• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 -0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 -0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 -0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 -0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 -0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 -0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 -0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 -0.28%
12 December 2025

Kazakhstan Begins Construction of Major International Logistics Hub in Kostanay

Kazakhstan has officially begun construction of a major transport and logistics complex in the northern city of Kostanay, aiming to establish a critical transit hub linking China, Central Asia, and Europe. The new “Tobyl” Logistics Hub is set to enhance the country’s role in regional and global supply chains.

Designed to integrate into international transport corridors, including routes to China, Central Asia, Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, and Europe, the facility is scheduled to be operational by 2027. It is expected to significantly boost transit capacity along the “Northern Kazakhstan, Southern Urals” corridor and facilitate freight movement toward the People’s Republic of China.

In the first half of 2025, Kazakhstan’s transit freight volume reached 16.8 million tons, marking a 4% year-on-year increase.

Strategic Investment for Economic Growth

“The complex will reduce logistics costs for businesses, support export-oriented manufacturing, attract investment into processing industries, and stimulate the creation of new industrial enterprises,” said Aydyn Alimov, Director of the new logistics center. “We believe Tobyl will become a business magnet and a driver of regional industrial growth.”

The hub will feature advanced infrastructure, including terminals, warehouses, customs clearance facilities, IT zones, and service areas operating under a “one-stop-shop” model. A digital cargo tracking system will provide real-time logistics monitoring.

The project is being developed with the participation of JSC Kedentransservice, Kazakhstan’s largest logistics operator, and is backed by the state-owned Industrial Development Fund. Covering an area of 133.6 hectares, the Tobyl complex represents an investment of 64 billion KZT (approximately $122 million). It is designed to process up to 400,000 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs), or more than 11 million tons of cargo annually, and will create 500 new jobs in logistics, IT, and service sectors.

A Catalyst for Regional and National Development

“We are not just building a logistics hub, we are laying the foundation for a new economic geography,” said Deputy Prime Minister Yermek Kosherbayev at the groundbreaking ceremony. “Tobyl will become an intellectual platform where logistics, digitalization, education, and industry converge. This is not just a regional but a national project, a catalyst for growth across the country.”

According to the government, the Tobyl hub will also promote sustainable exports from the Kostanay region and foster deeper industrial cooperation within the Eurasian space.

Kostanay is already Kazakhstan’s leading automotive manufacturing hub. In 2024, local automaker Allur produced 90,515 vehicles, comprising passenger cars, trucks, and buses, out of a national total of 134,000. In 2025, a new KIA plant with an annual capacity of 70,000 vehicles is expected to launch, along with facilities for producing automotive components and spare parts.

Earlier this month, Kazakhstan and China signed an updated strategic agreement to strengthen railway links and increase cargo throughput along the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route (TITR), also known as the Middle Corridor.

Uzbekistan to Sell Mobiuz in Bid to Attract Foreign Investment

Uzbekistan is aiming to raise $300 million through the sale of its mobile operator Universal Mobile Systems LLC, better known as Mobiuz, according to a report by Bloomberg. The planned sale forms part of President Shavkat Mirziyoyev’s broader push to reduce state ownership and attract foreign investment into key sectors of the economy.

Sources familiar with the matter said the government would support a buyer who is willing to merge Mobiuz with other local telecom companies. Investors from Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Azerbaijan, and Europe have already expressed preliminary interest.

A formal tender for 100% of Mobiuz was launched in June, with interested parties required to submit letters of intent by August 1. Rothschild & Co. is acting as the primary financial advisor for the deal.

The State Assets Management Agency of Uzbekistan declined to comment on the sale.

Part of a Broader Privatization Drive

The Mobiuz sale is a key component of Uzbekistan’s ambitious privatization program, which aims to generate at least 10 trillion soums (approximately $786 million) in revenue this year. The government plans to divest stakes in 29 major companies across industries such as telecommunications and energy by the end of 2026.

As of the end of 2024, Uzbekistan had 35.6 million mobile subscribers. Mobiuz accounted for roughly 20.9% of the market, according to BMI, a division of Fitch Solutions. The operator’s main competitors include state-owned Uztelecom JSC, which had a brand valuation of $241 million last year, as well as Coscom LLC and Unitel LLC, the latter of which is owned by Dubai-based Veon Ltd.

In 2024, Mobiuz reported $164 million in revenue and an EBITDA of $41 million, according to figures from the State Assets Management Agency.

