Curfew lifted in Kyrgyzstan region of Osh

Share This
+ Comment
0
Kyrgyzstan is going ahead with a constitutional referendum, despite warnings that the poll could spark a renewal of the violence (AAP)

Kyrgyzstan is going ahead with a constitutional referendum, despite warnings that the poll could spark a renewal of the violence (AAP)

Kyrgyzstan authorities have lifted a curfew in its violence-torn southern region of Osh to allow a controversial referendum on a new constitution to go ahead, officials said.

Kyrgyzstan authorities have lifted a curfew in its violence-torn southern region of Osh to allow a controversial referendum on a new constitution to go ahead, officials said.
  
Kyrgyzstan is going ahead with a constitutional referendum on Sunday, despite warnings that the poll could spark a renewal of the violence that killed at least 264 people in inter-ethnic clashes earlier this month.
  
"The inhabitants of Osh had asked the leadership to extend the curfew," said deputy interior minister Baktybek Alymbekov, announcing the decision on national television.
  
"But the decision was taken to examine this question according to the situation after the referendum has taken place," he added.
  
The official said that roadblocks staffed by security forces rather than soldiers would remain in place and security would be boosted throughout the region.
  
The new constitution proposed in the referendum would significantly reduce the powers of the president and make the country Central Asia's first parliamentary republic.
  
Osh was the centre of the deadly clashes between the majority Kyrgyz and minority Uzbek populations that forced tens of thousands from their homes and prompted the imposition of a 24-hour curfew in the region.
  
The referendum has been called by Kyrgyzstan's provisional government, which came to power after former president Kurmanbek Bakiyev was ousted in riots in April.
  
 

Join the Discussion

Name
City / Suburb E.g. Artarmon, Sydney
Title
Comment
You have characters remaining.
Validation
What's this?
This is a captcha-picture. It is used to prevent mass-access by robots.
All submitted comments become the property of SBS. They are moderated, so we reserve the right to edit comments and remove HTML tags. Not all submitted comments will be published. Publication does not mean we endorse the opinions expressed. Please read our terms and conditions for more information.