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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stockman_scott who wrote (162068)5/15/2005 10:08:43 AM
From: sylvester80  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 281500
 
NEWS: UZBEKISTAN BUSH CLOSE FRIEND & ALLY GUNS DOWN OWN PEOPLE, WOMEN & CHILDREN IN COLD BLOODED MURDER MASSACRE!!!!!

This is one of Bush's closest friend and ally. A COMPLETE CRIMINAL MURDEROUS THUG!!!! Just like BUSH, his best friend.

Uzbeks bury dead after troops fire on protesters
Sun May 15, 2005 09:26 AM ET

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Witnesses describe bloodbath outside Uzbek school

By Dmitry Solovyov
ANDIZHAN, Uzbekistan (Reuters) - Families of the hundreds killed when Uzbek troops opened fire to quell protests in Andizhan buried their dead on Sunday as witnesses told of bloody mayhem in which women and children were gunned down.

"They shot at us like rabbits," a boy in his late teens said recalling the horror of troops rampaging through the town square on Friday where some 3,000 protesters had rallied in support of rebels holed up in a state building with police hostages.

A Russian news agency also reported that Uzbek troops had fired on civilians trying to flee into neighboring Kyrgyzstan to escape the violence in their homeland.

Uzbekistan's autocratic president, Islam Karimov, said on Saturday no order had been given to troops to fire in Andizhan. He said he had forbidden the use of force against women, children and the elderly.

Karimov, a close ally in the U.S. war on terrorism since giving Washington an airbase in 2001, said 10 police and troops had been killed and a higher number of rebels had also died. He gave no figure for civilians killed.

But two days after an uprising in the mostly Muslim Central Asian state's Ferghana Valley, blood and body parts could still be seen on sidewalks and in gutters in the center of this leafy city of 300,000 people.

The facade of the two-storey School No. 15, the scene witnesses said of a massacre of civilians and police being held hostage, was pockmarked with at least 20 bullet holes.

Pools of wet blood mixed with water and dirt could be seen in the blocked open drains. A blood-soaked baseball cap lay in bushes.

Andizhan violence started early on Friday when armed rebels freed from prison comrades standing trial for religious extremism. They took 10 police hostage and occupied Andizhan's local government building backed by thousands of sympathizers.

Human rights campaigner Saidzhakhon Zainabitdinov estimated up to 500 people may have been killed in the ensuing operation to crush the protests, which would make it the bloodiest incident in Uzbekistan's post-Soviet history.

Witnesses said that on Saturday, when soldiers started removing bodies, a handful of wounded tried to get away but were shot dead on the spot. "Those wounded who tried to get away were finished with single shots from a Kalashnikov rifle," said one witness, a businessman. "Three or four soldiers were assigned to killing the wounded."

reuters.com



To: stockman_scott who wrote (162068)5/15/2005 10:10:37 AM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 281500
 
NEWS: Witnesses describe bloodbath outside Uzbek school
Sun May 15, 2005 09:05 AM ET
reuters.com

By Dmitry Solovyov
ANDIZHAN, Uzbekistan (Reuters) - Uzbek soldiers fired into a crowd, including women, children and their own police comrades begging them not to shoot, when they crushed an uprising in the town of Andizhan, witnesses said on Sunday.

Soldiers later moved in among "literally hundreds" of bodies, finishing off some of the wounded with a single bullet, said one witness to Friday's killings outside School No. 15.

The two independent eyewitness accounts to Reuters, both by men who live nearby but who asked not to be identified, could not be independently verified. President Islam Karimov said on Saturday he had forbidden the use of force against women, children and the elderly.

Two days after an uprising in the mostly Muslim Central Asian state's Ferghana Valley, blood and body parts, hastily sprinkled with soil, still lay on the pavements, streets, and gutters in the center of this leafy town of 300,000 people.

A human rights campaigner from Andizhan, Saidzhakhon Zaidabitdinov, has said up to 500 were killed, including police and soldiers, in the Friday violence.

The first to die outside School No. 15, the witnesses told Reuters, were a group of policemen who had been seized by rebels. Some rebels seen in Andizhan on Friday were carrying guns.

"About 10 policemen were pushed ahead of the crowd as hostages," said one of the witnesses, a 35-year-old businessman. He said an armored personnel carrier (APC) and troops took up position in front of them.

"'Don't shoot! Don't shoot!' they (the police) begged. But then the APC opened fire from about 150 meters (yards) away."

It was not clear from witness accounts to what extent those in the crowd were armed, or returned fire.

Panic broke out as troops continued firing from rooftops and people fled down narrow alleyways, some pursued by soldiers.

The rebels, whom Karimov says are Islamic militants, had earlier taken 10 police officers hostage and seized a state building in the central square. Protesters, some calling for Karimov to resign, staged a demonstration outside.

When troops opened fire in the square, the rebels took their hostages and mingled with a large crowd, including casual onlookers, that made its way 1,200 meters (less than a mile) down Cholpon Avenue, a broad tree-lined street, to the school, the witnesses said.

School No. 15's facade was pockmarked on Sunday with at least 20 bulletholes and there were pools of blood in the blocked open drains.

"I COULD NOT COUNT ALL THE DEAD"

On Saturday, soldiers started removing corpses and the wounded, but a handful who tried to escape were shot dead, the witnesses said.

"Those wounded who tried to get away were finished with single shots from a Kalashnikov rifle," said the businessman. "Three or four soldiers were assigned to killing the wounded."

The second witness, a 42-year-old driver, said he saw soldiers later loading corpses onto trucks and buses.

"At about 5:00 a.m. (on Saturday) the dead women and children were the first to be removed from the street," he said. "I could not count all the dead, there were literally hundreds."

"There were many bodies lying on top of each other, and smashed brains on the pavement."

Karimov said on Saturday that no order had been given to fire on the crowd.

"I categorically banned the use of physical force against women, children and the elderly," he added. "In Uzbekistan, no one fights against women, the elderly and children."

He said 10 police and "many more" rebels had been killed, but made no mention of civilian casualties.

A third witness, a man in his 20s who did not see the shooting outside the school, said he helped remove bodies to a makeshift morgue in the school building.

"When the soldiers left, we saw that around 30 dead people were left lying on the pavement and I was among those who took them to School No. 15," he said.

Faizula Shakirov, 67, said his 33-year-old son Said, himself a father of three, had been killed in another part of town on Friday.

"My son wanted to look at what was going on," he said after burying his son. "He walked out of the courtyard, turned a corner into a neighboring street and was shot in the leg and stomach by a soldier."

"He lay wounded there until (Saturday) morning," Shakirov said. "None of the neighbors could help him because people were afraid they would be shot if they left their homes."