• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10849 0.37%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0.28%
11 December 2025

Uzbekistan Tops Central Asia in 2024 Healthcare Ranking

Uzbekistan has been ranked as having the best healthcare system in Central Asia, according to the 2024 Health Care Index published by CEOWORLD magazine. The country placed 64th globally with a score of 36.26. Kazakhstan followed in 78th place with 34.28 points, while Turkmenistan ranked 95th with 27.3 points.

The index evaluates 110 countries based on the quality of healthcare services, including infrastructure, the competency of medical professionals, and access to care. Taiwan topped the global list with a score of 78.72, while El Salvador came in last with 18.6 points. Other countries ranking in the top 10 include South Korea (2nd), Sweden (5th), and Germany (8th).

Healthcare and Tourism Growth

The report coincides with a notable increase in foreign tourism to Uzbekistan. In January–February 2025, the country welcomed 1.3 million international visitors, a 37.1% increase compared to the same period in 2024. Officials suggest that improved healthcare services could further enhance the country’s appeal as a travel destination, potentially boosting medical and wellness tourism.

Uzbeks Rank High in Global Happiness Index

In another recent international ranking, Uzbekistan also stood out for overall wellbeing. The Centre for the Study of Wellbeing at the University of Oxford and the Gallup Institute placed Uzbekistan 53rd in its global happiness index, above Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.

The study includes two key components. The first is based on respondents’ self-assessment of life satisfaction on a scale from 0 to 10; in Uzbekistan, the average score was 6.2. The second examines responses related to charitable giving, lawfulness, helping strangers, and reactions to emotional experiences, both positive and negative.

Opinion – Not Ready for Democracy? Come See Our Street

In March 2025, the first round results of Uzbekistan’s Open Budget vote were announced. Among the thousands of approved projects, one quietly transformed the life of my neighborhood: our village street was getting asphalt.

To many, that might not sound like much. But for us, it was everything. After decades of walking through dust and mud, we were finally getting a paved road. When the results came in, something incredible happened: people began to celebrate. Not in the restrained, bureaucratic sense that tends to accompany official programs, but with real joy: music playing, neighbors cheering, children dancing in the same dirt that was finally going to be covered.

It felt like a wedding.

It was the result of effort. Weeks earlier, our local mahalla council had met and chosen this road as our community’s proposal. Then came the work. They assigned residents to campaign: not in any formal political sense, but with sincerity and purpose. People went door to door, house by house, explaining what Open Budget was and why this project mattered. Elders were helped to vote online. Younger neighbors posted in group chats. No one was forced; people just believed that for once, something depended on them.

And it did.

The Open Budget initiative, launched  in 2019, allows Uzbek citizens to propose local development projects, new roads, repaired schools, better lighting, and vote for which ones deserve funding. The process is digital, accessible, and remarkably straightforward. But the impact is deeper than infrastructure. It gives people something they rarely get in official life: the feeling that their voice matters.

We often hear, especially from outside observers, that Central Asians are not “ready” for democracy. That our cultures don’t value participation, or that our political habits are too rooted in hierarchy and obedience. But the truth is simpler and less convenient: people participate when they believe their participation means something.

Open Budget, though limited in scope, creates a rare and meaningful space where that belief can grow. People vote not for politicians or platforms, but for real things – things they can touch, walk on, benefit from. And because of that, they care. They organize. They show up.

Of course, it’s not a perfect system. There have been reports about votes being bought, people being pressured, and outcomes being nudged. But even with those imperfections, the initiative continues to expand, and millions of people continue to engage. That’s not because they’ve been told to. It’s because they’ve seen results.

There’s a kind of quiet dignity that emerges when people take collective action for the first time, and it actually works. In our case, that dignity took the form of asphalt. It may seem simple, but it was hard-won, and it matters.

What’s most telling is how people talked about the process afterward. Not with skepticism, not with detachment, but with a sense of ownership. People said, “We voted for this road.” And that’s no small thing. Because in much of our recent history, things have happened to people. Rarely have they happened because of people.

