UN: 1 million may need aid after Kyrgyz clashes; interim leader says death toll could be 2,000

By Peter Leonard, AP
Friday, June 18, 2010

UN: 1 million may need aid after Kyrgyz clashes

OSH, Kyrgyzstan — The United Nations says as many as 1 million people may need aid after the outbreak of ethnic clashes in the south of Kyrgyzstan.

U.N. aid agencies and the World Health Organization say the figure of 1 million in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan includes the potential number of refugees, internally displaced, host families and others that may suffer in one way or another from the unrest.

UNICEF spokeswoman Christiane Berthiaume said Friday the figure was an estimate to help agencies plan how much aid they need to prepare. She says the actual number of people in need may be turn out to be higher or lower.

The aid agencies say those uprooted by the unrest most urgently need food, water, medicine and shelter.

Engeler reported from Geneva.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

OSH, Kyrgyzstan (AP) — Kyrgyzstan’s interim president said Friday that the death toll from the ethnic clashes that have rocked the country’s south could be near 2,000, as she made her first visit to a riot-hit city since the unrest broke out.

Kyrgyz Health Ministry officials figures put the number of killed in rampages led mainly by ethnic Kyrgyz against Uzbeks at 191.

“I would increase by ten times the official data on the number of people killed,” Interim President Roza Otunbayeva said, according to her spokesman, Farid Niyazov. She said current figures don’t take into account those buried before sundown on the day of death, in keeping with Muslim tradition, according to the spokesman.

Otumbayeva arrived early Friday by helicopter in the central square of Osh, a city of 250,000 where the violence began late last week. Parts of the city have been reduced to rubble by roving mobs of young Kyrgyz men who burned down Uzbek homes and attacked Uzbek-owned businesses.

The United Nations estimates that 400,000 people fled the country’s south.

“We have to give hope that we shall restore the city, return all the refugees and create all the conditions for that,” she said.

She insisted good will between ethnic Kyrgyz and Uzbeks would end hostilities.

Up to 100,000 people have crossed the nearby border into neighboring Uzbekistan where they are getting food and water in specially created camps. Thousands more remain camped out in squalid conditions on the Kyrgyz side of the border, unable to cross due to Uzbek restrictions.

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Robert Blake, who was visiting a refugee camp in Uzbekistan about five kilometers (3 miles) from the Kyrgyz border, called for an investigation into the violence and said he was working to ensure the refugees would be able to return home safely.

At one camp in Uzbekistan, in a former polymer plant near the Kyrgyz border, Blake was swamped by throngs of crying refugees, mainly older woman and children, complaining they were desperate to return home but too fearful of fresh attacks to do so.

“We … believe there should be an investigation,” he said, an Uzbek interpreter at his side. “We are working with the government of Kyrgyzstan to provide security so you can return home safely,”

Blake, who was accompanied by two-dozen-strong security detail, appeared to be conducting his own probe, asking the refugees if they thought the violence had been organized, as the United Nations and Kyrgyz authorities have suggested.

“Yes, of course it was organized, it all happened so unexpectedly,” answered one refugee, Nasiba Mamyrdzhanova, from Osh. “We didn’t have any weapons, only sticks,” said the refugee, wearing a traditional Uzbek long-sleeved dress with a bright headscarf.

Kyrgyz authorities have said the violence was sparked deliberately by associates of Kurmanbek Bakiyev, the president who was toppled in April in a bloody uprising. The U.N. has said the unrest appeared orchestrated but has stopped short of apportioning blame.

Ethnic Uzbeks on Thursday accused security forces of standing by or even helping ethnic-majority Kyrgyz mobs as they slaughtered people and burned down neighborhoods. Col. Iskander Ikramov, the chief of the Kyrgyz military in the south, rejected allegations of troop involvement in the riots but said the army didn’t interfere in the conflict because it was not supposed to play the role of a police force.

The military and police set up roadblocks and began patrols this week after the worst violence was over.

Uzbeks interviewed by Associated Press journalists in Osh said that on one street alone, ethnic Kyrgyz men sexually assaulted and beat more than 10 Uzbek women and girls, including some pregnant women and children as young as 12.

Members of the Kyrgyz community have denied accusations of brutality and have accused Uzbeks of raping Kyrgyz women. Eyewitnesses and experts say many Kyrgyz were killed in the unrest, but most victims appear to have been Uzbeks, traditional farmers and traders who speak a different Turkic language and have been more prosperous than the Kyrgyz, who come from a nomadic tradition.

More than 1 million Uzbeks who lived in Kyrgyzstan before the crisis had few representatives in power and pushed for broader political and cultural rights. About 800,000 of them lived in the south, rivaling Kyrgyz in numbers in Osh and Jalal-Abad. Both ethnic groups are predominantly Sunni Muslim.

Meanwhile, in Bishkek, the capital, human rights advocates were gathering in the center to demand authorities probe the alleged arrest of their colleague in the southern city of Jalal-Abad, who said he had filmed rioting that spread there.

Associated Press writers Yuras Karmanau in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, and Masha Stromova from the Khadjabad region in Uzbekistan contributed to this report.

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