UK to boost aid to Afghanistan – minister

July 18 (Reuters) – Britain plans to increase aid to Afghanistan by as much as 40 percent, International Development Minister Andrew Mitchell said.

Spending on international aid is one of only two areas, along with health, the coalition government has pledged to protect as it slashes departmental budgets to try to tackle a public deficit running at about 11 percent of national output.

“We have looked very carefully at the way in which British taxpayers money is being deployed as part of the effort we are making in Afghanistan,” Mitchell told the BBC in an interview broadcast on Sunday.

“We have found some additional funding from less-good programmes, so in principal have an additional 40 percent of money going into the development budget.”

The government has committed 510 million pounds ($782.3 million) to Afghanistan over the 2009-2013 period to support effective government, stability, job creation and economic growth. In 2008-2009, British bilateral aid spending to Afghanistan was 147.5 million pounds.

Defending the government’s decision to continue spending taxpayer money in other countries at a time when Britons are being warned to expect tough cuts to public services, Mitchell said it was in Britain’s national interest.

“We are making the choice not only on moral grounds but also on national interest grounds,” he said. “It is an issue of national interest because many of the problems which make our world much less secure emanate from very poor developing countries often caught up in crisis and conflict.”

Britain has 9,500 troops in Afghanistan, with many engaged in training Afghan security forces so they can gradually take over control. Prime Minister David Cameron has said he wants British combat troops home from Afghanistan within five years.

Mitchell said measures had been put in place to ensure aid money was well spent.

“We are now looking at the results we achieve for our spending,” he said. “We have a series of specific results and outcomes we want to achieve in Afghanistan and we’ve got the money to support that.” (Reporting by Kylie MacLellan)

Stray NATO artillery kills six Afghan civilians

KABUL, July 10 (Reuters) – Foreign troops in Afghanistan killed six civilians and wounded several others with stray artillery fire just a day after a NATO airstrike accidently killed five Afghan government soldiers.

A joint Afghan and NATO investigation team found the civilians died on Thursday when artillery fire failed to hit a target in the Jani Khel district of Paktia Province, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement.

“ISAF officials offer sincere condolences to those affected and accept full responsibility for the actions that led to this tragic incident,” the statement, received late on Friday, said.

The country’s interior ministry initially blamed the deaths on a rocket fired by insurgents hitting a local bazaar.

Civilian casualties and friendly fire deaths among Afghan security forces have been a frequent irritant between President Hamid Karzai and Western military forces during the nine-year war since the ousting of the Taliban in 2001.

ISAF said commanders had held two days of meetings, or “shuras”, with local elders in Jani Khel to discuss the incident.

New U.S. and NATO forces commander General David Petraeus is considering a change to rules of engagement drawn up his predecessor to avoid civilian casualties, following complaints they tie the hands of coalition troops combating insurgents.

Casualties among NATO forces fighting in Afghanistan hit a record high in June and commanders expect violence to rise in parallel with an anti-insurgent offensive in coming months, raising questions about whether more can be done to protect troops.

Two coalition soldiers were killed on Friday in separate bomb attacks, the alliance said, while a suicide car bomb hit a NATO convoy on a bridge outside Jalalabad, killing one civilian and wounding nine others.

Five Afghan government soldiers were accidently killed and two others wounded in a pre-dawn NATO helicopter airstrike on Wednesday, prompting condemnation from the country’s government.

The attack took place after a aircraft mistook Afghan National Army soldiers for Taliban insurgents during an operation in southwest Ghazni. (Editing by David Fox) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

NATO confident in McChrystal despite U.S. article

BRUSSELS, June 22 (Reuters) – The head of NATO has full confidence in the top U.S. and NATO general in Afghanistan, whose aides were quoted as insulting some of President Barack Obama’s closest advisers, a NATO spokesman said on Tuesday.

An article to be published on Friday by Rolling Stone magazine also quotes an aide to the commander, General Stanley McChrystal, as describing his “disappointment” with his initial one-on-one meeting with Obama at the White House last year.

“It’s a rather unfortunate article, but it is just an article,” NATO spokesman James Appathurai said, providing a response from NATO Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen.

“We are in the middle of a very real conflict and the secretary-general has full confidence in General McChrystal as the NATO commander and in his strategy.”

McChrystal apologised on Monday for the comments by his aides and said he had “enormous respect and admiration for President Obama and his national security team”. [ID:nN2178209]

The article, which quotes several McChrystal aides anonymously, portrayed his team as disapproving of the Obama administration, with the exception of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who backed McChrystal’s request for additional troops in Afghanistan.

U.S. Vice President Joe Biden, who wanted a more focused strategy in Afghanistan, comes in for particular criticism.

McChrystal was quoted as saying he felt betrayed by the leak of a classified cable from the U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan, Karl Eikenberry, last year which raised doubts about sending more troops to shore up an Afghan government already lacking in credibility.

The article portrays a split between the U.S. military and Obama’s advisers at a sensitive moment for the Pentagon, which is fending off criticism of its strategy to turn around the nearly nine-year-old Afghan war.

The article quotes a member of McChrystal’s team making jokes about Biden, who was seen as critical of the general’s efforts to escalate the conflict and who had favoured a more limited counter-terrorism approach.

It also quotes an adviser to McChrystal dismissing an early meeting with Obama as a “10-minute photo op”, and quotes the general as expressing disappointment that the president then clearly did not know anything about him. (Reporting by David Brunnstrom; editing by David Stamp)

US indirectly funding Afghan warlords-House report

WASHINGTON, June 22 (Reuters) – The United States is indirectly paying tens of millions of dollars in protection money to Afghan warlords, and potentially to the Taliban, to secure convoys carrying supplies to U.S. troops in Afghanistan, congressional investigators said in a report.

The Pentagon’s system of outsourcing to private companies the task of moving supplies in Afghanistan, and leaving it up to them to provide their own security, frees U.S. troops to focus on counterinsurgency.

But its unintended consequences undermine U.S. efforts to curtail corruption and build an effective Afghan government, according to the report to be reviewed at a congressional hearing on Tuesday.

“This arrangement has fueled a vast protection racket run by a shadowy network of warlords, strongmen, commanders, corrupt Afghan officials, and perhaps others,” Representative John Tierney, chairman of a House of Representatives national security subcommittee, said in a statement.

