• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10904 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10904 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10904 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10904 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10904 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10904 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10904 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10904 0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
08 December 2025

Empowering Trade and Women Entrepreneurs: Kazakhstan’s Digital Leap for the Turkic States

The head of the Presidium of the National Association of Women Entrepreneurs of Kazakhstan (ASMAR), Lazzat Ramazanova, who currently chairs the Council of Women Entrepreneurs of Turkic States, has reported on the development of a single digital ecosystem for business in the five countries which form the Organization of Turkic States (OTS). This platform is expected to expand international trade with countries outside of the Organization.

This year, Kazakhstan chairs the Council of Women Entrepreneurs of Turkic States, which operates under the OTS and includes five member countries: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Uzbekistan. Three more countries – Hungary, Northern Cyprus, and Turkmenistan – are represented in the Organization with the status of observer states. One of the goals of Kazakhstan’s chairing of the OTS was to strengthen business ties between Turkic states. To this end, the Turkic Business Hub initiative was implemented, an online platform that will become an important element of integration and cooperation in the region.

Speaking at the close of the meeting in Astana, Lazzat Ramazanova told those in attendance: “Today, within the framework of the General Assembly of Women Entrepreneurs of the Turkic World, an ambitious initiative was put forward to create a unified digital platform for business. Kazakhstan was the initiator and implementer of this idea, as our country is now among the top 25 most digitized countries. The platform has already been developed, and in Kazakhstan, we are already working with our ministries on the integration of info-systems. Now, we will work with the governments of Turkic states so that the same integration takes place with their info-systems. In other words, the software has been created, and we are working to bring other countries into it.”

The main advantage of a Turkic Business Hub is it ensures business security when choosing a partner in a given country. This is because when a user of the platform registers as a potential participant in trade relations, all information about them as a business entity is collected. Artificial intelligence automatically scans the fiscal (tax and customs) authorities and runs the business’ credit history through the hub’s integration with the databases of banks. The banks have their own interest in this system, since using it they can find clients and borrowers who have passed strict compliance checks. AI can also monitor the presence or absence of lawsuits from former partners of the entity that is attempting to register.

“In the case of detection of negative information, the entity is denied registration, i.e., from there start, there will be no ‘scam’ companies or unscrupulous counter-parties on the platform,” Ramazanova explained. “They will immediately be ‘canceled’ by the artificial intelligence based on the data from tax, customs, and other state services. But the most important thing is that in case of rejection, AI will send such the rejectee a complete summary of the reasons why they were denied registration, so the business will know what they need to correct to join the system. Once business entities that have no problems with the tax authorities, a clean credit history, and no debts and lawsuits from partners, have successfully registered, they will be able to sign contracts with foreign partners on the platform with the help of an electronic digital signature”.

Security of transactions is not the only advantage of the Turkic Business Hub. The Kazakh IT companies that participated in the creation of this platform ensured it was also convenient for users. All marketplaces operating in the country are represented on the platform, and it has a dedicated payment system. The Hub allows businesses to conclude turnkey transactions, meaning there is no need to open additional windows when concluding transactions. Now, logistics companies are becoming involved in the platform, with the developers planning to introduce a ready-made transportation scheme for supplying goods between countries.

“We plan to bring in large logistics companies to the platform in order to organize transportation for our entrepreneurs, because logistics is a very serious challenge for the countries of Central Asia,” Ramazanova stated. “We have not ruled out working with the governments of the region’s countries to subsidize the transportation costs of certain sectors represented on the platform when they enter other markets. This product is created under the direction of women’s entrepreneurs because it is primarily designed for micro and small businesses, and in our countries, women’s entrepreneurship is concentrated in these areas. However, we offer this product not only to women – it is available to male entrepreneurs as well because business has no gender restrictions.”

The developers of the Turkic Business Hub are currently preparing to present a demonstration model to OTS member countries. Additionally, there are plans to create a “room” on the platform for online negotiations between businesses from different countries. It is planned for the platform to eventually include non-OTS members. Kazakhstan sees this platform as a basis for organizing global trade, but the first step is to unite Turkic businesses. According to the Organization of Turkic States, total trade turnover between countries in the Turkic world was approximately $42 billion by the end of 2023.

