Tajik policemen killed in attacks on state buildings
Attacks that killed eight officers blamed on group allegedly linked to the country's opposition Islamic Revival Party.Asia
Tajik policemen killed in attacks on state buildings
Attacks that killed eight officers blamed on group allegedly linked to the country's opposition Islamic Revival Party.
Eight
policemen have been killed in Tajikistan after gunmen attacked state
security buildings in the capital Dushanbe and the adjacent city of
Vahdat, the country's interior ministry said.
The violence, which is very rare in the Central Asian country, prompted the US embassy in Dushanbe to close on Friday.
It is not yet clear who was behind the attacks, but authorities claimed they were linked to the country's opposition Islamic Revival Party (IRP), which was recently banned.
Tajikistan's interior ministry blamed the attacks on a "terrorist group" led by Major General Abdulkhalim Mirzo Nazarzod, the deputy defence minister who was dismissed later on Friday by President Imomali Rakhmon for allegedly committing crimes.
Nazarzod was a member of the IRP and a former opposition fighter who was brought into the Tajik armed forces under a 1997 peace deal.
Law enforcement officers had killed at least two of the attackers, one of whom was a state security official, and wounded three others, the ministry said. Six people were detained.
The US embassy said the clashes "may be precursors to other acts of violence" and advised Americans in the country to "shelter in place and not send children to school today".
The violence, which is very rare in the Central Asian country, prompted the US embassy in Dushanbe to close on Friday.
It is not yet clear who was behind the attacks, but authorities claimed they were linked to the country's opposition Islamic Revival Party (IRP), which was recently banned.
Tajikistan's interior ministry blamed the attacks on a "terrorist group" led by Major General Abdulkhalim Mirzo Nazarzod, the deputy defence minister who was dismissed later on Friday by President Imomali Rakhmon for allegedly committing crimes.
Nazarzod was a member of the IRP and a former opposition fighter who was brought into the Tajik armed forces under a 1997 peace deal.
Law enforcement officers had killed at least two of the attackers, one of whom was a state security official, and wounded three others, the ministry said. Six people were detained.
The US embassy said the clashes "may be precursors to other acts of violence" and advised Americans in the country to "shelter in place and not send children to school today".
Source: Agencies
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário