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100,000 Uzbek Refugees Flee Deadly Chaos, Bound For Border

ANVAR ILYASOV and SASHA MERKUSHEV   06/14/10 09:22 PM ET   AP

Uzbeks Refugee

JALAL-KUDUK, Uzbekistan — Standing behind barbed wire with other Uzbek refugees, the woman tearfully raised her hands in a Muslim prayer for her dead husband. She had left his body at their burned-down house in southern Kyrgyzstan while fleeing ethnic riots that reduced much of a major city to ruins.

"He's lying there unburied," lamented the woman, who identified herself only as Khadicha, a doctor in her 50s, as she waited Monday in a no-man's land to cross into Uzbekistan.

She is among tens of thousands of minority Uzbeks who have fled the deadliest violence Kyrgyzstan has seen since the two ethnic groups fought over land 20 years ago as Moscow lost its grip on the former Soviet republic in Central Asia.

In the southern Kyrgyz city of Osh, three miles (five kilometers) from the border with Uzbekistan, gunfire pierced the air and fires raged for a fourth day. Officials said 138 people were killed and nearly 1,800 wounded since the violence began last week, but an Uzbek community leader said at least 200 Uzbeks had already been buried, and many bodies had not been recovered from charred homes and businesses.

The United States and Russia, which both have military bases in northern Kyrgyzstan – away from the violence – worked on humanitarian aid airlifts, as did the United Nations.

The U.N. Security Council late Monday condemned the violence in Kyrgyzstan and called "for calm, a return of rule of law and order, and a peaceful resolution of differences." The council, in a press statement, noted the need to support the urgent delivery of humanitarian assistance and expressed support for the efforts of Secretary- General Ban Ki-moon and regional organizations "to deal in an appropriate way with the situation."

Uzbekistan hastily set up camps to handle the flood of refugees, most of them women, children and the elderly. They were hungry and frightened, with accounts of Uzbek girls being raped and Kyrgyz snipers shooting at them as they rushed to the border. Aid workers said many had suffered gunshot wounds.

Kyrgyzstan's interim government, which took over when former President Kurmanbek Bakiyev was ousted in an April uprising in the impoverished country, has been unable to stop the violence and accused Bakiyev's family of instigating it to halt a June 27 referendum on a new constitution. Uzbeks – a minority in Kyrgyzstan as a whole but whose numbers rival the Kyrgyz in the south – have backed the interim government. Many Kyrgyz in the south have supported Bakiyev.

Kyrgyz security chief Kenishbek Duishebayev said Monday evening on television that Bakiyev's younger son, Maxim, was arrested earlier in the day in Britain when he flew into a Hampshire airport on a private plane. Britain's Home Office said it could not comment for legal reasons.

Prosecutors, who placed him on an international wanted list in May, allege that companies he owned avoided almost $80 million in taxes on aviation fuel sold to suppliers of the U.S. air base near the capital of Bishkek that is a crucial supply hub for the coalition fighting the Taliban in Afghanistan.

The violent protests that led to President Bakiyev's ouster were fed by anger over corruption permeating his extended family, which grew wealthy and powerful under his rule. The new government has been under pressure to bring them to justice.

The government said earlier it had arrested a "well-known person" suspected of stoking the violence, but gave no other details. Suspects from Tajikistan, Afghanistan and Kyrgyzstan were also detained and claimed to have been hired by Bakiyev supporters, government spokesman Farid Niyazov said.

The new leaders had hoped to seal their political and democratic credentials with the referendum, but the likelihood of that vote taking place looked slim.

From self-imposed exile in Belarus, Bakiyev has denied any role in the violence. Speaking to reporters Monday, he again blamed the interim government for not preventing the rioting and called on the Moscow-dominated Collective Security Treaty Organization to send in troops. The new Kyrgyz government asked Russia to send troops, but the Kremlin turned down the request.

