PRAGUE, May 10, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- The bloody crackdown on May 13 was preceded by public protests surrounding the sedition trial of 23 local businessmen.
The men were also charged with membership of a banned Islamic group called Akramiya. All of the defendants denied the charges.
Trial Sparks Local Tensions
But even before the trial began in February 2005, their companies had been closed, property confiscated, and their employees sent home to join the ranks of Ferghana Valley's massive jobless population. Human rights activists had accused authorities of using trumped-up charges to get at the businessmen's assets.
Family members and former employees had been demonstrating for weeks outside the courthouse, demanding a fair trial.
"I went personally to School No. 15 in Andijon. And I saw the bodies that were gathered there. I saw it with my own eyes. There were about 500 bodies or more." --Gulbahor Toraeva, Andijon physician.
Andijon-based human-rights activist Lutfulla Shamsiddinov was monitoring the trial. He spoke to RFE/RL on May 10, just days before the rebellion and official crackdown.
"There were around 5,000 people near the courthouse," he said. "In a very organized manner, they were sitting on long benches that they had brought and put on the roadside. There was neither disorder nor shouting."
A verdict was expected on May 11, but was postponed until further notice.
On May 12, word spread that relatives and friends of the accused had been detained. That appeared to trigger more dramatic events.
Protesters Release Defendants, Demand Fair Trial
On the night of May 12-13, unidentified attackers took over a police station, a military garrison, and the prison housing the 23 defendants.
Karimov, addressing a news conference on May 14, blamed members of Hizb ut-Tahrir, an outlawed group seeking to establish an Islamist state in Central Asia, for the unrest. The London-based Hizb ut-Tahrir quickly dismissed the allegation.
Prosecutor-General Rashid Qodirov subsequently laid out the government's version of what happened in the early morning hours of May 13.
"During the attack [on the police station], the criminals murdered four personnel of the patrol post, [and] four more were seriously wounded," Qodirov said. "They took 264 firearms, 40 grenades, and more than 8,000 rounds of ammunition. After that, the same armed band raided the nearby military base and seized a huge amount of weaponry -- including 53 machine guns, four rifles, and more than 2,000 rounds of ammunition, as well as a ZIL-130 [military] truck."