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RIA Novosti / Iliya Varlamov, STR 15.06.2010, 12:06 1 comment

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RIA Novosti / Andrey Stenin 01.07.2010, 17:58

Kyrgyz stability hanging by a thread

The situation in Kyrgyzstan has somewhat stabilized of late, but new riots cannot be ruled out, according to Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) Secretary General Nikolay Bordyuzha.

Uzbeks stage protests in Moscow

Published: 12 June, 2010, 19:38
Edited: 15 June, 2010, 09:26


More than a hundred ethnic Uzbeks have staged a protest outside Kyrgyzstan's embassy in Moscow. Last Thursday some 200 Uzbeks gathered near the Government Building.

 
6 COMMENTS
cheez June 13, 2010, 00:17 quote
0

This is happening because the CIA are trying to de-stablize Uzbekistan. America wants an excuse to send troops eventually in order to start a war with Russia and China. Clearly they are surrounding Russia and China any chance they can get.

Vladimir June 13, 2010, 00:20 quote
0

Uzbeks in Kyrgyzstan are instigated by CIA agents to raise a riot in this period of political unrest. I suppose Americans will now make an offer their troupes to enter Kyrgyzstan to make a "peace" there. And to push some "democracy" into Kyrgyzstan, I presume? That is the last thing the Kyrgyz people should do.

Ambricourt June 13, 2010, 10:25 quote
0

Is Russia acting wisely in refusing to be drawn into the conflict? The Americans, who are probably responsible for the unrest, will fill the vacuum with "humanitarian" relief workers - usually trained soldiers acting in a non-military role but dedicated to US expansion into Central Asia. Once the Americans are present, they don't leave. Soon, the country becomes part of the empire, tied by bonds of debt to ever-loving plutocratic Amerika. Reports of the disturbances in Osh remind me of reports from Timosoara, Romania, in 1989. Events moved quickly then, leading to the extra-judicial execution of the President and his wife, the destruction of communism and the present servile condition of a once-proud country. Events are likely to move even faster today. Amerika is more dedicated in its fanaticism to control Central Asia than in 1989. Beware Russia and China! You are being out-outmaneuvered.

Fred June 13, 2010, 11:18 quote
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What has to happen, to make Russia do something? Have they forgotten the 90's, Georgia, Ukraine etc.,(thank God for the Ukraine people the US puppet Yushenko is gone) or do they believe the US like the Roman Empire will destroy itself, perhaps , look at Latin America as an example only Colombia and one Central American country , heavily financed by the American tax payer can you call US allies......yet countries like Kyrgystan ARE in Russia's backyard and the desperate "wounded eagle" is just as greedy as ever and must be contained somehow if necessary for the good of the world. fred.......oregon,usa

A. Sharipov June 13, 2010, 11:46 quote
0

Please join us on June 13th at 10 AM at White House, to support people of Kyrgyzstan to help to stop violence and to promote peace.

Razkolnik June 14, 2010, 05:46 quote
0

USA! CIA! What is it with you people that you always blame them! So don't you believe that sometimes Russia and other states couldn't or wouldn't use their secret services for their purpuses is wanted??? Rosa Okumbayeva already said it - these clashes are masterminded by the CSTO states in order to destabilize the country and to underminde the upcoming referendum. Well, why would they want to prevent the referendum, you ask? What is it about this referendum that makes the CSTO leaders so scared of it? Because if passed by the peoples it would change the constitution - a) turning Kyrgyztan into the first and only parliamentiary republic among all the CIS states and b) making it impossible by law to monopolize the mass media under one party. You can compare what is happening now in Kyrgyzstan to the French revolution of 1789 and the counter-revolutionary reaction by the monarchys of Europe in the years that followed. A succesfully passed referendum would put a democraticaly elected parliament in charge, instead of the president, thus creating a precedent in the post-soviet sphere. This would make people in the CIS ask themselves "Why do we have to tolerate life-long autocratic presidents (Karimov, Nazarbaev, Lukashenko, Yeltsin and Putin, etc...) being in charge unchecked for 20 years now? Why do we have to tolerate state-controlled mass media? Why can't we have our country run by the parliament? Hey, look at fellow Kyrgyzstan, their peoples rose up, passed a referendum, and now look - the have real democracy! Why can't WE have that?!!" And now you get why the CSTO countries' leaders are so scared of such a prospect, and why the clashes started exactly now during the SCO summit in Tashkent...

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