reported being submerged in water from toilets while others said they had rags shoved down their throats. And in Moscow last year, a man the police suspected was a terrorist was beaten so badly while in custody that his wife was subsequently unable to identify his corpse.

"Such cases are typical and widespread," said Olga Shepeleva, a lawyer at the Demos Research Center for Civil Society in Moscow, which monitors police abuse. "There is nothing exceptional about them."
Murder 'Victim' Turns Up
In September 1998, Alexei Mikheyev confessed to the rape and murder of a 17-year-old girl in Nizhniy Novgorod after what he said was nine days of torture, including electric shock, in a local police station. In an interview, he said he felt as if his body was exploding when the wires, which were attached to his earlobes, were turned on.

When Mikheyev was brought to the prosecutor's office after that, he retracted his statement. He was then sent back to the police station for further questioning on the instruction of a prosecutor. Faced with more physical abuse, he said, he threw himself out a third-floor window, breaking his back; he now walks with the aid of crutches and sometimes uses a wheelchair.

The girl he allegedly killed returned home the day after his suicide attempt. She had disappeared with a group of partying young people.

In the intervening years, prosecutors were reluctant to press charges against the police officers involved. They dropped 23 preliminary investigations and reopened their probes only after Mikheyev's lawyers exposed legal irregularities in the decisions to drop the case, according to Igor Kalyapin, chair of the Committee Against Torture in Nizhniy Novgorod, which took up Mikheyev's case. "Prosecutors sabotage these cases," he said.

The investigation was reopened for the 24th time late last year, after the European Court of Human Rights agreed to hear the case.

"When the European Court intervened, an order came down from the prosecutor general's office to investigate the case and charge somebody," said Kalyapin. Four policemen are under investigation, he said. Requests to the prosecutor's office to provide someone to discuss the case did not lead to an interview.

"I want them punished," said Mikheyev, who rejected an out-of-court settlement. "I want this country to accept responsibility for the actions of its police. And I don't want this to happen to anyone again."

Hard numbers on how many officers are charged with illegal use of violence are not publicly available; that category of offense is not among the crime statistics published by the Russian Interior Ministry. But violence and other criminal activity is on the rise among the 4 million police officials in Russia, according to federal officials.

"Between 2001 and 2004, the number of crimes amongst police rose hugely," Prosecutor General Vladimir Ustinov told a gathering of prosecutors in January. "Ordinary citizens know and feel the actual situation for themselves."

Public opinion surveys suggest that the problem is endemic. According to three nationwide and three regional surveys conducted between the spring of 2002 and the summer of 2004, up to 5.2 percent of Russians have suffered violence at the hands of the police.

"The prevalence of abuse suggests that roughly 6.2 million Russian adults are victimized by police violence in a two-three year window," Theodore P. Gerber of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Sarah E. Mendelson of the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington wrote in a draft paper scheduled for publication this fall. "These numbers are in fact quite staggering and imply that police abuse is indeed widespread even commonplace in contemporary Russia."

Much of the abuse is driven by the need for confessions or testimony to support prosecutions that are otherwise lacking in evidence, human rights activists said. "Our estimate, based on interviewing judges who hear cases, is that at least one-third of all convictions, and probably more, are based on evidence that was extracted using physical force," said Kalyapin. "Police can beat suspects in any country, but in Russia the problem is simply massive."

The crackdown in Blagoveshchensk was organized by the Interior Ministry after five policemen were allegedly assaulted in the center of town as they tried to arrest some local businessmen. Sharafutdinov, the ministry spokesman, said there was no order to use violence or wear masks, but that the police on the ground lost control.

"You can't rule out a Chechnya syndrome," he said, noting that the 17 Interior Ministry troops who took part in the operation, along with 130 local police, were veterans of the conflict in the Caucasus.

Around 8 p.m. on Dec. 11, Alexander Kosov, 29, was grabbed as he stood outside a store with his year-old child, who was in a stroller. The baby, he said, was left behind on the street by the police despite his protests. Kosov's wife was shopping nearby and happened to return to the child within minutes of Kosov's departure.

Another man, Alexander Shabanov, 27, slashed his wrists at the police station on Dec. 12 after he was arrested for a second time. A third man, Sergei Fedoseyev, 19, said he was forced to shout "I love the police!" as he was struck with a baton.