In that way, Open Budget reveals something larger. It shows that participation does not need to begin at the top, with elections or political parties or national debates. It can begin in the neighborhood, in the family chat group, in a village street covered in dust.

Democracy, if it is to mean anything in our region, will likely not arrive through sudden revolutions or imported blueprints. It will arrive, as it is beginning to, through small, local moments where people feel their agency. Where they choose. And where their choice leaves a mark on the world around them.

I don’t want to exaggerate what Open Budget is. It is not a democratic transformation. It is not a substitute for representation or reform. But it is something. In systems where civic space is narrow, even small openings can reveal enormous things.

Because when people are given space, just a little, they act. They build. They imagine. What’s missing is not the will of the people. It’s the space in which to exercise it.

The road in my village will soon be paved. But the more important thing is what’s being paved beneath it: a quiet, patient kind of political awareness. One that begins not in slogans, but in streets.

If you want to know whether Uzbekistan is ready for democracy, don’t look at our elections. Look at our neighborhoods. Look at the way people organized for their road. Look at how they celebrated when it was approved. Look at how they believed, if only for a moment, that what they did mattered.

That is where it begins.

Two Earthquakes Strike Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, Causing Damage in Talas Region

Two earthquakes struck Central Asia early on March 28, affecting parts of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.

The first tremor, with a magnitude of 5.5, occurred in southern Kazakhstan, approximately 133 kilometers from Bishkek. The Kyrgyz capital felt the tremors at 4:42 a.m., according to the Institute of Seismology at the National Academy of Sciences of Kyrgyzstan. The quake registered a strength of four points in Bishkek and reached up to five points in parts of Kyrgyzstan’s Talas Region, which borders Kazakhstan.

A second, less powerful earthquake was recorded at 7:00 a.m. on the Chatkal Ridge in southwestern Kyrgyzstan. It registered a magnitude of 3.5.

According to the Kyrgyz Ministry of Emergency Situations, five residential buildings and one educational institution sustained damage in the Talas Region following the first quake. An operational team has been dispatched to assess the extent of the damage.

“A state of emergency has been declared in connection with the earthquake recorded in Kazakhstan on March 28. An emergency meeting was held at 5 a.m. at the central office of the Ministry of Emergency Situations and the Crisis Management Center of Kyrgyzstan. First Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs Azamat Mambetov instructed officials to maintain a high alert regime,” the ministry’s press service reported.

No casualties have been reported.

Authorities have stated that the situation remains under control. Kyrgyzstan’s Crisis Management Center is in direct communication with its counterpart in Kazakhstan, with both agencies exchanging real-time updates.

Two major earthquakes were also recorded on March 28 in Southeast Asia. Seismologists from China and the United States reported tremors affecting Myanmar and Thailand. In Myanmar, the first quake registered a magnitude of 7.9 (with other sources citing 7.7), followed by a second at 6.4. The tremors were also felt in Bangladesh, India, Thailand, Laos, and China.

Kyrgyzstan Turns to Alternative Energy to Address Power Deficit

Expanding the use of alternative energy sources is key to overcoming Kyrgyzstan’s persistent electricity shortages, Deputy Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers Bakyt Torobayev said during a meeting at the Ministry of Energy on March 27.

Torobayev acknowledged the country’s chronic power deficit and underscored the need for investment in renewable energy development.

“Increasing power generation is today’s top priority,” he stated.

In response to the ongoing energy crisis, the Kyrgyz government declared a state of emergency in the energy sector from August 1, 2023, to December 31, 2026. The move was intended to accelerate emergency measures to counter the impacts of climate change, reduced water flows in the Naryn River, a major source of hydropower, rising energy demand, and limited generating capacity.

Power Imports Fill the Gap

Although Kyrgyzstan has the potential to generate 142 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh) annually, current production stands at just 14 billion kWh, approximately 10% of its hydropower capacity.