Strategic Investment Opportunity

Veon declined to confirm whether it plans to participate in the tender but said it “regularly reviews organic and inorganic growth opportunities” and considers Uzbekistan a key market in which it is “pursuing an ambitious growth strategy and expanding our digital portfolio.”

The Uzbek government hopes the sale will bring in fresh capital and modern expertise to support the development of the country’s rapidly expanding telecom sector. Officials also expect that increased competition will lead to improved services for consumers.

Travel Ban Overturned: Turkmen Woman and Her Daughter Rejoin Family in Turkey

After nearly a year of separation, Zulfiya Kazhir and her six-year-old daughter Sena have finally been allowed to leave Turkmenistan and reunite with their family in Turkey. The case drew widespread public attention after the pair, Zulfiya, a Turkmen citizen, and Sena, a Turkish citizen, were detained while attempting to leave the country in September 2024. The long-awaited reunion took place on July 15, and a video capturing the emotional moment was shared on TikTok by Zulfiya’s husband, Turkish national Ahmed Sefa Kacir.

 

A Sudden Separation

In the summer of 2024, Zulfiya traveled to Turkmenistan with Sena to renew her documents. However, their scheduled return flight on September 18 was abruptly halted when Zulfiya was denied boarding at Ashgabat airport. Authorities cited her temporary placement on a no-fly list, though no further explanation was provided at the time.

Only later did Turkmenistan’s migration service inform her that she was subject to a travel ban. Despite numerous appeals to both Turkmen and Turkish authorities, the family’s efforts to lift the restriction proved unsuccessful for many months.

The situation was especially dire due to Sena’s medical and developmental needs. Diagnosed with gluten intolerance and autism spectrum disorder, she requires a specific diet, regular hygiene protocols, and access to developmental therapy, services largely unavailable in Turkmenistan.

Collective Punishment

After nearly ten months of legal and diplomatic stalemate, Zulfiya learned that the travel ban was linked to her brother’s alleged involvement in armed conflicts in Syria. Although he had not lived in Turkmenistan for over 20 years and Zulfiya had no contact with him, her name was included on a restricted travel list alongside other relatives, a practice critics describe as a form of collective punishment.

A Direct Plea to the President

As previously reported by The Times of Central Asia, frustrated by the lack of progress, Zulfiya recorded a video appeal to President Serdar Berdimuhamedov, calling for an end to the restriction on her freedom of movement. In the message, she identified her family as ethnic Tatars and explained that her mother and sister also hoped to leave for Tatarstan, their ancestral homeland.

“Let me and my daughter return home,” she pleaded in the video, which was widely circulated online.

Shortly afterward, the travel ban was lifted. On July 15, her husband posted a video from the airport showing the family’s emotional reunion, filled with hugs, tears, and relief, marking the conclusion of their nearly year-long ordeal.

Containerization: A Game-Changer in Global Logistics

The current trajectory of freight transport highlights the growing scale of global containerization and its significant potential for expansion. Containerization could offer a more efficient solution for transporting bulk cargo for Kazakhstan, a major exporter of raw materials. However, to realize this potential, the country must address a range of internal and external challenges.

Container shipping enables door-to-door delivery with minimal risk of damage and faster handling, making it a reliable mode of transport both domestically and internationally. Its advantages include increased transport efficiency, safety, and cost savings. As such, containerized cargo transport, or “containerization”, is becoming increasingly relevant both in Kazakhstan and around the world.

Despite its global prominence, containerization in Kazakhstan remains underdeveloped. Satjan Ablaliyev, Deputy Minister of Transport of the Republic of Kazakhstan, said in an interview with The Times of Central Asia, containerized freight made up only 6.73% of the country’s total cargo turnover in 2024. Domestic container traffic was just 0.16%. Yet, container shipping significantly reduces the time and costs associated with loading and unloading across various transport modes, such as sea, rail, and road, while also protecting cargo from damage and theft, simplifying paperwork, and minimizing transport costs.

This also helps avoid delays caused by shortages of freight wagons, which is particularly relevant in Kazakhstan during peak seasons such as meeting winter heating needs or harvest time. Global experience has shown that container transport is suitable even for bulk, liquid, and perishable goods.

Several factors are currently hindering the development of containerization in Kazakhstan:

  1. Insufficient number of railway stations equipped to receive and handle container cargo;
  2. Higher tariffs for container transportation compared to traditional wagon-based freight;
  3. Limited and uneven access to infrastructure and resources for market participants.

To address these issues, Kazakhstan needs to expand its transport infrastructure and reform its tariff and regulatory policies.

