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What we know about protests in Uzbekistan’s Karakalpakstan region

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What we know about protests in Uzbekistan’s Karakalpakstan region

Uncommon protests in Uzbekistan’s autonomous Karakalpakstan area turned lethal final week, in line with the federal government, as President Shavkat Mirziyoyev confronted rising calls to permit an impartial investigation into the violence.

1000’s of demonstrators took to the streets on Friday in opposition to proposed constitutional reforms that will have refused the province, which borders Kazakhstan and the Aral Sea, the suitable to secede.

Beneath the present structure, the sprawling Karakalpakstan, dwelling to a various inhabitants of two million folks together with ethnic Karakalpaks which accounts for about 40 % of Uzbekistan’s territory, is described as a sovereign republic inside Uzbekistan and has the suitable to secede by holding a referendum.

Mirziyoyev has since deserted the modification whereas imposing a month-long state of emergency within the area, the place the circulation of data has been stifled by reported web suspensions since final week.

Uzbek service members are seen in Nukus, capital of the northwestern Karakalpakstan area. [Kun.uz/Reuters]

Here’s what we all know concerning the protests to this point:

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Eighteen useless and 243 wounded

Uzbek authorities mentioned on Monday that 18 folks had been killed and 243 had been wounded in the course of the protests. The nationwide guard mentioned 516 folks had been detained however have since been launched.

Mirziyoyev, who pledged a raft of human rights reforms after taking workplace in 2016, has mentioned there have been “civilians and legislation enforcement officers” among the many useless. Authorities haven’t supplied additional particulars of the identities of these killed or how they died.

The federal government has mentioned protesters marched by way of the provincial capital of Nukus on Friday. They accused protesters of throwing stones, beginning fires and attacking police, in addition to attempting to storm native authorities buildings.

A joint assertion by the province’s police, parliament and cupboard mentioned that “provocateurs” had tried “to grab state establishments … cut up the society and destabilise the socio-political state of affairs in Uzbekistan”.

Unverified movies posted on-line have proven 1000’s of protesters marching in Nukus. Some have purported to point out wounded protesters bleeding on the streets.

Pictures printed on Sunday by the Kun.uz information web site confirmed road barricades, burned vehicles and a heavy army presence together with armoured personnel carriers.

In the meantime, rights teams have mentioned the central authorities has suspended web within the area since final week.

On Saturday, the federal government imposed a month-long state of emergency within the province to “guarantee the security of residents, defend their rights and freedoms (and) restore legislation and order”, Mirziyoyev’s Press Secretary Sherzod Asadov wrote on the Telegram app.

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The state of emergency included a curfew however additional particulars weren’t instantly launched by the federal government.

Requires impartial investigation

On Monday, the European Union known as for “an open and impartial investigation into the violent occasions in Karakalpakstan” and known as on “all sides to point out restraint of their actions”.

The EU additionally known as on “authorities to ensure human rights, together with the basic rights to freedom of expression and freedom of meeting, according to Uzbekistan’s worldwide commitments”.

Talking to Al Jazeera, Hugh Williamson, the director of the Europe and Central Asia division on the New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW), known as the “excessive loss of life toll” very regarding.

He additionally mentioned there have been considerations that “impartial reporting shouldn’t be being allowed” in Karakalpakstan after a correspondent from Eurasia.web was detained on Monday, following her reporting in Nukus. She was later launched.

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Williamson mentioned HRW was calling on the federal government to reverse suspensions of cell and fixed-line web connections in Nukus and urged Mirziyoyev to reside as much as his guarantees of reform.

“This can be a good alternative for it to show … that it respects fundamental human rights, it investigates what’s occurred, and particularly, it brings to account the police or safety forces which will or might have carried out these killings,” he mentioned.

Regional response

The protests characterize the second important occasion of unrest in Central Asia this yr, after Kazakhstan in January crushed mass protests. No less than 227 folks had been killed in that crackdown, with practically 10,000 arrested.

Forces from the Collective Safety Treaty Group (CSTO) – which incorporates Kazakhstan, Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Kazakhstan – had been additionally deployed to the nation on the request of Kazakhstan President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev.

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The Reuters information company reported that Mirziyoyev spoke to Tokayev on Monday. The Kazakh president’s workplace later mentioned Tokayev welcomed Tashkent’s measures to make sure stability in Karakalpakstan. Kazakhstan is dwelling to the biggest Karakalpak diaspora overseas.

Uzbekistan shouldn’t be a member of the CSTO or any safety alliance with Russia, and whereas sustaining shut ties to Moscow, has more and more developed relations with the US, the EU and China lately.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov on Monday known as Uzbekistan a “pleasant nation” and mentioned the protests in Karakalpakstan had been an “inside matter” that it was assured Tashkent would resolve.

Map of Uzbekistan showing Karakalpakstan

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TVLine Items: Mistletoe Murders Date, General Hospital Return and More

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‘Mistletoe Murders’ Release Date for Hallmark Plus Sarah Drew Series



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Israeli defense minister tells US only ‘military action’ can return people to homes amid Hezbollah threat

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Israeli defense minister tells US only ‘military action’ can return people to homes amid Hezbollah threat

In a meeting with a top adviser to President Biden on Monday, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant warned that “military action” against Hezbollah was the “only way” to safely return its citizens to their northern homes. 

