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International
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Concern over Islamic insurgency in C. Asia
By Vladimir Radyuhin
MOSCOW, AUGUST 25. Russia's defence chief voiced concern over
continuing rebel incursions in Central Asia and urged closer
anti-terrorist cooperation with the countries of the region.
Following weeks of rebel incursions into Kyrgyzstan and
Uzbekistan, the Defence Minister, Marshal Igor Sergeyev, said the
situation in the Central Asian region ``remains difficult and
calls for additional measures to improve operation controls of
the unified anti-terrorist command'' of Russia and the Central
Asian states set up earlier this year.
The army and security forces in Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan have
been battling Islamic insurgents for three weeks now amid reports
that more rebels are planning to join the fray from Afghanistan
and Tajikistan.
The authorities in Kyrgyzstan said a border post on the border
with Tajikistan had been attacked on Thursday and in Uzbekistan
government commandos were trying to track down a group of Islamic
rebels hiding in the mountains just 100 km from the capital,
Tashkent.
``The latest flareup of terrorism in the region of the Tajik-
Kyrgyz and Tajik-Uzbek borders betrays far-reaching plans of
Islamic extremists to assert their control in the region and
destroy by military and other means the foundations of statehood
in the Central Asian republics,'' the Russian defence chief told
Interfax news agency on Friday.
Kazakhstan has put its army and security forces on alert, the
Izvestia daily reported Friday.
``Authorities in Astana capital of Kazakhstan0 do not rule out
that Islamic rebels who are terrorising Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan
and Uzbekistan may push into Kazakh territory,'' it said.
The rebels are led by the notorious Uzbek warlord Djuma
Namangani, leader of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU),
which last year invaded southern Kyrgzystan, taking hostage four
Japanese geologists. His stated aim is to overthrow the Uzbek
President, Mr. Islam Karimov, and replace him with a
fundamentalist regime. The rebels are said to have been trained
in Afghanistan and financed by Osama bin Laden, who seeks to
destabilise the secular governments in Central Asia and weaken
their ties with Russia.
The Government in Uzbekistan on Friday issued calls for increased
vigilance by the population, urging people to report anything
suspicious. The calls followed clashes with a rebel group 110 km
east of the capital Tashkent in which two Uzbek border guards had
been killed, according to the country's Defence Ministry
announcement.
Mr. Karimov said on national television that the military had
underestimated the enemy and had suffered
``unjustifiable losses.'' ``The liquidation of bandits is not
going to be a lightning operation,'' he admitted. ``It is a most
challenging task.''
Last weekend, the leaders of Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan
and Tajikistan met in an emergency summit in the Kyrgyz capital
Bishkek to discuss stepped-up cooperation to repulse the attacks.
They called on the world community to pay closer attention to the
situation in Central Asia which could undermine stability not
only in the region but also far beyond its borders.
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Section : International Previous : Bypassing curbs, factions, U.N. aid will reach Afghans Next : Trade unions reviewing support to ANC Govt.? | |
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