Corridors of the future

The bulk of Kazakhstan’s container traffic comes from transit. According to national rail operator Kazakhstan Temir Zholy (KTZ), the volume of transit cargo in 2024 reached 27.5 million tons, with container transit alone growing by 59%, hitting 1.4 million TEUs.

Kazakhstan is betting on the development of overland multimodal transit across its territory. Recent global events such as the COVID-19 pandemic, disruptions in global supply chains due to geopolitical tensions, and increased attacks on shipping in the Red Sea have exposed the vulnerability of maritime trade routes (e.g., the Suez Canal, which handles about 30% of global container traffic). These challenges have prompted major container operators to rapidly reroute maritime shipping and explore alternative land-based transit corridors.

As land routes gain importance, competition among transit countries is intensifying. Many are now investing in infrastructure along international transport corridors to facilitate multimodal logistics. Ablaliyev pointed out that these factors have made Kazakhstan an increasingly attractive route for containerized cargo. Between 2020 and 2024, Kazakhstan’s container traffic rose from 876,000 TEUs to 1.395 million TEUs. In the first five months of 2025 alone, the figure reached 565,400 TEUs.

To further grow transit container flows, Kazakhstan is investing in large-scale logistics infrastructure projects, streamlining administrative procedures, and strengthening partnerships with international stakeholders. By 2030, the country aims to increase total transit volumes to 74 million tons, with container transit reaching 2 million tons.

Ambitions and Infrastructure Gaps

Kazakhstan’s freight system still reflects its Soviet industrial legacy, which was tailored to transporting raw materials (coal, ore, grain, construction materials, chemicals, etc.) by rail in traditional wagons. As a result, only about 11% of freight stations are currently equipped to handle containers.

Significant investment is needed to modernize these stations for container handling, storage, and sorting, and the associated costs will largely fall on industrial, agricultural, and commercial enterprises. Therefore, government incentives and private sector involvement will be crucial for developing container infrastructure.

According to Ablaliyev, export-import freight volumes have more than doubled in the past five years. Ablaliyev cited the launch of Kazakhstan’s first container train carrying non-ferrous metals, operated by Kedentransservice and KazZinc in March 2024, as well as a container shipment of Kazakh grain to Vietnam’s Hai Phong port in May 2024.

To improve container logistics, Kazakhstan is also investing in terminal infrastructure. In June 2025, the first phase of a new container hub was launched at the Port of Aktau. The project will boost the port’s capacity from 70,000 to 240,000 TEUs, offering services such as transshipment, storage, repair, and integration with rail logistics. Meanwhile, the Sarzha multifunctional marine terminal at the Port of Kuryk is another project that is set to open in 2026, with a capacity of up to 10 million tons.

“These large-scale projects on the Caspian Sea coast reflect investor confidence in long-term growth in container shipping,” Ablaliyev stated.

The Almaty region, which borders China, remains the leading region for container logistics expansion, both in traffic volume and infrastructure development, meanwhile. Its geographic position makes it a key hub for redistributing freight to the CIS and Europe.

Tariffs: A Drag on Growth

A major constraint remains the cost of container transport, which is more than twice as high as shipping in standard wagons. Meanwhile, KTZ’s container tariffs do not fully cover the actual service costs. The company continues to transport socially important goods (wheat, coal, ore), which comprise about 70% of its cargo, at below cost.

Where is efficiency lost?

A key logistical challenge is the imbalance between loaded and empty containers along major transit routes like China–Europe–China, as well as in export-import traffic. For example, there is a higher volume of cargo going from China to Europe than in the reverse direction. A similar imbalance exists for Kazakh exports.

This trend has a negative impact on transportation costs and efficiency. According to Ablaliyev, the solution to the problem of backhauling containers and the imbalance between export and import container flows lies in three things: the continued active development of the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route; the construction of both domestic and cross-border terminal infrastructure in Kazakhstan, which would allow for the consolidation and redistribution of container traffic; and the launch of a digital transport corridor featuring the Tez Customs electronic customs clearance system, with real-time cargo tracking capabilities.

“Thanks to large-scale infrastructure projects, the digitization of logistics processes, and the involvement of international logistics operators, Kazakhstan is creating the conditions to increase the share of backhaul container loading,” Ablaliyev emphasized, while also noting a positive trend in reducing the current imbalance.