U.S. envoy Amos Hochstein met with both Gallant and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in an attempt to avoid a broader conflict between the Jewish state and the Iran-backed terrorist groups.

But Israeli officials appeared steadfast in their position on handling Hamas to the south and Hezbollah to the north, and noted the time to secure a cease-fire agreement to end the war in Gaza was running out, particularly as Hezbollah continues to “tie itself” to Hamas.

Amos Hochstein, left, senior adviser to President Biden, meets with Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant during his visit in Tel Aviv, Israel on Sept. 16, 2024. (Ariel Hermoni/IMoD/Anadolu via Getty Images)

HEZBOLLAH RELIES ON ‘SOPHISTICATED’ TUNNEL SYSTEM BACKED BY IRAN, NORTH KOREA IN FIGHT AGAINST ISRAEL

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Instead, Gallant told Hochstein that Jerusalem needed to “change the security situation on the northern border,” though he did not detail what this would entail.

Israeli security experts have been warning for months that Jerusalem faces a far greater threat along its northern border as Hezbollah – already better financially backed and militarily equipped than other Iranian proxy forces like Hamas – has been gaining power for decades.

Israeli citizens fled their homes in the north following the catastrophic attacks by Hamas in the south on Oct. 7, 2023, fearing a similar attack could be carried out by Hezbollah.

Additional evacuations have since been enforced by government officials along the northern border as Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and Hezbollah routinely engage in cross-border skirmishes.

Injured man in Israel

Israeli soldiers evacuate an injured man following a cross-border attack from Lebanon into Israel, Sept. 1, 2024. (Reuters/Ayal Margolin)

ISRAEL’S UN AMBASSADOR SLAMS WORLD BODY, SAYS UNRWA TAKEN OVER BY HAMAS TERRORISTS IN GAZA

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It is unclear how many Israeli residents have been displaced since the onslaught of the war against Hamas nearly one year ago, though some estimates suggest that figure could be as high as 80,000.

“We are in a multi-front campaign against Iran’s axis of evil, which is striving for our destruction,” Netanyahu said following Houthi and Hezbollah missile strikes on Sunday. “I am attentive to the residents of the north. 

“I see their distress. I hear their anguish. The current situation will not continue,” he added. “This requires a change in the balance of forces on our northern border. We will do whatever is necessary to return our residents securely to their homes.

“I am committed to this. The government is committed to this, and we will not suffice with less than this,” Netanyahu warned. 

Israeli officials have shown increasing resistance to a cease-fire deal with Hamas and have said no deal can be reached without the return of all hostages, despite pressure from the Biden administration. 

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Lebanon strikes

An explosion takes place as Israeli strikes hit southern Lebanon, as seen from Zibqin, Lebanon, Aug. 25, 2024. (Reuters TV via Reuters)

Netanyahu has also said there are major security concerns that cannot be compromised for the sake of a cease-fire, like the continued presence of Israeli forces in the Philadelphi Corridor in Gaza, which runs along the border with Egypt.

Following the Monday meeting between Netanyahu and Hochstein, the prime minister, according to a readout of the exchange, said Israel “appreciates and respects the support of the United States,” but added that Jerusalem “will do whatever is necessary to maintain its security and return the residents of the north to their homes safely.”

Fox News’ Yonat Friling contributed to this article.

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Brain drain in Western Balkans spikes amid absence of opportunities

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Brain drain in Western Balkans spikes amid absence of opportunities

Youth brain drain is becoming a worrisome problem for the Western Balkan countries of Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Kosovo and Serbia.

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Youth brain drain is becoming one of the most worrisome problems for Western Balkan countries. 

All six countries of the region — Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Kosovo and Serbia — rank among the top brain drain leaders in the world due to the pace and intensity of the phenomenon within their borders. 

They could lose between an estimated 25%-50% of their skilled and educated workforce in the forthcoming decades, according to the research of the German Marshall Fund. 

Young Macedonians who spoke to Euronews said they were disappointed by the level of corruption in the country as well as the absence of opportunities and perspectives. 

“You still see corrupt institutions, you do not see any rule of law, you do not see any improvement in terms of the economy or education, and that’s the first thing,” Petar Barlakovski, who studied in the UK, said.

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“When one cannot see that the European Union is close, that it’s far, it is just as it was 10 years ago, one asks the question, is there a future in this country,” he added.

The Macedonian Ministry of Education spends millions of euros on scholarships for young people but then reportedly shows no interest in them, according to experts.

Risto Saveski, president of the Youth Educational Forum, told Euronews the ministry does not have evidence of how many students finish their studies abroad and whether they have returned to North Macedonia. 

The Western Balkan countries are rapidly losing their population. 

In the last three decades, due to massive emigration, Serbia has lost 9% of its citizens, North Macedonia lost 10%, while 24% left Bosnia and 37% departed from Albania. 

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To find out more, watch the Euronews report in the player above. 

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