This is needed from the people of Pakistan too!!!!

love Pak

Politcal Worker (100+ posts)
Interior minister killed in Kyrgyzstan uprising


BISHKEK: Opposition followers killed Kyrgyzstan's interior minister, took the deputy prime minister hostage and captured state television in a deadly revolt Wednesday against President Kurmanbek Bakiyev.

Riot police fired tear gas and stun grenades in repeated efforts to disperse thousands of protestors surrounding Bakiyev's offices in the capital Bishkek, but retreated as demonstrators tried to ram the gates with an armoured vehicle.

A police source said that at least 12 people had been killed while AFP reporters saw six bodies being carried out of the square near the presidential headquarters in Bishkek.

In a desperate bid to contain the unrest, Prime Minister Daniyar Usenov declared a state of emergency.

But shortly after the announcement, opposition protestors stormed the Kyrgyz television centre, forcing a halt to all programmes, in a dramatic sign that the government was fast losing its grip.

A source in the office of Interior Minister Moldomus Kongantiyev then revealed that he had been killed in riots in the northwest hub of Talas where the first protests had erupted.

Kongantiyev had been attacked by protestors in Talas who had also taken deputy prime minister Akylbek Zhaparov captive, the Kabar Kyrgyz state news agency reported.

In Bishkek, explosions from stun grenades reverberated across the city and the crackle of automatic weapons fire filled the air as protestors in the main square gasped for breath in a fog of tear gas.

Amid appeals for calm from Russia, authorities in the ex-Soviet republic said three opposition leaders had been arrested for perpetrating "serious crimes".

The United States, which maintains an air base in Kyrgyzstan used in the NATO campaign in nearby Afghanistan, also voiced "deep concern".

The riots in Bishkek were the culmination of spiralling protests by the opposition which accuses the government of rights violations, authoritarianism and economic mismanagement.

Between 3,000 and 5,000 protestors overturned cars and set them on fire as they marched from the opposition headquarters towards the presidential offices, witnesses said.

Protestors appeared to have seized several heavily armoured police vehicles and were standing atop them waving red Kyrgyz flags and the blue flag of the opposition movement.

The violence came a day after more than 1,000 opposition protesters burst through police lines and took control of government offices in Talas.

In the central city of Naryn, hundreds of opposition protesters on Wednesday stormed the regional government headquarters after the local governor refused to negotiate, local witnesses told AFP.

Witnesses in the city of Tokmak, just outside the capital, said around 2,000 demonstrators had gathered there. Residents in three regions near the southern town of Osh also told of protests in the streets.

Kyrgyzstan, a mountainous country perched at the strategic junction between China, Russia and southwest Asia, is among the poorest countries to have emerged from the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union.

It has been plagued by corruption and chronic instability and the troubles resemble widespread unrest that washed over the country in March 2005 and resulted in the ouster of President Askar Akayev.

Opposition leaders accuse the Bakiyev government of basic rights violations, authoritarianism and arbitrary economic management that has resulted in sharply higher prices for basic goods and services.

As the unrest unfolded, Kyrgyzstan's prosecutor general Nurlan Tursunkulov announced police had arrested former prime minister and presidential candidate Almazbek Atambayev, ex-parliament speaker Omurbek Tekebayev and his aide Bolot Cherniazov.

Bakiyev's government vowed on Tuesday to "severely" crush the protests but as the demonstrations gathered momentum, Russia called for Kyrgyzstan not to use force against the protesters.

"We consistently stand for all disagreements -- political, economic and social -- to be solved within the framework of the democratic procedures that exist in Kyrgyzstan, without the use of force and harm to the Kyrgyz citizens," deputy foreign minister Grigory Karasin told the Interfax news agency.

The United States has an airbase at Manas that has become a pivotal staging ground for the battle against the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan.

In a statement Tuesday, the US embassy in Bishkek said it was "deeply concerned" and urged "all parties to show respect for the rule of law and ... to engage in talks to resolve differences".
http://geo.tv/4-7-2010/62528.htm
 

peace

Councller (250+ posts)
when I read this news I had the same opinion. There are times when people have to stand up for their rights otherwise problems will only increase and hopes will only be shattered.
 

khan afghan

Politcal Worker (100+ posts)
Ther a few similirities between this in pakistan.Last month Jandullah chief ws arrested while on air
his way to Kyrghastan to meet high official from US.Jandullah is the group busy in iran to destabalise it.
It means that the govt there is too americans poodle and have no concern for the people of the country.
In a desperate move the opposition toook the advantage and act exactly what the people would want to.
Interior minister is killed as it is apparent in the news.The sme play will be played in pakistan as Zardari and Co
is trying to control everything even judiciary and have no concerns the problems the people of pakistan
are facing.The most disloyal to Banzeer and loyal to Zardari mR Rehman Malik will face
the drum beat.
 

rakeem82

Banned
I don't think such events would ever happen in Pakistan, Pakistan's majority are in rural areas who believe in biradari caste politics, Pakistanis are jointly suffering from loadshedding, dangerously high food prices, national debt growing etc., but they don't have any forum or people or entity to safeguard their interests secondly politicians[especially from peoples party] have found ways in keeping them distant based on Language, caste, being wary of other institutions that are out to get them etc.
Secondly Pakistanis are demoralised not to look the third way PTI, or other party, they are led to believe if you withdraw support from nawaz league peoples party will win and as everyone understands both are in bed with the establishment. Politicians have garnered corruption in local people making them get used to bribes, backroom deals, kickbacks, majority people in Punjab and Sindh elect people who are close to power and influence and family background, not their working background. For the kind of revolution you are seeing in Kyrgyzstan you need a majority literate nation with years of education who knows whats bad or good for them. Pakistan is down with sub saharan african nations in bottom of UN index in 192 nations, so GOOD LUCK WITH THAT!!!