BISHKEK PREPARING FOR ANOTHER NIGHT OF RIOTS
RIA Novosti
BISHKEK, March 25 (RIA Novosti) - Bishkek residents are bracing
themselves for another night of riots that swept the capital last night.
Shops, markets, petrol stations, and bureaux de change, are all closed
in the city. Along with tens of looted and sometimes burnt down
supermarkets associated with the Akayev family, people attacked small
retail outlets and service offices.
A group of active protesters who stormed the government house yesterday
came to ask parliamentarians today to introduce a curfew for the sake
of security of local residents.
"Our demand is to introduce a state of emergency to install democracy.
People need be "sticks" to begin with," said Talai, a physical
education teacher.
The opposition supporters surrounded parliamentarians during the day
asking them to bring order, but the majority of the parliamentarians
passed by hiding behind their assistants and bodyguards.
A female revolutionary in a white top embracing her 11-year-old son
called on the parliamentarians to introduce a state of emergency in the
city.
"I am happy that we have carried out a revolution. But we are afraid
now, I will not let my son go to school. Boys are already sitting
outside shops waiting for the night to come to loot them. When these
hooligans are through with the shops, they will go around people's
flats. They are not patriots who want democracy," the woman said.
There is no single leader of the Bishkek "Maidan" [Maidan is the name
of the square where the orange revolution took place in Ukraine], only
commanders of small detachments formed in a village or district.
Excited people easily follow provocative appeals, occasionally voiced
in the crowd, and to reconciliatory addresses of parliamentarians who
appear to stop another storm.
Opposition supporters from southern Kyrgyzstan, where the anti-Akayev
movement is quite strong, have set up a camp on a lawn outside the
government house.
Elderly families wearing national costumes drink tea sitting on a big carpet spread on the grass next to the army tents.
"Politicians are struggling for portfolios. Somebody needs the riots in
the city. Mafia is always the winner," a man in a suit says.
Since the riots began in Kyrgyzstan, 15 people have died, and two are
in a critical condition. RIA Novosti learnt this from a source in the
National Security Service of Kyrgyzstan.