Modernizing by Rail

Kazakhstan exports 80–85 million tons of cargo annually, of which 20–22 million tons are moved via containers. This requires 120,000–130,000 containers and about 5,000 additional rail platforms. Currently, according to Ablaliyev, the country has around 12,000 platforms. By 2028, it plans to open 7,000 more.

As for container stockpiles, Ablaliyev emphasized that since most container shipments are international, maintaining a large inventory within Kazakhstan is inefficient. The idea of producing containers domestically has also been shelved due to high production costs, which are estimated to be twice as high as in neighboring China.

Meanwhile, industry experts predict a technological shift in container design: from passive “boxes” to smart, autonomous units capable of real-time tracking and transmitting data on temperature, humidity, vibration, and internal movement, along with predictive arrival estimates.

According to Ablaliyev, the introduction of digital technologies in this area will enhance the transparency, efficiency, and responsiveness of logistics processes. Key initiatives include the implementation of electronic railway bills to enable data exchange among all participants in international container transport and reduce paper-based documentation, as well as the development of an integrated digital system for tracking and managing logistics. This system will allow for real-time monitoring of the location of container trains and feeder vessels, facilitating coordination between rail and maritime services and improving the overall responsiveness of freight flow management.

In addition, the use of modern digital planning tools and real-time communication systems is planned to synchronize schedules, reduce idle times during loading and unloading, and optimize the use of logistical resources.

Prospects

Current global trends have shown that containerized cargo transport is optimal, safe, and efficient. For Kazakhstan in particular, after facing restrictions on cargo transit due to military conflict along routes through Russia, which historically accounted for over 70% of the country’s exports, there was an urgent need to redirect transport flows to alternative routes that were not initially prepared to handle such volumes. In this context, containerization also offers a way to structure logistics more effectively along these new transport corridors.

Given the current global and regional instability and the potential for unforeseen disruptions in the future, it is essential to develop resilient and technologically advanced transport models that can minimize risks and respond to emerging challenges over the long term.

UN Urges More Vaccinations; Kyrgyzstan Reports Drop in New Measles Cases

More children are vulnerable to disease and the risk of outbreaks is higher in Europe and Central Asia because coverage of childhood vaccines in 2024 remained below pre-pandemic levels, according to United Nations agencies. Still, some countries have pushed hard on vaccination campaigns and are currently reporting a slowdown in the spread of some infectious diseases – Kyrgyzstan, for example, said on Wednesday that measles cases are dropping. 

Data released this week by the World Health Organization and UNICEF reveal a “stagnated recovery” for childhood vaccinations against measles, whooping cough and other diseases in 53 countries in Europe and Central Asia.  

The average coverage of those vaccines remained the same or dropped by 1% in 2024 compared to the previous year, according to the agencies. They cited examples of the declines between 2019 and 2024, including 92% to 91% with the second dose of measles/mumps/rubella (MMR) vaccine, 95% to 93% with the third dose of diphtheria/tetanus/pertussis (DTP) vaccine and 95% to 93% with the third dose of the polio vaccine.

“In many ways, vaccination has been a victim of its own success across Europe and Central Asia,” said Regina De Dominicis, UNICEF’s regional director. “Today’s generation has not witnessed the devastating impact of vaccine-preventable diseases – leading to complacency and making it easier for misinformation to take hold.”

There was some progress in the coverage of newer vaccines, including against human papillomavirus (HPV), according to the U.N. data. Authors of the report urged governments to invest in health systems and make vaccines available. 

Kyrgyzstan, in particular, has struggled with measles outbreaks. The Ministry of Health, however, says a massive vaccination campaign that reached up to 1 million children has borne results since what it called the “rampant” spread of measles last autumn and winter. 

“From the beginning of the year to July 15, 8,672 confirmed cases of measles were registered in the republic,” the ministry said. But it said the number of new cases is gradually falling, with just 109 confirmed cases in the first two weeks of July. 

Kazakhstan, which has also battled measles outbreaks, said this week that the number of infectious disease cases is slowing, according to the state Kazinform News Agency.

Central Asia Charts New Course as Russian Aviation Falters

Sanctions against Russia may intensify if U.S. President Donald Trump escalates pressure on the Kremlin and Vladimir Putin. But even without additional measures, several sectors of Russia’s economy are already buckling under strain. Among the most vulnerable is civil aviation, now grappling with “fleet cannibalization”, a practice born of scarcity and isolation.

In this context, alarmist claims from Russian aviation analysts that Central Asian airlines might soon replace Russian carriers not only on international routes but potentially within Russia itself are being reassessed. So, what is actually happening and why?

