Thai PM delays speech after botched arrests

Thai anti-government protest leaders evaded capture on Friday in a botched police raid, and Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva unexpectedly delayed his first address to the nation in four days.

Government promises to crack down on what it termed “terrorists” went awry when a protest leader at a Bangkok hotel slid down a rope from a balcony to escape riot police.

Another two were rescued by hundreds of “red shirts”, who heavily outnumbered security forces at the hotel owned by the family of former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

The leaders later joined around 10,000 of their supporters at a hotel and shopping centre in the middle of the city, now the main protest encampment.

“If they use force to disperse us, we will flatten the entire neighbourhood,” said Jatuporn Prompan, a protest leader who was not among the three escapees, on a red shirt stage.

Abhisit had been scheduled to address national television at 1 p.m. local (0600 GMT) from an army barracks where he has been holed up during the month-long protests, but by 5.30 p.m. he had not done so and his aides could not provide a reason.

He has been absent from the public eye since Monday.

The government, which had previously said it would not directly confront the protesters, has also stepped up the rhetoric, although no troops were seen on Bangkok streets.

“We will arrest and suppress the terrorists. We have set up special task forces hunting for the terrorists,” Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said before launching the attempt to snatch opposition leaders.

The move against the red shirt leaders on Friday follows a failed attempt by troops to eject protesters from one of their sit-in sites in the city last weekend.

At least 24 people were killed and more than 800 wounded in the clash, Thailand’s worst political violence since 1992, which only appears to have hardened the four-year political impasse and raised the possibility of more bloodshed.

STOCKS FALL

The risk of further instability sent Thai stocks down 3.25 percent. The market has now lost almost all its gains this year.

“Under the current uncertain situation, we recommend investors to stay along the sidelines at the moment as we could see a possibility of another 5 percent drop in the near term,” Julius Baer Research said in a note to clients on Friday.

The $33 million LionGlobal Thailand Fund said it was “positive on the long-term outlook for the Thai market, overweighting the banking sector which is expected to benefit from the domestic economic recovery through higher loan growth and lower loan provisions.”

Tourism has taken a hit, with occupancy rates less than a third of normal levels in Bangkok, according to a tour operator body.

Morgan Stanley said in a report that losses to tourism, which accounts for 6 percent of gross domestic product, could clip 0.2 percentage point from economic growth this year.

The government says Thailand’s economy could grow 4.5 percent this year, but Korn warned that forecast could prove optimistic.

Thailand’s five-year credit default swaps (CDS), often used as a measure of political risk, were trading at 111/116.85 against 105/111 bps on Monday, the last trading day prior to a three-day holiday.

The red shirts back Thaksin, who was ousted in a 2006 coup, and want Abhisit to step down immediately and call early elections. The government has offered December — possibly October — as poll dates. The powerful military chief this week also suggested early polls to resolve the crisis.

Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij told Reuters on Thursday Abhisit would not resign as it would “be very negative for the country”.

Protesters called off plans to march on television stations that they accused of biased coverage, removing one potential flashpoint with security forces. They hunkered down at their base in a central Bangkok shopping district, which they vowed to make a “final battleground” with the security forces.

The government has also said it would crack down on people it believed to be financing the red shirts and issued summonses under emergency powers for 60 people to report to a military barracks, where Abhisit has set up emergency headquarters.

(Additional reporting by Viparat Jantraprap; Writing by David Chance; Editing by Jerry Norton)

Thai “red shirts” gather after botched arrests

Thousands of Thai anti-government protesters gathered at a central Bangkok site on Friday after police botched an attempt to arrest three of their leaders as the authorities vowed to crack down on “terrorists”.

One protest leader slid down a rope from a hotel balcony to escape riot police, while others were rescued by hundreds of “red shirts”, who heavily outnumbered security forces at a Bangkok hotel owned by the family of former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

The three leaders later joined around 10,000 of their supporters at a shopping centre in the middle of the city, now the main site of month-long protests in the Thai capital.

“If they use force to disperse us, we will flatten the entire neighbourhood,” said Jatuporn Prompan, a protest leader who was not among the three escapees, on a red shirt stage at the intersection of posh shopping malls and luxury hotels.

For a graphic: http://link.reuters.com/rap67j

The government, which had previously said it would not directly confront the protesters, also stepped up the rhetoric, although there were no troops on the streets of Bangkok.

“We will arrest and suppress the terrorists. We have set up special task forces hunting for the terrorists,” Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said.

The move against leaders of the red shirts on Friday follows a failed attempt by troops to eject protesters from one of their encampments in the city last weekend. At least 24 people were killed and more than 800 injured in Thailand’s worst political violence since 1992.

STOCKS FALL

The risk of further instability in Thailand sent stocks down 2.1 percent and the the market has now lost almost all its gains this year.

Thailand’s five-year credit default swaps (CDS) , often used as a measure of political risk, were trading at 110/115.57 against 105/111 bps on Monday, the last trading day prior to a three-day holiday.

The “red shirts” back Thaksin, who was ousted in a 2006 coup, and want Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to step down immediately and call early elections, which he has refused to do.

Abhisit had been due to hold his first news conference in four days at 1 p.m. local time (0300GMT) but it was delayed, although no reason was given.

Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij told Reuters on Thursday Abhisit would not resign as it would “be very negative for the country”.

