| Topic: |
Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus |
| User: |
"The Court Fool" |
| Date: |
14 May 2005 10:44:02 AM |
| Object: |
U.S. Ally Fires On Its People (And what will the WH*RE say now?) |
Karimov said people from Kyrgyzstan were among the organizers of the
violence in Andijan, and claimed they were trying to repeat the events
from the neighboring country in Uzbekistan.
Almambet Matubraimov, acting President Kurmanbek Bakiyev's
representative in southern Kyrgyzstan, vehemently denied the
accusation.
"It's not true that Kyrgyz citizens were involved in the events in
Andijan. Our people have nothing to do with it. Kyrgyzstan has had
nothing to do with it," he said.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Oh yes, Kyrgyzstan will have much to do with it once Karimov decides to
carry out a border incursion into Kyrgyzstan searching for
"terrorists", in the likeness of Israel's action in southern Lebanon.
Stop it, stop it guys. The WH*RE just wants people to ***** her *****.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
And will we hear passionate warnings or comdemnations from the dirty
fucking filth WH*RE against "horrible" repression toward peaceful
agitators, like we did in Ukraine and Georgia? No. Mr. Karimov is
resorting to these methods becuase he knows he can get away with it
from his favorite "***** dumpster"
The paralells with Iran with this situation are numerous. Accept this
time the stink WH*RE will not let it hapen again this time. It will
just degenerate into an Algeria.
BEWARE TURKEY, BEWARE!!!
__
! !
!__!__
! !
__! !
***** THE WH*RE OF BABYLON!!!!
U.S. Ally Fires On Its People
ANDIJAN, Uzbekistan, May 14, 2005
President Islam Karimov claimed Saturday that authorities tried to
negotiate a peaceful end to protests, but that troops were forced to
open fire when insurgents who had seized a government building
attempted to break through an advancing line of Uzbek police and
soldiers.
He said 10 government troops and "many more" militants died in fighting
Friday in the eastern city of Andijan. Relatives of the victims
condemned the government, accusing troops of killing innocent
civilians. Witnesses said 200 to 300 people were shot dead.
On Saturday, protesters overran government buildings in an Uzbek
village on the Uzbek-Kyrgyz border, torching police vehicles and
beating border guards, a Kyrgyz official said.
The fresh clashes broke out in the village of Korasuv, some 31 miles
east of Andijan. Uzbek police and tax police offices were set on fire,
and police cars were vandalized, a Kyrgyz official said on condition of
anonymity. Uzbek helicopters were seen circling over the town.
On Friday, soldiers loyal to Karimov, who has maintained tight control
over this Central Asian nation, fired on thousands of demonstrators to
put down an uprising that began when armed men freed 2,000 inmates from
prison, including suspects on trial for alleged Islamic extremism. The
U.S. State Department expressed concern on Friday that members of the
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, which is on the U.S. list of terrorist
groups, were freed.
Karimov said at least 100 people were wounded in the Friday clashes. He
didn't specify who fired first.
Hundreds of angry protesters gathered Saturday at the site of the
violence, placing six bodies on display from among the scores of people
witnesses said were killed in fighting. Knots of bystanders watched as
men covered other bloodied bodies with white shrouds.
Demonstrators, some with tears in their eyes, condemned the government
for firing on women and children.
Fleeing the violence, some 6,000 Uzbek residents headed Saturday to the
border. Kyrgyz border guards were awaiting a government decision on
whether to allow them in, said Gulmira Borubayeva, a spokeswoman for
Kyrgyzstan's border guard service.
Karimov said Saturday that authorities tried to negotiate a peaceful
way out - but won't yield to the protesters' demand - which he
described as excessive - for freedom for all their followers across
the Fergana Valley.
"To accept their terms would mean that we are setting a precedent that
no other country in the world would accept," Karimov told a news
conference in the capital, Tashkent.
The Uzbek leader denied that forces would target innocent civilians.
"In Uzbekistan, nobody fights against women, children or the elderly,"
Karimov said.
He also claimed the government also earlier offered the demonstrators
free passage out of the city in buses - with their weapons, seized in
attacks on a police station and military outpost.
But a protest leader, Kabuljon Parpiyev, said Interior Minister Zakir
Almatov didn't sound willing to negotiate in a phone call Friday. "He
said, 'We don't care if 200, 300 or 400 people die. We have force and
we will chuck you out of there anyway,'" Parpiyev quoted Almatov as
saying.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Karimov spoke by telephone on
Saturday, the Kremlin said.