Tierney, a Democrat, said the system “runs afoul” of the Defense Department’s own rules and may be undermining the U.S. strategic effort in Afghanistan.

The report by the subcommittee’s Democratic staff called protection payments “a significant potential source of funding for the Taliban,” citing numerous documents, incidents reports and emails that refer to attempts at Taliban extortion along the road.

Congressional investigators began looking into the Defense Department’s $2.16 billion Host Nation Trucking (HNT) contract in November 2009. The contract covers 70 percent of the food, fuel, ammunition and other supply distributions to U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

“HNT contractors and trucking subcontractors in Afghanistan pay tens of millions of dollars annually to local warlords across Afghanistan in exchange for ‘protection’ for HNT supply convoys to support U.S. troops,” the report said.

“The HNT contractors frequently referred to such payments as ‘extortion,’ ‘bribes,’ ‘special security,’ and/or ‘protection payments,’” the document said.

Many contractors have told U.S military officials that warlords were demanding protection payments in exchange for safe passage and that these payments were funding the insurgency, the report said. But the contractors concerns were never appropriately addressed, it said.

It faults the Pentagon for a lack of effective oversight of its supply chain and private security contractors.

“The Department of Defense has little to no visibility into what happens to the trucks carrying U.S. supplies between the time they leave the gate to the time they arrive at their destination,” the report said.

The congressional investigators said the Defense Department must take direct responsibility for the contractors to ensure robust oversight.

They also recommended a top-to-bottom evaluation of the secondary effects of the HNT contract, including an analysis of corruption and the impact on Afghan politics.

(Reporting by JoAnne Allen; Editing by Vicki Allen)

FACTBOX – Central Asia supply routes for Afghanistan

REUTERS – A dispute between Central Asian nations Tajikistan and Uzbekistan has disrupted food and fuel supplies for NATO troops in Afghanistan.

Below is some information about the transit routes NATO uses in the former Soviet region.

WHO IS INVOLVED?

The Northern Distribution Network (NDN), as the United States refers to it, was launched in 2009. It involves Russia, Latvia, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.

Some cargo containers are delivered to Kazakhstan by rail from Latvia via Russia. Others cross Georgia and Azerbaijan by land before being shipped to Kazakhstan across the Caspian Sea.

From Kazakhstan, trains deliver cargo to Uzbekistan. After that, supplies can be either shipped by trucks straight across the border to Afghanistan or moved by rail further to Tajikistan which also borders Afghanistan.

WHAT IS THE CARGO?

Washington’s agreements with NDN nations describe supplies as “nonlethal”. According to diplomats and local officials, those include food, water, construction materials and fuel.

The United States has not publicly said how much cargo it ships through the route.

WHAT OTHER CENTRAL ASIAN SUPPLY ROUTES ARE AVAILABLE?

The United States operates a military air base in Kyrgyzstan which serves as an important support hub for Afghan operations as well as an aircraft refuelling point.

The Manas air base was set up in 2001. Last year Washington paid $180 million to Kyrgyzstan to keep it open after then-president Kurmanbek Bakiyev threatened to shut it.

Operations at Manas were briefly suspended in early April after violent riots toppled Bakiyev and brought to power an interim government made up of his opponents.

The new government has said the fate of the air base would be decided after the parliamentary election scheduled for October.

(Writing by Olzhas Auyezov; Editing by Maria Golovnina)

Beckham rallies England squad to win World Cup for Brit soldiers in Afghanistan

London, May 26(ANI): England footballer David Beckham has called on Fabio Capello’s men to secure World Cup glory in South Africa to honour the British soldiers serving in Afghanistan.

Beckham, who was recently in Afghanistan for a surprise visit to boost the morale of thousands of British troops serving in the country, delivered a dressing room speech to his England team-mates before Monday’s friendly 3-1 victory over Mexico.

England captain Rio Ferdinand said that Beckham told the squad to be inspired by the troops in Afghanistan.

“Becks came in the changing room and he was talking about his trip. He told us about the experience he had going over there and what is was really like. He said the lads do a great job for us,” The Mirror quoted Ferdinand, as saying.

“It is great that we are getting support from the boys in Afghanistan. With them being so far away they probably think we don”t really care about what is going on, but we do,” he added.

Earlier, Beckham, who is recovering from an Achilles-tendon injury, had spoken about his respect for the armed forces.

“I have nothing, but admiration for these young men and women and it makes me very proud to be British,” Beckham said.

Britain has around 10,000 troops in Afghanistan as part of an international force, largely fighting the Taliban. (ANI)

UK army’s chief bomb officer resigns over Afghanistan

The British Army’s top bomb disposal officer has resigned, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) said in a statement on Monday.

The MoD said Colonel Bob Seddon, who held the post of Principal Ammunition Technical Officer (PATO), would step down in January.

The Sun newspaper said Seddon was quitting over concerns that a shortage of trained bomb disposal experts was putting troops in Afghanistan under strain.

“I am very concerned over the pressures they are facing in Afghanistan,” the paper quoted Seddon as saying in a BBC documentary to be broadcast later on Monday.

“We’ve broadened our training and selection but it will take time before these measures come into play. The existing cohort are going to be under pressure,” Seddon said.

Britain’s new Foreign Secretary William Hague and other senior ministers were in Afghanistan at the weekend to get a first-hand look at the situation in the country.

The Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government formed after the May 6 election says its top foreign policy priority is the strategy for Afghanistan, where Britain has 9,500 troops battling Taliban insurgents.

Some 285 British soldiers have died in Afghanistan since 2001, when the NATO mission there was launched and Britain has struggled to turn the tide on an insurgency in the restive southern Helmand province, where most of its troops are deployed.

“We can confirm that the current PATO has resigned and will leave his post and the Army in January next year,” an Army spokesman said in the statement.

“The Army remains committed to the counter IED (improvised explosive devise) effort which is the number one priority in Afghanistan,” the spokesman said.

(Reporting by Caroline Copley; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

Three children among seven killed in Pakistan

Islamabad, May 13 (DPA) Three boys died and two people were injured Wednesday when a bomb exploded in a camp of Afghan refugees in northwestern Pakistan, police said.

Separately, Taliban militants killed two men in the same region, accusing them for spying for the United States, while a blast ripped through an oil tanker carrying supplies for NATO troops in Afghanistan, killing two people in Pakistan’s southwestern province.

