The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Riots in Kazakhstan: more than 160 dead and nearly 6,000 arrests after the crackdown

2022-01-09T12:56:51.351Z


Pope Francis also expressed this Sunday his “pain” for the victims of the violence that shook the country this week.


Dramatic.

Riots in Kazakhstan this week have left at least 164 people dead, according to a new sharply rising toll, as authorities in Central Asia's largest country continue their relentless crackdown, with nearly 6,000 arrests.

In Almaty alone, the economic capital where the most violent riots took place, 103 people were killed, several media reported on Sunday, citing the Ministry of Health.

Read also Kazakhstan: chaos, repressed demonstrations ... 5 minutes to understand an explosive situation

This balance sheet, which could not be verified independently, is on the rise. Authorities had so far reported 26 protesters and 16 members of the security forces killed and more than 2,000 injured. The presidency announced Sunday that 5,800 people had been arrested and 125 investigations opened in the wake of these unprecedented riots since the independence, in 1989, of this country of 19 million inhabitants rich in hydrocarbons.

"The situation is stabilized in all regions of the country", even if the security forces are still carrying out "cleaning" operations, declared the presidency after a crisis meeting with the head of state, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev.

Before this return to calm, which may be precarious, the protest began in the provinces last Sunday after the increase in gas prices, before reaching large cities, in particular Almaty, where the police fired live ammunition at demonstrators taking d assault on official buildings.

"Shoot to kill"

According to the Kazakh Interior Ministry, the material damage caused by the violence was initially estimated at around 175 million euros. More than 100 businesses and banks were looted and more than 400 vehicles destroyed, according to the same source. Kazakhstan announced on Saturday the arrest of the former director of intelligence services, Karim Massimov, the first major figure arrested, on suspicion of "high treason". Refusing any dialogue with the demonstrators, President Tokayev had authorized his forces on Friday to "shoot to kill".

A sign of a timid return to normalcy, supermarkets reopened their doors on Sunday in Almaty, as the population worried about shortages, AFP noted.

Long queues of vehicles have formed in particular in recent days in front of gas stations.

Still, the tension is still palpable: in Almaty, police officers fired shots in the air several times on Saturday to prevent residents from approaching the city's central square.

The economic capital also still bore the scars of violence, with building facades blackened by flames and scorched car wrecks littering the streets.

VIDEO.

Kazakhstan: protests against rising gas prices riot, dead, injured

In addition to the rise in the cost of living, the figure of former President Nursultan Nazarbayev, who reigned with an iron fist over Kazakhstan from 1989 to 2019, crystallized the anger of the demonstrators.

His spokesperson, Aïdos Oukibaï, once again denied Sunday that Mr. Nazarbayev left the country, assuring that he supported Mr. Tokayev.

Against the backdrop of rumors of a power struggle, he also said that Nazarbayev had ceded the leadership of the National Security Council on his own initiative to Mr. Tokayev, who had abruptly announced this week that he was taking the reins.

The "pain" of the Pope

The situation in Kazakhstan is followed with concern abroad, Pope Francis thus expressing his “pain” on Sunday and calling for “dialogue” to find peace.

This crisis has also given rise to tensions between Russia and the United States, in a context of growing tensions between these two powers.

Moscow has deployed troops to the Central Asian country as part of a multinational collective security treaty organization (CSTO) contingent, at Tokayev's call.

The United States estimated that it would be "very difficult" for Kazakhstan to obtain the departure of the Russian military, a criticism which Moscow qualified on Saturday of "rude".

While American and Russian representatives are due to meet from Sunday evening in Geneva to talk about Ukraine and Europe, Moscow has ruled out any discussion with Washington on Kazakhstan.

"This question does not concern them at all," swept the Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Riabkov on Sunday.

Source: leparis

All news articles on 2022-01-09

You may like

News/Politics 2024-03-26T13:44:19.292Z

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.