Akaev's Daughter Denies Family Corruption

Bermet Akaeva in Bishkek in April (RFE/RL) PRAGUE, November 1, 2006 -- The daughter of ousted President Askar Akaev has denied as "rehashed fantasies" a recent U.S. media report that suggests Kyrgyzstan's onetime ruling family oversaw a vast network of illegal assets that included many U.S.-based shell companies.

In remarks to the ferghana.ru information website, Bermet Akaeva questioned the authenticity of the documents the NBC television network used for its report.


NBC on October 30 said it had obtained an FBI report saying that an international investigation was under way "targeting as many as 175 entities associated with the Akaev organization."


Kyrgyz authorities have not reacted to the NBC report, which the AKIpress news agency carried on October 31.


Kyrgyz prosecutors have been giving contradicting indications as to whether Akaev is under criminal investigation for alleged financial misdeeds.


Akaev ruled Kyrgyzstan from 1990 until March 2005, when street protests forced him to flee to Russia.


(ferghana.ru, msnbc.com, 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.