Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New Leadership Is Established In Kyrgyzstan

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • New Leadership Is Established In Kyrgyzstan

    New Leadership Is Established In Kyrgyzstan
    By Karl Vick

    washingtonpost.com
    Mar 26, 2005

    BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan, March 25 -- A day after chasing out a president
    who ruled this mountainous former Soviet republic for 15 years,
    Kyrgyzstan's new leaders named an interim government Friday and
    struggled to suppress the looting and arson that have ruined scores
    of shops in the capital.

    Kurmanbek Bakiyev, a former prime minister turned opposition leader,
    was returned to his former post by parliament. He was also given the
    duties of president, the title held since 1990 by Askar Akayev, who
    disappeared Thursday as demonstrators surged into his headquarters,
    known as the White House, in the third successful street revolt in
    a former Soviet republic in 16 months.

    The United States and Russia, which both maintain military bases
    in the poor, largely Muslim country of 5 million people, signaled
    Friday they were ready to do business with the new leadership that
    was taking shape.

    "Who's running our country?" asked the banner headline in a newspaper
    here in the capital.

    Bakiyev said he was, and called on his countrymen to prevent a repeat
    of the looting and violence that erupted after nightfall Thursday,
    causing at least three deaths and scores of injuries.

    "As the prime minister and the acting president of Kyrgyzstan, I
    address you and ask you to be wise, be patient and happy," Bakiyev
    told a respectful crowd of several thousand in front of the White
    House, which protesters had overrun 24 hours earlier. "Let's work on
    concrete things now."

    But Akayev appeared to argue that he was still the legitimate leader.
    In neighboring Kazakhstan, where Russian media reports said he took
    refuge before leaving for some other destination, a statement bearing
    his name declared that "an unconstitutional coup d'etat has been
    staged in Kyrgyzstan."

    It said that "my current stay outside the country is temporary.
    Rumors of my resignation are deliberate, malicious lies." The statement
    said he had possessed the means to suppress the insurrection but chose
    not to, so as to avoid violence. There was no way to authenticate
    the statement.

    A mountainous nation with a nomadic heritage, Kyrgyzstan is one of
    five sparsely inhabited republics in Central Asia that were ruled
    from Moscow during Soviet days. Akayev, a physicist and former
    Soviet legislator, led it into independence and governed as one of
    the region's more tolerant leaders. But, remaining year after year,
    he came to be widely viewed in the country as an authoritarian ruler
    who used his power to enrich his family.

    On Friday night, officials organized civilian patrols to bolster
    the handful of uniformed police officers who returned to duty after
    disappearing from the streets in face of the demonstrators' advance.
    Gunfire sounded about midnight, apparently warning shots that combined
    with a rainstorm to disperse a crowd of hundreds of youths approaching
    a shopping center.

    "God forbid anybody would have to have such a revolution," Felix Kulov,
    a political prisoner who was freed from jail Thursday, said of the
    violence. "It was a rampage of looting, just like in Iraq." On Friday,
    Kulov was put in charge of security services.

    By day, the capital, which sprawls at the foot of the mountain range
    that defines this striking country, was almost serene. Traffic was
    steady, and city work crews in orange vests kept busy clearing debris
    from the scores of stores looted or burned overnight. "Who needs to
    tell us to do this? This is our work. This is our responsibility,"
    said Jildash Abdikulov, who was supervising a crew in front of a
    charred store.

    Knots of men stood sentry outside the barricaded gates of the city's
    main market, an improvised warren of steel shipping containers and
    stalls. The mood was subdued, not tense, and women and children joined
    men thronging the sidewalks in the spring weather.

    In the city's main square, crowds listened for much of the day
    to speakers who mounted a portable podium one after another. They
    alternately congratulated the gathering for the revolution, condemned
    Akayev as greedy and urged control of the streets after dark.

    "We're all really frustrated because of what happened last night,"
    one woman told the crowd, which was sprinkled with young men who had
    tied red cloths around their coat sleeves to show they were militia
    volunteers.

    A day after the government fell, there were suggestions that dissidents
    in other parts of the former Soviet Union might try to replicate
    the revolt's quick, unforeseen success. In Uzbekistan, which borders
    Kyrgyzstan, opposition parties issued a joint statement expressing
    certainty that "the process of democratic reforms that started in
    Kyrgyzstan will highly influence all parts of Central Asia."

    In Minsk, the capital of Belarus, about 1,000 people gathered near
    the palace of President Alexander Lukashenko in hopes of touching off
    a larger movement, but they were dispersed by riot police, according
    to the Associated Press.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin gave the appearance of taking the
    revolution in stride. After backing the losing side in revolts in
    Georgia and Ukraine, the Kremlin made no public effort to protect
    Akayev, though Putin said he would be welcome in Russia.

    "We know these people pretty well," Putin told reporters during a
    visit to Armenia, referring to the opposition. "And they have done
    quite a lot to establish good relations between Russia and Kyrgyzstan."

    "For its part, Russia will do its best to keep up the current level
    of relations between the states and improve relations between the
    people," he said.

    But some Russian analysts called the development bad news for Moscow.
    "The Central Asian region now faces a risk of Islamization," said
    Sergei Markov, an architect of Putin's quasi-authoritarian governing
    policy known as managed democracy, according to the Knight Ridder
    newspaper chain. "In addition, drug trafficking from Central Asia to
    Europe via Russia will certainly grow."

    Akayev was a favorite of Washington, which welcomed his early
    initiatives to reform a Soviet-style economy and nurture democratic
    institutions. But there were signs Friday that the United States was
    readily accepting his demise.

    As Bakiyev worked his way Friday from the plaza podium toward the
    parliament building behind a human chain of security volunteers,
    he told reporters he had spoken with the U.S. ambassador in Bishkek,
    Stephen Young. "He says, and I agree with him, that we are going to
    work together," Bakiyev said. "We will continue our cooperation."

    The State Department said that Young had met with Bakiyev on Thursday
    evening and that the ambassador had been in regular telephone contact
    with him and other interim leaders.

    A Western observer who lives in Bishkek said Akayev had worn out
    his welcome with his own people. When protests first erupted in the
    southern part of the country, an area both poorer and ethnically
    distinct from Akayev's native north, the incumbent dismissed the
    uproar and refused to meet with the opposition.

    "The fact is the government didn't have much support and it just
    started crumbling," said the observer, who spoke on condition that
    he not be further identified.

    On Thursday, Ishenbai Kadyrbekov was briefly made acting president
    because of his position as speaker of the legislative assembly, the
    Interfax news agency said. But on Friday he was replaced by Bakiyev,
    a native of Jalal-Abad, a city in the south and an early center of
    opposition. Bakiyev served as prime minister from 2000 to 2002, before
    resigning after security forces killed six protesters in a clash.

    The government he began putting in place Friday is drawn largely from
    other mainstream politicians who had fallen out of favor with Akayev.

    Kulov, for instance, once served as mayor of Bishkek. Roza Otunbayeva,
    a frequent guest on English-language news shows, has been named
    foreign minister, a post she held under Akayev. She said a presidential
    contest may be set for June.

    Residents said this country's sense of close kinship made Thursday
    night's violence particularly hard to accept. Smoke was still pouring
    from one downtown mall at midday. Pizza shops and other businesses
    were missing windows. By afternoon, shop owners were emptying their
    shelves and preparing to guard stock too heavy to pack up.

    Staff writer Robin Wright in Washington contributed to this report.
Working...
X