Local police officer Mohammad Aslam said that an explosion took place in the outskirts of Peshawar, the capital of Khyber-Paktunkhwa province, formerly known as North West Frontier Province.

‘Three children aged between 10 and 13 died in the blast while one child and a man were injured,’ said Aslam. ‘The nature of the blast is not known yet. Our bomb disposal squad is on the spot and they are collecting evidence to determine what sort of bomb that was’.

Peshawar has seen dozens of bombings carried out by Taliban militants who have intensified attacks to avenge Pakistan’s ongoing assaults in their strongholds in lawless tribal region along Afghan border.

The US has encouraged Islamabad to target Taliban and Al Qaeda militants who launch regular cross-border raids from their hideouts in rouged tribal region on international forces into Afghanistan.

In addition to the efforts by around 150,000 Pakistani troops against Islamist insurgency, the American CIA has also launched a covet war in Pakistan’s tribal region with unmanned drone aircrafts.

More than 900 people, most of them Taliban and Al Qaeda operatives, have been killed in the missiles attacks carried out by the drones since August 2008.

Following almost every drone strike Taliban respond with killing alleged US spies who they believe guide the drones by planting electronic devices near possible targets.

Wednesday, residents found the bodies of two people dumped in Miranshah, the main town in tribal district of North Waziristan that is a major bastion of militants.

An intelligence official said that a note attached with the bodies comprised a promise from Taliban for the same fate for all those who ‘intended to spy for the Americans’.

North Waziristan has been severely hit by drone attacks in recent months. Twenty-four people died in two US aerial attacks in the district Tuesday.

Also Wednesday, a blast destroyed a tanker carrying fuel supplies for the NATO troops in the landlocked Afghanistan, killing two by-passers and injuring two more.

The attack took place in Chaman, the main border town in south-western Baluchistan province that adjoins Afghan province of Kandahar.

‘One child and a man died in the attack, while two more were wounded,’ said Ata Mohammad of the border security police. ‘Several shops near the bombing place also caught fire’. Mohammad suspected that Taliban could be behind the bombing.

Two or more groups could have tutored Times Square suspect

Washington/New York, May 7 (IANS) US investigators probing the aborted Times Square bombing attempt have shifted their focus to prime suspect Faisal Shahzad’s links in Pakistan and a counter-terrorism expert has said two or more groups could have worked together in grooming Shahzad for a terrorist mission.

Meanwhile, the US is planning to send Pakistan a detailed request for ‘urgent and specific assistance’ in the aborted bombing case, the Washington Post reported.

According to the daily, a US counter-terrorism official was cited as saying it was possible that two or more groups had worked together in grooming Shahzad for a terrorist mission during an extended trip he made to Pakistan last year.

The influential daily cited US officials as saying that they had reached no firm conclusion about whether Shahzad had ties to any domestic militant group in Pakistan, but that information gathered thus far continued to point to the Pakistani Taliban, which has asserted responsibility for the bombing attempt.

The question of which group, if any, was involved is an important one for the future of the uneasy counter-terrorism alliance between the United States and Pakistan, it said.

‘The Pakistani military has been waging war against the Pakistani Taliban for more than a year, with US assistance,’ the Post said.

‘But Pakistan might be more reluctant to take action against other groups, particularly those focused on separating the disputed region of Kashmir from India.’

‘Some, particularly the Lashkar-e-Taiba, thought responsible for terrorist attacks in India, have strong support within the Pakistani intelligence service,’ it noted.

The Post cited Pakistani officials aiding in the Times Square case as saying they have arrested some people linked to a third group, Jaish-e-Muhammad, which is focused on Kashmir but has also turned its efforts against US troops in Afghanistan.

US intelligence suspects there is increasing overlap and coordination among domestic Pakistani groups and the Pakistan-based Afghan Taliban and Al Qaeda, the daily said.

The Post said pressure on Pakistan to escalate its domestic counter-terrorism operations, particularly toward Kashmir – and India-focused militants, could increase anti-US sentiment there, while any perceived Pakistani hesitation would undermine congressional and public support in the US.

White House spokesperson Robert Gibbs told reporters that the justice department and investigating agencies are actively looking at the time which Shahzad spent in Pakistan, but did not go into details.

The New York Times also cited unnamed officials as saying that after two days of intense questioning Shahzad, an American citizen of Pakistani origin, evidence was mounting that the Pakistani Taliban had helped inspire and train Shahzad in the months before he drove the car bomb to Times Square Saturday night.

Officials said Shahzad had discussed his contacts with the group, and investigators had accumulated other evidence that they would not disclose.

On Wednesday, Shahzad, the 30-year-old son of a retired senior Pakistani Air Force officer, waived his right to a speedy arraignment, a possible sign of his continuing cooperation with investigators, the Times said.

One senior Obama administration official cited by the Times cautioned that ‘there are no smoking guns yet’ that the Pakistani Taliban had directed the Times Square bombing.

But others said that there were strong indications that Shahzad knew some members of the group and that they probably had a role in training him. American officials said it had become increasingly difficult to separate the operations of the militant groups in Pakistan’s tribal areas.

Besides the Pakistani Taliban and Al Qaeda, groups operating in the tribal areas are the Haqqani Network and the Kashmiri groups Lashkar-e-Taiba, blamed for the Mumbai terror attacks, and Jaish-e-Muhammad.

Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal said Shahzad possibly received instruction from the Pakistan Taliban’s suicide-bomb trainer.

If verified, the suspected links between Pakistan Taliban and Shahzad would mark a stark shift in how it and related jihadist groups, which have so far focused on attacks within Pakistan and in India, not the US, pursue their goals, it said.

Pakistani investigators are also probing Shahzad’s possible connections with Jaish-e-Muhammad, an outlawed Islamist militant group, after the arrest Tuesday of Tohaid Ahmed and Mohammed Rehan in Karachi, the Journal said.

The two men were believed to have links to Jaish, it said citing a senior Pakistani government official. Ahmed had been in email contact with Shahzad.

Rehan took Shahzad to South Waziristan, the official was quoted as saying. There, Shahzad received training in explosives in a camp run by Qari Hussain, a senior commander with Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan who trains suicide bombers, the official was quoted as saying.