Protesters called off plans to march on television stations that they accused of biased coverage, removing one potential flashpoint with security forces. They hunkered down at their base in a central Bangkok shopping district, which they vowed to make a “final battleground” with the security forces.

The government has also said it would crack down on people it believed to be financing the red shirts and issued summonses under emergency powers for 60 people to report to a military barracks, where Abhisit has set up emergency headquarters.

The violent protests have hit Thai tourism, with occupancy rates less than a third of normal levels in Bangkok, according to a tour operator body.

According to a report from investment bank Morgan Stanley, losses to tourism, which accounts for 6 percent of gross domestic product, could clip 0.2 percentage point from economic growth this year.

The government believes Thailand’s economy could grow 4.5 percent this year, although Korn warned that forecast could prove optimistic.

(Additional reporting by Viparat Jantraprap; Writing by David Chance; Editing by Alan Raybould and Bill Tarrant)

Thai “red shirt” leaders escape arrest

Thai anti-government protest leaders staged a dramatic escape from police on Friday after the authorities vowed to crack down on “terrorists” ahead of a planned televised address by the prime minister.

One protest leader slid down a rope from a balcony, while others were rescued from riot police by hundreds by “red shirts”, who heavily outnumbered security forces at a Bangkok hotel owned by the family of former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

The protest leaders later joined thousands of their supporters at the main “red shirt” site in a central Bangkok shopping centre.

For a graphic: http://link.reuters.com/rap67j

Thailand’s financial markets extended losses. Sovereign credit default swap spreads, a measure of the country’s credit quality, widened out and the stock market lost further ground, underperforming the emerging Asian region.

The “red shirts” back Thaksin, who was ousted in a 2006 coup, and want Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to step down immediately and call early elections, which he has refused to do.

Abhisit had been due to hold his first news conference in four days at 1 p.m. local time (0300GMT) but it was delayed, although no reason was given.

MARCH CALLED OFF

Protesters called off plans to march on television stations that they accused of biased coverage, removing one potential flashpoint with security forces, and hunkered down in their base in a central Bangkok shopping district.

The government, which had previously said it would not directly confront the protesters, stepped up its rhetoric ahead of the botched arrest of red shirt leaders, although there are no troops on the streets of Bangkok.

“We will arrest and suppress the terrorists. We have set up special task forces hunting for the terrorists,” Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said.

The government warning came after five days of peace in the capital and as the thousands of protesters camped out in Bangkok’s most affluent shopping centre, which they vowed to make a “final battleground” with the security forces.

Violent clashes last Saturday killed 24 people and injured more than 800 in Thailand’s worst political violence since 1992, and potentially damaging a recovery in Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy, especially its lucrative tourist sector.

Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij told Reuters on Thursday Abhisit would not resign as it would “be very negative for the country”.

The government has also said it would crack down on people it believed to be financing the red shirts and issued summonses under emergency powers for 60 people to report to a military barracks, where Abhisit has set up emergency headquarters.

The escalation in government rhetoric on Friday caused a further selloff in Thai markets.

By 0639 GMT, the Bangkok bourse was down 2.1 percent and has lost almost all its gains this year.

Thailand’s five-year credit default swaps (CDS) , also used to speculate on the country’s credit quality, were trading at 110/115.57 against 105/111 bps on Monday, the last trading day prior to a three-day holiday.

OCCUPANCY RATES PLUNGE

The violent protests have hit Thai tourism, with occupancy rates less than a third of normal levels in Bangkok, according to a tour operator body.

According to a report from investment bank Morgan Stanley, losses to tourism, which accounts for 6 percent of gross domestic product, could clip 0.2 percentage point from economic growth this year.

If the protests, centred on Bangkok’s ritziest shopping area, are prolonged, damage to consumer confidence in the capital could lop off another 0.6 percentage point, the bank said.

The government believes Thailand’s economy could grow 4.5 percent this year, although Korn warned that forecast could prove optimistic.

(Additional reporting by Viparat Jantraprap; Writing by David Chance; Editing by Alan Raybould and Bill Tarrant)

Defiant Kyrgyz president warns of bloodshed

TEYYIT, Kyrgyzstan, April 12 (Reuters) – Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev on Monday said that any attempt to seize or kill him by the Central Asian country’s interim leadership would result in bloodshed.

“Let them try to seize me, let them try to kill me. I believe this will lead to such a great deal of bloodshed which no one will be able to justify,” he told reporters after speaking to thousands of supporters in a town in the south of the country.

At least 81 people were killed on April 7 when riot police and troops shot into crowds of protesters in the capital. Bakiyev fled the city and was replaced by an interim government. (Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov; Writing by Conor Sweeney; Editing by Louise Ireland)

Ousted Kyrgyz president asks for U.N. peacekeepers

TEYYIT, Kyrgyzstan, April 12 (Reuters) – Ousted Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev on Monday said he had asked the United Nations to send peacekeepers to the Central Asian country after he was forced to flee the capital Bishkek last week.

Bakiyev told reporters from a town in the south of the country that he wants the U.N. to establish an independent commission into the events of April 7.

