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| Uzbek President Islam Karimov speaks at a
press conference in Tashkent, capital of Uzbekistan May 14, 2005.
(Xinhua/AFP photo) |
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| Two Uzbekistan women walked through downtown Andizhan after the riot. (Xinhua/AFP photo) |
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| A Uzbekistan nurse is taking care of the wounded at the hospital. (Xinhua/AFP photo) |
MOSCOW, May 14 (Xinhuanet) -- Uzbek President Islam
Karimov said Saturday an organization linked to the outlawed radical Hizb
ut-Tahrir group was behind the unrest in Andijan that has left 10 government
troops and many more protesters dead Friday in violent clashes, the Interfax
news agency reported.
"The organizers of the unrest were 'Akramites,' a new
offshoot of the Hizb ut-Tahrir group. Its goals, which are unacceptable forus,
are hatred and denial of the secular way of development," Karimov told a press
conference in Tashkent, capital of Uzbekistan.
"According to information we have, they are
brainwashing young people with ideas of creating a unified Islamic state,"
Karimov said.
The radical Islamic Hizb ut-Tahrir group was also
held responsible by the Uzbek government for murdering dozens of peoplein
Uzbekistan last year.
Karimov said the center that fomented the unrest in
Andijan lies in south Kyrgyzstan and the Fergana valley. Rioters made phone
calls to the Kyrgyz towns of Osh and Dzhalal-Abad from the regional government
building they captured, he said.
Armed protesters began to rally in Andijan Wednesday
to demand the release of 23 men who have been on trial since February for links
to the Hizb ut-Tahrir group but have pleaded not guilty.
Violence culminated days of protest Friday with
witnesses reporting vehicles and a theater being torched and bloodshed in
clashes near a downtown square.
Witnesses reported a night of relative calm before
bursts of gunfire at dawn Saturday.
Karimov described the developments in Andijan as an
attempt to copy the recent events in Kyrgyzstan. "We realize that such
developments spill across the borders to the territories of neighboring
countries," he said.
Karimov said the authorities had tried to create
favorable conditions for negotiations with the rioters, who "were offered
transport to leave along their chosen route," but the government could not
accept rioters' condition to release jailed supporters in different parts of the
country.
"No country negotiates such things with criminals,"
Karimov said.
The situation in the former Soviet republic caused
wide concernafter governments collapsed in three other former Soviet republics--
Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan -- in the past one and a half years.
Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke to Karimov on
the phone Saturday to express deep concern about the threat to stability in
Central Asia. Enditem |