Hussain is also a cousin of Hakimullah Mehsud, the Pakistan Taliban’s chief.

Hussain claimed responsibility for the attempted attack in a weekend audio message. His message followed a video of Mehsud, the Pakistan Taliban leader, in which he warned of a wave of attacks on the US. ‘Our fighters are already in the United States,’ said Mehsud.

Clinton admits to shortfall of trainers for Afghan troops as exit strategy is agreed

Tallinn (Estonia), Apr.24 (ANI): U.S. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton has admitted that Washington is aware of there being a ””shortfall of trainers”” for local troops in Afghanistan, but believes that with sufficient mentoring the latter can support themselves against the Taliban.

Her comment surfaced as NATO agreed on a road map for the future of Afghanistan.

According to The Independent, the NATO summit ended here last night without details of the framework for a handover of security to President Hamid Karzai””s forces being made public.

The Independent has learned, however, that an area will be deemed ready for transfer if serious violence has been in abeyance for a period of time, if there is access to power by different ethnic and tribal elements and if the conditions are present for development projects taking place in relative safety.

According to senior diplomatic sources, clusters of provinces, rather than individual ones, will be transferred to “provide critical mass” able to withstand the Taliban.

The decisions on the locations for handover and the timeframe involved will be made at a NATO conference later this year after talks between Western and Afghan government officials.

The start of the handover will not, however, mean that troops can start to withdraw.

British troops in particular will have to wait before pulling out as the areas in the south where they are based – the main battleground with the Taliban –– will be among the last to be transferred to Afghan control.

NATO Secretary General, Anders Fogh Rasmussen said: “The future of this mission is clear and visible: more Afghan capability and more Afghan leadership… But it will not be a pullout. It will not be a run for the exit… Our soldiers will move into a more supportive role. So, it will be a gradual process. This is conditions-based and not calendar-driven.”””” (ANI)

Factbox: Key risks to watch in Kyrgyzstan turmoil

(Reuters) – Following last week’s uprising in Kyrgyzstan, the main questions remain whether violence rises and how the United States, Russia and China react to turmoil in a country where all have interests.

World | China | Russia | Kyrgyzstan

The United States leases the Manas airbase to support NATO troops in Afghanistan. Russia also leases a base, while China has a long border with Kyrgyzstan and will be concerned for the growing number of Chinese residents and businesses there.

A Russian official has said Moscow alone should have a base in Kyrgyzstan.

Domestic strains appear to be the main reason for the uprising.

VIOLENCE OR STABILISATION?

Around 80 people were killed in the uprising that forced President Kurmanbek Bakiyev to flee to his southern stronghold, and Bakiyev is now hinting he may attempt to go into exile.

The new leadership, led by former opposition leader Roza Otunbayeva, looks to be in control of the security forces, some of whom fired on opposition demonstrators last week.

The self-proclaimed government at first offered Bakiyev safe passage abroad should he resign but on Monday said it was planning a special operation against him after he warned that any attempt to seize him would lead to bloodshed. It now says it wants to put him on trial.

However, on Tuesday Bakiyev hinted he could leave the country if the interim government guarantee his safety and that of his family.

What to watch:

– Does Bakiyev yield, or does the self-proclaimed government move against him? Does he have sufficient support to attack in Bishkek or control areas in the south where he has his power base and will hold rallies this week? So far, outside powers look to be abandoning him.

– What happens with the security forces? So far, they look to have switched loyalty to the new leadership. Is this the case across the country, particularly in the south? What happens to commanders involved in shooting opposition demonstrators?

– Does looting continue and is it put down? So far, mining businesses and the minority Jewish community have been targeted. Does it target Chinese businesses in the capital, as some previous violence has? If so, how would China react?

– The Ferghana Valley in the south, where Bakiyev has his power base, has been the scene of ethnic violence in the past, and there are some signs that tension surrounding the ethnic Uzbek minority may not be far below the surface.

SUPERPOWER POLITICS

The United States and Russia are at loggerheads, although neither publicly acknowledges this.

Washington’s priority will be keeping its Manas base open while a Russian official with President Dmitry Medvedev’s delegation said last week Moscow wanted it closed.

A senior White House adviser on Russia told reporters in Prague: “This is not some anti-American coup. That we know for sure, and this is not a sponsored-by-the-Russians coup.”

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has denied Russia played a part in the turmoil, but a Kyrgyz opposition leader, Omurbek Takebayev, said: “Russia played its role in ousting Bakiyev.”

So far Russia is the only country to recognize the interim government officially — although Medvedev warns the country is on the brink of civil war.

On Wednesday, a visiting U.S. diplomat said Washington was willing to help the new rulers, putting additional pressure on Bakiyev to go into exile.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin approved a $50 million aid and loan package for Kyrgyzstan hours later.

What to watch:

– How overt is Russian support for the self-proclaimed government, not to mention pressure to close the base? Does Russia offer military support?

– Does the uprising worsen broader Russia-U.S. relations just as Washington hoped they were improving?

– Do other countries — particularly the United States and China — ultimately recognize the self-proclaimed government or continue to support the ousted leadership?

– How does China react? Analysts say it had lent money to the ousted government. Does it shift to the new rulers, perhaps sweetening relations with a new loan, or support Bakiyev tacitly or overtly? Does it make any comment on the U.S. base?

AFGHANISTAN WAR

The United States has cut back flights through Manas, which officials it has been central to the war effort in Afghanistan, allowing round-the-clock combat airlift, airdrop, medical evacuation and refueling.

Pentagon officials say they have other options to Manas, although they are more expensive, and the base is not in itself essential.

U.S. officials say only around 20 percent of their supplies into Afghanistan go by air, with 30 percent transported overland through former Soviet states and 50 percent by road through Pakistan, a route which is vulnerable to attack on both sides of the border.

What to watch:

– What happens to the base? The new rulers talk of shortening of the five-year lease rather than outright immediate U.S. departure. Is it able to operate fully?

– Does the dispute prompt Washington to rethink its strategy of relying heavily on transport through the Russian sphere of influence?

ECONOMY AND INVESTMENT

Kyrgyzstan’s economic problems are seen as a big factor in the uprising. Recent energy tariff increases have been unpopular and many people are angry about alleged government corruption and recent privatization deals. The self-proclaimed government says it badly needs financial aid.