At least 81 people were killed on April 7 when riot police and troops shot into crowds of protesters in the capital. (Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov; Writing by Conor Sweeney; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

Greek police arrest suspected leftist guerrillas

ATHENS, April 11 (Reuters) – Greek police have arrested six people suspected of belonging to one of the country’s most militant guerrilla groups and taking part in bomb attacks, officials said on Sunday.

The arrest of the suspected members of the Revolutionary Struggle appeared to be a major strike against groups which have stepped up attacks against police, public buildings and businesses since riots that paralysed Athens in December 2008.

“They have been arrested and will be led to the prosecutor on charges of participating in a terrorist organisation,” police spokesman Thanassis Kokkalakis told a news conference.

Kokkalakis said police found a wealth of evidence at the residence of two of those arrested, including a hard disk containing pamphlets claiming attacks by Revolutionary Struggle as well as handwritten texts about past and intended attacks.

Police said in a statement they had arrested six people, revising the number down from media reports of seven arrests.

They raided dozens of suspects’ homes over the weekend, officials said, adding they had not yet found weapons or explosives. They were investigating whether the suspects had taken part in bomb attacks claimed by other guerrilla groups.

On Sunday, about 60 leftists threw stones and plastic bottles at police who raided a home in central Athens. Police fired tear gas to disperse them.

Revolutionary Struggle emerged in September 2003, about a year after the capture of the urban guerrilla group November 17.

It attempted to kill a minister in 2006 and launched a rocket-propelled grenade against the U.S Embassy in Athens in 2007, causing minor damage and no injuries.

It reappeared weeks the police killing of a teenager in December 2008, claiming responsibility for shooting at riot police guarding the culture ministry which left one wounded.

Greece’s socialist government, elected in an October snap election, has made combating guerrilla groups a priority. (Reporting by Dina Kyriakidou and Renee Maltezou; writing by Ingrid Melander; editing by Andrew Roche)

Riot police shut down teen dance party

Riot police have shut down an underage dance party in Sydney’s north-west overnight.

Officers found more than 400 young people at the Pennant Hills event, and discovered many had been drinking alcohol.

Riot police and the dog unit were brought in at about 8:30pm to shut down the party and disperse the crowd.

17 killed in uprising against Kyrgyzstan president

Opposition followers fought security forces in the Kyrgyz capital and captured state television as a revolt against president Kurmanbek Bakiyev left at least 17 dead.

As demonstrators seized the parliament building, reports and some officials said the interior minister had been killed by rioters in a remote north-western town, although his spokesman denied the information.

In the capital Bishkek, riot police fired tear gas and stun grenades in a repeated bid to fight off thousands of protestors surrounding Bakiyev’s offices before retreating as demonstrators rammed the gates.

The riots were the culmination of spiralling protests in the Central Asian nation with the opposition accusing the government of rights violations, authoritarianism and economic mismanagement.

A health ministry official said 17 people died, many from gunshot wounds, and 142 had been injured.

“Most are young people under the age of 30,” the official, Larisa Kachibekova, told AFP.

In a desperate bid to contain the unrest, prime minister Daniyar Usenov declared a state of emergency.

But after the announcement, opposition protestors stormed the Kyrgyz parliament and television centre, halting all programs, in a dramatic sign that the government was losing its grip.

A police source said interior minister Moldomus Kongantiyev had been killed in the northwest hub of Talas where the first protests erupted.

Mr Kongantiyev was attacked by protestors who had also taken deputy prime minister Akylbek Zhaparov captive, the Kabar Kyrgyz state news agency reported.

An interior ministry spokesman, Rakhmatullo Akhmedov, later said Mr Kongantiyev was alive but acknowledged the government had little information on the situation in Talas, saying it was “checking” reports the minister was taken hostage.

In Bishkek, explosions from stun grenades reverberated across the city and the crackle of automatic weapons fire filled the air as protestors in the main square gasped for breath in a fog of tear gas.

Amid appeals for calm from Russia, authorities in the ex-Soviet republic said three opposition leaders had been arrested for perpetrating “serious crimes”.

The United States, which maintains an air base in Kyrgyzstan used in the NATO campaign in nearby Afghanistan, also voiced “deep concern”.

Between 3,000 and 5,000 protestors overturned cars and set them on fire as they marched from the opposition headquarters towards the presidential offices, witnesses said.

Protestors appeared to have seized several heavily armoured police vehicles and were standing on them waving red Kyrgyz flags and the blue flag of the opposition movement.

The violence came a day after more than 1,000 opposition protesters burst through police lines and took control of government offices in Talas.

In the central city of Naryn, hundreds of opposition protesters stormed the regional government headquarters after the local governor refused to negotiate, local witnesses told AFP.

Witnesses in the city of Tokmak, just outside the capital, said around 2,000 demonstrators had gathered there. Residents in three regions near the southern town of Osh also told of protests in the streets.

Kyrgyzstan, a mountainous country perched at the strategic junction between China, Russia and south-west Asia, is among the poorest countries to have emerged from the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union.

It has been plagued by corruption and chronic instability and the troubles resemble widespread unrest that washed over the country in March 2005 and resulted in the ouster of President Askar Akayev.

Opposition leaders accuse the Bakiyev government of basic rights violations, authoritarianism and arbitrary economic management that has resulted in sharply higher prices for basic goods and services.

