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Uzbek president in intensive care after brain haemorrhage, says daughter | Uzbek president in intensive care after brain haemorrhage, says daughter |
(35 minutes later) | |
The Uzbek president, Islam Karimov, is in intensive care after a brain haemorrhage, his younger daughter wrote on social media on Monday. | |
“My father was hospitalised after suffering a cerebral haemorrhage on Saturday morning, and is now receiving treatment in an intensive care unit,” Lola Karimova-Tillyaeva, Uzbekistan’s ambassador to Unesco, wrote on Instagram. | “My father was hospitalised after suffering a cerebral haemorrhage on Saturday morning, and is now receiving treatment in an intensive care unit,” Lola Karimova-Tillyaeva, Uzbekistan’s ambassador to Unesco, wrote on Instagram. |
She said that the authoritarian 78-year-old leader’s condition was “considered stable” but that “at the moment it is too early to make any predictions about his future health”. | She said that the authoritarian 78-year-old leader’s condition was “considered stable” but that “at the moment it is too early to make any predictions about his future health”. |
Uzbekistan’s cabinet of ministers said on Sunday that the leader of the former Soviet country had been hospitalised, in a statement published by the state news agency that gave no details. | |
Karimov has long been the subject of rumours of ill health that are difficult to verify, since information in the central Asian country is tightly controlled. | |
He has held power in the country, which is strategically important and borders Afghanistan, since before it gained independence from Moscow in 1991. | He has held power in the country, which is strategically important and borders Afghanistan, since before it gained independence from Moscow in 1991. |
Karimov has no obvious successor and the country has never held an election judged free and fair by international monitors. | Karimov has no obvious successor and the country has never held an election judged free and fair by international monitors. |
His elder daughter, Gulnara Karimova, a flamboyant figure formerly seen as a potential successor, was detained under house arrest in 2014 after openly criticising officials and family members on Twitter. | His elder daughter, Gulnara Karimova, a flamboyant figure formerly seen as a potential successor, was detained under house arrest in 2014 after openly criticising officials and family members on Twitter. |
Karimova-Tillyaeva is based in Paris. She revealed in a 2013 interview that she had not spoken to Gulnara for 12 years. |