home

Storm Over Kyrgyzstan

by

In a matter of days, opponents of the government of Kyrgyzstan, a tiny, land locked country in the heart of central Asia, ran the president from his offices, and organized an emerging ruling council.

jailhouse.jpg

Storm Over Kyrgyzstan

[col. writ. 4/11/10] (c) '10 Mumia Abu-Jamal

It began with rebellion in the streets.

In a matter of days, opponents of the government of Kyrgyzstan, a tiny, land locked country in the heart of central Asia, ran the president from his offices, and organized an emerging ruling council.

Pres. Kurmanbek Bakiyev himself came to power after a series of protests charging electoral fraud against the former president, Askar Akayev and his parliamentary allies. Ousted president Bakiyev was considered the leader of the 2005 "Tulip Revolution", and was thus immensely popular.

What went wrong?

In essence, the closer Bakiyev got to the U.S. supporter "War on Terror", the more unpopular he became. He assumed more and more autocratic power at the expense of parliament and the people.

The U.S.is, not surprisingly, quite concerned about the ouster of Bakiyev and the state of U.S. - Kyrgyzstani relations. That's because, not far from the capital of Bishkek, is the Manas Air Base, where thousands of U.S. troops are stationed, and where there is also a 13,800 foot runway, making Kyrgyzstan the aerial doorway to Afghanistan, Pakistan and beyond.

And while Kyrgyzstan is now unsettled, and the final result is far from clear, it shows how populations, specifically Muslim populations, may respond when their leaders get too cozy with the Americans, and become perceived as puppets of the U.S. Empire.

This "War on Terror", much like its predecessor, 'The Cold War', placed a premium on buying, co opting or threatening leaders to do U.S. bidding, often at the cost of any real pretense of democracy.

Like any imperial project, it prizes puppets - something no people can support.

It is the flint and spark of protests and inevitably - revolution.

--(c) '10 maj

 

Comentarios

Wisdom

More wisdom from an unrepentant proven and affirmed murderer
as in Mumia Abu Jamal,,,shame

Jon Pisano
Justice for Officer Daniel Faulkner,executed by Mumia Abu Jamal.

Not perfect

Jon Peppers, Amnesty International disagrees with your assessment. If we are to assume that Amnesty lies about human rights violations in the US, why assume they are telling the truth about China or Zimbabwe which once was Rhodesia.

Sadly because Mumia is conflicted in what Amnesty called flawed process, or just because he's been in jail for a generation, it is awkward to question his logic. Mumia seems to assume that there is not a problem caused on planet earth that isn't caused by the US. According to other sources, Russia is at least as responsible for turmoil in Kyrgyzstan, which doesn't excuse what the US does wrong.

I don't think blaming everything on the US makes the US better or the world better either. Mumia I hope you and other falsely convicted people see the light of day someday.
RichardKanePA.blogspot.com

RK PA

May I ask mier% WHY do you believe Jamal was falsely accused and convicted when this case has been reviewed by some of the sharpest legal minds in the business and ALL of the Courts, both State and Federal AFFIRMED his conviction and NONE of the defence attorneys proved otherwise...including AI. Jamal will die in prison...with or without the help of the State. A better chance than he gave his victim ,Officer Daniel Faulkner. Some people are fools led by fools and foolish retoric...are YOU one of them?

Jon Pisano
Justice for Officer Daniel Faulkner

Enviar un comentario nuevo

El contenido de este campo se mantiene como privado y no se muestra públicamente.
  • Las direcciones de las páginas web y las de correo se convierten en enlaces automáticamente.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Saltos automáticos de líneas y de párrafos.

Más información sobre opciones de formato