As the unrest unfolded, Kyrgyzstan’s prosecutor general Nurlan Tursunkulov announced police had arrested former prime minister and presidential candidate Almazbek Atambayev, ex-parliament speaker Omurbek Tekebayev and his aide Bolot Cherniazov.

The United States has an airbase at Manas that has become a pivotal staging ground for the battle against the Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan.

In a statement, the US embassy in Bishkek said it was “deeply concerned” and urged “all parties to show respect for the rule of law and … to engage in talks to resolve differences”.

Blood on the streets in Kyrgyzstan revolt

There are reports the government of the Central Asian republic of Kyrgyzstan has been overthrown after a day of bloodshed and amid reports that key regime officials have been killed, taken hostage or fled the country.

Opposition leaders say the government has resigned after more than 100 people were killed in running battles with security forces who opened fire on crowds with machine guns.

In other cities, government buildings were overrun and riot police fled.

Kyrgyzstan’s president, Kurmanbek Bakiyev, has fled the capital Bishkek.

Unrest has been growing in Kyrgyzstan along with discontent with the rule of Mr Bakiyev, whose regime was widely seen as corrupt and was accused of routinely violating human rights.

Earlier officials said at least 40 people died in the capital Bishkek as protesters stormed government and TV offices. More than 400 were injured and television pictures showed security forces firing machine guns into crowds of protesters as running gun battles raged throughout the city centre.

Kyrgyz opposition leader Roza Otunbayeva has called for Mr Bakiyev to resign and says she plans to run an interim government for six months to draft a new constitution.

Opposition leaders have now been released from custody, satisfying one of the demands of the anti-government protesters.

Prime minister Daniyar Usenov has reportedly resigned. There were rumours Mr Bakiyev might be in neighbouring Kazakhstan but they cannot be confirmed.

Earlier a police source said interior minister Moldomus Kongantiyev had been killed in the north-west hub of Talas where the first protests erupted.

Mr Kongantiyev was attacked by protesters who had also taken deputy prime minister Akylbek Zhaparov captive, the Kabar Kyrgyz state news agency reported.

The BBC is reporting that an interim government has been set up, headed by Roza Otunbayeva, the opposition’s foreign affairs spokeswoman.

The opposition has taken control of at least one television channel.

A Kyrgyz human rights activist said on the channel that several regional administrations had been seized and their governors had resigned.

None of the claims on the broadcasts can be independently confirmed.

In Talas, in western Kyrgyzstan, police fled the city and protesters have ransacked government buildings.

Protests against Mr Bakiyev’s heavy-handed rule began last month and boiled over when several leading members of the opposition were arrested.

United Nations secretary-general Ban Ki-moon has joined representatives of other international organisations in calling for calm in Kyrgyzstan.

Neighbouring Kazakhstan, which currently holds the chair of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, called on the government and opposition to show political will and wisdom to resolve their differences.

Earlier, the United States, which has an air base in Kyrgyzstan which supports US-led military operations in Afghanistan, expressed grave concern while Russia also called for restraint.

Egypt releases anti-Mubarak protesters

A senior Egyptian official on Wednesday ordered the release of more than 30 protesters detained for demonstrating against the government of President Hosni Mubarak.

Of the 93 people that police arrested for demonstrating in Cairo on Tuesday, 60 were released the same evening, a security source said. On Wednesday, General Prosecutor Abdel Meguid Mahmoud ordered the rest to be released, his media office said.

The 33 released on Wednesday face charges including taking part in an illegal movement and creating a disturbance, the Interior Ministry said in a statement. If convicted, the protesters, mostly young people, could get long jail terms.

The protests on the streets of Cairo this week may signal more political ferment to come ahead of Egypt’s parliamentary election late this year and a presidential vote in 2011, which could challenge or cement the enduring rule of Mubarak, who has led Egypt since 1981.

The pro-reform group behind the protest, the Sixth of April Youth, is one of the few grassroots groups actively challenging the government as it seeks constitutional amendments and an end to an emergency law that sanctions indefinite detentions.

Rights groups condemned the government forces’ response to Tuesday’s protests, when riot police beat people with sticks and dragged dozens of others away.

“This is only the beginning … We are in the early stages of witnessing bigger movements urging democracy,” said Gamal Eid, head of the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information.

Mubarak’s National Democratic Party is expected to win an overwhelming majority in parliament. But human rights groups, which have long complained of manipulation of Egyptian voting, are calling for international oversight of the elections.

Mubarak, 81, has not said whether he will run for a sixth presidential term but, if he does not, many Egyptians believe he will try to hand power to his son, Gamal, 46.

SMALL STEPS

Such demonstrations rarely occur in Egypt, the most populous Arab country and an important U.S. ally in the Middle East. Protests are usually quashed by local forces swiftly.

On Wednesday, the government said 10 police were injured when protesters threw stones at them.

But in a city of nearly 20 million people, the fleeting demonstration of several hundred protesters was a reminder of the delicate steps toward political change in Egypt.

“People must go to the street and protest. This is the only way to achieve political reform and change,” said Mahmoud El-Khoudairy, a prominent judge who resigned in protest in 2009 over what he called government corruption and interference in judicial rulings. He has joined a number of street protests.

“We are 80 million, we can do something,” Khoudairy said in a recent interview.

Analysts say the government’s tough response to these street movements indicates its fear of their influence on the public.

