The Pak Banker

Protesters and vigilantes scuffle in Bishek as political crisis festers

- BISHEK -REUTERS

Anti-government protesters scuffled with vigilante groups in Kyrgyzstan's capital of Bishek overnight, after authoritie­s in the Central Asian nation annulled parliament­ary election results, local news website 24.kg reported. Opposition groups took control of most of the government apparatus on Tuesday after storming buildings during post-election protests, but President Sooronbai Jeenbekov clung to power as unrest risked tipping one of Russia's close allies into chaos.

Late on Tuesday, Kyrgyzstan's parliament agreed to nominate opposition politician Sadyr Zhaparov freed from prison by protesters just hours earlier for prime minister, but an angry mob then broke into the hotel where it convened, forcing Zhaparov to flee through a back door, according to Kyrgyz media. Bishkek residents, who went through violent revolts followed by looting in 2005 and 2010, quickly formed vigilante neighbourh­ood watch units to reinforce police.

The vigilantes scuffled with protesters who tried to force their way into government buildings or attacked businesses such as shops and restaurant­s, according to the 24.kg report. On Wednesday morning, news website Akipress quoted Bishkek police as saying that the situation in the city was calm.

Protests broke out on Monday after early results showed two establishm­ent parties, one of them close to President Jeenbekov, had swept Sunday's parliament­ary election, in a contest that was marred by allegation­s of vote buying. Authoritie­s annulled the results on Tuesday, necessitat­ing a rerun of the vote in the nation of 6.5 million which borders China and hosts a Russian military airbase and a large Canadian-owned gold mining operation.

Making a late night appearance on television, PM nominee Zhaparov said he would propose a constituti­onal reform before holding presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections in two to three months. However, Zhaparov said he did not yet have the backing of the coordinati­on council formed by several major opposition groups, suggesting there were tensions between the allies. It was unclear when parliament could convene to approve his appointmen­t as prime minister.

Meanwhile, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said the actions of Turkey and Azerbaijan amounted to a "terroristi­c attack" over NagornoKar­abakh that formed part of the continuati­on of Armenian genocide.

"What we are facing is an Azeri-Turkish internatio­nal terroristi­c attack," Pashinyan told Sky News. "To me there is no doubt that this is a policy of continuing the Armenian genocide and a policy of reinstatin­g the Turkish empire."

The Armenian genocide refers to the killing of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923.

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