According to Energy Minister Taalaibek Ibrayev, the country currently generates 3,450 megawatts of electricity, while demand has risen to 3,600 megawatts.

In 2024, Kyrgyzstan consumed 18.3 billion kWh, an increase of 1.1 billion kWh over the previous year. Hydropower plants accounted for 12.77 billion kWh, while coal-fired thermal plants produced 1.76 billion kWh. Small private hydropower plants added 156.2 million kWh, and solar installations contributed 0.17 million kWh.

To close the gap, Kyrgyzstan imported 3.63 billion kWh of electricity in 2024, an increase of 141.7 million kWh from 2023.

Expanding Generation Capacity

To alleviate the crisis, the government has launched several major hydropower construction projects. The Ministry of Energy announced ongoing work to install a second hydroelectric unit at the Kambarata-2 Hydropower Plant (HPP). The plant is designed for three units with a combined capacity of 360 megawatts (120 MW each). Currently, only the first unit is operational. The addition of the second unit will significantly enhance the plant’s output.

Meanwhile, construction has also begun on the much larger Kambarata-1 HPP on the Naryn River. When completed, it will become Kyrgyzstan’s largest hydropower facility, with a projected capacity of 1,860 megawatts and an expected annual output of 5.6 billion kWh, enough to substantially address the country’s energy shortfall.

Embracing Solar and Wind

As part of its energy diversification strategy, Kyrgyzstan has also initiated solar and wind energy projects. In 2024, the country began building a 400-megawatt solar power plant and a 100-megawatt wind farm, marking significant steps toward reducing reliance on imported electricity and fossil fuels.

EU-Central Asia Ministerial Meeting Highlights Enhanced Cooperation and Strategic Priorities

The 20th EU-Central Asia Ministerial Meeting took place on March 27 in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, reaffirming the parties’ strong political will to deepen engagement and strengthen cooperation in strategically significant areas.

The meeting brought together the EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Kaja Kallas, along with the foreign ministers of Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan, and the deputy foreign ministers of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.

A key item on the agenda was preparation for the inaugural EU-Central Asia Summit, scheduled for April 4, 2025, in Samarkand, Uzbekistan.

Advancing Strategic Cooperation

Kallas and Central Asian ministers discussed a broad spectrum of mutual priorities under the EU’s Global Gateway Flagship Initiatives, including trade, transport, energy, water resource management, climate change, digitalization, and critical raw materials. Both sides also highlighted advancing cooperation in education, vocational training, research, and skills development to foster deeper people-to-people ties.

In a joint communiqué adopted at the meeting, the EU and Central Asian states reaffirmed their shared commitment to further strengthening their comprehensive partnership, grounded in mutual interests and values. The discussions were guided by the “Joint Roadmap for Deepening Ties between the EU and Central Asia,” previously adopted in Luxembourg in October 2023.

Focus on Connectivity and the Trans-Caspian Corridor

Connectivity emerged as a central theme, with the participants stressing the need to expand sustainable connections between Central Asia and Europe. The EU’s Global Gateway Strategy was highlighted as a key vehicle for supporting regional infrastructure in trade, transport, water, and energy.

The participants recalled the success of the Global Gateway Investors Forum on EU-Central Asia Transport Connectivity, held in Brussels in January 2024. They welcomed commitments by European and international financial institutions to invest €10 billion in the Trans-Caspian Transport Corridor (TCTC), aimed at significantly enhancing East-West transport links.

Critical Raw Materials and Local Value Chains

Another focal point was the growing strategic importance of critical raw materials (CRMs). Ministers reviewed progress following the signing of a Strategic Partnership Memorandum of Understanding between the EU and both Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan in the CRM sector.

The meeting acknowledged EU support for strengthening local value chains in Central Asia. Discussions stressed alignment with international labor and environmental standards and the development of sustainable investment projects across the region.

