In a televised address to the nation, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev blamed the unrest on terrorists and militants and said that he had authorized the use of lethal force against them.
“Those who don’t surrender will be eliminated,” Tokayev said.
He also blasted calls for talks with the protesters made by
some other countries as nonsense. “What negotiations can be held with
criminals, murderers?” Tokayev said.
Kazakhstan’s Interior Ministry reported Friday that 26
protesters had been killed during the unrest, 18 were wounded and more than
3,000 people have been detained. A total of 18 law enforcement officers were
reported killed as well, and over 700 sustained injuries.
Protests have turned extremely violent, with government
buildings set ablaze and scores of protesters and more than a dozen law
enforcement officers killed. Internet across the country has been shut down,
and two airports closed, including one in Almaty, the country’s largest city.
In a concession, the government on Thursday announced a
180-day price cap on vehicle fuel and a moratorium on utility rate increases.
Tokayev has vacillated between trying to mollify the protesters, including
accepting the resignation of his government, and promising harsh measures to
quell the unrest, which he blamed on terrorist bands.
In what was seen as one such measure, the president has
called on a Russia-led military alliance for help.
The alliance, the Collective Security Treaty Organization,
includes the former Soviet republics of Kazakhstan, Belarus, Armenia,
Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan and has started deploying troops to Kazakhstan for a
peacekeeping mission.
Kazakh officials have insisted that the troops will not be
fighting the demonstrators, and instead will take on guarding government
institutions.
On Friday, Tokayev declared that constitutional order was mainly
restored in all regions of the country” and that “local authorities are in
control of the situation.
The president added, however, that terrorists are still
using weapons and are damaging people’s property and that counterterrorist
actions should be continued.
Skirmishes in Almaty were still reported on Friday morning.
Russia’s state news agency Tass reported that the building occupied by the
Kazakh branch of the Mir broadcaster, funded by several former Soviet states,
was on fire.
However, the Almaty airport — stormed and seized earlier by
the protesters — was back under the control of Kazakh law enforcement and CSTO
peacekeepers, Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov
said Friday. The airport will remain shut until Friday evening, local TV
station Khabar 24 reported, citing the airport’s spokespeople.
In other parts of the country some things started to go back
to normal. In the capital, Nur-Sultan, access to the internet has been
partially restored, and train traffic has been resumed across Kazakhstan.
The airport in the capital is operating as usual, Khabar 24
reported. According to the TV channel, airlines will resume domestic flights to
the cities of Shymkent, Turkestan and Atyrau, as well as flights to Moscow and
Dubai, starting from 0900 GMT.