As much as 40 percent of gross domestic product is estimated to come from remittances from Kyrgyz workers in Russia, Russia’s Uralsib says.

Foreign investors are mainly Russian and Chinese, with little Western interest outside the small gold mining sector. Canadian mining company Centerra Gold and London-listed Chaarat Gold Holdings Ltd, both of which operate in the country, have seen their shares fall.

South African gold miner Gold Fields said groups of villagers had seized one of its camps, one of a series of attacks and looting episodes against businesses.

Kyrgyzstan has no significant oil and gas reserves, although Russia’s Gazprom is involved in exploration.

What to watch:

– How long does the crisis last? Analysts say there is already little Western interest in investing, but that buying insurance at present would probably be impossible, potentially prompting delays in any planned ventures. Does looting continue or do the police step in?

– Does Russia or someone else provide financial aid, or does the U.S. agree to pay more for its base?

– Most analysts say the uprising does not mean other central Asian states are less stable, but might investors view events as a sign of heightened regional risk and charge higher premiums for investing in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and elsewhere? (Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

Khyber air strike kills dozens

Up to 48 people have been killed in an air strike in north-western Pakistan.

Pakistani military aircraft have bombed a suspected militant hideout in the volatile Khyber district.

Civilians and militants were among the dead and injured.

Military officials say the air strike was carried out after intelligence agencies received a tip off that senior members of the militant group Lashkar-e-Islam were meeting in the area.

The Pakistani military has stepped up its operations in Khyber, which is the main overland supply route to NATO troops in Afghanistan.

In a separate incident, one Pakistani soldier and six members of the Taliban were killed during heavy exchanges of fire in South Waziristan.

U.S. aircraft crashes in Afghanistan, 4 die

(Reuters) – A U.S. Air Force Osprey aircraft crashed overnight in Afghanistan, killing three American service members and one civilian employee, the NATO-led international force in the country said on Friday.

The CV-22 Osprey is a hybrid aircraft with giant rotors at the ends of its wings. It takes off and lands like a helicopter and can tilt the rotors to fly like a fixed-wing turbo-prop plane.

The cause of the crash, in southern Zabul province, was not yet known, the international force said in a statement.

The force said the aircraft was carrying U.S. troops at the time of the crash. An undisclosed number of injured people were treated at a nearby base.

There are some 120,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan and that is set to rise to nearly 150,000 by the end of this year as Washington sends in more troops as part of a new strategy to try and quell the mounting violence.

(Reporting by Peter Graff; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

U.S. aircraft crashes in Afghanistan, 4 die

(Updates with type of aircraft, confirmation of casualties)

KABUL, April 9 (Reuters) – A U.S. Air Force Osprey aircraft crashed overnight in Afghanistan, killing three American service members and one civilian employee, the NATO-led international force in the country said on Friday.

The CV-22 Osprey is a hybrid aircraft with giant rotors at the ends of its wings. It takes off and lands like a helicopter and can tilt the rotors to fly like a fixed-wing turbo-prop plane.

The cause of the crash, in southern Zabul province, was not yet known, the international force said in a statement.

The force said the aircraft was carrying U.S. troops at the time of the crash. An undisclosed number of injured people were treated at a nearby base.

There are some 120,000 foreign troops in Afghanistan and that is set to rise to nearly 150,000 by the end of this year as Washington sends in more troops as part of a new strategy to try and quell the mounting violence.

(For more on Afghanistan click [ID:nAFPAK])

(Reporting by Peter Graff; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

Kyrgyz opposition says will preserve U.S. base deal

BISHKEK, April 8 (Reuters) – The head of Kyrgyzstan’s self-proclaimed government on Thursday said it would keep an existing agreement to allow the United States operate a military air transit base.

“Its status quo will remain in place. We still have some questions on it. Give us time and we will listen to all the sides and solve everything,” said Roza Otunbayeva, who led opposition to President Kurmanbek Bakiyev’s government, from inside the country’s parliament building.

The United States has a military air base supporting troops in Afghanistan in the Kyrgyz city of Manas and is a major donor to Kyrgyzstan. (Reporting by Maria Golovnina; Writing by Guy Faulconbridge and Conor Sweeney; Editing by Louise Ireland)

Kyrgyz opposition says running govt, wants election

Kyrgyzstan’s opposition said on Thursday it has taken over the government of the impoverished Central Asian state after at least 47 people were killed in violent protests that forced the president to flee the capital.

Opposition leader Roza Otunbayeva demanded the resignation of President Kurmanbek Bakiyev, whom she helped bring to power five years ago, and told Reuters she would run an interim government for six months.

“We have a caretaker government now in place, and I am the head of it,” Otunbayeva said. “It will remain in place for half a year, during which we will draft the constitution and create conditions for free and fair (presidential) elections.”

Bakiyev left Bishkek, where thousands of demonstrators torched the prosecutor-general’s office and tried to smash trucks into government buildings, and flew to the southern city of Osh, an opposition member of parliament told Reuters earlier.

Otunbayeva said she had not been in contact with Bakiyev.

Sporadic gunfire continued through the night in Bishkek as crowds looted shops and ran through streets strewn with rubble and glass, whistling and waving red national flags. Many buildings were ablaze and the border with Kazakhstan was closed.

Kyrgyz news agency Kabar said looters ransacked and set ablaze a house belonging to the family of Bakiyev.

The violent unrest, which spread to Bishkek on Wednesday a day after protests in a provincial town, was sparked by growing discontent over corruption and rising prices in a nation where a third of the 5.3 million population live below the poverty line.

The United States has a military air base supporting troops in Afghanistan in the Kyrgyz city of Manas and is a major donor to Kyrgyzstan, along with China and Russia, which also has military base in the former Soviet state.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said operations at the Manas base — visited by U.S. Central Command chief General David Petraeus last month — appeared unaffected.

“It’s an important facility connected to our Afghan operations and it’s functioning normally,” he said.

Bakiyev came to power in the 2005 “Tulip Revolution” protests, led jointly by Otunbayeva, which ousted Kyrgyzstan’s first post-Soviet president, Askar Akayev. She briefly served as acting foreign minister before falling out with Bakiyev.

Spokesmen for the president were not available for comment.