Over four days, 388 people were swept off the streets and taken to the police station, where officials acknowledge many were beaten with batons. About 170 of those arrested were initially charged with minor offenses, including public drunkenness, according to the Interior Ministry.

On March 1, the republic's Supreme Court rescinded all the charges.

"They behaved like fascists," said Alexei Raschyoskov, 29, who had surgery for internal bleeding and a ruptured bladder after he was struck with a rifle butt when arrested in the center of town on Dec. 11.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/a...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Rivals' struggle locks Kyrgyzstan in power vacuum
Two parliaments competed for legitimacy Sunday, as stability returned
to the streets. By Fred Weir
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0328/p01s04-wosc.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Dueling Parliaments, Old and New, Deepen Crisis in
Kyrgyzstan
By CRAIG S. SMITH
A conflict between the newly elected Parliament and the old
one continued to cloud prospects for the government that
seized power last week.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/28/internat....html?th&emc=th
Snuffysmith
Civil war grows closer as Kyrgyz leaders fall out over parliament Times Online
KYRGYZSTAN’S new leaders appeared to have fallen out over the composition of their country’s parliament yesterday, raising fresh fears of a civil war after the removal of President Akayev last week.
2 Parliaments Fight for Power in Bishkek Moscow Times
Kyrgyzstan slides into confusion International Herald Tribune
Reuters.uk - Christian Science Monitor - CBC News - Daily Times - all 2,056 related »
Snuffysmith
http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/wo...world-headlines

Kyrgyz Official Warns of Akayev Comeback
Snuffysmith
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A...anguage=printer

Kyrgyz Rivals Vie for Legitimacy
President's Sudden Ouster Exposes Rifts Among Opposition
Snuffysmith
http://www.wpherald.com/Asia_Pacific/story...26-011012-3593r

Kyrzystan faces possible counter revolution
Snuffysmith
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/s...sp?story=624252

Parliaments fight for control of Kyrgyzstan
Snuffysmith
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-1544370,00.html

Civil war grows closer as Kyrgyz leaders fall out over parliament
Snuffysmith
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/GC26Ag03.html

the Tulip Revolution takes root
Pepe Escobar
Snuffysmith
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/GC26Ag02.html

After the dust settles
Daniel Kimmage
Snuffysmith
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/publicati...a=view&id=16710

Kyrgyzstan's Tulip Revolution
Snuffysmith
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/publicati...a=view&id=16667

Now Let the Chechens Select Their Leader
Snuffysmith
http://www.carnegieendowment.org/events/in...ntDetail&id=756

Russia 2005: The Logic of Backsliding
Snuffysmith
Kyrgyz politicians strike deal that could undo 'tulip' revolt
Postrevolutionary leaders agree to recognize the parliament that
protesters say was fraudulently elected. By Fred Weir
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0329/p07s01-wosc.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
Kyrgyzstan Forms Makeshift Government

By Karl Vick

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan, March 28 -- Prospects for political stability in this Central Asian country rose Monday as most major political leaders agreed on which of two competing parliaments had the right to rule, and the winning chamber quickly endorsed an interim president.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/29/internat...a/29biskek.html

Kyrgyz in Political Compromise
Snuffysmith
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/internatio...Kyrgyzstan.html

Kyrgyz Leaders Support New Parliament
Snuffysmith
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
Democracy Falls on Barren Ground
By Elinor Burkett
The so-called revolution in Kyrgyzstan doesn't quite fit
the paradigm of democracy on the march.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/29/opinion/....html?th&emc=th
Snuffysmith
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Kyrgyzstan's Leader Endorses the Newly Elected Parliament
--------------------

The acting president's move to accept the results of a vote he had earlier denounced as rigged angers protesters. He becomes premier.