Kazakhstan’s initiative has already received support from entrepreneurs from other OTS countries.

“We need to have a platform that would unite the Turkic world in the age of digital technology,” said Aizhan Chynybaeva, a member of the Council of Women Entrepreneurs from Kyrgyzstan. ”I am inspired by the pace at which the platform was created – in just one year – and if we implement it in our countries at the same pace, we will see great economic growth and the development of women’s entrepreneurship. As a representative of the hotel and tourism sector, I believe it would be good to organize separate focused meetings of different business sectors in our countries on this platform.”

Secretary General of the Turkic Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Adem Kula stated that this year a forum of financial organizations of the Turkic world will be held. It will advocate for the allocation of 20% of all funds of the Turkic Investment Fund, which started its activity in May of this year, for the development of women’s entrepreneurship. The initial capital will amount to $500 million, and the main purpose of the fund is to develop economic and commercial relations between Turkic countries. Kula believes that the Turkic Business Hub project proposed by Kazakhstan can become the core of these initiatives and a platform for the formation of joint business projects from several countries which could be financed by the Investment Fund.

In March of this year, the Ministers of Agriculture of the Turkic Five agreed to create a similar information system between OTS states. Following the meeting in Taraz, a communique was signed which highlighted the need to create a common platform for real-time data transfers, the exchange of market information and data analysis, and reports on value chains in agriculture in the region of the Organization. It is feasible that given the emergence of the Turkic Business Hub for small and medium-sized businesses, work on creating a digital counterpart for counterparts in agriculture will be accelerated.

Charges Reclassified for Defendants in Crocus Terror Attack Case

The charges against the four defendants in the Crocus City Hall terrorist attack case have been reclassified, lawyer Alexander Yarin has told Russia’s state-owned TASS news agency. “Aminchon and Dilovar Islomov, their father Isroil Islomov, and Alisher Kasimov are now charged under Part 3 of Article 205.1 of the Russian Criminal Code,” Yarin stated.

Previously, the defendants were charged under paragraph “b” of Part 3 of Article 205 of the Criminal Code, which pertains to a terrorist act resulting in a fatality. The updated charges now reflect involvement in actions that facilitated the commission of a terrorist act.

As previously reported by TCA, the terrorist attack at Crocus City Hall, located on the outskirts of Moscow, resulted in 144 fatalities and 551 injuries. The incident has created a climate of fear among Central Asian migrants living in Russia.

In the aftermath of the attack, Tajik migrants have faced a surge of hostility and aggression, further exacerbating tensions within the migrant community.

AI Facial Recognition System Being Tested in Two Cities in Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan has launched a national video monitoring system powered by artificial intelligence technologies. The project, developed by the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the National Security Committee, and the Ministry of Digital Development, Innovation, and Aerospace Industry, aims to enhance surveillance capabilities across key locations in the country.

The system is designed to recognize faces, detect abandoned objects, capture offenses, and identify vehicles by make, model, and color. Critical sites such as railway stations, airports, hotels, streets, intersections, and shopping malls are priority areas for implementation.

During the World Nomad Games in Astana, the technology was reportedly instrumental in locating lost children and missing persons. Authorities also noted that the system helped detain 46 wanted individuals in Astana and 30 in Almaty. Proponents argue that these technologies could contribute to improving public safety and reducing crime.

Kazakhstan’s initiative follows a broader global trend of integrating AI into “smart city” systems, similar to developments in China, Russia, and some European countries. Officials say the system will be expanded with additional cameras nationwide to increase monitoring coverage.

To date, more than 1.3 million video cameras have been installed in Kazakhstan, with 310,000 of them connected to operational control centers and police duty stations. Advocates of the system highlight its potential to deter crime and bolster public security, although concerns about privacy and misuse of surveillance technology have been raised internationally.

Worldwide, AI video surveillance systems are being adopted to improve law enforcement and public safety. In China, they are used for facial recognition to track criminals and prevent offenses. Russia has integrated AI into its video systems to detect potential threats, while in the UK, intelligent cameras are used for crowd management and event security.

While supporters emphasize the benefits of such systems in enabling faster responses to incidents and reducing crime, the deployment of AI in surveillance has sparked ongoing debates over privacy, civil liberties, and the potential for misuse.

