Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Kazakhstan arrests ex !
Current location:HOME >style >Kazakhstan arrests ex

Kazakhstan arrests ex

Time:2024-05-01 06:17:13 source:Culture Quest news portal

TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — Authorities in Kazakhstan arrested a former interior minister on Tuesday, in connection with deadly police crackdown on unrest that gripped the country in 2022, Kazakh news media reported.

The Prosecutor General’s Office announced on Monday that Erlan Turgumbayev was detained on charges of “abuse of power and official authority resulting in grave consequences” in the harsh crackdown of riots by the police. Kazakhstan’s Ministry of Internal Affairs is in charge of the nation’s police force.

The unrest started in the city of Zhanaozen on Jan. 2, 2022, when residents protested a sharp increase in the cost of liquefied petroleum gas, commonly used as fuel for vehicles in Kazakhstan.

Those protests evolved into criticisms of corruption, economic inequality against former leader Nursultan Nazarbayev, whose critics say have been profiting off the country’s vast energy wealth ever since assuming office in 1991.

Related information
  • China calls for intensified diplomatic efforts to end Ukraine crisis
  • 'Unusually cool March': Cold but clear weather for Easter weekend
  • Homicide investigation launched after body found in Hastings
  • Israel presses on with Gaza offensive approaching 100 days of war
  • Shanghai Port remains world's busiest with record throughput in 2023
  • Trump seeks Supreme Court pause in 2020 election case
  • Hamas weighs ceasefire proposal
  • In China, a factory is turning old wedding photographs into fuel
Recommended content
  • Chinese FM meets Russian ambassador to China
  • Ethnic army seizes city on Myanmar
  • TikTok users losing access to Taylor Swift, Billie Eilish songs
  • With feasts and patrols, China tries to keep Uyghurs from fasting — Radio Free Asia
  • China approves first cargo airport
  • Number of reported scams drops, but 'underreporting is still happening'