Kohat car bomb blast kills 18, including 6 children
KOHAT – At least 18 people, including policemen, women and children, were killed and more than...
Islamia College Vice Chancellor kidnapped in Peshawar
PESHAWAR – Kidnappers seized the Vice Chancellor of Islamia College University in Peshawar out...
Aisam Qureshi in US Open tennis semi-final
ISLAMABAD – Pakistani tennis star Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi became the first-ever Pakistani to reac...
TTP to continue attacking Pakistani forces
PESHAWAR – The Pakistani Taliban vowed to continue attacking the country’s security forces and...
UN: Pakistan aid essential for global stability
NOWSHERA The world must help Pakistan rebuild homes and businesses destroyed by floods to win...
ADB refuses extra $2 billion for flood-hit Pakistan
ISLAMABAD – The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has abandoned plans to provide Pakistan an extra...
3 school bombings in Peshawar, Khyber Agency
PESHAWAR – Two schools in Khyber Agency and another in Peshawar have been blown up during the...
Afghan cricket team defeats Pakistan
KARACHI – The Afghanistan Youth Afghan Cricket Association (AYCA) won the final of the Dr. M.A...
Orakzai Agency 90% cleared of militants, army says
ORAKZAI AGENCY – The Pakistani army claimed September 7 it has cleared nearly 90% of Orakzai A...
Kazakhstan, Russia to develop Imashevsky gas field
ATYRAU OBLAST, Kazakhstan -- Kazakhstan and Russia have signed a pact to jointly explore and s...
Osh riot participant gets 23-year sentence
OSH -- An Osh court has sentenced a participant in the June ethnic riots to 23 years in prison...
Tajik guardsman killed in shootout with escapees
DUSHANBE -- A Tajik National Guardsman was killed September 7 in a shootout in eastern Tajikis...
Turkmenistan to build $1.9 billion sports complex
ASHGABAT -- The Turkmen government announced September 4 plans to build a US $1.9 billion Olym...
Kazakh-Russian tokamak produces first plasma
OSKEMEN, Kazakhstan -- A joint Kazakhstani-Russian tokamak has produced its first plasma, Kurc...
OSCE deploys Kyrgyz election mission
BISHKEK -- The OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR) opened its obs...

Tajik officials react to Ahmadov’s threat to take up arms

By Buzurgmekhr Ansori and Max Maxudov
2010-07-28


DUSHANBE – Several Tajik observers have responded to former United Tajik Opposition field commander Mirzokhudzha Akhmadov's vow to resort to arms if the government tries to prosecute him for the unsolved 2008 slaying of special police (OMON) commander Oleg Zakharchenko.


The story is false, Interior Ministry spokesman Makhmadullo Asadulloyev told Central Asia Online.


“The story spread by several foreign media organisations is unreliable and can be treated as disinformation,” he said. “We’ll explain who wrote it and are preparing a denial.”


The question of Akhmadov’s alleged involvement needs to be answered through the legal process rather than through violence, said Islamic Renaissance Party of Tajikistan (PIVT) spokesman Khikmatullo Saifulozoda.

“In light of the situation in eastern Tajikistan,” he said, “it’s necessary to create a working group (on this issue) ... to prevent destabilising an entire region.”


In an interview with Central Asia Online, Akhmadov said that he doesn’t have weapons now, but he has many supporters. He said if the Zakharenko case is raised again, he will resort to arms. Akhmadov said he wasn’t guilty in Zakharenko’s death – Zakharenko died in an exchange of fire, but there is no proof that the bullet that killed him came from Akhmadov’s side.


Sukhrob Sharipov, director of the Presidential Centre for Strategic Research, was more optimistic about Tajik stability when he gave a news conference July 15. The country is peaceful for several reasons, he said then. “It has eight legitimately existing political parties,” he said, adding that law enforcement agencies monitor and fight religious extremism.


The ultimate guarantee of stability, in his view, is the population’s memory of civil war. “Our people will never return to the chaos and anarchy that reigned at the beginning of the 1990s,” he said.


Bookmarking

.