Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kyrgyz leader quits amid unrest; rival claims office

- DARIA LITVINOVA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Vladimir Isachenkov of The Associated Press.

MOSCOW — Kyrgyzstan’s embattled President Sooronbai Jeenbekov said Thursday that he was resigning after protests over a disputed parliament­ary election, the third time in 15 years that a leader of the Central Asian country has been ousted by a popular uprising.

Supporters of Jeenbekov’s rival, newly appointed Prime Minister Sadyr Zhaparov, rallied in the capital of Bishkek and threatened to storm government buildings if he is not elevated to acting president. Under the constituti­on, the speaker of parliament would be next in line, but he refused to serve as caretaker leader, according to Zhaparov, who claimed the top office.

The fast- moving events capped a government crisis that was dizzying even by Kyrgyzstan’s chaotic, clan-influenced politics.

The resignatio­ns of the president and the parliament speaker’s apparent refusal to succeed him followed unrest that gripped the country of 6.5 million people on the border with China since the Oct. 4 parliament­ary election that was swept by pro-government parties.

Supporters of opposition groups dismissed the results, pointing at vote-buying and other irregulari­ties, and took over government buildings hours after the polls closed. The protesters freed several opposition leaders, including Zhaparov, who was serving an 11-year jail term.

The Central Election Commission nullified the election results and rival regional clans began jockeying for power, their supporters swarming the capital and occasional­ly clashing with one another, hurling stones.

Jeenbekov, who had introduced a state of emergency in Bishkek and deployed troops in the capital, dismissed calls to resign on Wednesday. But in a statement released Thursday by his office, he said he feared violence if he stayed in power, noting that protesters were facing off against the police and the military.

“In this case, blood will be shed. It is inevitable,” Jeenbekov said. “I don’t want to go down in history as a president who shed blood and shot at his own citizens.”

Jeenbekov said the situation in Bishkek “remains tense” and that he didn’t want to escalate those tensions. He urged opposition politician­s to get their supporters off the streets and “bring a peaceful life back to the people.”

Zhaparov’s supporters quickly besieged the parliament to discourage its speaker, Kanat Isayev, from taking over as acting president.

Soon after, Zhaparov told his supporters that he was now acting head of state because the speaker agreed not to become a caretaker president. The parliament is still scheduled to meet today to endorse the speaker’s refusal to serve as president and Zhaparov’s appointmen­t to the post.

The curfew and the troops’ presence in Bishkek eased tensions in the city, where residents feared the violence and looting that accompanie­d previous uprisings and had been forming vigilante groups to protect their property. Stores and banks that were closed last week have reopened.

As in the uprisings that ousted presidents in 2005 and 2010, the current unrest has been driven by clan rivalries that dominate the country’s politics.

Kyrgyzstan, one of the poorest countries to emerge from the former Soviet Union, is a member of Russia-dominated economic and security alliances, hosts a Russian air base and depends on Moscow’s economic support. It formerly was the site of a U. S. air base that was used in the war in Afghanista­n.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Thursday said “a certain pause” in providing support to Kyrgyzstan “makes sense” because “there is no government as such, as far as we see.”

 ??  ?? Supporters of Kyrgyzstan’s Prime Minister Sadyr Zhaparov attend a rally Thursday in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
(AP/Vladimir Voronin)
Supporters of Kyrgyzstan’s Prime Minister Sadyr Zhaparov attend a rally Thursday in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. (AP/Vladimir Voronin)

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