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Kyrgyz opposition figure claims control a day after president ousted

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  • Kyrgyz opposition figure claims control a day after president ousted

    Kyrgyz opposition figure claims control a day after president ousted in massive protests
    By BAGILA BUKHARBAYEVA

    AP Worldstream
    Mar 25, 2005

    Kyrgyzstan's interim prime minister, acting to fill a power vacuum
    after the ouster of the president, named four acting key ministers
    and a chief prosecutor Friday, the speaker of parliament's upper
    house said.

    Kurmanbek Bakiyev chose mostly prominent opposition figures for the
    posts of foreign, defense and finance ministers and chief prosecutor.
    For the job of acting interior minister he picked a former chief
    prosecutor who had been fired by deposed President Askar Akayev on
    Wednesday, speaker shenbai Kadyrbekov.

    By appointing them as acting ministers Bakiyev avoids the need to
    have them approved by parliament's upper house.

    The opposition worked quickly in an effort to restore order a day
    after protesters drove Akayev's government from power, unleashing
    widespread looting.

    The new leadership faced an immediate challenge in halting vandalism
    and looting that left major stores in the capital, Bishkek, gutted
    and many others damaged by rowdy youths who roamed the city overnight,
    with few police to be seen.

    The drama of the events, propelled by widespread anger over disputed
    elections, were heightened by Akayev's sudden flight. It was not yet
    clear where Akayev was.

    Bakiyev emerged from the Parliament building Friday and said he had
    been named Kyrgyzstan's acting leader.

    "Freedom has finally come to us," Bakiyev told a crowd in the central
    square of the capital, Bishkek.

    Bakiyev's appointment as acting president was endorsed by a
    newly restored parliament of lawmakers who held seats before the
    elections, which fueled protests against longtime leader Akayev and
    his government.

    The move set Bakiyev squarely at the helm of the leadership emerging
    from the fragmented former opposition.

    Kyrgyzstan became the third former Soviet republic over the past 18
    months _ after Georgia and Ukraine _ to see popular protests bring
    down long-entrenched leaders widely accused of corruption.

    Another opposition figure, Felix Kulov, who was released from prison
    during Thursday's turmoil and appointed head of law enforcement,
    said Akayev had fled to a foreign country after being turned away by
    Russia. The Russian news agency Interfax said Akayev and his family
    were in neighboring Kazakhstan.

    "He had a chance to resign, but he fled," Kulov said in televised
    comments. "He wanted to go Russia, but the Russians didn't accept him."

    Bakiyev told the crowd on the square that Akayev was "not on the
    territory of the republic. I don't know where he is."

    Russian President Vladimir Putin said, however, that the Kremlin
    wouldn't object if Akayev wants to go to Russia. Russia's Foreign
    Ministry spokesman Alexander Yakovenko said Friday that Moscow doesn't
    know where Akayev is.

    Putin, speaking during a visit to Armenia on Friday, lamented the
    violence and looting in Kyrgyzstan, saying that "it's unfortunate that
    yet again in the post-Soviet space, political problems in a country are
    resolved illegally and are accompanied by pogroms and human victims."

    He urged the Kyrgyz opposition to quickly restore order, and praised
    the Kyrgyz opposition leaders for helping develop bilateral ties
    during their earlier work in the government.

    Kyrgyz lawmakers met early Friday to consider the country's new
    leadership but were interrupted by youths throwing stones at the
    Parliament building. Bakiyev then emerged and told about 1,000
    demonstrators in the central square that he had been appointed "acting
    prime minister and acting president" and would seek to form a Cabinet.

    The crowd shouted his name in support.

    Bakiyev urged opposition supporters not to allow looting, and
    stressed that the popular opposition figure Kulov would coordinate
    law enforcement. Bakiyev proposed that former Foreign Minister
    Roza Otunbayeva be named the country's top diplomat, and said,
    "All intergovernmental agreements will remain in full force and are
    in full effect."

    Bakiyev said he would fight corruption _ a major complaint against
    Akayev's regime _ and the clan mentality that roughly splits the
    country between north and south.

    "I will not allow the division of the people into north and south,"
    he said. "We are a united nation."

    The square was the scene of swift political change Thursday, when
    opposition protesters seized control of the presidential and government
    headquarters. The takeover followed weeks of protests over disputed
    parliamentary elections the opposition said were aimed at keeping
    Akayev in power.

    The Red Cross reported dozens injured in the turmoil Thursday, while
    lawmaker Temir Sariyev said three people had been killed and about
    100 injured overnight.

    On Friday, a shopping center on the main avenue stood mostly destroyed
    by fire and strewn with wreckage that spread into the street, as smoke
    hung in the air. At another shop gutted by fire, a few elderly people
    and children picked through what was left after looting overnight. Cars
    were picked clean, their windows and tires gone.

    The 60-year-old Akayev had led Kyrgyzstan since 1990, before it gained
    independence in the Soviet collapse.

    The takeover of government buildings in Bishkek followed similar
    seizures by opposition activists in the country's impoverished south.
    The protests began even before the first round of parliamentary
    elections Feb. 27 and swelled after March 13 run-offs that the
    opposition said were seriously flawed.

    The fractious opposition unified around calls for more democracy,
    an end to poverty and corruption, and a desire to oust Akayev. There
    was no sign the new leadership would change policy toward the West
    or Russia. Unlike the revolutions in Georgia and Ukraine, foreign
    policy has not been an issue.

    Both the United States and Russia have military bases near Bishkek.

    Kyrgyzstan has been a conduit for drugs and a potential hotbed
    of Islamic extremism. There was no indication, however, that the
    opposition would be more amenable to Islamic fundamentalist influence
    than Akayev's government has been.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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