A media scandal
has broken out in the Central Asian republic of Kyrgyzstan following the
posting of a YouTube video showing a protest organizer meeting with the
American ambassador.
Continue..
On
Wednesday, a few dozen people organized by civil society and rights
groups gathered in front of the presidential building in the Kyrgyz
capital of Bishkek, protesting a government initiative to hold a
referendum which would make changes to the country's constitution.
Protesters attached portraits of government officials with their faces
crossed out to the presidential building's gates, and carried banners
saying "Do Not Sell the Country!" and "Do Not Rape the Constitution."
Еще раз! В Бишкеке прошел НЕМНОГОЧИСЛЕННЫЙ митинг против поправок в Конституцию. Приняли участите около 50 чел. pic.twitter.com/NAln2Q6uf9
— Ivan Info (@monitor4press) June 24, 2015
"Again!" A small rally in Bishkek against amendments to the Constitution. Attended by about 50 people."
But the scandal, which broke out on Wednesday evening, was over an anonymous YouTube video which showed protest organizer Nurbek Toktakunov, leader of local NGO 'Precedent', meeting with US Charge d'Affaires Richard Miles shortly after the protest.
"What was the reason behind the American
ambassador's meeting with an ordinary NGO organizer? Perhaps Toktakunov
was accounting for his work before the Americans –for organizing the
protest rally?"
Gaining wide attention in local media, the scandal forced Toktakunov
to attempt to explain the meeting with Miles, who has been described
as a 'genius of color revolutions'. The civil society organizer told
Kyrgyz news agency 24.kg that "the meeting had been planned for a long
time. The original meeting was scheduled for June 18, but I was busy and
forgot, so they [the US Embassy] carried it forward to the 24th. It had
no relation to yesterday's events."Having experienced a color revolution in 2005, the country's journalists' worries were heightened in April, when it was revealed that the US had sent a mysterious Ukrainian-owned plane with over 150 tons of 'diplomatic mail' from the UAE to its embassy in Bishkek. Media have not ruled out that the 'diplomatic cargo' could be used for planning another color revolution in the country.
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