BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan — Baton-wielding police dispersed an anti-government demonstration today in former Soviet Kyrgyzstan, but protesters fought through tear gas and flash grenades to regroup, burning police cars and hurling stones and Molotov cocktails.
By late today, hundreds of protesters angry over rising heat and power prices had overrun a government office on the main square of Talas, a town of 30,000 people west of the capital, Bishkek — just hours after police had forced them out of the area.
The clashes began after the demonstrators in the impoverished Central Asian nation assembled on the central square armed with rocks and flammable liquids, residents told The Associated Press by telephone. Some of the protesters gathered at the local police station and threw Molotov cocktails at President Kurmanbek Bakiyev’s portraits.
Special forces stormed the square and government office, freeing a regional governor who had been taken hostage by the demonstrators. But the forces quickly lost control as the crowd swelled. Toward nightfall the protesters thinned out.
A correspondent for the local affiliate of U.S.-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty in Talas said one person was shot with a rubber bullet fired from inside the police precinct.
Interior Ministry spokesman Rakhmatillo Akhmedov in Bishkek confirmed to The Associated Press that police had used tear gas and said several officers were injured by stones in Talas. The ministry insisted the situation in the town had been brought under control.
The clashes occurred three days after U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon visited Kyrgyzstan and repeatedly criticized it for human rights problems in a strong rebuke to the country once regarded as former Soviet Central Asia’s “island of democracy.”
In Bishkek today, Almazbek Atambayev, the country’s most popular opposition politician, barricaded himself inside his home, according to Irina Karamushkina, another politician who said she was with him. Karamushkina said in a telephone interview that police were trying to enter the building and had threatened to arrest them both.
Other opposition activists were arrested in the capital, according to local reports. Access to the Internet was disabled, but it was unclear how far the electronic disruption reached.
Nationwide rallies are planned for Wednesday, and the unrest could spread through the country. The government warned of “severe” repercussions, and the main opposition party said U.S. and Russian diplomats should urged the government to refrain from violence.
Today, Ban, who is still traveling in central Asia, expressed concern about the situation in Talas.
“He emphasizes that while freedom of assembly is an essential element of any democratic society the rule of law must be respected,” the U.N. spokesman’s office in New York said in a statement. “He calls on all concerned to show restraint and appeals for dialogue.”
Prime Minister Daniyar Usenov said about 100 policemen had been dispatched to Talas, which is a six-hour drive west of the capital, Bishkek, as backup.
“I urge the organizers of these actions to desist from what they are doing. For those that do not listen, measures will be severe,” Usenov said. He said there would be no curfew.
Kyrgyzstan, a mountainous country of 5 million people, hosts a U.S. air base that supports military operations in neighboring Afghanistan and serves as an important transit point for coalition troops and supplies.
Since coming to power on a wave of street protests in 2005, Bakiyev has ensured a measure of stability, but many observers say he has done so at the expense of democratic standards.
Over the past two years, Kyrgyz authorities have clamped down on free media, and opposition activists say they have routinely been subjected to physical intimidation and targeted by politically motivated criminal investigations.
Anti-government forces have been in disarray until recently, but widespread anger over soaring utility bills has galvanized the fractious opposition.
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