Protests Reach Kyrgyz Capital

Not a Good Sign for President Akayev

Opposition Protests Reached the Capital of Bishkek in Kyrgyzstan today and the event got ugly:

A peaceful anti-government demonstration in the capital, Bishkek, against flawed parliamentary elections was violently dispersed by Kyrgyz riot police on Wednesday.

About 200 security personnel encircled an estimated 100 protesters in the central square, intent on bringing the demonstrations that have paralysed much of the south of the country to Bishkek.

Some of the speakers and opposition supporters were arrested by the police after security forces had used a megaphone to order the crowds to disperse. “OMON [riot police] came in buses armed with shields and clubs. We tried to stop them attacking us, but they beat us and dragged our people away, one by one,” Ulan, one of the protest organisers, told IRIN.

The attack on the demonstrators came on the same day the new interior minister warned that authorities may use force to restore order and prevent events in the south repeating themselves in the capital.

Meanwhile…

the US is urging Kyrgyzstan to correct polling irregularities.

President Akayev sacks two top oficials (one being the Interior Minsiter- see above) because of their failure to stop the protests.

Reuters is also commenting about the violent demonstration in Bishkek today:

Edil Baisalov, head of the election-monitoring NGO “For Democracy and Civil Society” and one of the leaders of the protest was seen being bundled off by the police.

Also in custody, according to the AP news agency, was Bolotbek Maripov, who ran unsuccessfully against the daughter of President Askar Akayev in the disputed 27 February election. The chair of the Independent Union of Journalists (IUJ), Azamat Kalman, was badly beaten up by the riot police, according to eye witness reports.

One passer-by near the demonstration said she had seen three buses with some 24-30 people detained in each.

“Yesterday there was a pro-government demonstration in Bishkek (click here to read more on the staged(?) event), why were the police doing nothing to those people, yet attacking us like dogs today?” Sayra Sagyzbaeva, a protester from Bishkek told IRIN, adding that she was on the streets because President Akayev had been too long in power and the country needed change.

As always, Registan.net and Publius Pundit are great resources for more news from this area.

Update: (6:00PM) Welcome Instapundit readers! The “Great One” has done a wonderful job keeping up on this story. From a slow start the situation in Kyrgyzstan is now reaching a political apex. The days ahead will be critical to the country’s future.

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Jim Hoft is the founder and editor of The Gateway Pundit, one of the top conservative news outlets in America. Jim was awarded the Reed Irvine Accuracy in Media Award in 2013 and is the proud recipient of the Breitbart Award for Excellence in Online Journalism from the Americans for Prosperity Foundation in May 2016. In 2023, The Gateway Pundit received the Most Trusted Print Media Award at the American Liberty Awards.

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