A senior U.S. State Department official said Bakiyev’s fate was unclear. Asked whether the president was still in power, the official said on condition of anonymity: “The situation is unclear. We are in touch with both government officials and the opposition encouraging resolution according to the rule of law.”

GUNSHOT WOUNDS

Political unrest over poverty, rising prices and corruption has gripped Kyrgyzstan since early March. The average monthly wage is about $130 and remittances from workers in Russia have fallen sharply during the global economic crisis.

Analysts said the unrest would also increase uncertainty for foreign investors in Kyrgyzstan’s mining sector and raised the possibility of outside military intervention.

“Bakiyev is unlikely to return to power but the prevailing uncertainty poses severe risks to foreign investors, raises the possibility of foreign intervention and will directly affect U.S. interests in Central Asia,” Eurasia Group analyst Ana Jelenkovic said in a note.

The opposition said at least 100 people had been killed on Wednesday. A Health Ministry official put the death toll in Bishkek at 47, and said 420 people had been injured.

A doctor at a Bishkek hospital said many of the victims had been shot. “There are dozens of dead bodies, all with gunshot wounds,” Akylbek Yeukebayev told Reuters.

The foreign ministry in China, which shares a border with Kyrgyzstan, said it was “deeply concerned” about the unrest.

“Kyrgyzstan’s situation returning to normal as soon as possible is in the interest of the Kyrgyz people, as well as in the interest of regional peace and stability,” spokeswoman Jiang Yu said in a statement on the ministry website www.fmprc.gov.cn.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin earlier called for calm and denied Moscow had played a hand in the clashes.

“Neither Russia, nor your humble servant, nor Russian officials have any links whatsoever to these events,” Putin was quoted as saying by RIA news agency.

Kyrgyz troops earlier shot at thousands of anti-government protesters who tried to smash two trucks through the perimeter fence of government buildings. Opposition activists also took control of state television channel KTR.

Protesters seized government buildings in three other towns. In Talas, Kyrgyz First Deputy Prime Minister Aklybek Japarov and Interior Minister Moldomusa Kongantiyev were beaten. Kongantiyev was forced to shout: “Down with Bakiyev!”, two witnesses said.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visited Bishkek last week and called on the government to do more to protect human rights.

“The secretary-general is shocked by the reported deaths and injuries that have occurred today in Kyrgyzstan. He urgently appeals for dialogue and calm to avoid further bloodshed,” Ban’s spokesman, Martin Nesirky, said on Wednesday.

(Additional reporting by Alexander Reshetnikov in Bishkek; Guy Faulconbridge, Amie Ferris-Rotman and Conor Sweeney in Moscow; Sylvia Westall in Vienna and Lucy Hornby in Beijing; Writing by Robin Paxton and Alison Williams; Editing by Louise Ireland)

Kyrgyz opposition says it forced out government

The Kyrgyz opposition said on Wednesday it had forced the Central Asian country’s government to resign and was demanding the president quit after troops shot at protesters besieging government buildings, killing dozens.

“We have reached an agreement that the government will resign. That has not been signed on paper yet,” Galina Skripkina, a senior official in the opposition Social-Democratic Party and member of parliament, told Reuters.

She said President Kurmanbek Bakiyev had left the capital Bishkek — where demonstrators torched the prosecutor-general’s office and tried to smash trucks into government buildings — and flown to the southern city of Osh.

“For now we have only achieved the government’s resignation. The White House has surrendered. The president himself has not resigned. He must resign and formally submit his resignation to parliament so we can appoint a caretaker government,” she said.

Spokesmen for the government and the president were not available for comment.

Bakiyev himself came to power after 2005 protests which ousted Kyrgyzstan’s first post-Soviet president, Askar Akayev. Both men were accused by their opponents of concentrating power in the hands of their associates.

The U.S. State Department said it had no information the government had fallen and for the moment believed Bakiyev was still in power after the clashes that have spread across the ex-Soviet state of 5.3 million people since last month.

The United States has military air base supporting troops in Afghanistan in the Kyrgyz city of Manas and is a major donor to Kyrgyzstan, along with China and Russia, which also has military base there.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said operations at the base — visited by U.S. Central Command chief General David Petraeus last month — appeared unaffected.

“Right now the transit centre at the Manas airport is functioning normally,” he said. “It’s an important facility connected to our Afghan operations and it’s functioning normally.”

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin earlier called for calm and denied Russia had played a hand in the clashes.

“Neither Russia, nor your humble servant, nor Russian officials have any links whatsoever to these events,” Putin was quoted as saying by RIA news agency.

GUNSHOT WOUNDS

Political unrest over poverty, rising prices and corruption has gripped Kyrgyzstan since early March. About a third of the population live below the poverty line and remittances from workers in Russia have fallen during the global economic crisis.

The opposition said at least 100 had been killed on Wednesday. The Health Ministry put the death toll at 40, and said 400 people had been injured.

“There are dozens of dead bodies, all with gunshot wounds,” Akylbek Yeukebayev, a doctor at a Bishkek hospital, told Reuters.

Many of the injured had gunshot wounds to their heads. “They are killing us,” said one wounded man on the emergency ward.

Reuters reporters could hear gunfire and explosions in Bishkek’s main square and armed men were stalking the streets after midnight. Bonfires burned and shops and restaurants were looted. Thousands of people were on the streets, waving Kyrgyz flags.

Kyrgyz troops earlier shot at thousands of anti-government protesters who tried to smash two trucks through the perimeter fence of government buildings, a Reuters reporter said.

Around 1,000 people stormed the prosecutor-general’s office before setting fire to the building. Opposition activists also took control of state television channel KTR.

Protesters seized government buildings in three other towns. In Talas, Kyrgyz First Deputy Prime Minister Aklybek Japarov and Interior Minister Moldomusa Kongantiyev were beaten. Kongantiyev was forced to shout: “Down with Bakiyev!”, two witnesses said.

Kyrgyz Prime Minister Daniyar Usenov earlier told Reuters by phone that he and the president were 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.

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

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visited Bishkek last week and called on the government to do more to protect human rights.

“The secretary-general is shocked by the reported deaths and injuries that have occurred today in Kyrgyzstan. He urgently appeals for dialogue and calm to avoid further bloodshed,” Ban’s spokesman, Martin Nesirky, said on Wednesday.

