Tokayev regime pressed for truth
Questions persist over state’s version of unrest over fuel price hike, writes Christopher Rickleton
As the dust settles on lethal clashes in Kazakhstan that prompted authorities to call in Russian-led troops, questions are mounting over the authoritarian government’s handling of the unprecedented crisis.
While President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev has pinned the blame on bandits and foreign militants, many ordinary people question the official storyline.
Many stress that a number of issues remain unexplained.
It is unclear why so many civilians died, and who the “foreign terrorists” the government blames for the violence are. And where is Mr Tokayev’s mentor and predecessor, 81-year-old Nursultan Nazarbayev, who has not been heard from since last year?
Dauren Bitkembayev, 30, who lost his elderly parents in the unrest, said he needs answers.
He and others want to know why gun attacks on civilian cars in the country’s largest city occurred even after the military had appeared to restore order.
A video shared on social media shows a car engulfed in flames close to barriers put up by the military. Inside the vehicle were a retired postal service worker and a former teacher, Mr Bitkembayev’s late parents.
“It looks like military shot [the car] up... and we thought [violence] was over,” the eyewitness, who filmed the burning car, can be heard saying.
“Everyone is saying it was the army [who fired]. I don’t understand,” said Mr Bitkembayev, who works in a pawn shop ransacked by looters during the upheaval.
“Were they blind? They could see it was a grandfather and a grandmother — what kind of looters or terrorists could they be?” he asked.
Some doubt the authorities will ever tell the whole truth.
Daniyar Moldabekov, a commentator and political reporter, said society was polarised.
“With internet shut down, some turned out to be too susceptible to propaganda ready to believe that everyone who has been out on the streets is a terrorist and villain,” he said.
“Others understand that a lot of civilians died, there are a lot of innocent people in prisons, and instances of torture have been reported.”
The government has offered detailed accounts of how members of law enforcement died but provided little evidence proving the involvement of “foreign terrorists”.
Rights activists have been putting together a list of hundreds of people detained, killed or missing.
It has taken authorities days to release an official death toll. Kazakhstan had initially acknowledged fewer than 50 fatalities. A higher mortality count of 164 had been quickly retracted last week. On Saturday, officials said 225 had died.
Over 12,000 people have been detained since the unrest erupted in early January, including journalists and rights activists.
Internet has been returned to the vast country after a blackout that lasted close to a week in Almaty, but establishing facts on the ground remains difficult.
Outside morgues in Almaty, relatives of people suspected to have been killed stood on the street, waiting for information and a chance to bury their loved ones.
Three men from the eastern city of Semey said security service representatives had warned them not to speak to journalists.
Official attempts to highlight foreign involvement have met with particular controversy.
Days after the violence peaked in early January, pro-government television showed a man from Kyrgyzstan with cuts and bruises on his face, appearing to confess to accepting money to participate in unrest. But he was quickly identified by the public as a well-known jazz musician.
Pianist Vikram Ruzakhunov was eventually allowed to return home. In a guarded media appearance, he attributed the bruises on his face to “a harsh arrest”.