Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

KAZAKH PRESIDENT ISSUES SHOOT-TOKILL ORDER AS VIOLENCE CONTINUES

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The president of Kazakhstan, Kassym-jomart Tokayev, issued a shoot-to-kill order against the protesters threatenin­g his authoritar­ian government’s survival on Friday. “I have given orders to the security forces and the army to open fire without warning,” Tokayev said in a televised address, rejecting internatio­nal calls for dialogue as “stupidity” and asking: “What kind of negotiatio­ns can there be with criminals and murderers?”

Demanding “anti-terrorist operations” continue until the “fighters are completely wiped out,” Tokayev claimed that some 20,000 “bandits” had rioted in the country’s biggest city Almaty, and suggested without giving any details that the unrest had been directed from abroad.

On Friday morning, state television reported that 26 demonstrat­ors had been killed and over 3,700 arrested since the unrest began, while officials put the death toll for the security forces at 18.

Meanwhile, independen­t news channels showed footage of smoke rising from buildings in Almaty and reported the sound of gunfire, suggesting that the unrest is continuing despite the government’s claim to have regained control. The arrival of Russian troops in the country appears to have given the Kazakh authoritie­s significan­t relief, however, with Moscow announcing that Almaty airport was once again “under full control” after anti-government protesters occupied it earlier this week.

Russia’s troop deployment came in response to a request to the Russian dominated Collective Security Treaty Organizati­on from Tokayev asking for help in putting down the antigovern­ment demonstrat­ions, which were sparked by soaring fuel prices.

MOSCOW (DPA), 7 JAN, 2022

 ?? ?? Kazakh law enforcemen­t officers block a street leading to the official presidenti­al residence Akorda after protests against the government in Nur-sultan, Kazakhstan (REUTERS)
Kazakh law enforcemen­t officers block a street leading to the official presidenti­al residence Akorda after protests against the government in Nur-sultan, Kazakhstan (REUTERS)

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