Man convicted for ‘inciting ethnic hatred’ on social network in north Kazakhstan

ASTANA (TCA) — A court in Kazakhstan’s northern city of Petropavlovsk has sentenced a man to two years in prison on charges of inciting ethnic hatred via the Internet, RFE/RL’s Kazakh Service reports.

Regional anti-extremism directorate chief Ruslan Mukhambetzhanov told journalists that Sergei Khandogin, a 45-year-old Petropavlovsk resident, had pleaded guilty to the charges and was sentenced on November 13.

Prosecutors said at the trial that in several posts on the Russian-based social network Odnoklassniki, Khandogin “used negative words insulting ethnic Kazakhs” and cited material that “distorts historic facts.”

Petropavlovsk is the capital of the North Kazakhstan region, which borders Russia, and Russian speakers make up a majority of the city’s population.

Since 2014, several Kazakh citizens have been convicted of inciting ethnic hatred or separatism over Internet posts amid heightened government concern sparked by Russia’s actions in Ukraine.

Russia occupied the Crimean Peninsula in March 2014 and fomented separatism in eastern Ukraine, where it has backed separatists in a war that has killed more than 10,000 people since that April.

Russian President Vladimir Putin sought to justify Moscow’s interference in part by citing what he said were concerns about the life, security, and rights of Russian speakers in Ukraine.

Those developments, as well as calls for the creation of a “Russian World” linking areas with large Russian-speaking populations, sparked concerns that Moscow might set its sights on the swath of northern Kazakhstan along the border with Russia.

Sergey Kwan

TCA

Sergey Kwan has worked for The Times of Central Asia as a journalist, translator and editor since its foundation in March 1999. Prior to this, from 1996-1997, he worked as a translator at The Kyrgyzstan Chronicle, and from 1997-1999, as a translator at The Central Asian Post.
divider
Kwan studied at the Bishkek Polytechnic Institute from 1990-1994, before completing his training in print journalism in Denmark.

View more articles fromTCA