Fallout hits 400,000 in Kyrgyzstan
ABOUT 400,000 people have been displaced by ethnic violence in southern Kyrgyzstan, the United Nations announced yesterday, dramatically increasing the official estimate of a crisis that has left throngs of desperate, fearful refugees without enough food and water in grim camps along the Uzbek border.
UN Humanitarian Office spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs said an estimated 300,000 people had been driven from their homes but remain inside the nation of 5.3 million people.
She said there were now also about 100,000 refugees in neighboring Uzbekistan. The last official estimate of refugees who fled the country was 75,000.
Violence erupted last week between the majority Kyrgyz population and minority Uzbeks.
Kyrgyzstan's government has accused the country's deposed president of igniting long-standing ethnic tensions by sending gunmen in ski masks to shoot members of both groups.
The government, which overthrew President Kurmanbek Bakiyev in April, accuses the leader of deep corruption and says that he and his supporters were attempting to shake official control of the south and reassert their domination of the Afghan heroin trade in the area.
The deputy chief of the provisional government, Azimbek Beknazarov, said yesterday that authorities had strengthened roadblocks at all entrances into the capital, Bishkek, and tightened security in prisons to prevent Bakiyev's clan from provoking turmoil in the north.
Beknazarov put the official death toll on both sides at 223, but others said the figure could be significantly higher.
Many Kyrgyzs were killed but most victims appear to have been predominantly Uzbeks, farmers and traders who speak a distinct but separate Turkic language and have traditionally been more prosperous than the Kyrgyz, who come from a nomadic tradition.
Ethnic Uzbeks in camps along the Uzbekistan side of the border said yesterday they were fearful of returning to their homes.
Many on the Kyrgyzstan side said they had been prevented from doing so by the authorities and were awaiting their chance to leave the country for the camps.
A few parts of the south have been all but purged of Uzbeks.
UN Humanitarian Office spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs said an estimated 300,000 people had been driven from their homes but remain inside the nation of 5.3 million people.
She said there were now also about 100,000 refugees in neighboring Uzbekistan. The last official estimate of refugees who fled the country was 75,000.
Violence erupted last week between the majority Kyrgyz population and minority Uzbeks.
Kyrgyzstan's government has accused the country's deposed president of igniting long-standing ethnic tensions by sending gunmen in ski masks to shoot members of both groups.
The government, which overthrew President Kurmanbek Bakiyev in April, accuses the leader of deep corruption and says that he and his supporters were attempting to shake official control of the south and reassert their domination of the Afghan heroin trade in the area.
The deputy chief of the provisional government, Azimbek Beknazarov, said yesterday that authorities had strengthened roadblocks at all entrances into the capital, Bishkek, and tightened security in prisons to prevent Bakiyev's clan from provoking turmoil in the north.
Beknazarov put the official death toll on both sides at 223, but others said the figure could be significantly higher.
Many Kyrgyzs were killed but most victims appear to have been predominantly Uzbeks, farmers and traders who speak a distinct but separate Turkic language and have traditionally been more prosperous than the Kyrgyz, who come from a nomadic tradition.
Ethnic Uzbeks in camps along the Uzbekistan side of the border said yesterday they were fearful of returning to their homes.
Many on the Kyrgyzstan side said they had been prevented from doing so by the authorities and were awaiting their chance to leave the country for the camps.
A few parts of the south have been all but purged of Uzbeks.
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