
MOSCOW — Ethnic violence that began as fistfights and escalated to raging gunbattles broke out in the Central Asian nation of Kyrgyzstan, leaving at least 41 people dead and more than 500 injured, Russian media and an eyewitness reported Friday.
The clashes in the southern city of Osh began Thursday evening between several hundred Kyrgyz and Uzbek youths, said the witness, human-rights activist Almaz Kalet.
Combatants at first battled with sticks and metal rods, but by about 2 a.m. Friday, their numbers had grown to several thousand and they were fighting across the city center using automatic rifles, shotguns and other weapons, Kalet said in a telephone interview from Osh, where he lives.
“Youths armed with sticks, metal rods, guns and bottles with Molotov cocktails were running after each other wearing white, blue and red arm bands and kerchiefs over their noses and mouths,” said Kalet, who works with the Center for Journalism in Extreme Situations, a Moscow-based rights group.
“They were overturning cars in the streets and setting them on fire, looting shops and houses and setting them on fire.”
The fighting calmed down after troops in armored personnel carriers and tanks rolled into the city shortly before dawn, Kalet said. But it flared again in the late afternoon.
“We heard gunfire, shouts and screams, and glass breaking all over the place,” Kalet said. “The troops came here, and the fighting moved on to the suburbs.”
The violence provided a fresh challenge to the interim government of Kyrgyzstan, which has struggled to impose control since a coup in April drove President Kurmanbek Bakiyev from power and into exile.
The country, a former Soviet republic, has been wracked by occasional violence since Bakiyev’s overthrow.
On Friday, the interim government declared a state of emergency in the south.
“Regrettably for us, we’re clearly talking about a standoff between two ethnicities,” interim President Roza Otunbayeva said in the capital, Bishkek, according to Reuters news service. “We need (to muster) forces and means to stop and calm these people down, and this is what we are doing right now.”
The ethnic violence appeared to be the worst in Kyrgyzstan since 1990, when clashes between Kyrgyz and Uzbeks in the Fergana Valley claimed several hundred lives.
Uzbeks, who make up 14 percent of the population, are the second-largest ethnic group in the country after the Kyrgyz, at 70 percent. But Osh is evenly divided between the two groups.
“I don’t know what caused the fighting,” Kalet said, but he added: “For these youths, whether they are Kyrgyz or Uzbeks, ethnic hatred is just a handy cover to indulge in rampage and looting.”
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, in neighboring Uzbekistan for a meeting with leaders of Central Asian nations, told reporters in remarks carried by Vesti 24 channel that “the absence of power and control creates the best grounds for violations of elementary human rights.”
“We express hope that the interim leadership of (Kyrgyzstan), which has yet to prove its legitimacy and efficiency, will take the situation under control,” Medvedev said.



