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A man stands in the burned ruins of his house in Maevka on April 20.
A man stands in the burned ruins of his house in Maevka on April 20.
RFE/RL has reported that some of yesterday’s violence in Kyrgyzstan, which claimed the lives of at least three people, was ethnically motivated. Amid speculation that Russians were being targeted, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev swung into action, ordering his defense minister to ensure the security of Russian citizens in the country.

But in the village of Maevka, RFE/RL correspondents reported that the main target of attacks appeared to have been Meskhetian Turks.

Who?

Not exactly major players on the geopolitical landscape, that’s for sure.

The ethnic origin of Meskhetian Turks is still a subject of debate among scholars. While some argue that they are ethnic Turks, others believe they were forcibly converted to Islam by Ottoman forces who invaded their homeland, Meskheti, in southwestern Georgia. With a culture and dialect formed from both Turkish and non-Turkish elements, the Meskhetian Turks number between 300,000 and 400,000 people.

In recent history, they have been persecuted and displaced, starting in 1944, when Stalin deported more than 100,000 of them from Meskheti for alleged disloyalty to the Soviet Union. They were cast across Central Asia and thousands died in the process.

In 1989, some 100 Meskhetian Turks were killed in ethnically motivated violence in present-day Uzbekistan’s Ferghana Valley, prompting Soviet authorities to evacuate them. A large number were moved to the Krasnodar area.

After the fall of the Soviet Union, they existed in stateless legal limbo, and in Krasnodar, faced state-sanctioned persecution. In recent years, as plans for Georgian repatriation have stalled, there has been a mass immigration of Meskhetian Turks to the United States.

WATCH: Meskhetian Turks in the Kyrgyz village of Maevka become a target of attacks as rioters loot and burn their houses:

Kyrgyz Village After Attack
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For the thousands who remain in Central Asia, ethnically motivated violence persists. A EurasiaNet.org report recounted one man’s experience of the April 19 events in Kyrgyzstan:

Binali Dursunov, 50, says he believes he was targeted for his ethnicity. "They were running around yelling, ’Go away Turks, this is our land,’" he told EurasiaNet.org, standing in the gutted, burned shell of his family home. "They went to the Turkish houses and some Russian houses got damaged on the other side of the village as well.
EurasiaNet.org reports that squatters perpetrated the attacks, as they looked to grab land in the wake of ex-President Kurmanbek Bakiev’s ouster.

But whatever the cause, it is nothing new for the long-persecuted group.

Nevertheless, there are some who are looking out for the estimated 20,000-30,000 Meskhetian Turks living in Kyrgyzstan. Today, Turkish Ambassador Nejat Akcal visited the village of Maevka and urged authorities to prevent further attacks.

And again from EurasiaNet.org:

Praising her ethnic Kyrgyz neighbors, Dursunov’s Meskhetian neighbor Sonya Omurkanova, 40, said, "Our Kyrgyz neighbors were coming out, standing in the gates to the Turkish houses, telling the crowd it is a Kyrgyz home; the crowds then passed by." The Kyrgyz also hid some Turks.

-- Richard Solash
Vahan Khalafian in an undated photograph
Vahan Khalafian in an undated photograph
The relatives of an Armenian man who died in detention last week have accused the police of murdering him, RFE/RL's Armenian Service reports.

Relatives of Vahan Khalafian, who died in a police station in the town of Charentsavan, told RFE/RL on April 19 that they reject police claims that Khalafian committed suicide.

They said a forensic examination of Khalafian's body provided ample evidence of torture that they believe he suffered on April 13 at the police station in Charentsavan, which is about 40 kilometers north of the capital, Yerevan.

Khalafian, 24, and three other local men had been detained on suspicion of stealing 1.5 million drams' ($3,800) worth of goods.

The police claimed the next day that following an interrogation after his arrest, Khalafian took a "kitchen knife" from a police officer's drawer and fatally wounded himself in the stomach. They said he suffered from a mental disorder and had been exempted from military service in 2005 for that reason.

National police chief Alik Sarkisian today denied the family's claims, saying police officers did not need to forcibly extract any testimony from Khalafian as he had already confessed.

"I want to make clear that there was no torture," Sarkisian told RFE/RL. "Such claims about beatings, torture, and the like are made all the time, especially among the popular masses."

"There is simply no point in subjecting [a suspect] to torture after obtaining confessing testimony and other factual evidence," he added.

Armenia's Special Investigative Service questioned the police version of events after it took over the criminal investigation into Khalafian's death last week.

Khalafian's relatives said he had bruises on various parts of his body, lacerations on his chest, and two stab wounds on his abdomen. "They made crosses on his chest with a knife and stabbed him in the abdomen twice," his bereaved mother, Anahit Khalafian, told RFE/RL. "How could my boy make such crosses on himself?"

"If my son was a thief, they should have jailed him rather than killing him and sending me his dead body," she said, screaming in anger.

She claimed that her son was detained by the police only to extort a bribe from him.

Ill treatment of criminal suspects has long been regarded by critics as the most frequent form of human rights violations in Armenia. Local and international human rights groups continue to accuse law enforcement of extracting confessions by force and intimidation.

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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