Tokyaev thanks Russia for assistance in dealing with worst incident “in the history of the country”
Last week’s unrest throughout Kazakhstan was an attempted coup that had been planned in advance, and was not simply a spontaneous protest against rising fuel prices, the country’s President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev claimed on Monday.
Speaking to an online meeting of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), made up of six former Soviet republics, Tokayev also stated that constitutional order had been restored.
“Kazakhstan has experienced the worst crisis in the history of its 30-year independence,” Tokayev said, claiming that terrorists, “including foreign militants,” had entered the country to cause mayhem.
“Armed militant groups, who had been waiting for their turn, came into action,” he said. “The main goal has become clear: to undermine the constitutional order, destroy institutions of governance and seize power. We are talking about an attempted coup d’état.”
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Protests in Kazakhstan began early last week when large groups of mainly peaceful protestors took to the streets to protest the removal of price controls on liquified petroleum gas, a fuel that many use to power their cars. According to Kazakh officials, these demonstrations were hijacked by terrorists and organized crime groups, which took to the streets with weapons and attacked law enforcement officers.
“There were rallies, and the participants put forward socioeconomic and sociopolitical demands, all of them were heard and fulfilled by the state,” Tokayev said.