Dozens Reported Dead in Kazakhstan, as Russian Alliance Sends Troops
MOSCOW — A Russia-led military alliance began deploying
paratroopers in Kazakhstan on Thursday as part of a peacekeeping operation
after a night of protests in the Central Asian country turned violent, with the
police reporting that dozens of anti-government demonstrators had been killed
and hundreds injured.
The peacekeeping effort, organized by a group that is
Russia’s version of NATO, will be limited in time and will aim at protecting
government buildings and military objects, the body said in a statement. It did
not specify how many soldiers would be mobilized. Some troops have already
started operating in Kazakhstan, the statement said.
Saltanat Azirbek, a police spokeswoman in Almaty,
Kazakhstan’s largest city, said that dozens of people had been killed by the
authorities when they tried to storm government buildings, police headquarters
and district police offices, the first widespread fatalities since the protests
started. That announcement came after earlier reports in the local news media
that the police had opened fire on demonstrators in the oil city of Atyrau,
killing at least one person.
The police warned people living near main government
buildings to stay at home.
The announcement of the military deployment came after a
night of violent protests swept Kazakhstan’s cities, including Almaty, where
some protesters came with firearms and started looting shops and malls,
according to video footage posted from the scene. They set government buildings
on fire, including the city hall and the old office of the country’s president.
They also captured the airport.
The authorities reported that in addition to those who had
been killed, about a thousand people had been injured and up to 400 had been
hospitalized. At least eight members of the security forces have been killed in
the clashes, the police reported on Wednesday.
The revolt began on Sunday in western Kazakhstan as a
protest against a surge in fuel prices. Even though the government said it
would rescind the price increase, the protests widened, spreading across the
country, with broader demands for increased political representation and
improved social benefits.
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