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| Title | Kyrgyzstan: New Attacks Against Uzbeks |
| Publisher | Human Rights Watch |
| Country | Kyrgyzstan |
| Publication Date | 17 June 2010 |
| Cite as | Human Rights Watch, Kyrgyzstan: New Attacks Against Uzbeks , 17 June 2010, available at: http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/4c2073bac.html [accessed 4 June 2012] |
| Disclaimer | This is not a UNHCR publication. UNHCR is not responsible for, nor does it necessarily endorse, its content. Any views expressed are solely those of the author or publisher and do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR, the United Nations or its Member States. |
(Osh) - Residents of Kyrgyzstan's southern city of Osh are being brutally attacked, beaten, and raped, despite government claims that the situation has stabilized, Human Rights Watch said today. The reports come from Human Rights Watch researchers, who visited several neighborhoods in Osh on June 16 and June 17, interviewing witnesses and documenting human rights violations.
Osh residents are in urgent need of protection and humanitarian assistance, Human Rights Watch said. Human Rights Watch and the International Crisis Group called for the United Nations Security Council to work with regional organizations to ensure that an international stabilization mission is sent without delay to secure the area for the delivery of much-needed humanitarian relief, help ensure security, and create the opportunity for reconciliation programs to succeed.
"Osh feels like a tinderbox that might ignite at any moment," said Ole Solvang, a Human Rights Watch researcher who is in Osh. "Without protection from attacks, people won't be able to get the humanitarian or medical aid they so badly need."
Nineteen-year-old Nadira (not her real name) told Human Rights Watch researchers that she tried today to reach her neighborhood in the Kirpichni Zavod district, carrying her 5-month-old son, to check her house and to search for her husband and other relatives. She was stopped by four men in military uniform driving a black car.
The men beat and pushed her and at least some of them raped her, she said - Nadira was too shaken to remember how many. She lost consciousness. When she came to, she was lying in a ditch by the road. Her baby was missing. When Human Rights Watch spoke to Nadira, she was bleeding from a deep cut on her brow, and her clothes and hands were covered in blood.
Human Rights Watch said that Kyrgyz human rights defenders are also documenting human rights abuses in southern Kyrgyzstan, but one defender, Azimjon Askarov, was arrested on June 15, 2010, in Bazar Kurgon, several days after he had filmed police standing by and allowing a gang to engage in looting and arson. Askarov's brother has said that police beat him in custody.
Human Rights Watch also called on the government to begin cooperating immediately with the UN human rights office as part of its responsibility to investigate and prosecute those responsible for the crimes and abuses in southern Kyrgyzstan over the past week.
Since massive violence erupted in Osh on June 10, ethnic Kyrgyz and Uzbeks have separated into largely ethnically homogenous neighborhoods that are separated by ad hoc barricades and military checkpoints. In Uzbek neighborhoods in particular, residents told Human Rights Watch that they were concerned for their safety, fearing that they would be attacked if they left their neighborhood.
Their security concerns seem to be well-founded, Human Rights Watch said. In addition to the attack on Nadira, Human Rights Watch documented other violent attacks against Uzbeks who left their neighborhoods during the last two days:
The tense security situation, barricades, and checkpoints have significantly limited distribution of aid, medical supplies, and access to medical treatment, the researchers found. Many ethnic Uzbeks told Human Rights Watch that they had not received any humanitarian aid from the government or international organizations since the conflict started. There is also a shortage of clean water.
The director of a private clinic in Cheremushki district told Human Rights Watch on June 17 that his clinic is facing a shortage of medicines and that he is afraid to go to the central hospital for supplies. He said hospital officials told him that they could not deliver medicines to the clinic because it is in an Uzbek neighborhood. When Human Rights Watch spoke to the director, the ambulance service had just refused to pick up from the clinic a woman who was facing serious complications during her pregnancy, saying that they could not drive to the neighborhood with a Kyrgyz driver.
In several neighborhoods people expressed despair that they had been unable to bring the bodies of relatives who had been killed from the district hospital morgue for burial. They told Human Rights Watch that they were afraid of being attacked on their way to the hospital.
"No one who has seen the situation firsthand could describe southern Kyrgyzstan as stable," Solvang said. "The Security Council should act now to protect those living in fear and prevent further deaths and displacement."
Topics: Ethnic minorities, Uzbek, Communal conflict, Ethnic cleansing, Human rights activists, Humanitarian assistance,