Kyrgyz Ex-President's Son Appeals Ruling

Aidar Akaev (file photo) (RFE/RL) October 6, 2006 -- The son of former Kyrgyz President Askar Akaev has appealed a Central Election Commission ruling stripping him of his parliamentary seat.
Aidar Akaev's lawyers Galina Skripkina and Cholponbek Aitbaev today filed an appeal with a Bishkek district court.


Skripkina says the commission should have waited for the parliament's go-ahead before making a decision.


In an interview with RFE/RL's Kyrgyz Service, Aitbaev cited other irregularities that, in his view, make the CEC ruling "illegal."


"Should [election commission members] have invited [Aidar] Akaev to their session, he or his representatives would have been able to defend his interests," Aitbaev said. "Since that did not happen, the right a lawmaker has to defend his or her interests have been directly violated."

The commission voted on October 5 to strip Aidar Akaev of his legislative mandate, arguing that he no longer lives in the country.

But Skripkina told reporters today the commission should have waited for the parliament's go-ahead before making a decision.

The commission also stripped another legislator, Muratbek Malabaev, of his parliamentary seat. Malabaev is reportedly close to the Akaev family and currently lives in Moscow.

Both Malabaev and Aidar Akaev won parliamentary seats in the disputed 2005 legislative polls that led to President Akaev's ousting and flight to Russia with his relatives.

(24.kg, AKIpress)

The Tulip Revolution

The Tulip Revolution


ONE YEAR AGO: Click on the image to view RFE/RL's archive of coverage of Kyrgyzstan's Tulip Revolution from the beginning, including biographical sketches of the key players and photo galleries of the demonstrations.

See RFE/RL's special review of the March 2005 Kyrgyz events:

Questions Remain About March 24 'Revolution' (Part I)

Did Revolution Sow The Seeds Of Democracy? (Part II)

Was 'Revolution' A Worthy Successor To Rose And Orange? (Part III)

See also:

Reporter's Notebook -- Witness To The Uprising

THE COMPLETE KYRGYZSTAN: To view an archive of all of RFE/RL's coverage of Kyrgyzstan, click here.