Kazakhstan, Hungary, and China Establish Cargo Terminal in Budapest

Kazakhstan Temir Zholy (KTZ, Kazakhstan’s national railway company), L.A.C. Holding (Hungary), and Xi’an Free Trade Port Construction and Operation Co., Ltd (China) have signed a memorandum to establish a joint inter-modal cargo terminal in Budapest. The document was signed on November 20 as part of the state visit of Kazakhstan’s President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev to Hungary.

The planned terminal will leverage the strategic location of the Hungarian capital in the heart of Europe and its developed transport network for multimodal transportation across the continent.

The terminal will have a capacity of 230,000 TEU annually and will increase the number of container trains between China and Europe, including transit along the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route (TITR). The new terminal is expected to reduce delivery times and transportation costs.

KTZ continues to expand its terminal network along key transport corridors to strengthen Kazakhstan’s position as a key transit hub in Eurasia. On November 12, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, and China signed an agreement to establish an inter-modal cargo terminal in the Port of Alat in Baku, Azerbaijan.

Commenting on the signed Memorandum at a press briefing in Budapest, Tokayev said this initiative will strengthen trade and transport ties between the participating countries. “New opportunities are opening up for the development of infrastructure, logistics, and international trade. Eighty-five percent of land transit shipments between Asia and Europe pass through Kazakhstan. In the near future, the volume of cargo transportation along this route will reach 10 million tons,” Tokayev said.

Kazakhstan’s Ambassador: Kazakh Companies Do Not Want To Be Under Sanctions

Kazakh companies seek to avoid secondary sanctions, but the country will continue to cooperate closely with Russia. This was stated by Kazakhstan’s Ambassador to Russia, Dauren Abayev, at a press conference in TASS news agency.

According to him, about ten companies in the country have fallen under such sanctions, but these are isolated cases.

“Kazakh companies, naturally, do not want to be under sanctions, as any restrictions have a negative impact on their activities,” Abayev emphasized.

Nevertheless, he noted that strategic partnership and allied relations remain between Kazakhstan and Russia, and the growth of trade turnover confirms the continuation of cooperation.

Earlier in August, Kazakhstan’s Deputy Prime Minister Serik Zhumangarin said in an interview with Bloomberg that the republic would not blindly follow sanctions against Russia but would take into account international restrictions. He emphasized that Kazakhstan will not allow a ban on trade for its companies, but the country cannot completely ignore the sanctions because of the risk of economic isolation.

Kazakhstan’s Minister of National Economy Nurlan Baibazarov commented in early November on Kazakhstan companies being placed on the UK sanctions lists, saying that these violations are not systemic. He said the sanctions were mainly one-day firms, and the republic continues to comply with international restrictions.

A Synthesis of Sounds: How the Silk Road Became the Melting Pot of Music in the Soviet Empire

As a DJ, radio podcaster and music enthusiast, I love discovering hidden retro gems like Nuggets-style compilations. There is an unspoken agreement on an era’s sounds depending on the artist’s breaking into the mainstream at the time. Then there are the obscure cuts and one hit wonders that for some reason didn’t make it big upon release, but dated well or were ahead of their time and found an audience at a later date. On other occasions, it’s about geography; if it had been premiered in a different part of the world, it would have been successful or far more celebrated than it was. In my search for such sounds, I feel it shouldn’t be limited by location; good music has no boundaries.

Yalla band, commemorative stamp, Uzbekistan, 2021

There are many compilations touching upon niche genres and moments in time which can transport one to sonically experience a particular era. As a Westerner trying to peek behind the Iron Curtain to gauge the music and arts scene of the 1970’s and 80’s, what flickered across the Cold War barriers seemed controlled, state-approved, and mostly a mystery. It was a delight to learn that under this supposed monochromic blanket, a dynamic underground music scene was flourishing in regions that had a long history of cultural fusion. SYNTHESIZING THE SILK ROADS: Uzbek Disco, Tajik Folktronica, Uyghur Rock & Crimean Tatar Jazz from 1980s Soviet Central Asia features musicians from countries such as Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Kazakhstan, who were creating a unique sound that stood apart from anything else being produced in the USSR. TCA spoke to Ostinato record label boss Vik Sohonie about the release.

