Kyrgyzstani constitutional referendum, 2010

Kyrgyzstan

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Politics and government of
Kyrgyzstan



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A constitutional referendum was held in Kyrgyzstan on 27 June 2010 to reduce presidential powers and strengthen democracy in the wake of the 2010 Kyrgyzstani riots.[1] Parliamentary elections followed on 10 October 2010.

Contents

Background

Following the ouster of Kurmanbek Bakiyev, the interim administration of Roza Otunbayeva called for a referendum to decrease presidential powers. The proposed constitution would make Kyrgyzstan Central Asia's first parliamentary republic.

In the weeks prior to the election ethnic unrest in the south of the country (Bakiyev's home region) in the cities of Osh and Jalal-Abad between minority Uzbeks and indigenous Kyrgyz curfew was imposed in a clampdown by Bishkek. Some refugees returned from camps in Uzbekistan amid a humanitarian crisis. The curfew was lifted for the elections. In Bishkek, the situation was reportedly "calm, with people displaying a mixture of skepticism and hope that the vote would create a new future for Kyrgyzstan."[2]

The vote came amid international fears over the stability of the country.

The interim government's deputy leader Omurbek Tekebayev responded to this criticism saying the foreign intelligence bureaus imply that the parliamentary democracy envisioned in the referendum was incompatible with Kyrgyzstan. "Some top officials from different states have spoken about a possible Afghanization of Kyrgyzstan, about a break-up of the state. I mean the statements by President Dmitry Medvedev and others. It is possible they have been misinformed, that they blindly believe the officials from their special services who have long been at the service of the local oligarchs."[3]

Constitutional changes

The new consititution would make Kyrgyzstan a parliamentary democracy, moving it away from a presidential system. It would also allow parliament to choose a prime minister and play a key role in forming the new government.[4]

Election

Voting was scheduled to end at 20:00, with initial results expected on Monday.[2]

Result

The result was a resounding "Yes," with more than 90 per cent of voters supporting the amendment to the constitution.[5] Sixty-nine percent of voters voted from a total of 3 million eligible voters.[6] Kyrgyzstan was therefore legally able to implement a parliamentary system similar to much of Europe.[6] The result, however, did not include many of the 400,000 ethnic Uzbeks who had left during recent ethnic clashes since they were residing in Uzbekistan at the time of elections.[5]

Kyrgyzstani constitutional referendum, 2010[7]
Choice Votes Percentage
Yes 1,777,339 90.55%
No 158,373 8.07%
Total votes 1,935,712 100.00%
Voter turnout 72.25%
Electorate 1,962,837

Reactions

President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev said the result might lead to a "collapse of the state" as "eventually, won't it enable the political parties, which have extremist direction, to receive the power?".[6]

The U.S. Department of State praised the referendum and called upon the provisional government and people of Kyrgyzstan to "advance the process of reconciliation and accountability to ensure future interethnic harmony and move Kyrgyzstan forward on the path toward stability, security, democracy and prosperity for all citizens of the republic."[8]

Aftermath

Following the legislative election, with an expanded and further empowered parliament, the pro-Baikiyev Ata-Zhurt party won a plurality as it advocated rolling back the new laws and bringing the former president back from exile.

References