(Additional reporting by Alexander Reshetnikov in Bishkek; Guy Faulconbridge; Amie Ferris-Rotman and Conor Sweeney in Moscow; Sylvia Westall in Vienna; Writing by Robin Paxton and Alison Williams; Editing by Philippa Fletcher)

ANALYSIS – Divorce not in cards for U.S. and Karzai

Afghan President Hamid Karzai and the Obama administration have traded public insults in recent days, reflecting a relationship that was tense from the start.

But with more than 85,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan and President Barack Obama relying on a counter-insurgency strategy to turn around the eight-year war, divorce is not an option.

“This latest flap is just one in a steady stream of events whereby Karzai felt he was getting pressured in ways that are not comfortable,” said Daniel Markey, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.

Vice President Joe Biden kicked off a series of tough talks with Karzai soon after Obama was elected, and in a secret memo leaked to The New York Times late last year, Washington’s own ambassador to Kabul tagged Karzai as a “not adequate” partner.

Among his recent criticism, Karzai accused the West of seeking to weaken him and of carrying out election fraud in Afghanistan last year, singling out Washington specifically.

Kabul-based analysts say much of the friction stems from Karzai’s feeling he is not being treated as a true ally and of being lectured to on his own turf by Obama during the U.S. president’s brief visit there last month.

“He is trying to make this issue known that ‘if I am a mercenary, then this country is occupied and if I am a partner, then treat me such,’” said Waheed Mozhdah, a leading analyst who has been in several Afghan governments.

Pro-Karzai parliamentarian Mohammad Noor Akbari agreed. “His viewpoints are reciprocal respect and treatment.”

CORRUPTION QUESTION

But U.S. officials argue that to be treated like a true partner, Karzai must follow through on promises he made after last year’s fraud-tainted election, when he pledged to tackle corruption in his second term.

Lisa Curtis, an analyst from the Heritage Foundation in Washington, said the United States needed to boost the legitimacy of Karzai’s government to lessen the influence of the Taliban, while at the same time deal with claims of corruption against the Afghan leader and his family.

“It is a bit of a game of chicken but the U.S. really has no choice but to put its money where its mouth is and demand that Karzai act as an effective partner. Otherwise, the mission becomes quite difficult and almost impossible,” said Curtis.

The Obama administration’s response to Karzai’s outbursts reflect that dilemma, with initial reaction muted in order not to further erode confidence in the Afghan leader and play into the hands of his enemies.

But there was also a sense of embarrassment that Karzai chose to launch his attacks so soon after Obama’s trip. When the tirades continued after Karzai telephoned Secretary of State Hillary Clinton last Friday, the U.S. tone shifted.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs suggested on Tuesday that a planned meeting between Karzai and Obama on May 12 could be canceled if the Afghan leader’s criticism persisted.

“Our position on this is that when the Afghan leaders take steps to improve governance and root out corruption, then the president will say kind words,” said Gibbs.

BLOW OVER SOON?

The hope is that the war of words will subside soon — just as it did when Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki had caustic ties with the Bush administration at the height of violence there.

U.S. officials are also banking on Karzai’s outbursts being aimed at a domestic audience that sees him as being propped up by Washington, rather than targeting the Obama administration.

“They are doing their best to try and work with him and shape his calculations. Many see the comments for what they are worth — trying to shore up his domestic political base and save some face for himself personally,” said Brian Katulis of the Center for American Progress, a liberal U.S. think tank.

But some of Karzai’s critics in Afghanistan say blaming foreigners for his country’s ills only bolsters the militants.

“The utterances embolden the Taliban and al Qaeda,” said Sardar Mohammad Oughli, a lawmaker and critic of Karzai. “We concede that foreigners have committed lots of mistakes, but when we have a poor government, they should not blame the foreigners.”

Either way, experts say there is no option for the United States but to plod along with a relationship that will always be prickly and work more with ministers who tackle corruption and offer services that have been lacking for decades.

“Of course, the Americans say that Karzai does not fit with Obama’s strategy, but sidelining or removing him is not in the interest of America,” said Kabul analyst Mozhdah.

Troops fire on Kyrgyz protests, govt “resigned”

Kyrgyz troops opened fire on Wednesday on thousands of anti-government protesters who tried to smash two trucks through the perimeter fence of government buildings in the capital Bishkek, a Reuters reporter said.

Russian news agency RIA cited the opposition as saying later the government had resigned and President Kurmanbek Bakiyev had left the capital. There was no immediate confirmation.

The opposition said at least 100 people had been killed on Wednesday in the clashes that have spread across the country since last month.

Around 1,000 people stormed the prosecutor-general’s office in Bishkek before setting fire to the building. Opposition activists also took control of state television channel KTR.

Government soldiers earlier fired automatic weapons from the government headquarters, where Bakiyev had been sheltering from the violence. He has made no public comment.

Protesters earlier arrived in the main square on an armoured personnel carrier seized from the military.

Smoke from burning buildings and makeshift bonfires billowed around the capital of the ex-Soviet Central Asian state of 5.3 million people. The country hosts a U.S. military air base that helps support troops in Afghanistan, as well as a Russian base.

There were a series of blasts in the city and protesters were dragging away the wounded covered in blood.

“There are dozens of dead bodies, all with gunshot wounds,” Akylbek Yeukebayev, a doctor at a Bishkek hospital told Reuters.

Many of the injured had gunshot wounds to their heads. “They are killing us,” said one wounded man on the emergency ward.

“About 100 people were killed today, possibly more. What kind of negotiations with the government can we talk about when they are killing our people?”, prominent opposition and human rights campaigner Toktoaim Umetaliyeza told Reuters.

The Kyrgyz Health Ministry said the official death toll in Bishkek was 40, with around 400 injured across the country.

Around 5,000 people were in the centre of Bishkek, some carrying rifles and holding red-and-yellow Krygyz flags, despite a curfew which came into effect at 8 p.m. (1400 GMT). Some shops and restaurants in the main square were looted.

Political unrest over poverty, rising prices and corruption has gripped Kyrgyzstan since early March. About a third of the population live below the poverty line and remittances from workers in Russia have fallen during the global economic crisis.

The opposition wants Bakiyev, who came to power in a popular revolt in 2005, to fire his relatives from senior positions, and were seeking talks with him.

