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War and unrest

Rioters attack government buildings in Kyrgyzstan

AP
Police officers use tear gas trying to stop protesters in downtown Bishkek on Wednesday.
  • Protesters tried to break into a building housing the parliament
  • Crowds demand the resignation of the prime minister and other top officials
  • Health Ministry said at least 10 people are being treated for injuries

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan (AP) -- Protesters clashed with police and tried to break into a building housing the parliament and government offices in Kyrgyzstan's capital Wednesday, during a rally to demand the resignation of the prime minister and other top officials.

Police officers protecting the government building, known as the White House, used dogs and smoke bombs to disperse a group of young men who attempted to scale the gates.

The Health Ministry said 10 people are being treated for injuries, three of them for gunshot wounds. Officials said no police were injured.

Around 1,000 people gathered in the center of the city for a rally, organized by nationalist politicians Sapar Zhaparov and Kamchibek Tashiyev, ostensibly to demand the nationalization of a controversial gold mine in the east of the Central Asian nation.

Interior Minister Zarylbek Rysaliyev said those responsible for the violence will be sought out and punished.

Kyrgyzstan, a country of 5 million people on China's mountainous western border, has come to prominence in recent years because it hosts a U.S. air base used to support military operations in nearby Afghanistan.

Kyrgyzstan is currently governed by a parliamentary coalition presided over by Prime Minister Zhantoro Satybaldiyev.

Zhaparov and Tashiyev are members of a virulently nationalist opposition party, Ata-Zhurt, which draws the bulk of its support from the south of the country, which was the scene of deadly ethnic clashes in June 2010.

Ata-Zhurt is the largest party in the turbulent ex-Sovet republic's parliament although it is not in the governing coalition.

Prosecutors said last month that they are pursuing criminal charges against Zhaparov on suspicion of fraud. Zhaparov denies he has been involved in any financial wrongdoing and says the investigations are politically motivated.

Wednesday's gathering was nominally intended to voice discontent over the Kumtor gold mine, which has been the source of a series of toxic spills in past years.

Critics have alleged that Toronto-based Centerra Gold, which is developing Kumtor, has used accounting tricks to reduce its tax liabilities. The company has denied the allegation.

Centerra says its project has generated $1.9 billion in benefits for Kyrgyzstan, including $620 million in taxes. Kumtor accounts for 12 percent of the economy.

Some observers believe that opposition politicians may be using discontent over the mine as a smokescreen for a grab at power.

"It is clear that the situation with Kumtor was just a pretext to destabilize the situation," said political analyst Mars Sariyev.

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