EXPLAINER: What's behind unrest rocking oil-rich Kazakhstan
ABC News
Intense protests have ripped through the oil-rich Central Asian nation of Kazakhstan
MOSCOW -- Kazakhstan is experiencing the worst street protests the country has seen since gaining independence three decades ago.
Police in the country's largest city, Almaty, say that dozens of people have been killed in attacks on government buildings. At least eight law enforcement officers have been killed.
The outburst of instability is causing significant concern in Kazakhstan's two powerful neighbors: Russia and China. The country sells most of its oil exports to China and is a key strategic ally of Moscow.
A sudden spike in the price of car fuel at the start of the year triggered the first protests in a remote oil town in the west. But the tens of thousands who have since surged onto the streets across more than a dozen cities and towns now have the entire authoritarian government in their sights.