European security watchdog, the Organisation for Security Cooperation in Europe, chaired by neighbouring Kazakhstan, called for calm and offered to broker any talks.

“The OSCE recognises that there are political, economic and social issues underlying the unrest, which need to be addressed through broad political dialogue. The Organisation stands ready to facilitate such a dialogue,” Kazakh Foreign Minister Kanat Saudabayev told Kyrgyz counterpart Kadyrbek Sarbayev by telephone.

Protesters seized government buildings in three other towns. In Talas, Kyrgyz First Deputy Prime Minister Aklybek Japarov and Interior Minister Moldomusa Kongantiyev were beaten. Kongantiyev was forced to shout: “Down with Bakiyev!”, two witnesses said.

Kyrgyz Prime Minister Daniyar Usenov earlier told Reuters by phone that he and the president were 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.

Kyrgyz opposition leader Temir Sariyev said he wanted to hold talks with Bakiyev. “We’re going to the government’s headquarters,” he told Reuters by telephone. He said he would be accompanied by three more opposition politicians. Asked whom he would meet, he said: “The president, probably.”

Sariyev was among more than 10 opposition politicians released after a crowd gathered outside the building in which they had been held. Sariyev was arrested on his arrival on a flight from Moscow earlier on Wednesday.

U.S., RUSSIA CALLED FOR CALM

Analysts said the violence was likely to continue.

“Given (Bakiyev’s) resolve in recent years to concentrate power in his hands only, it is difficult to see how a political compromise may be found,” Lilit Gevorgyan, political analyst at IHS Global Insight.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin denied Russia had played a hand in the clashes and called for restraint.

“Neither Russia, nor your humble servant, nor Russian officials have any links whatsoever to these events,” Putin was quoted as saying by RIA news agency.

The White House urged all parties to refrain from violence.

Kyrgyzstan receives aid from both Russia and the United States as well as from neighbouring China. Bishkek also relies on remittances from migrant workers in Russia; payments that have dwindled in the past year as Russia’s economy has suffered.

“The country still has an inherent vulnerability which in an environment of economic dislocation can easily be sparked off into a new cycle of violence,” said Christopher Granville of Trusted Sources Research in London.

“The drop in remittances is a very important part of the explanation for the latest civic violence,” he said.

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

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visited Bishkek last week and called on the government to do more to protect human rights.

“The secretary-general is shocked by the reported deaths and injuries that have occurred today in Kyrgyzstan. He urgently appeals for dialogue and calm to avoid further bloodshed,” Ban’s spokesman, Martin Nesirky, said on Wednesday.

(Additional reporting by Alexander Reshetnikov in Bishkek; Guy Faulconbridge; Amie Ferris-Rotman and Conor Sweeney in Moscow; Sylvia Westall in Vienna; Writing by Robin Paxton and Alison Williams; Editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Troops fire on Kyrgyz anti-govt protests, many dead

Kyrgyz troops opened fire on Wednesday on thousands of anti-government protesters who tried to smash two trucks through the perimeter fence of government buildings in Bishkek, a Reuters reporter said.

The opposition said at least 100 people had been killed on Wednesday in the clashes that have spread across the country.

Around 1,000 people stormed the prosecutor-general’s office in the capital before setting fire to the building. Opposition activists also took control of state television channel KTR.

Government soldiers earlier fired automatic weapons from the government headquarters, where President Kurmanbek Bakiyev had been sheltering from the violence. It was not immediately clear whether he was still there.

Huge plumes of black smoke were billowing around the capital of the impoverished ex-Soviet Central Asian state of 5.3 million people that hosts a U.S. military air base that helps support troops in Afghanistan, as well as a Russian base.

There was intense gunfire in the centre of the city and a series of blasts. Protesters were dragging wounded people covered in blood away from the square.

A group of protesters, waving red-and-yellow Kyrgyz flags, earlier arrived in the main square of the capital on an armoured personnel carrier seized from the military.

“There are dozens of dead bodies, all with gunshot wounds,” Akylbek Yeukebayev, a doctor at a Bishkek hospital told Reuters.

Many of the injured had gunshot wounds to their heads and stomachs. “They are killing us,” said one wounded man on the emergency ward.

“About 100 people were killed today, possibly more. What kind of negotiations with the government can we talk about when they are killing our people?”, prominent opposition and human rights campaigner Toktoaim Umetaliyeza told Reuters.

Political unrest over poverty, rising prices and corruption has gripped Kyrgyzstan since early March. About a third of the population live below the poverty line and remittances from abroad have fallen during the global economic crisis.

The opposition wants Bakiyev, who came to power in a popular revolt in 2005, to fire his relatives from senior positions, and were seeking talks with him.

Protesters seized government buildings in three other towns. 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.

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

Kyrgyz opposition leader Temir Sariyev said he wanted to hold talks with Bakiyev. “We’re going to the government’s headquarters,” he told Reuters by telephone. He said he would be accompanied by three more opposition politicians. Asked whom he would meet, he said: “The president, probably.”

Sariyev was among more than 10 opposition politicians released after a crowd gathered outside the building in which they had been held. Sariyev was arrested on his arrival on a flight from Moscow earlier on Wednesday.

MORE CLASHES

“The political violence is likely to continue in Kyrgyzstan,” said Lilit Gevorgyan, political analyst at IHS Global Insight. “Given (Bakiyev’s) resolve in recent years to concentrate power in his hands only, it is difficult to see how a political compromise may be found.”

Kyrgyzstan receives aid from both Russia and the United States as well as from neighbouring China. Bishkek also relies on remittances from migrant workers in Russia; payments that have dwindled in the last year as Russia’s economy has suffered.

“The country still has an inherent vulnerability which in an environment of economic dislocation can easily be sparked off into a new cycle of violence,” said Christopher Granville of Trusted Sources Research in London.

“The drop in remittances is a very important part of the explanation for the latest civic violence,” he said.

The Kyrgyz government declared a state of emergency and said a curfew would be enforced between 8 p.m. and 6 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 and Naryn the day before and continued into Wednesday.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visited Bishkek last week and called on the government to do more to protect human rights.

“The secretary-general is shocked by the reported deaths and injuries that have occurred today in Kyrgyzstan. He urgently appeals for dialogue and calm to avoid further bloodshed,” Ban’s spokesman, Martin Nesirky, said on Wednesday.

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