"Both sides expressed concern about the danger of the destabilization
of the situation in the Central Asian region," the Kremlin press
service said in a statement.
In Washington, the White House urged restraint by both sides. "The
people of Uzbekistan want to see a more representative and democratic
government. But that should come through peaceful means, not through
violence," White House spokesman Scott McClellan said Friday.
No government forces were at the square early Saturday, but a few
blocks away, about 30 soldiers clad in flak jackets and armed with
assault rifles stood ready for action.
Big military trucks loaded with soldiers cruised the streets and troops
backed by armored vehicles surrounded heavily fortified local police
headquarters in the city.
Earlier Saturday, soldiers loaded scores of bodies onto four trucks and
a bus after blocking friends and relatives from collecting them,
witnesses said.
Lutfulo Shamsutdinov, head of the Independent Human Rights Organization
of Uzbekistan, said he saw the bodies of about 200 victims being loaded
onto trucks near the square.
A witness in central Andijan told The Associated Press that "many, many
dead bodies are stacked up by a school near the square."
An AP reporter saw at least 30 bodies. All had been shot, and at least
one had his skull smashed. The streets were stained with blood and
littered with spent cartridges.
Daniyar Akbarov, 24, joined the protests Saturday after being freed
from the prison during the earlier clashes.
"Our women and children are dying," he said, tearfully beating his
chest with his fists. Akbarov said he saw at least 300 people killed.
The focus of the jailbreak was 23 men charged with membership in a
group allegedly allied with the outlawed radical Islamic party
Hizb-ut-Tahrir, which seeks to create a worldwide Islamic state and has
been forced underground throughout most of Central Asia and Russia.
Supporters of the 23 men say they were victims of religious repression
by Karimov's secular government.
The men are alleged members of Akramia - a group named for their
founder, Akram Yuldashev, an Islamic dissident sentenced in 1999 to 17
years in prison for allegedly urging the overthrow of Karimov. He has
proclaimed his innocence.
Akramis are considered the backbone of Andijan's small business
community, running a medical clinic and pharmacy, as well as working as
furniture craftsmen, and providing employment to thousands in the
impoverished Fergana Valley, where Islamist sentiment runs high.
Their trial has inspired one of the largest public shows of anger at
the government. In recent weeks, Uzbeks have shown increasing
willingness to challenge the leadership in protests, apparently
bolstered by the March uprising in Kyrgyzstan that drove out President
Askar Akayev and the similar ones in Ukraine and Georgia.
Karimov said people from Kyrgyzstan were among the organizers of the
violence in Andijan, and claimed they were trying to repeat the events
from the neighboring country in Uzbekistan.
Almambet Matubraimov, acting President Kurmanbek Bakiyev's
representative in southern Kyrgyzstan, vehemently denied the
accusation.
"It's not true that Kyrgyz citizens were involved in the events in
Andijan. Our people have nothing to do with it. Kyrgyzstan has had
nothing to do with it," he said
.
|
|

|
Related Articles |
Oh well, guess what peoplez ?!?!?! Yeppers, yes siree yes indeedy deedy deedily do !!! It'z that time of the day once again to say the now world famous goodbye HOOROO !! to all of my favorite peoplez out there in APN land, Adios, aufwiedersehen, au r WMD have been found, so what will the Liberals say now? =?utf-8?q?oH_Well_party_peoplez_in_da_Haus,_it'z_that_time_of_the_day_once_again_for_your_dear_ol'_Uncle_Wally_to_say_the_now_world_famous_HOOROO_to_all_of_his_favorite_peoplez_!!!_so_it'z_Au_revoir,_aufwiedersehen,_aloha,_sayonara,_joy_gin,_da_sweda =?utf-8?q?oH_Well_kids,_it'z_that_time_of_the_day_once_again_for_your_dear_ol'_Uncle_Wally_to_say_the_now_world_famous_HOOROO_to_all_of_his_favorite_peoplez_!!!_so_it'z_Au_revoir,_aufwiedersehen,_aloha,_sayonara,_joy_gin,_da_swedanya,_farval,_ciao_be Re: Try to say *this* ten times the right to bear arms is not in the Constitution say gun grabbers Gallup: 72% of teens say abortion wrong Re: Did I just hear Wacko Jacko say
| did someone say.. What is he trying to say? Liberals say, "Let your kids consort with criminals" Black minister: Say 'no' to Kwanzaa Students Say Press has "Too Much Freedom" Could lawsuit against Indian casino succeed? Some experts say yes, it's possible Liberal groups say their study shows globalization hurts low-income workers
|
|
|