Squeezing Russia Out

One of the most overlooked aviation developments of 2024 was the announcement at the Central Asian Aviation Summit in Astana that regional countries were forming their own civil aviation regulatory body. As Amir Akhmetov, senior advisor to the director of the Aviation Administration of Kazakhstan, put it: “In the changing geopolitical environment of the republics of Central Asia and the South Caucasus, together with like-minded countries, they are creating their own regional civil aviation organization, the Eurasian Civil Aviation Conference (EACAC).”

This initiative, first proposed by Astana in 2023, includes Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Turkmenistan, as well as Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Moldova, and Mongolia. Although initially scheduled for 2025, the first EACAC meeting took place in Almaty in November 2024.

Russian observers have taken note. The publication Versiya, which had predicted Russia’s marginalization in the Central Asian aviation market as early as 2016, commented on the development in stark terms: “It is hard not to notice that this is truly a momentous event in the field of civil aviation regulation within the EAEU member states, aimed precisely at pushing Russia out of the process… which, after the formation of the announced structure, will de facto exist and be managed under direct Anglo-American influence.”

However alarmist the tone, the underlying concern is not unfounded. Russia’s aviation sector is increasingly isolated and dependent. By December 2024, it was confirmed that a new aircraft maintenance hub would be built in Aktau, one of Kazakhstan’s four major aviation centers. The project, spearheaded by Turkish Technic, YDA, and ASFAT, will serve civil and military aircraft from Kazakhstan, Russia, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan.

According to then-Minister of Transport Marat Karabayev, “The center will serve 411 civil aircraft… As a result of the project, the airport’s cargo handling capacity will increase to 200,000 tons per year, with an annual turnover of 520 billion tenge ($996.7 million).”

Aviation in Central Asia: A Regional Snapshot

In Kazakhstan, liberalization and competition have allowed the civil aviation sector to flourish. National carrier Air Astana operates hubs in Almaty and Astana and is widely considered among the best airlines in the post-Soviet space. Its low-cost subsidiary, FlyArystan, has grown rapidly, fueled by a strong Airbus fleet, now over 60 aircraft, with new A320 and A321 deliveries annually.

Private airline SCAT flies across the former USSR and Asia, while Qazaq Air, now rebranded as Vietjet Qazaqstan, entered into a strategic partnership in 2025 with Vietnam’s Sovico Group, owner of Vietjet Air. Fleet expansion plans include 20 Boeing 737 MAX or Airbus A321s.

Kazakhstan’s airport infrastructure, Almaty (ALA), Astana (NQZ), Shymkent, and Aktau, is undergoing modernization under the management of global operators such as TAV, Fraport, and Limak. The Open Skies policy now applies to 14 airports, and the country is actively working to align with EASA (European Aviation Safety Agency) standards.

Uzbekistan is not far behind. Its national carrier, Uzbekistan Airways, is modernizing with Airbus A321neo and Boeing 787s. New private carriers, Qanot Sharq, Silk Avia, and Center Avia, are expanding, while major airports like Tashkent and Samarkand are being upgraded. The country also offers fifth freedom rights on selected routes and plans to privatize shares in its national airline.

Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan have minimal domestic aviation and are heavily reliant on foreign carriers. Meanwhile, Turkmenistan, despite its isolationist stance, operates Boeing 777 and 737 MAX aircraft through state-run Turkmenistan Airlines, which has regained EU flight permission after a 2019 ban.

Capturing the Russian Market: In Theory and Practice

Kazakhstan is now poised to replace Russia in key regional aviation segments, not out of hostility, but necessity. The dangers of fleet cannibalization, now commonplace in Russia due to sanctions and spare parts shortages, are well known in Kazakhstan. A tragic incident involving a cannibalized aircraft crashing shortly after takeoff, killing the entire crew, left a lasting impact. The country has since moved to ensure that such practices never recur.

And while Russian protectionism will prevent Central Asian airlines from fully replacing Russian carriers on domestic routes, opportunities exist on border routes, diaspora services, and transit corridors. Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and others are moving to fill the vacuum, safely and efficiently.

Conspiracy theories that paint these moves as orchestrated by London or Washington reflect what many analysts identify as a lingering post-imperial mindset. As the article in Versiya reveals, Russian narratives often deny their neighbors the capacity for independent decision-making, even on critical matters like aviation safety.

Yet the shift is real. And it is hard to argue against it when images of dismantled Russian aircraft parked on remote runways offer visual proof of a system in decline.