During this past month, ethnic violence between Uzbeks and Kyrgyz has shook the small country of Kyrgyzstan in central Asia, resulting in over 200 dead and 120,000 displaced. Throughout the chaos Kyrgyz libertarians led a series of coordinated voluntary efforts to provide emergency aid to the victims of the vicious attacks and to promote peace throughout the nation and the region. Atlas’s Tom Palmer has been in regular touch with our friends there, and on Tuesday evening he talked to Central Asian Free Market Institute (CAFMI) Director Mirsulzhan Namazaliev by Skype, as he was interrupted by a stream of volunteers working late into the night in the CAFMI offices. He made their resolution clear:
“We are helping those who are suffering, but we are doing more. For me personally this is not only a fight for life. It is a fight for freedom. We don’t want to be ruled by any authoritarian Central Asian or Russian regimes that would exploit this awful violence. The violence we are suffering is a provocation designed to generate chaos and to overturn the chance for a constitutional regime. We will not stand for it. We want peace, we want freedom, and we want a lawful government.”
Palmer was in Kyrgyzstan just last month to work with CAFMI and with the new acting minister of economic development, Emil Umetaliev, a founding member of CAFMI’s board of directors. The CAFMI team includes two Atlas Think Tank MBA graduates – co-founder and director, Mirsulzhan Namazaliev, and operations manager Gulmira Aidaralieva. There was guarded optimism about the country’s future, after the corrupt and increasingly authoritarian regime of Kurmanbek Bakiyev was ousted in an uprising after he tried to suppress demonstrations with deadly force. But there was also fear of Bakiyev’s machinations, especially after the revelation of a recorded cell phone conversation between his son, Maksim, and his brother Janybek (who had given the orders to shoot protesters in April), in which they clearly plot violence to derail a new constitutional process and regain power, even proposing how many “fighters” to hire, arming them with iron bars and other implements, and how much to pay them to launch attacks. The recording was chilling. And with the money they looted from the country, they found the thugs to launch attacks on both Uzbek and Kyrgyz villages, in order to spark revenge attacks. Their plans bore fruit this month, as hundreds were murdered, homes and businesses were burned, and 120,000 people were made refugees.
As Namazaliev remarked, “We will not stand for it.”
CAFMI’s staff and volunteers are almost all under the age of 25. Few have backgrounds in defense or security. But they immediately put the talents they do have to work. CAFMI volunteers worked with others to solicit, gather, and deliver humanitarian assistance for the thousands of people – mainly mothers and children – who had been driven from their homes, and to create a message of communal peace – of Kyrgyz, Uzbeks, Russians, Uighurs, Tajiks and others who were standing together for peace and against murder and hatred. They called together teams of computer experts, technological wizards, social networkers, and activists to build an umbrella coalition:
“I Want Peace in Kyrgyzstan” -”Мен Қирғизистонда тинчлик бўлишини истайман!” in Uzbek, “Мен Кыргызстанга тынчтыкты каалайм!” in Kyrgyz, and “Я хочу мира в Кыргызстане!” in Russian.
The “I Want Peace in Kyrgyzstan” campaign has five coordinated elements:
The young volunteers and staff of CAFMI are donating their time, risking their lives, and contributing their scarce resources, in a country with a per-capita income of about $2,100. If you’d like to stand with a group of very brave, very determined, and very committed libertarians you can send a tax-deductible donation to the Central Asian Free Market Institute (CAFMI) through Atlas, which has provided support to CAFMI. Please write to Erin.Grant@AtlasNetwork.org and 100% of your donation will be dedicated to CAFMI’s work in Central Asia. Donations of all sizes are welcome.
It would be a decision you would not regret. (You can follow CAFMI’s work on its Facebook page and Namazaliev writes in Russian and in English on NewEurasia.net, Twitter, and other media. He covered the April uprising against Bakiyev’s authoritarian regime in The Independent and was quoted frequently by CNN and many other news organizations. You can also read more about CAFMI’s work on the Atlas website.)
Your support can make a huge difference in Kyrgyzstan’s transition to a peaceful and free country.