After the riots, recovery continues in Kazakhstan.

Authorities announced on Saturday January 22 that they had arrested more than 450 people for terrorism and mass unrest after protests that rocked the Central Asian country in early January.

Unprecedented demonstrations against an increase in energy prices had degenerated in this former Soviet republic into riots and armed repression, killing some 225 people, injuring hundreds and prompting President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev to request the deployment of forces Russian armies and their allies to restore order.

According to Eldos Kilymjanov, a senior Kazakh prosecutor, 464 suspects were arrested for terrorism and mass disturbances following the riots.

 A total of 970 people accused of theft, public disorder or illegal possession of weapons have been arrested as part of the investigations opened after the violence, Eldos Kilymjanov told the press.

 Unprecedented violence since the country's independence in 1991 has prompted at least 12,000 arrests and prompted authorities to seek help from the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), a Russian-led alliance .

More than 2,000 soldiers were thus dispatched to Kazakhstan to support the authorities, before withdrawing on January 19, once their mission was accomplished. 

President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev hastened to accuse "terrorists" trained according to him abroad of being behind the violence, without however providing evidence.

Conflict at the top of power

Kassym-Jomart Tokayev succeeded in 2019 to his mentor, Nursultan Nazarbayev, who reigned with an iron fist for three decades over the largest country in Central Asia, with 19 million inhabitants, a transition which seemed successful.

The bloody crisis in January, however, brought to light the internal struggle at the top of power.

>> To see: Kazakhstan: does the "anti-terrorist" operation hide a clan struggle?

In an unprecedented way, the new president attacked his predecessor last week, accusing him of having favored the emergence of a "rich caste" dominating this state abounding in hydrocarbons.

On Tuesday, the influential "Head of the Nation", ex-president Nursultan Nazarbayev, 81, spoke for the first time since the start of the crisis to pledge allegiance to the current president and ensure that he does not there was "no conflict or confrontation within the elite".

Several of Nursultan Nazarbayev's relatives have however been removed from key positions in recent days, and others have been imprisoned.

With AFP

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