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Another 10,000 protesters stormed police headquarters in Talas, where on Tuesday protesters held the regional governor hostage in his office. Witnesses said the crowd in Talas, mostly middle-aged men from nearby villages, looted police headquarters Wednesday, removing computers and furniture. Dozens of police officers left the building and mingled with protesters. The prime minister, meanwhile, accused the opposition of provoking the violence in the country of 5 million people. "What kind of opposition is this? They are just bandits," Prime Minister Daniyar Usenov said. Hundreds of protesters overran the government building Tuesday on Talas' main square. They were initially dispersed by baton-wielding police, but then fought through tear gas and flash grenades to regroup, burning police cars and hurling stones and Molotov cocktails. Usenov said Tuesday's violence in Talas had left 85 officers injured and 15 unaccounted for. The president, Bakiyev, came to power after spearheading 2005 street protests dubbed the Tulip Revolution, which ousted his predecessor while accusing him of corruption, cronyism and cracking down on the opposition. Five years later, Bakiyev is facing similar accusations from an opposition that says he has sacrificed democratic standards to maintain peace while consolidating power in the hands of his brothers and son. Authorities over the past two years have clamped down on free media, and opposition activists say they have routinely been subjected to intimidation and targeted by politically motivated criminal investigations.
[Associated
Press;
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