Sanctions Compliance

The EU also briefed participants on its restrictive measures in the current geopolitical environment, underlining the need to prevent sanctions circumvention. Central Asian countries expressed readiness to continue cooperating with the EU to prevent re-exports of sensitive items, particularly those classified as “high priority.”

Strategic Outlook

The meeting reaffirmed the EU’s 2019 Strategy on Central Asia, which recognizes the region’s increasing strategic relevance to Europe. The Ashgabat gathering further solidified this recognition, highlighting Central Asia’s growing role in regional connectivity, resource security, and global diplomacy.

Kyrgyz Startup Yessa Helping Women to Reclaim Pleasure

When Begaiym Zamirbek left her job at the Institute for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR), where everything was stable and predictable, she dove into the significantly riskier world of startups with her new venture, Yessa. That’s how her path of entrepreneurship began, which led her to Vietnam.

Yessa supplies audio erotic entertainment for women, like companies including Quinn and Femtasy. Both boast a vast audience and have raised over $3 Million in investments. Quinn is based in the U.S., and its European counterpart, Femtasy, operates out of Berlin. Neither are available in languages other than English, French, and Deutsch, however. But Yessa is trying to fix that by making audio erotica for women available in other languages.

My previous partner “did things in bed that I agreed to unconditionally. I didn’t even know I had a choice,” Zamirbek told TCA. “I came out of that relationship traumatized and didn’t realize, but after the breakup, any thought of sex made me feel disgusted. I accidentally came across an audio where the men were caring, tender and asked for my consent for literally everything. I thought that if such audios exist, then there must be such partners in reality. And I was not mistaken. I regretted that all such content was in English, and then I thought that Russian-speaking women also need such things.”Apart from her full-time job at IWPR, Zamirbek is a seasoned podcast host. Her podcast, Second Shift, which she has been co-hosting for five years, was the first feminist podcast in Kyrgyzstan and quickly became one of the most popular ones. That experience set her on the path toward the launch of her audio company.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Zamirbek spent a lot of time at home listening to erotica in English, which piqued her interest in exploring her desires and going on dates. In 2024, inspired by TikTok, where more and more women were openly discussing the intimate details of their relationships, she began implementing her startup idea. After seeking advice from a venture capital professional and completing the Y Combinator’s Startup School, Zamirbek started looking for a tech co-founder.

“We met at the March 8 march for women’s rights in Bishkek. Anna Karamurzina came up to say ‘hello’ because she knew of me. She had worked in IT for over twelve years, and I came to her with an offer to build a startup just when she needed a job. Since August 2024, we’ve been the co-founders of the Yessa app.”

The ex-IWPR Program Manager for Central Asia began her journey in the startup ecosystem by participating in the Startup Nation hackathon as the Co-Founder of Yessa in September 2024, where she was awarded a special prize as the strongest startups chosen from over 40 teams.

Zamirbek soon realized that she needed resources and expertise to scale Yessa and followed the path of one of the Kyrgyz founders of Antler, one of the leading global accelerators backing early-stage companies with offices worldwide. With the help of several Antler alumni based in Vietnam, she was been accepted to the VN7 cohort in Ho Chi Minh. 2024 was a record year for the Kyrgyz Republic, which saw four companies admitted to Antler: Yessa, Admitted, Chef Vision AI, and Baby Guide. Zamirbek finished the program at Antler Vietnam and, at her first attempt, received $110,000 in investment.

“Everything related to sex is usually directed at the desires of the man,” she told TCA. “It’s not customary in Central Asian countries to talk about what a woman wants. I think that’s why our idea has caught on.”

The Yessa app is set to be released in the coming month with the goal of providing an audio alternative to often violent male-centric experiences and helping women to reclaim pleasure.

“As long as there is a product where access to women’s bodies is bought, we’ll have problems with violence,” Zamirbek says. “Women will be seen as objects and treated as commodities. That’s one of the reasons why I wanted to create a sexual world where access to bodies is not purchased.”