Representatives of the CSTO, which includes Kyrgyzstan, met in Moscow and agreed to offer aid to Kyrgyz law enforcement agencies, Russian news agencies said. The aid could include helicopters, military vehicles and fuel, the Russian general secretary of the organization was quoted as telling President Dmitry Medvedev. The reports made no mention of sending troops.

Jallahitdin Jalilatdinov, who heads the Uzbek National Center, told The Associated Press that at least 100,000 Uzbeks were awaiting entry into Uzbekistan, while another 80,000 had crossed the border. The Uzbek government said 45,000 had already been registered.

The refugees were in about 30 camps, said Pascale Meige Wagner, head of operations in Central Asia and Europe for the International Committee of the Red Cross. "The conditions are very difficult," she said in a statement. "The authorities were prepared for about 20,000 to 30,000 coming in, but we are far above this figure."

The ICRC said one of its aid workers visited five refugee camps in the eastern Uzbekistan city of Andijan on Sunday and saw about 40 men with gunshot wounds.

Khadicha, wearing a Muslim headscarf and a traditional long dress, was among 400 refugees caught in no-man's land near the Uzbek village of Jalal-Kuduk. She carried only a small purse with her documents.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay expressed alarm at the violence and urged authorities to protect all citizens.

"It seems indiscriminate killings, including of children, and rapes have been taking place on the basis of ethnicity," Pillay said in a statement.

"This is a very dangerous situation, given the ethnic patchwork in this part of Kyrgyzstan, as well as in neighboring areas of Uzbekistan," she said. "It has been known for many years that this region is a potential tinder box, and for that reason it is essential that the authorities act firmly to halt the fighting – which appears to be orchestrated, targeted and well-planned – before it spreads further inside Kyrgyzstan or even across the border into neighboring countries."

The fertile Ferghana Valley, where Osh and Jalal-Abad are located, once belonged to a single feudal lord, but was divided by Soviet dictator Josef Stalin among Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, rekindling old rivalries.

In June 1990, hundreds were killed in a land dispute between Kyrgyz and Uzbeks in Osh, Kyrgyzstan's second-largest city, and only the quick deployment of Soviet troops quelled the fighting. A year later, the Soviet Union collapsed, and new tensions rose between Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan over distribution of water for irrigation, natural gas and electricity.

The influx of refugees to the Uzbek part of the Ferghana Valley could worsen high unemployment and poverty in the overpopulated region.

Uzbeks make up 15 percent of Kyrgyzstan's 5 million people and are generally better off economically, but they have few representatives in power and have pushed for broader political and cultural rights. Both ethnic groups are predominantly Sunni Muslim.

Few police or troops were seen on the streets of Osh, a city of 250,000. In the Anoshin neighborhood, a unit from the national police academy was working with representatives of the Uzbek and Kyrgyz communities to restore calm.

"I'm telling all the Uzbeks there is nothing to fear," Kyrgyz representative Orunbai Suleimanov told AP Television News. "I'm not going to touch anyone even with my finger and the others will behave like this as well."

Food and water were scarce after armed looters smashed stores, stealing everything from TVs to food. Cars stolen from ethnic Uzbeks raced around the city, most crowded with young Kyrgyz wielding sharpened sticks, axes and metal rods.

In the mainly Uzbek district of Aravanskoe, an area of shops and restaurants, whole streets were burned to the ground. In one smoldering building, an AP photographer saw three charred bodies.

Hundreds gathered at Osh's central square to get on buses for the airport. Gunmen have made the road from the city to the airport too dangerous to tackle alone.

Osh Police Chief Kursan Asanov told AP that 950 foreigners – mostly Russians, Pakistanis, Indians and Africans – have been evacuated since disturbances began, as well as Uzbek and Kyrgyz residents.

In the village of Sura-Tash, ethnic Uzbeks converted a mosque into a makeshift hospital. Health workers treated anyone who came in with wounds from beatings or ordinary conditions such as heat exhaustion and diabetes. Vodka was used to sterilize medical equipment and powdered plaster was melted down to use as casts for broken limbs.

Some Uzbeks said the Kyrgyz attackers seemed to have the support of the military.