Yet there are powerful obstacles to change. Protest movements gained some momentum before 2005 elections, when Western powers pressured Egypt to open to democracy, but the government cracked down once outside scrutiny subsided.

Nabil Abdel Fattah, political analyst at the Al-Ahram Centre for Strategic and Political Studies in Cairo, said protesters could only prompt real change if they broadened their support and took on a more traditional political role.

“Then, together, they can challenge the current political regime and break the chains now restricting political activity.”

While most of Egypt’s political parties talk about reform, none of them took part in Tuesday’s protest. Nor have they backed previous demonstrations from the April 6 movement or Kefaya (Enough), Egypt’s only other active protest movement.

The Muslim Brotherhood, the country’s biggest political opposition group, won a minority stake in parliament in the last polls in 2005, but it has eschewed street protests.

Opposition leader Ayman Nour, who came in a distant second in the 2005 presidential race, and about 20 supporters were blocked from reaching central Cairo’s Tahrir Square on Tuesday.

“The strong presence of security forces on the streets in Cairo simply illustrates the current Egyptian governing mentality,” Nour said before the protests.

(Additional reporting by Marwa Awad; editing by Missy Ryan)

At least 17 killed in Kyrgyz anti-govt protests

At least 17 people were killed in the capital of Kyrgyzstan in clashes on Wednesday between police and thousands of protesters trying to topple the president of the impoverished Central Asian state.

The Kyrgyz Kabar news agency also said 142 people were wounded in the unrest, but an emergency services official said more than 50 people may have been killed.

Riot police used tear gas and flash grenades to battle a crowd wielding automatic rifles and iron bars outside the office of President Kurmanbek Bakiyev, bringing nationwide unrest to the heart of the ex-Soviet state of 5.3 million people.

Kyrgyz Prime Minister Daniyar Usenov, who earlier dismissed the protesters in Talas as “bandits”, told Reuters by telephone that he and the president were both working in their offices.

“We daren’t even look out of the window,” Kamil Sydykov, the prime minister’s spokesman, said by telephone from inside the presidential building.

Some 1,000 people stormed the prosecutor-general’s office in the capital and were breaking windows and tossing out computers and office equipment, a Reuters reporter said. Opposition activists also took control of state television channel KTR.

Protesters seized government buildings in three other towns in Kyrgyzstan, which hosts U.S. and Russian military bases and relies heavily on remittances from migrant workers in Russia.

In one town, Talas, Kyrgyz First Deputy Prime Minister Aklybek Japarov and Interior Minister Moldomusa Kongantiyev were badly beaten. Kongantiyev was forced to shout: “Down with Bakiyev!”, two witnesses said.

UNREST SPREADS

Political unrest has gripped Kyrgyzstan since early March over widespread poverty, rising prices and official corruption.

The opposition in Kyrgyzstan has been demanding that Bakiyev, who himself came to power in a popular revolt in 2005, tackle corruption and fire his relatives from senior positions.

Kyrgyzstan is heavily reliant on support from both the United States and Russia, as well as neighbouring China, so their reaction to the unrest and government crackdown would be critical, said Alexei Vlasov, a Moscow political scientist.

“If the reaction is firmly negative, Bakiyev will be in a very difficult situation because the economic situation in the country is severe,” he said.

Russia has so far called for restraint. “We would like to make an urgent appeal to the hostile parties to refrain from the use of force to avoid bloodshed,” Andrei Nesterenko, spokesman for Russia’s Foreign Ministry, said in a statement.

The government declared a state of emergency and said a curfew would be enforced between 8:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. in Bishkek and three other regions of Kyrgyzstan.

Bakiyev, from the south of Kyrgyzstan, has angered clans from Bishkek, Talas and other regions by appointing in his own kinsmen to senior positions, and excluding others from power, said Reinhard Krumm, director of a Moscow think-tank.

The protests spread to the capital after riots which began in Talas the day before and continued into Wednesday.

“We will stay here until the end, no matter what the government does,” Talas Kadyraliyev, a 45-year-old local opposition activist, told Reuters from the scene.

In Naryn, a town in central Kyrgyzstan, more than 1,000 opponents of the president also took over the local government building, witnesses told Reuters. The government headquarters in a southern village, Kerben, were also occupied by protesters.

Analysts said poverty in Kyrgyzstan, where the average monthly wage is about $130 a month, was a major factor in the protests, as well as falling income from remittances from Kyrgyz workers in Russia due to the economic problems there.

Last week, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visited Bishkek and called on the government to do more to protect human rights. The United Nations said on Tuesday Ban was concerned at events in Talas and urged all parties to show restraint.

(Additional reporting by Alexander Reshetnikov and Maria Golovnina in Bishkek and Conor Sweeney in Moscow; Writing by Robin Paxton; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Kyrgyz clashes kill 17, injure 142 – agency

At least 17 people were killed and 142 injured in clashes between riot police and opposition protesters in the capital of Kyrgyzstan on Wednesday, the Kyrgyz Kabar news agency said.

A Reuters reporter in Bishkek said about 1,000 people had stormed the Prosecutor-General’s office and were breaking the windows of the building and tossing out computers and office equipment.

An emergency services official who declined to be identified told Reuters that more than 50 people may have been killed in the unrest.

