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Stricken Uzbek leader's daughter hints at 'recovery'

The daughter of Uzbek strongman Islam Karimov, who has suffered a brain haemorrhage, on Wednesday said public support was helping her father's recovery, as rumours swirl over his condition. Lola Karimova-Tillyaeva posted a message of thanks on social media "for your kind words of support and best wishes for the speedy recovery of our president." "It means the world to us, and I am sure that your heartfelt good wishes are helping in his recovery," wrote Karimova-Tillyaeva, Uzbekistan's ambassador to UNESCO. The statement was the first on Karimov's health since his youngest daughter announced on Monday that he was in a "stable" condition in intensive care after suffering a cerebral haemorrhage over the weekend. Long lambasted by rights groups for his brutal crushing of dissent, Karimov, 78, has ruled Central Asian Uzbekistan with an iron fist for over a quarter of a century. While information is very tightly controlled in the ex-Soviet nation, reports have appeared in opposition media based abroad claiming that Karimov is dead. Anonymous sources in Uzbekistan denied the reports in remarks to Russian news agencies. Uzbek officials have made no mention of Karimov's health since a terse government statement on Sunday saying he had been "hospitalised". - Russian doctors - Doctors from Moscow's Burdenko neurosurgical hospital have been treating Karimov "from the very first moment," its head Alexander Konovalov told RBK news site on Wednesday, while giving no details of his condition. Officials have cancelled some celebrations as the country marks 25 years since independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 on Wednesday and Thursday. Tashkent authorities said fireworks planned for Thursday evening had been postponed indefinitely, saying the decision was due to the national team playing Syria in a qualifier match for the 2018 World Cup. Karimov's press service on Wednesday also released a written message from the president for Independence Day saying the country took the "correct path" in 1991. He said Uzbekistan had transformed itself from a "backward" country with a one-sided economy focused on cotton to "a dynamically and stably developing powerful state." The Uzbek presidential site on Wednesday also posted a message from President Vladimir Putin congratulating Karimov on the independence anniversary and wishing him "good health." Karimov, who last year was re-elected to a fifth term with more than 90 percent of the vote, lacks a clear successor. The country has never held an election judged free and fair by international monitors. The wily leader has played off Russia, China and the West against each other to ensure strategically-located Uzbekistan -- which borders volatile Afghanistan -- has avoided total isolation.