"Many people have died, snipers fired from more than one kilometer away, and organized gangs followed the military as they drove in with armored personnel carriers," said Lutsalla Khakimov, a doctor working at the mosque. "This was organized, they wanted to start a war."

As the clashes continued, desperately needed aid began trickling into the south. Several planes arrived at Osh's airport with tons of medical supplies from the World Health Organization. Trucks carried supplies into the city with an armed escort. The ICRC said one planeload of medical supplies had been flown to Osh and 12 more would be arriving in coming days.

The U.S. had a shipment of tents, cots and medical supplies ready to fly to Osh from its Manas air base in Bishkek, the U.S. Embassy said. The air base said it had also gathered food and fuel that would be delivered to Osh.

The State Department said the U.S. has committed $600,000 in immediate humanitarian assistance and identified an additional $200,000 in medical and emergency supplies that will be distributed.

___

Merkushev reported from Osh, Kyrgyzstan. Also contributing were Associated Press writer D. Dalton Bennett in Osh, Yuras Karmanau and Leila Saralayeva in Bishkeik, Kyrgyzstan, and Mansur Mirovalev in Moscow.

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JALAL-KUDUK, Uzbekistan — Standing behind barbed wire with other Uzbek refugees, the woman tearfully raised her hands in a Muslim prayer for her dead husband. She had left his body at their burn...
JALAL-KUDUK, Uzbekistan — Standing behind barbed wire with other Uzbek refugees, the woman tearfully raised her hands in a Muslim prayer for her dead husband. She had left his body at their burn...
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05:12 AM on 06/16/2010
I also have been compelled actually to run away from Russia because I was pursued by special services - KGB, my human rights were violated repeatedly by the authorities of Russia and Finland. I came to Germany from Finland by Spain visa. I was put in prison. My application for asylum was “examined” with gross violation of standards of law : they didn`t give me any possibility to appeal against any decisions ; they refused to give me a lawyer and an interpreter ; and didn`t give me till now any materials of affairs , any answers to my numerous applications and so on. In prison they subjected me to tortures ; I was put into psychiatric hospital under compulsion and so on. “Humane” A. Merkel didn`t answer to my application from 14 Feb 2008 . The answer to my repeated complaint to A. Merkel and to the president of Germany, or rather - as a response from them - I was deported. Not in Finland - to my husband, or in other safe country for me, but in Russia. To this day I cannot get from German authorities: answers to all my applications and the materials of cases; the return of my pet- the kitten, which was taken from me by German dregs in police uniform; the return of all my material values, money, documents and so on ...
But UNHCHR Navi Pillay till now has not answered complaints about my situation - she does not hurry... http://wickholm-irina.blogspot.com/ .
11:31 PM on 06/15/2010
What do the Muslim nations have to say about this? Why doesn't Iran or Sausi Arabia send troops and stop the killing?
08:41 PM on 06/15/2010
This is what hate-mongering and fear can do to a society. To those who advocate armed conflict and government overthrow, gunning down suspected illegal immigrants etc.well folks, this is what "watering the tree of liberty with the blood of patriots" looks like. The Repubs and Palinest who advocate "lock and load", are you prepared for scenes like this in America? To the Fox fake news reporters who call the President dangerous and accuse him of "taking away your freedoms", advocating his violent removal, praising the lunatic fringe that agrees with them, are you ready to take responsiblity for this scenario happening here? Just wondering.
01:21 PM on 06/15/2010
WHY IS THIS STORY NOT ON HUFFPOST'S HOME PAGE?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Son of Sensi
To be or not to be, is that seriously a question?
03:43 PM on 06/15/2010
sadly, because it's 2 countries no one can pronounce, and neither the US or Israel is involved.
12:31 PM on 06/15/2010
why is there not a single UN Security Council / UN Human Rights / UN as a whole resolution / action or anything in regards to these devastating events?!!!!
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01:01 PM on 06/15/2010
because they are corrupt and there is no opportunity to bash america or jews.
12:12 PM on 06/15/2010
this is raw footage from the Kyrgyzstan border today - a truly scary scene, my heart goes out to these people:
http://www.frequency.com/video/raw-footage/111954
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PrideCraddock
Black...Yankee...Lesbian...Living in the south!
11:53 AM on 06/15/2010
This is because we live in a male dominated society. Women, children and elderly die because men can keep them selves out of pissing contest.
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Richard Aron
Be the change you wish to see in the world. Gandhi
11:09 AM on 06/15/2010
The son of the former Kyrgyz president was arrested in the UK by Interpol for corruption charges. Let's see if there will be a link between his father and what happened.
10:49 AM on 06/15/2010
Who cares? this does not involve Israel, so lets continue to ignore this in the international community.

