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Two Kazakhstan police officers killed by gunmen, say authorities | Two Kazakhstan police officers killed by gunmen, say authorities |
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Two policemen have been killed by gunmen in Kazakhstan’s financial capital, Almaty, security sources and the interior ministry told Reuters, as the authorities said they had launched an anti-terrorist operation. | |
The Interfax news agency, quoting a police source, said “a religious radical and probably a follower of non-traditional Islam”, had opened fire in central Almaty. | The Interfax news agency, quoting a police source, said “a religious radical and probably a follower of non-traditional Islam”, had opened fire in central Almaty. |
Two witnesses told Reuters they had heard shots in several areas in the centre of Almaty, the mainly Muslim country’s biggest city. | Two witnesses told Reuters they had heard shots in several areas in the centre of Almaty, the mainly Muslim country’s biggest city. |
“We saw a man with a rifle, he passed by,” one shop worker said by phone. Police cordoned off streets in the city centre, including one near a local office of the KNB security police, where shots were also heard. | “We saw a man with a rifle, he passed by,” one shop worker said by phone. Police cordoned off streets in the city centre, including one near a local office of the KNB security police, where shots were also heard. |
“I heard one shot, most probably fired from a pistol,” said one man standing nearby. At least one attacker had been detained by the police, the RIA news agency quoted a security source as saying. It said several policemen had also been wounded. | |
Kazakhstan, an oil rich-rich nation of 18 million people, is far more prosperous than its post-Soviet neighbours in central Asia. President Nursultan Nazarbayev, 76, has ruled it with a firm hand since 1989, making stability his motto. But the country has recently seen outbreaks of violence, triggered initially by discontent over proposed land reforms. | |
The KNB, the successor to the Soviet-era KGB, said last month it had detained several members of a group that planned “terrorist acts using improvised explosive devices”, following a deadly attack in the north-western town of Aktobe. | |
In that incident, about two dozen men, described by the authorities as sympathisers of Islamic State, attacked gun stores and a national guard facility, killing seven people. Security forces killed 18 attackers, some on the same day and some in the subsequent manhunt. |