Cyberbullying has long ceased to be merely an argument on the internet. Insults, harassment in chats, the publication of humiliating photos and videos, coordinated mockery, threats, and the spread of false information can cause harm comparable to offline violence. In Central Asia, the problem is becoming increasingly visible, but legal responses still vary significantly.
As of 2026, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan have incorporated bullying and cyberbullying into legislation more directly, while Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan continue to address such cases mainly through general provisions on insult, defamation, threats, child protection, and internet regulation.
Kazakhstan has taken the most explicit legislative approach to cyberbullying. The law introduced an official definition: cyberbullying is understood as systematic actions, that is, actions committed two or more times of a humiliating nature against a child, including persecution and intimidation using internet resources.
The law also grants a citizen or the legal representative of a child the right to submit a complaint to the authorized body regarding instances of cyberbullying against a child, specifying the relevant internet resource. At the same time, laws on children’s rights and education have formally incorporated the concept of child bullying, including acts committed through media and telecommunications networks.
A further step was taken in 2024, when Article 127-2 (“Bullying of a Minor”) was added to Kazakhstan’s Code of Administrative Offenses. It provides for a warning or a fine, with higher penalties for repeated violations within a year. In December 2024, Kazinform reported that Kazakhstan became the first country in Central Asia to establish specific liability for the bullying and cyberbullying of children in a separate legal provision, which entered into force on June 16, 2024.
It is also significant that the provision is now being applied in practice. According to data released in February 2026 by the Deputy Chair of the Committee for the Protection of Children’s Rights, around 200 cases of bullying and cyberbullying against children had been recorded in 2025. This figure is important not only in itself; it indicates that the state has begun systematically recording such incidents and that victims and their families are more likely to seek protection.
The main strength of the Kazakh model is its clarity. The law explicitly defines the problem, outlines complaint procedures, and establishes specific liability. Its main limitation lies in implementation: as with domestic violence legislation, effectiveness depends on how prepared schools, parents, law enforcement, and online platforms are to apply it in practice.
Uzbekistan: Cyberbullying Within the Child Protection Framework
In Uzbekistan, there is no separate legal provision titled “cyberbullying,” but the country has taken a significant step in terms of child protection. The Law “On the Protection of Children from All Forms of Violence,” adopted on November 14, 2024, and in force since May 15, 2025, explicitly recognizes bullying as a form of violence against children. The law defines such violence as actions, including those carried out through telecommunications networks and the internet, that cause or may cause physical or psychological harm. The definition of bullying explicitly includes prolonged psychological and/or physical aggression carried out online.
This is important for two reasons. First, the law frames online harassment not merely as a matter of communication ethics but as a form of violence against a child. Second, it embeds the issue within the responsibilities of multiple state bodies, including the Cabinet of Ministers, the prosecutor’s office, internal affairs bodies, educational institutions, social protection agencies, and the children’s ombudsman. In other words, the legal framework is built not around a single sanction, but around coordinated, interagency protection.
At the same time, a gap remains: digital violence is expanding faster than enforcement practices are developing. The issue has moved beyond the school environment, yet the legal system still focuses primarily on protecting children rather than offering comprehensive protection for all victims of online harassment.
As a result, the Uzbek model is strongest in child protection. However, further development may require clearer procedures for addressing cyberbullying beyond school settings, for example, cases involving online stalking of adults, harassment of women, or coordinated abuse on social media.
Kyrgyzstan: No Separate Offense, but Stronger Rules on Online Insult
In Kyrgyzstan, there is still no distinct legal definition or offense specifically addressing bullying or cyberbullying. However, preventive measures within the education system are being strengthened.
In November 2024, according to the Kabar agency, citing the Ministry of Education and Science, a new directive aimed at combating bullying and cyberbullying in schools was adopted, requiring school administrations to carry out systematic preventive work with students and parents.
At the same time, the country has increased liability for certain online behaviors often associated with cyberbullying. Amendments to the Code of Offenses, which entered into force on February 10, 2025, introduced penalties for defamation and insult in the media and on internet platforms. Administrative fines include 20,000 soms ($228) for individuals and 65,000 soms for legal entities.
Thus, Kyrgyzstan’s approach remains fragmented. While the problem is acknowledged in education policy, the legal response relies on related offenses such as defamation, insult, threats, and, in some cases, harm to health. This provides enforcement tools but does not establish a unified framework in which cyberbullying is clearly defined and procedurally addressed.
Public discussion, however, suggests growing awareness. In 2025, the ombudsman and media reported on school violence and the need for anonymous reporting mechanisms. Dozens of cases of bullying, cyberbullying, and school extortion were reportedly recorded in Bishkek, indicating increased visibility of the issue, though not yet comprehensive legal reform.
Tajikistan: Regulation Through Defamation and Insult Laws
Tajikistan also lacks a dedicated law on cyberbullying. Instead, related conduct is addressed through existing defamation, insult, threat, and related speech provisions, including in cases involving online dissemination.
In practice, this means that online harassment is typically addressed as a combination of established offenses. While this allows authorities to respond to individual incidents, it is less effective in addressing sustained or coordinated harassment campaigns, where harm arises from repeated actions rather than a single act.
As a result, Tajikistan appears to be at an earlier stage of legal development on this issue: public and educational discussions are emerging, but legislation continues to rely on traditional legal categories rather than recognizing cyberbullying as a distinct, systemic phenomenon.
Turkmenistan: Strict Internet Control, Limited Victim-Centered Mechanisms
In Turkmenistan, the internet is tightly regulated, primarily through broad legal provisions governing online activity. The Law “On the Legal Regulation of the Development of the Internet and the Provision of Internet Services in Turkmenistan,” in force since December 29, 2014, requires state bodies to combat offenses committed online, restricts children’s access to harmful content, and establishes liability for disseminating defamation, insults, and other prohibited materials via the internet.
The law also includes provisions aimed at protecting children, including requirements to ensure information safety and prohibitions on distributing content that promotes violence, cruelty, unlawful behavior, or harmful actions.
However, as a mechanism for protecting victims of cyberbullying, this framework appears the least transparent in the region. The legal approach focuses primarily on controlling the information space rather than addressing harassment as a distinct violation affecting victims. Publicly available information on cases specifically involving cyberbullying is limited, likely reflecting both the absence of a dedicated legal category and broader constraints on transparency in the digital sphere.
What the Comparison Shows
Across the five countries, three general models emerge. The first is the Kazakh model: explicit recognition of cyberbullying and the introduction of specific liability for bullying of minors. The second is the Uzbek model: integration of bullying and online harassment into a broader child protection framework. The third, seen in Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan, relies on general legal provisions, such as defamation, insult, and child protection, without clearly defining cyberbullying as a separate legal category.
From the perspective of victim protection, approaches that recognize repeated online harassment as a distinct issue appear more aligned with the nature of cyberbullying, which typically involves sustained pressure rather than isolated incidents. In this regard, Kazakhstan’s and, to some extent, Uzbekistan’s frameworks appear more adapted to current challenges.
Despite differing reform trajectories, Central Asia is moving toward greater recognition of cyberbullying. The issue is no longer marginal and is gradually being incorporated into legislation, education policy, and child protection systems. Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan demonstrate that the region is capable of developing more structured responses, while in other countries, public demand for clearer rules and support mechanisms continues to grow.
This suggests cautious optimism that, as legal recognition expands, victim protection will become more substantive in practice.
