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Uzbekistan's leadership is trying to cover up a "massacre" by blocking
an international inquiry into the killing of protesters last month, Human Rights
Watch said on Tuesday.
The New York-based group released the most comprehensive report so far into
the bloodshed in the town of Andizhan but said key questions -- including the
true death toll which witnesses have said could be over 500 -- were still unanswered.
"The scale of the killings and the deliberateness of the security officials
means this can only be described as a massacre," Kenneth Roth, executive
director of Human Rights Watch, said as he presented the report.
The report said the wounded were left untreated for hours and some were finished
off by troops where they lay. Many bodies were still unaccounted for, it said.
Witnesses to the May 13 killings say Uzbek troops opened fire without warning
on a crowd of unarmed demonstrators, among them women and children, who were
protesting about poverty and government repression.
"An independent, international inquiry is required to get at the truth
of what happened," Roth told reporters.
"The Uzbek government and parliament say we should trust them to investigate
... but in fact the government is blocking access to information," Roth
said.
Uzbek President Islam Karimov has said the death toll was 173 people and that
most of the victims were armed terrorists who were trying to overthrow the government
and install Islamic rule in the ex-Soviet state.
Karimov has rejected calls from the United Nations, the European Union and
the United States for an international inquiry. The Uzbek parliament is conducting
its own inquiry.
Uzbekistan, with 26 million people Central Asia's most populous state, is an
ally in the U.S.-led "war on terror," leasing a base to the U.S. military
to support its operations in neighboring Afghanistan.
But Washington should now scrap plans to expand the base to exert pressure
on Karimov, Human Rights Watch said.
"I hope the Bush administration realizes that Karimov is no longer an
ally. He has turned into a deep liability," Roth told a news briefing.
"BOWLING ALLEY"
A senior official in the Uzbek capital, Tashkent, told Reuters an official
government response to the Human Rights Watch report was not ready.
The report was presented in Moscow because Roth was attending the group's board
meeting in the city.
A Reuters reporter in Andizhan on May 13 witnessed some of the killing, while
a second Reuters reporter afterwards collected witness accounts in the town
and saw evidence suggesting the authorities were secretly burying victims.
The rights group's report -- based on 50 interviews with witnesses -- said
troops fired directly into a crowd of protesters in Andizhan's main square without
issuing any warning, although in two cases they fired into the air.
No one in that crowd was armed, it said, contradicting the Uzbek government's
version. A handful of protesters with weapons were standing apart from the main
body of people, it added.
And it ruled out the involvement of Islamic militants in inciting the violence.
Before the shooting, protesters "were shouting 'Ozodliq!' ('Freedom'),
not 'Allahu Akbar! ('God is Great')," the report said.
It backed up earlier accounts of troops trapping fleeing protesters outside
the town's School No. 15, then opening fire.
"It was like a bowling game, when the balls strike the pins and everything
falls down ... There were bodies everywhere," the report quoted one unnamed
witness as saying.
In Geneva, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) pressed Uzbek
authorities to allow it to visit people wounded or detained in Andizhan.
"Restoring family links is a priority as many Uzbeks still do not know
whether missing next-of-kin are dead, injured or arrested or whether they fled
the violence to another part of the country," it added.
(Additional reporting by Shamil Baigin in Tashkent and Stephanie Nebehay in
Geneva)