San Diego Union-Tribune

KYRGYZSTAN PRESIDENT SAYS HE’S QUITTING

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MOSCOW

After more than a week in hiding following a disputed election, the president of Kyrgyzstan — Central Asia’s only democracy — on Thursday announced his plans to resign, saying that he did not want to go down in history as a leader “who shed blood and shot at his own citizens.”

In a statement issued from an undisclose­d location, the president, Sooronbai Jeenbekov, said he had “taken a decision to resign,” although he did not specify whether he had already quit.

Just a few hours earlier, Jeenbekov had assured a delegation of former senior officials and political veterans that he had no plans to step down and would stand firm against a power grab widely believed to be backed by criminal elements.

Feliks Kulov, a former prime minister who met with the president Thursday, voiced concern over Jeenbekov’s abrupt change of heart, speculatin­g in a post on Facebook that the leader had been “presented with a choice: voluntary resignatio­n or a real war.”

The day’s dizzying events, which left a freed prisoner in charge of the government as prime minister, seemed to signal the end of what began as a protest by mainstream opposition forces over a rigged election and degenerate­d last week into a reign of chaos fueled by thugs and criminals.

Jeenbekov vanished from view after protesters, enraged by Oct. 4 parliament­ary elections that were marred by widespread votebuying, stormed the president’s office and other government buildings in the capital, Bishkek. He was rumored to have taken refuge in a Russian military air base in the town of Kant, about 12 miles from Bishkek, but his exact whereabout­s remained unclear.

His departure is the third time in 15 years that violent protests have toppled a president of Kyrgyzstan, the only country in the region with a vibrant civil society, a relatively free press and regular competitiv­e elections for Parliament and the presidency.

 ?? VLADIMIR VORONIN AP ?? Demonstrat­ors celebrate the announceme­nt that Kyrgyzstan President Sooronbai Jeenbekov will resign. Jeenbekov said he did not want to go down in history as a leader “who shed blood and shot at his own citizens.”
VLADIMIR VORONIN AP Demonstrat­ors celebrate the announceme­nt that Kyrgyzstan President Sooronbai Jeenbekov will resign. Jeenbekov said he did not want to go down in history as a leader “who shed blood and shot at his own citizens.”

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