[Excerpt: Some appeared in windows, waving flags and throwing out
documents....Officials were seen fleeing by the back door....Mr Akayev
had been due to hold talks on the crisis in Bishkek with a special envoy
from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE),
but the meeting did not take place....Mr Kulov, a former vice-president
who was jailed for embezzlement in 2000, appealed to Mr Akayev to "meet
with opposition leaders in order to peacefully and constitutionally
transfer power".]

http://212.58.240.132/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/4379441.stm

Last Updated: Thursday, 24 March, 2005, 15:54 GMT

Protesters oust Kyrgyz government

The opposition in Kyrgyzstan says it has taken control of the capital,
Bishkek, after overrunning the president's palace.

Protesters confronted supporters of President Askar Akayev before
flooding into government offices.

A prominent Kyrgyz opposition leader, Felix Kulov, made a televised
appeal for calm after being freed from jail.

Demonstrations were stepped up after recent parliamentary elections,
which the opposition said were rigged.

An unconfirmed report by Interfax news agency said Mr Akayev and his
family have left Bishkek by helicopter.

Kyrgyzstan's Supreme Court has annulled February's controversial
elections and recognised the former parliament as the legitimate
legislature, Russia's Itar-Tass news agency quoted court chairman,
Kurmanbek Osmonov, as saying.

Palace stormed

At the palace - also the seat of government - police melted away as
hundreds of protesters flooded into the compound.

Some appeared in windows, waving flags and throwing out documents.

Officials were seen fleeing by the back door.

Mr Akayev had been due to hold talks on the crisis in Bishkek with a
special envoy from the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in
Europe (OSCE), but the meeting did not take place.

Mr Kulov, a former vice-president who was jailed for embezzlement in
2000, appealed to Mr Akayev to "meet with opposition leaders in order to
peacefully and constitutionally transfer power".

Observers say Mr Kulov is emerging as the leader of what is a fractious
opposition.

Clashes

The BBC's Central Asia correspondent Monica Whitlock says events have
moved at lightning speed, from a quiet demonstration in the morning to a
full-scale insurrection.

    
The demonstration in Bishkek grew rapidly from a few hundred people to
as many as 10,000.

Protesters chanting "Down with the Akayev clans" marched through the
capital to the presidential palace, known as the White House.

Security forces surrounding the building repelled an initial attempt to
storm the compound, but offered little resistance when the demonstrators
fought back.

Clashes erupted between protesters and government supporters in nearby
Ala Too Square and there were reports of some injuries.

The opposition has appeared united so far in calling for the president
to resign and for new elections to be held.

But our correspondent says the fact that some of the demonstrators are
carrying pink banners while others carry yellow shows how difficult it
may be for them to find common ground on more complicated political
issues.

Opposition activists have also seized control of several regional
government buildings in key towns in the south of the country.

Russia, which considers Kyrgyzstan as part of its natural sphere of
influence, urged the country to "return onto a lawful path", AFP news
agency quoted the Russian foreign ministry as saying.
enditem
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