Both sides in Kyrgyzstan fault government for failing to prevent violence
From a detachment, the incident hardly seemed valuable. Kyrgyzstan's new interim rule appeared to have maintained the standing quo.
But the back and forth on May 13-14 was a turning time. Because many in the crowd that prevailed were minority Uzbeks, the clash for political control of the district began to be seen as a fray for ethnic survival, firstly among the Kyrgyz majority here. That sense grew in the following weeks, fanned by townswoman politicians as the national authorities in the north struggled to feel for.
Now, after an explosion of rioting , profit and rape that has left as many as 2,200 people unresponsive and entire neighborhoods in ruins, two communities that had lived together peacefully for virtually 20 years are boiling with shared hostility, and the government of this strategically located Cardinal Asian country appears more unsubstantial than ever.
In a late-night evaluation after making her first trip to the south, interim President Roza Otunbayeva blamed the frenzy on her exiled predecessor, saying his allies had entranced advantage of longstanding ethnic tensions and incited the riots. "Bakiyev's people, they found that this is unerringly where they could really smash the administration and smash the situation," she said.
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