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2021–2022 conflict between Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A three-day border conflict between Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan began on 28 April 2021. The clashes stemmed from a long-running dispute over a water supply facility near the village of Kök-Tash.[10] Tajik media raised some concern over military drills in Batken prior to the conflict.[11]
2021 Kyrgyzstan–Tajikistan clashes | |||||||
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Part of the post-Soviet conflicts | |||||||
Map showing the borders between Kyrgyzstan (red) and Tajikistan (orange) | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Kyrgyzstan | Tajikistan | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
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Units involved | |||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
3 killed (per Kyrgyzstan)[5] |
9 killed (per Tajikistan)[6] 11 killed (per RFE/RL)[7] 1 BTR-70 destroyed[8][4] | ||||||
33 Kyrgyzstani and 10 Tajikistani civilians killed 190 Kyrgyzstani and 87 Tajikistani civilians injured[lower-alpha 1] |
On 28 April, forces of Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan on the Kyrgyzstan–Tajikistan border between Kök-Tash and Khojai A'lo, started the clashes, resulting in four deaths and dozens of injuries.[12][13] The initial clashes were fought with fists and thrown stones, but quickly escalated to gunfire, with reports of heavy weaponry.[14] The following day clashes resumed, with reported incidents in the Kyrgyz village of Kok-Terek and some other villages in the Batken and Leylek Districts,[15] and with at least 41 people killed from both sides and roughly 10,000 people evacuated.[16][17] The same day the foreign ministers of Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan agreed to a ceasefire at the border.[18] On 30 April, Tajikistan acknowledged the ceasefire in a statement published by its state information service.[19] The ceasefire was broken twice by Tajiks during the conflict, however, including the night of 29 April.[20]
On 1 May, the President of Kyrgyzstan Sadyr Japarov signed a decree that declares a two-day nationwide mourning,[21] accusing Tajikistan of building-up troops and military equipment on the border. The Kyrgyz side also accused Tajik forces of opening fire on Kyrgyz vehicles in the area, while a Tajik spokesman speaking from Dushanbe said that the country was sticking to the ceasefire and pull-out of troops.[22] Musurmanbek Tursumatov, representative of the regional administrator of the Batken Region, said that Tajik forces had blocked the Osh-Batken-Isfana road to Vorukh despite the ceasefire coming into effect.[23] That same day both countries also agreed to a new ceasefire[24] following minor new border clashes, which includes withdrawing troops from the border. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov urged both countries to honor the new agreement.[25][26]
On 2 May, around 33,388 civilians in Kyrgyzstan were evacuated from the Batken Region near the border.[27] The Kyrgyz Ministry of the Interior and Tajikistan report that the situation at the border is stable and calm. Nonetheless, an unexploded air-to-land rocket was later discovered at a house near the border in Batken.[28]
On 3 May, both countries completed the withdrawal of troops from the border.[29] The President of Tajikistan Emomali Rahmon also ordered that all residential buildings destroyed in Chorku be restored.[30] On 6 May, the Ministry of Emergency Situations reports that 136 houses and 84 facilities in the Batken region have been destroyed.[31] On 10 May, citizens in the Batken region returned home for the first time since evacuating the region.[32] On 18 May, officials in both countries announced that they had agreed to joint security controls along disputed border.[33]
On 9 July, despite the ceasefire, a clash between Tajik and Kyrgyz border guards killed one Kyrgyz serviceman.[34] According to the Kyrgyz side, their patrol unit on horseback was fired upon by the Tajiks in Leylek.[35]
During the four-day conflict, at least 55 people were confirmed killed: 36 died in Kyrgyzstan and 19 in Tajikistan. At least 163 people were wounded in Kyrgyzstan. More than 33,000 people had been evacuated from the area where fighting was taking place.[27][16][17]
The Kyrgyz Ministry of Health and Social Development stated that overall both military and civilian were killed in the clashes. It also stated that most of the dead and wounded were civilians. Some of the civilian deaths occurred when Kyrgyz villagers fled their homes in panic under Tajik mortar fire. Among the killed were a sixth-grader girl and her mother, who, according to Kyrgyz reports, were shot.[36] On 3 May, the death toll for Kyrgyzstan reached to 36 after a 4-year-old boy named Abidin Tursunbaev was killed. Tajikistan also admitted that there are deaths on their side in clashes.[37][38] On 4 May, the number of Tajiks killed at the border increased to 19, including eight border guards and one OMON (special police unit) officer.[39] On 5 May, the death toll during the clashes reached to 55.[40] On 27 January 2022, clashes resumed that resulted in the deaths of 2 people, further adding to the number of casualties.
On 30 April 2021, Human Rights Watch reported that armed Tajiks in civilian clothing had burned down all 17 houses in the Kyrgyz village of Kok-Terek, and 135 houses in Marksat, Arka, International and other 2 villages were destroyed and burnt by Tajik military. The local unprotected population was under mortar and artillery fire. Leilek District. The Kyrgyz authorities also stated that a school was burned.[15] On 2 May, the Kyrgyzstan Interior Ministry launched 11 criminal probe investigations into the events on the border.[41] On 3 May, the prosecutor general's office of Tajikistan launched a criminal investigation into servicemen and citizens of Kyrgyzstan for "unleashing an aggressive war".[42] The Kyrgyz Prosecutor General's Office filed a case on the crime against the peace on 30 April and accused the Tajikistan Armed Forces of invading the country and seizing their sovereign territory.[43]
The European Union welcomed the ceasefire agreement reached on 30 April, and expressed regret over the violence, as well as sympathy to those who had lost relatives or friends.[52]
The Secretary-General of the Turkic Council Baghdad Amreyev stated that "... the Turkic Council calls on the parties to continue exercising caution and take joint measures to stabilize the situation by refraining from any actions that may lead to further escalation of tension", and added it will continue maintaining its close contact with the "Government of brotherly Kyrgyzstan", a founding member of the Turkic Council.[53]
Kyrgyzstanis in Germany and the United Kingdom organized rallies and protests at Tajikistani embassies. Additionally, citizens living in San Francisco protested in support of Batken and call for international institutions to bring President Rahmon to justice.[54]
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