(Reporting by Olga Dzyubenko and Maria Golovnina, writing by Guy Faulconbridge)

Thousands protest against Putin in Russian city

Thousands of angry people demonstrated in a northwestern Russian city on Sunday against the high cost of living and demanded that the government of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin quits.

About 4,000 protesters braved biting cold to hold an unauthorised rally at a huge Lenin monument in Arkhangelsk’s main square, chanting: “Down with this useless state power” and “Down with United Russia”.

“We do not believe the authorities” and “We demand a pay rise,” read some of the posters. Red hammer-and-sickle Communist Party flags dominated the scene.

The large rally was similar to recent protests held in Vladivostok in Russia’s far east and in Kaliningrad in the west.

Demands by protesters across Russia vary from lower household bills to the abolition of transport taxes, lower imported car duties and demands to halt a paper mill at the pristine Lake Baikal.

Last Saturday, the opposition held around 50 rallies on a national “Day of Anger”. Kremlin critics plan to hold a new series of protests on March 31 and May 1.

“Putin and Medvedev, along with all deputies and bureaucrats and governors, must be sacked, because they have deprived us of everything, because we cannot afford paying for municipal services,” pensioner Nina Kozhukhova, aged 70, told Reuters.

At a past rally, she was knocked down by riot police and hurled into a police van. But Kozhukhova was determined to fight. “That’s the limit, we are fed up with this lawlessness,” she said. “I do not believe United Russia because they have plundered us and gave all we had to corrupt bureaucrats.”

SUPPORT FALLING

Former president Putin, still widely seen as Russia’s paramount leader, and President Dmitry Medvedev, seen as his handpicked successor, have launched efforts to tackle social and economic issues more efficiently.

This month’s local elections showed support for Putin’s ruling United Russia party had fallen since the start of the economic crisis, which ended the nation’s 10-year oil-fuelled economic boom, cut wages and drove unemployment above 9 percent.

The rally exposed some divisions among the protesters, but analysts say that despite the different slogans protesters were united in their anger at the ruling United Russia party.

A group of men dressed in black manhandled supporters of the liberal opposition movement Solidarity as they tried to unfold their posters and orange flags. Policemen did not interfere.

And communist members at the rally refused to give Solidarity members the floor.

“We will not allow this orange plague here in the north,” local Communist Party chief Alexei Novikov told the rally.

As most communists left the rally, some 1,500 supporters of liberals and leftist youth organisations marched separately along the main street, chanting: “Putin to be brought to justice,” and “United Russia to be thrown into a rubbish bin.”

(Writing by Dmitry Solovyov; Editing by Diana Abdallah)

Denis Pinchuk

Thousands protest against Putin in Russian city

(Reuters) – Thousands of angry people demonstrated in a northwestern Russian city on Sunday against the high cost of living and demanded that the government of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin quits.

World | Russia

About 4,000 protesters braved biting cold to hold an unauthorized rally at a huge Lenin monument in Arkhangelsk’s main square, chanting: “Down with this useless state power” and “Down with United Russia.”

“We do not believe the authorities” and “We demand a pay rise,” read some of the posters. Red hammer-and-sickle Communist Party flags dominated the scene.

The large rally was similar to recent protests held in Vladivostok in Russia’s far east and in Kaliningrad in the west.

Demands by protesters across Russia vary from lower household bills to the abolition of transport taxes, lower imported car duties and demands to halt a paper mill at the pristine Lake Baikal.

Last Saturday, the opposition held around 50 rallies on a national “Day of Anger.” Kremlin critics plan to hold a new series of protests on March 31 and May 1.

“Putin and Medvedev, along with all deputies and bureaucrats and governors, must be sacked, because they have deprived us of everything, because we cannot afford paying for municipal services,” pensioner Nina Kozhukhova, aged 70, told Reuters.

At a past rally, she was knocked down by riot police and hurled into a police van. But Kozhukhova was determined to fight. “That’s the limit, we are fed up with this lawlessness,” she said. “I do not believe United Russia because they have plundered us and gave all we had to corrupt bureaucrats.”

SUPPORT FALLING

Former president Putin, still widely seen as Russia’s paramount leader, and President Dmitry Medvedev, seen as his handpicked successor, have launched efforts to tackle social and economic issues more efficiently.

This month’s local elections showed support for Putin’s ruling United Russia party had fallen since the start of the economic crisis, which ended the nation’s 10-year oil-fueled economic boom, cut wages and drove unemployment above 9 percent.

The rally exposed some divisions among the protesters, but analysts say that despite the different slogans protesters were united in their anger at the ruling United Russia party.

A group of men dressed in black manhandled supporters of the liberal opposition movement Solidarity as they tried to unfold their posters and orange flags. Policemen did not interfere.

And communist members at the rally refused to give Solidarity members the floor.

“We will not allow this orange plague here in the north,” local Communist Party chief Alexei Novikov told the rally.

As most communists left the rally, some 1,500 supporters of liberals and leftist youth organizations marched separately along the main street, chanting: “Putin to be brought to justice,” and “United Russia to be thrown into a rubbish bin.”

(Writing by Dmitry Solovyov; Editing by Diana Abdallah)

Brazil riot police uses pepper spray on players

London, Mar 26 (ANI): To restore order in a Brazilian League game, the riot police in the country baton-charged and used pepper-spraying on the players.