Hamas can't get candy so lets have an EMMERGENCY UN meeting. But for this genocide? Nothing, not even a statement, no flotillas, barely even on the news....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Muslimhumanist
Liberty for the wolves is death for the lambs
02:48 PM on 06/15/2010
And you seem to care for the people of Kyrgyzstan. It is more than "Hamas can't get candy." It is about only allowing the people of Gaza subsistence until they throw out Hamas. It is about building a ghetto. And for some reason the first thing you think about when you see people in refugee camps in Uzbekistan is what you perceive as the unfair treatment of Israel. Do you really care?
07:14 AM on 06/15/2010
Tribal, Religious, Economic wars never seem to end and the fact of hate and intolerance for others being instigated by religious leaders and businessmen is a combination for a nightmare that is being played out.

Will Russia intervene is the big question but i know America will not being in 2 wars already.
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02:12 PM on 06/15/2010
american has an air base there.
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Son of Sensi
To be or not to be, is that seriously a question?
03:47 PM on 06/15/2010
as does GB
jackstpaul
What am I supposed to write here?
05:15 AM on 06/15/2010
And this isn't getting carried on TV yet?
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Son of Sensi
To be or not to be, is that seriously a question?
03:47 PM on 06/15/2010
keep waiting for it, maybe, MAYBE it'll get 2 minutes on CNN at some point.
02:01 AM on 06/15/2010
More familiar footage of women, children and the elderly fleeing for their lives. When will it end...
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Son of Sensi
To be or not to be, is that seriously a question?
03:48 PM on 06/15/2010
getting over the god myth would be a good start
01:12 AM on 06/15/2010
Who's stoking these fires, who?

Why are Muslim nations keeping silent?

And where's the rest of the world?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jennifer Hagan
Expat Mother of two living in France.
07:05 AM on 06/15/2010
Well, this is a nation of majority Muslim. it isn't a religion issue it is an ethnic issue. So, this would be the same as saying why didn't all the Anglican church nations step in when there was ethnic violence in Kenya. The rest of the world doesn't care. It is sad but true. They'll do the same thing they did after Rwanda and the Balkans. They'll lament the life lost and make memorials but do nothing to save the people that are being killed. I have no faith that any nation will step up.
09:53 AM on 06/15/2010
It most certainly partly a religious issue. Muslim have been fighting for centuries over who's interpretation of the Qur'an is right.
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12:58 AM on 06/15/2010
Dangerous political provocations of ethnic differences, probably for cynical purposes disguised as nationalism.

For shame
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Erzsebet Gilbert
author, expat, traveler
01:47 AM on 06/15/2010
Unfortunately, "cynical purposes disguised as nationalism" in cases of politically-provoked violence over ethnic differences aren't new at all. Think of Sarajevo, Rwanda, Nazi Germany.... too old a tale.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gevan
big dubya
11:45 PM on 06/14/2010
So which side is al-Qaeda on, so we know who we are against.
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Erzsebet Gilbert
author, expat, traveler
01:47 AM on 06/15/2010
I hope you are being sardonic here - I can't tell - isn't it time to look at an issue without deciding who's the one we ought to hate?
02:04 AM on 06/15/2010
all Sunnis... all kind of turkish too...so it is more a tribal battle...?