The Columbus Dispatch

Kazakhstan arrests fired anti-terror commander

Accused of trying to overthrow government

- Jim Heintz

MOSCOW – The former head of Kazakhstan’s counterint­elligence and anti-terror agency has been arrested on charges of attempted government overthrow in the wake of violent protests that the president has blamed on foreign-backed terrorists.

The arrest of Karim Masimov was announced Saturday by the National Security Committee, which Masimov headed until he was removed last week by President Kassym-jomart Tokayev.

Authoritie­s said security forces killed 26 demonstrat­ors in last week’s unrest and that 18 law-enforcemen­t officers died. More than 4,400 people have been arrested, the Interior Ministry said Saturday.

The protests in the Central Asian nation were the most widespread since Kazakhstan’s independen­ce from the Soviet Union in 1991.

The unrest began in the country’s far west as protests against a sharp rise in prices for liquefied petroleum gas that is widely used as vehicle fuel. The protests spread to the country’s largest city, Almaty, where demonstra

tors seized and burned government buildings.

At Tokayev’s request, the Collective Security Treaty Organizati­on, a Russia-led military alliance of six former Soviet states, authorized sending about 2,500 mostly Russian troops to Kazakhstan as peacekeepe­rs.

Some of the force is guarding government facilities in the capital, Nursultan, which “made it possible to release part of the forces of Kazakhstan­i law enforcemen­t agencies and redeploy them to Almaty to participat­e in the counterter­rorist operation,” according to a statement from Tokayev’s office.

Tokayev said Friday that he had authorized security forces to shoot to kill those participat­ing in unrest. On Saturday, there were no immediate reports of trouble in Almaty. Police dispersed a demonstrat­ion and detained people in the city of Aktau, while sporadic gunfire was heard in Kyzylorda, Russian news agency Sputnik said.

Sputnik later reported a clash outside Almaty on the main highway leading to Kyrgyzstan, but its size and intensity were unknown. The Russian internet broadcaste­r Dozhd said police fired weapons into the air and at the ground outside the city morgue.

No details were given about what Masimov, the former security agency head, was alleged to have done that would constitute an attempted government overthrow. The National Security Committee, a successor to the Soviet-era KGB, is responsibl­e for counterint­elligence, the border guards service and anti-terror activities.

Although the protests began as denunciati­ons of the near-doubling of liquefied petroleum gas prices at the start of the year, their spread and intense violence indicate they reflected widespread dissatisfa­ction in the former Soviet republic run by the same party for more than 30 years.

Many demonstrat­ors shouted “Old man out,” a reference to Nursultan Nazarbayev, who was president from Kazakhstan’s independen­ce until he resigned in 2019 and anointed Tokayev as his successor.

Nazarbayev, who was given the title “ebasy,” or leader of the nation, retained substantia­l power as head of the National Security Council. But Tokayev removed him as council head amid this week’s unrest, possibly aiming at a concession to mollify protesters.

Nazarbayev remained invisible during the chaos, but on Saturday his spokesman said Nazarbayev was in the capital and “calls on everyone to rally around the president of Kazakhstan to overcome current challenges and ensure the integrity of our country.”

 ?? VASILY KRESTYANIN­OV/AP ?? Unrest began last week in the country’s far west as protests against a sharp rise in prices for liquefied petroleum gas that is widely used as vehicle fuel.
VASILY KRESTYANIN­OV/AP Unrest began last week in the country’s far west as protests against a sharp rise in prices for liquefied petroleum gas that is widely used as vehicle fuel.

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