The New York Times / June 14, 2010

Kyrgyz Tensions Rooted in Class, Not Ethnicity, Experts Say

By ANDREW E. KRAMER

MOSCOW — The violence that has claimed scores of lives in Kyrgyzstan
is frequently ascribed to ethnic tensions, but regional experts say
the causes are more complex.

“I don’t believe in a narrative of long-simmering ethnic tension,”
Alexander A. Cooley, a professor at Columbia University’s Harriman
Institute and an authority on Central Asia, said in a telephone
interview.

Indeed, ethnic distinctions between Uzbeks and Kyrgyz are so slight as
to be hardly distinguishable, Professor Cooley and others say. Both
are predominantly Muslim and they speak a mutually comprehensible
Turkic language.

The most notable distinction, the one that is most responsible for the
animosities that led to the recent violence, Central Asian experts
say, is economic: Kyrgyz are traditional nomads, while Uzbeks are
farmers.

That divide has translated today into a wide class distinction, as
Uzbeks have prospered and now own many of the businesses in southern
Kyrgyzstan, which has engendered resentment. Among the first buildings
to burn in rioting over the weekend was the “People’s Friendship
University,” singled out apparently because it was built with
donations by wealthy Uzbek businessmen.

Ethnic Kyrgyz in the south have remained largely loyal to a president
deposed in April, Kurmanbek S. Bakiyev, while ethnic Uzbeks have
supported the new interim government. Mr. Bakiyev, now in exile, has
denied any role in the rioting.

Uzbeks make up about 15 percent of the population of Kyrgyzstan, but
they constitute a sizable portion of the population in the south and
had made up about half of the residents of the country’s second
largest city, Osh, before the violence depopulated Uzbek
neighborhoods.

Sergei Mikheyev, a Central Asia expert at the Center for Political
Technologies, a Moscow research group, said the basic divide between
the groups was still not sufficient to explain the rioting. Mr.
Mikheyev instead blamed the recent political turmoil.

from: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/15/world/asia/15ethnic.html

[In the NYT universe, class is something seen only outside of the US.]
-- 
Jim Devine
"Those who take the most from the table
        Teach contentment.
Those for whom the taxes are destined
        Demand sacrifice.
Those who eat their fill speak to the hungry
        of wonderful times to come.
Those who lead the country into the abyss
        Call ruling too  difficult
        For ordinary folk." – Bertolt Brecht.
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