Fans at the clash between Genus and Moto Clube in the north west of Brazil were stunned when the referee called in police after sent-off Genus player Robson refused to leave the pitch.

Genus players then surrounded the referee, who called in help, The Sun reports.

Clad in full riot gear and brandishing shields and batons, four officers tried to escort Robson off.

When he refused to go, they pepper-sprayed him and other players in the face.

In the confusion that followed, the match was abandoned.

Rondonia State Vice-Governor, Joao Cahula, said: “I will talk to the Police Chief to take all measures necessary. If the policemen overreacted, they will be punished for that.” (ANI)

Israeli Troops Clash With Palestinians in West Bank

JERUSALEM — Israeli troops clashed with Palestinian stone-throwers at two contested holy sites and in a West Bank village Friday, seriously injuring a Palestinian woman and a 14-year-old boy, officials and witnesses said.

At the Jerusalem shrine, home to the Al-Aqsa Mosque, hundreds of Muslim worshippers emerging from prayers threw stones at policemen and Jews praying below at the Jewish shrine known as the Western Wall, according to Israeli police.

Riot police carrying plexiglass shields rushed in, firing tear gas and stun grenades, and charged the youths throwing stones amid the compound’s stone buildings and cypress trees.

It was one of the most violent clashes in several years at the site, known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary.

Friday’s events were sparked, in part, by rising anger over Israel’s decision to add two West Bank shrines to its list of national heritage sites.

While the decision has no immediate consequences, Palestinians perceive it as another sign that Israel wants to hang on to large parts of the West Bank, one of the territories Palestinians want for their state.

In Gaza, some 4,000 supporters of the Islamic militant group Hamas called for a new uprising in the West Bank, urging Hamas’ rival, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, to “unleash the resistance” over the shrines.

Friday’s violence erupted ahead of a new mission by U.S. Mideast envoy George Mitchell who was to arrive in the region over the weekend to help launch indirect Israeli-Palestinian negotiations.

The Palestinians have been reluctant, arguing that talks are futile as long as Israel keeps expanding Jewish settlements on land they want for a state. However, Arab nations earlier this week gave Abbas the political backing to conduct such talks for four months, with Mitchell shuttling between the sides.

The United States also offered written assurances to Abbas, Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said Friday, confirming a report in Israel’s Haaretz daily. In the document, the U.S. promises to assign blame if the talks fail.

“If one side, in our judgment, is not living up to our expectations, we will make our concerns clear and we will act accordingly to overcome that obstacle,” said the document.

A senior U.S. official denied Washington has provided written assurances, but said the documents quoted in Haaretz may have reflected notes of Palestinian meetings with U.S. officials.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called for direct talks, but the Palestinians fear he is not serious about a deal and instead wants open-ended negotiations as a way of deflecting international pressure.

The clashes in Jerusalem and the West Bank erupted after Friday prayers.

At the walled compound in Jerusalem, 13 Palestinians and 18 police officers were hurt, according to police and medics. Among them was a Palestinian woman who was hit in the head by a rubber bullet and was hospitalized in serious condition, an Israeli hospital official said. Police denied using rubber bullets.

In the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh, a 14-year-old boy was critically wounded by a rubber bullet, medics said.

A witness, Israeli activist Jonathan Pollack, said soldiers fired from a rooftop in the village at stone throwers and that the boy was hit from a range of about 20 meters.

The Israeli military said soldiers fired rubber bullets in the village to disperse a violent riot.

Skirmishes also broke at a contested holy site in the West Bank city of Hebron, but no serious injuries were reported.

The Hebron site is one of the two included on the Israeli national heritage list.

China riots: 140 killed, 816 injured (Update-China)

Beijing, July 6 (ANI): At least 140 people have been killed in China’s northwestern region of Xinjiang in what has been described by the government as the area’s worst case of ethnic unrest in years.

Hundreds of rioters have been arrested, the official Xinhua news agency reported, after rock-throwing Uighurs took to the streets of the regional capital on Sunday, some burning and smashing vehicles and confronting ranks of anti-riot police.

Li Zhi, the Communist Party boss of Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang province, told reporters that the death toll from the rioting had risen to 140, and added that 816 people had been injured and hospitalised.

“Police have tightened security in downtown Urumqi streets and at key institutions such as power and natural gas companies and TV stations to prevent large-scale riots,” Xinhua quoted Xinjiang police chief Liu Yaohua as saying.

The riot in Urumqi, a city of 2.3 million residents 3,270 km (2,050 miles) west of Beijing, followed a protest against government handling of a June clash between Han Chinese and Uighur factory workers in southern China.

The China Daily put the number of protesters at 300 to 500 while the exiled Uighur American Association had it as high as 3,000.

An unnamed Chinese official said the “unrest was masterminded by the World Uighur Congress led by Rebiya Kadeer”, according to Xinhua.

Rebiya Kadeer is a Uighur businesswoman now in exile in the United States after years in jail, and accused of separatist activities. She did not answer calls for comment.

Exiled Uighur groups adamantly rejected the Chinese government claim of a plot. They said the riot was an outpouring of pent-up anger over government policies and Han Chinese dominance of economic opportunities.

