On March 25, a Kyrgyzstan man walks past Guoying Trading
Center, a locally renowned shopping mall owned by Chinese traders in Bishkek. It
was gutted Thursday night, clearly a result of arson by some of the mobs.
(Photo: Xinhua)
Chinese citizens have been warned not to go to Kyrgyzstan after dozens of
Chinese shops in the capital Bishkek were robbed or ransacked in two days of
chaos and looting.
Riots in the Central Asian state have left at least three
people dead, but unconfirmed reports have put the number as high as six.
The
chinese Embassy in Bishkek said at least four Chinese citizens were injured in
the riots and two are in serious condition.
"The unrest has caused the worst
economic damage for Chinese traders in Kyrgyzstan in more than 10 years of
bilateral ties," the embassy said.
The embassy is contacting Kyrgyz
authorities to try to ensure the physical safety and property of Chinese
citizens are protected. It said it will take all possible measures to protect
the 10,000 Chinese in Bishkek and help the victims.
"Due to ongoing concerns
about the possibility of robbery targeting foreigners and their interests, the
Chinese Embassy continues to warn all Chinese citizens of the danger in
Kyrgyzstan and advise them to avoid any unnecessary confrontation with local
people," it said.
Chinese citizens who are not in Kyrgyzstan should defer all
non-essential travel to the country, the embassy said.
The guoying Trading
Center, a locally renowned shopping mall owned by Chinese traders, was gutted on
Thursday night, as a result of arson.
Police and civilian volunteers appeared
yesterday to have stemmed the looting that raged through Bishkek after
demonstrators stormed the presidential headquarters on Thursday and sent
President Askar Akayev fleeing to Russia.
But disorder persisted in the
political sphere, with two rival parliaments competing for power yesterday,
fueling political uncertainty after the Akayev government collapsed in the face
of the massive demonstrations.
The country's law-enforcement coordinator,
appointed by one parliament, demanded the other body be recognized as legitimate
in an apparent split in the opposition.
Some fear the split - and the
competing parliaments - could fuel simmering tension and plunge the country into
deeper turmoil. Both parliaments - the new one elected in the disputed vote that
sparked massive discontent and the one that lost the election - met in separate
chambers over the weekend, each claiming to represent the people.
Felix
kulov, a former opposition leader who was freed from jail on Thursday, warned
lawmakers in the old parliament - led by his own allies - that they should step
down.
"The new parliament is legitimate and the old parliament's term has
expired," said Kulov, now in charge of law enforcement agencies.
He warned
the former parliament that "if you get people out, I will take measures to
arrest you."
Kulov later apologized when Prosecutor-General Azim Beknazarov
challenged him, saying: "These are the people who freed you, will you arrest
them?"
"I am too tired. I apologize for that," Kulov said.
The disputed
elections led to the upsurge of protests that culminated in Thursday's storming
of the presidential and government headquarters.
Akayev took refuge in Russia
while the former parliament reclaimed its expired mandate and quickly named a
new interim leader - former opposition party leader Kurmanbek Bakiyev.
The
split among the new leadership may reflect the deep divisions between north and
south Kyrgyzstan. Kulov is from the north, and most of the opposition leaders
are from the south.
Beknazarov, the prosecutor-general who is closely allied
with Bakiyev, conceded that the new parliament - dominated by Akayev's allies -
would now have to be officially recognized.