By David Holley
Times Staff Writer

March 29 2005

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan; Acting President Kurmanbek Bakiyev on Monday endorsed the newly elected parliament he previously had denounced as the product of ballot-rigging, while the lawmakers in turn formally named him prime minister.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...g-kyrgyz29mar29
Snuffysmith
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Anti-Government Protesters Sentenced
--------------------

From Times Wire Reports

March 29 2005

A Belarusian court sentenced 20 protesters to three to 15 days in jail for joining an anti-government rally inspired by the upheaval in Kyrgyzstan.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-03-28-voa27.cfm

Protesters Demand Resignation of Ingushetia's President
Snuffysmith
http://www.voanews.com/english/2005-03-28-voa27.cfm

Russia pounds rebel targets in Chechnya
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/n...tan_russia_dc_1

Russia's Putin Offers Emergency Help to Kyrgyzstan
Snuffysmith
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/GC30Ag02.html

Moscow grapples with Kyrgyz uprising
Snuffysmith
Protests, Power Struggles Continue in Kyrgyzstan

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=C85224:2F72C9D

Parliament again scene of protests in Kyrgyz capital

Kyrgyz woman shouts slogans in front of parliament building in
BishkekPolitical uncertainty continues in Kyrgyzstan, with some
members of the political opposition now accusing acting President
Kurmanbek Bakiyev of turning against them.

Parliament was again the scene of protests in the Kyrgyz capital
Tuesday. Only this time, the people who turned out were there to
support the newly-elected parliament emerging from the disputed
elections and an apparent power-sharing agreement between former
pro-government Akayev forces and opposition leader Kurmanbek Bakiyev.

Central Asia analyst Kumar Bekbolotov, with the London-based Institute
for War and Peace Reporting, says the deal is the result of political
pay-offs.

"The majority of opposition deputies who were in the old parliament
and who were asking for extension of the mandate until the
presidential elections in June, they seem to have been receiving some
types of favors from [Mr.] Bakiyev, in return for their agreement to
dissolve the old parliament," he said. "For instance, most of these
opposition deputies have already gotten some type of new positions in
the government."

Mr. Bekbolotov says this was done in order to co-opt, or neutralize
opposition from the very people who could have rallied the general
public back into the streets. Mr. Bekbolotov says the deal also
satisfied a political practicality.

"The main concern for [Mr.] Bakiyev was if he doesn't legitimize the
new parliament, he will be lacking the support of those rich and
influential people in the new parliament, who are the new business
elite, who are the new even criminal elite frankly," he explained.
"And the other dilemma was if he doesn't somehow appease the old
parliament, he will lack legitimacy from the very people who are
supporting him, who took him out to the streets and who backed him up
all the time."

The analyst agrees acting President Bakiyev took a big political risk
that could back-fire in terms of popular support. At worst, he says,
some may link Mr. Bakiyev in the same category as President Askar
Akayev, who fled the country amid the popular uprising over the
disputed elections and allegations of corruption and fraud.

That is exactly how a woman outside parliament Tuesday told VOA she
feels about Mr. Bakiyev.

The woman said we the people did all this revolution, but the leaders
took [back] the power. We had our own idea to keep the old parliament
in power until new elections can be held, but our officials deceived
us, she says.

She adds that she and other opposition members no longer know whom to
trust.

She says it is not at all clear which people acting president
Kurmanbek Bakiyev serves -- the people who helped thrust him into
power, or former pro-government forces who are the majority in the new
parliament.

Three constitutional experts are expected in Bishkek this week to
examine the legitimacy of the recent political actions in Kyrgyzstan,
including this latest move by lawmakers from the rival parliaments to
legitimize the new parliament.

Analyst Bekbolotov of IWPR says the newly-elected lawmakers themselves
have said it is the first and only anti-constitutional decision they
will make in what they say is in the interest of stability.

Some opposition members disagree. They say the new parliament's
decision sets a very dangerous precedent, and should not be allowed to
stand.
Snuffysmith
Revolution echoes around Russia
Kyrgyzstan's people-power revolt spurs other protests against
corruption throughout the region. By Fred Weir
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0330/p06s01-wosc.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Ousted Kyrgyz Leader Surfaces
--------------------

Akayev's offer to resign may facilitate the new authorities' efforts to form a government.

By David Holley
Times Staff Writer

March 30 2005

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan; Ousted President Askar A. Akayev, who fled this Central Asian country after protesters took over the main government building Thursday in a popular revolution, reemerged Tuesday in Moscow and gave an apparent boost to the new authorities' bid to consolidate the dramatic political changes.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...0,7063324.story
Snuffysmith
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/30/internat...68bde36&ei=5070

Key Kyrgyzstan Leaders Quits, Raising Prospect of Political Fight
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