The government’s claims of conspiracy by pro-independence exiles echo the handling of rioting across Tibetan areas in March last year, which Beijing also called a plot hatched abroad.

Xinjiang is the doorway to China’s trade and energy ties with central Asia, and is itself rich in gas, minerals and farm produce. But many Uighurs say they see little of that wealth.

Almost half of Xinjiang’s 20 million people are Uighurs. The population of Urumqi is mostly Han Chinese, and the city is under tight police security even in normal times. (ANI)

Four killed, 20 injured in W. China ethnic riots

Beijing, July 6 (ANI): At least four persons, including three civilians and a policeman, were killed, and 20 were injured in clashes on Sunday in a regional capital in western China after days of rising tensions between Muslim Uighurs and Han Chinese.

The rioting broke out Sunday afternoon in a large market area of Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang province, reports the New York Times.

It lasted for several hours before riot police officers and paramilitary or military troops locked down the Uighur quarter of the city.

Among the dead were three Han Chinese and one police officer.

Uighur men were led into nearby police stations with their hands behind their backs and shirts pulled over their heads, one witness said.

Early Monday, the local government announced a curfew banning all traffic in the city until 8 p.m.

The riot was the largest ethnic clash in China since the Tibetan uprising of March 2008, and perhaps the biggest protest in Xinjiang in years.

According to a Xinhua news report, initial investigation showed the World Uyghur Congress led by Rebiya Kadeer masterminded the unrest.

According to the government, the World Uyghur Congress has recently been instigating unrest via the Internet among other means, calling on the outlaws “to be braver” and “to do something big.”

Nur Bekri, chairman of the Xinjiang regional government, said in a televised speech Monday morning that the movement came after a conflict between Uygur and Han ethnic people in a toy factory in the southern Guangdong province on June 26.

Two Uygur workers were killed during the factory brawl, which was triggered by a sex assault by a Uygur worker toward a Han female worker. A total of 120 others of both Han and Uygur ethnic groups were injured.

Nur Bekri said some overseas opposition forces instigated Sunday’s unrest to undermine ethnic unity and social stability in the autonomous region.

“We should bear in mind that stability is to the greatest interest of all people in China, including the people in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region,” he said.(ANI)

Families of British embassy staff leave violent-torn Iran

London, June 23 (ANI): The ongoing violence in Iran is forcing families of British embassy staff to leave the country.

At least 12 relatives were packing bags last night.

The British Foreign Office has advised its nationals to avoid going to Iran, where 17 protestors have died in violent protests.

“The ongoing violence has had a significant impact on the families of our staff who have been unable to carry on their lives as normal. We are withdrawing dependants until the situation improves,” The Sun quoted a Foreign Office spokesman, as saying.

The action came as riot police fired bullets over hundreds of protesters in Tehran, and let off tear gas shells while helicopters hovered overhead.

Embassy staff will stay on for now but were warned to stay away from the demonstrations, and staff levels will be reduced if the situation worsens.

As the trouble escalated in the streets, a woman witness said: “There is a massive, massive, massive police presence.”

It was a sign President Majmoud Ahmadinejad is taking a tougher stance following the country’s disputed election.

Embassy chiefs fear further violence after a 27-year-old woman was shot dead.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard has warned of a “confrontation” if protests continued.

In a small concession, the Guardian Council admitted the election vote was flawed and more people had voted than were eligible.

It, however, insisted that Ahmadinejad would still have won – and refused to change the result.

Defeated Mir Hossein Mousavi urged supporters to defy police threats, by saying: “The country belongs to you.” (ANI)

Massive Iranian protests, a ‘revolution in the making’

Washington, June 23 (ANI): A general strike of private businesses being planned across Iran and supporters of Mir Hossein Mousavi unlikely to back down, could be portents of a revolution in the making, after new amateur videos surfaced showing clashes between police and protesters.

A video posted on YouTube on Tuesday appears to show riot police flooding the streets of Tehran in an attempt to disrupt large-scale protests in the wake of Iran’s disputed presidential election, FOX News reports.

Freelance journalist Kayvon Biouki said that his sources said a general strike was planned across the country. He said he did not know if any government entities were planning on participating.

“The genie is out of the bottle. I don’t think that there is a stop to all of this. I anticipate protests continuing until conservative forces give in, either by holding new elections or otherwise surrendering,” Biouki said.

“By the look of things, it doesn’t seem that the conservatives are going to back down. And at the same time it doesn’t seem that people, Mousavi supporters, and all those who oppose the Iranian system in one way or another, those aren’t going to back down from this either.

“In a way, it’s a revolution in progress,” Biouki said.

Just before the clashes on Monday, an Iranian woman who lives in Tehran said there was a heavy police and security presence in another square in central Tehran. She asked not to be identified because she was worried about government reprisals.

“There is a massive, massive, massive police presence,” she told a foreign news agency. “Their presence was really intimidating.”

In another amateur video that was apparently shot at night, shouts of “God is Great” and “Death to the Dictator,” are reportedly heard in the darkness.

Iran says at least 17 protesters have been killed in a week of unrest so far after the electoral council declared hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad winner of the June 12 election.

His main challenger, Mir Hossein Mousavi, charged the election was a fraud and insists he is the true winner. His followers have been staging near-daily rallies, at least one of them drawing a massive crowd of hundreds of thousands. (ANI)