Güncelleme Tarihi:
Law enforcement agents "neutralized" the group in a special operation carried out on Saturday, the Foreign Ministry said.
"According to the general prosecutor's office, a group of individuals involved in illicit drug supplies has been identified as a result of law enforcement operations," it said, without giving further details.
It was the first official statement on the events since some residents reported hearing gunfire on Saturday on the outskirts of Ashgabat.
A Western diplomat told the AP there were unconfirmed reports that at least 20 government forces were killed in Saturday's clashes.
Independent websites such as www.chrono-tm.org which is blocked for Turkmenistan Web users, gave a different version of events, reporting that several police officers were killed in a clash with what it described as Islamist militants.
Information is strictly controlled in Turkmenistan, a former Soviet republic.
The area was cordoned off but re-opened on Sunday and appeared calm, a Reuters correspondent said.
The gas-rich nation, seen by Western investors as a new alternative source of energy for European markets, is tightly run by the government which allows little opposition to state policy and controls domestic media.
The predominantly Muslim nation has been stable compared to some of its more volatile Central Asian neighbors and has sought to open up since the death of its absolute leader, Saparmurat Niyazov, in late 2006.
Criticized in the West for human rights violations, Niyazov ran
In 2002, Niyazov's motorcade came under attack from what the government described as assailants plotting to kill him. The events triggered a wave of arrests.
The new president, Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov, has vowed to push democratic reform.
Photo: AP