TCA: How does this statement by Peter Frankopan quoted in your liner notes – “The bridge between east and west is the very crossroads of civilization” – relate to or define the music you chose?

The music itself is the greatest evidence we have to this argument, because you can hear the cultures of Europe, South Asia, East Asia, West Asia – the Middle East – all mixed into it. Indeed, Central Asia was influenced by all of these regions musically given its unique geography, but it has also influenced the cultures of so many of those parts of the world. During the era of the Silk Roads and the “golden age” of the region, its musical theory, as stated in the liner notes, influenced the music of Europe.

Natalia Nurumkhamedova album cover

TCA: How did World War II and Stalin create the circumstances behind the Tashkent and Uzbekistan scene?

When the Nazis invaded the Soviet Union, Stalin put the best and brightest minds on trains bound for Soviet Central Asia, mainly Uzbekistan and its capital, Tashkent. There were recording engineers on board who went on to set up one of the biggest press plants in the Soviet Union that produced millions of records. A little-known story of World War II – the evacuation from the Eastern European front to Central Asia set in motion what would later form the tracks that make up this album.

TCA: Nikita Khrushchev was important in fostering a new creative drive and easing of censorship within the Soviet Union. Jazz, which Khrushchev compared to “having gas in the stomach,” was the biggest winner in the new, less restrictive atmosphere; can you explain how jazz was important?

Jazz was seen as a tool of American subversion, and perhaps with good reason. Jazz was used by the United States during the Cold War as a way of spreading the gospel of the United States and combating the reality of racism that defined the image of the U.S. amongst many post-colonial nations. A distinctly Black American art form, jazz was both a cultural export and a tool of statecraft – this is how the Soviets viewed it. Nevertheless, jazz’s power made its way to the cities of the Soviet Union and jazz clubs were the first outlets that sprung up in the 50s and 60s that then allowed rock and disco clubs to take shape.

TCA: Why and how did the music in the Tashkent scene move away from Soviet norms?

As a sanctuary city, a safe haven for artists from across the Soviet Union, given its millennia-old reputation as a welcoming hub, there was a freedom within Tashkent that perhaps artists in Moscow didn’t enjoy. But as mentioned in the liner notes, one of the women artists declared that Uzbekistan’s time as a Soviet republic was a golden era for the arts and music.

TCA: How did the “Deep Purple Generation” and disco play a role in the USSR’s unraveling?

Disco and rock clubs became the equivalent of, let’s say “free trade zones.” This is where Soviet censors and doctrine couldn’t control the message or the business model. Within these clubs, private and illicit commerce thrived, Western norms, sense of fashion and music also found a receptive space. This opened imaginations and allowed new ideas to influence the Soviet youth, many of whom developed pro-Western attitudes, and some went on to become leaders of ex-Soviet republics, reorienting them towards a more Western aligned stance.

TCA: You suggest that “discos had become a space for early alternative culture, as well as private commerce” in the Soviet Union, and I love the term “disco mafia”. Can you elaborate on this mafia and how disco was both subversive and advocated commercialism?

Because there was so much money being made at these discos – from the sale of alcohol, cigarettes, possibly even drugs, as well as Western clothing, music and other paraphernalia – a mafia emerged to profit off the revenue streams. It can also be argued that the powerful mafias that emerged in Russia and elsewhere in the former Soviet Union after 1991 found their nascence in these disco clubs, building networks to the West and understanding how to create captive markets they could control and profit from.

TCA: Given the time period and the political backdrop, some of the artists on the compilation have pretty tragic stories; when did you become aware of that and can you tell us more about it?

The more tragic stories were gleaned from our interviews with the artists or their families, and from newspaper clippings that we found from the era that details their arrest, torture, detention and the like.

TCA: I was fascinated by Enver Mustafayev, the “founder of Minarets of Nessef and an ethnic Tatar whose music had an American touch and often included lyrics in Crimean Tatar, a criminalized language;” why was this language criminalized?

Crimean Tatars consider themselves the indigenous people of Crimea and have long advocated for an independent state, one in which Tatar would be the official language. Since Tatars did not form a great deal of the leadership in Moscow or among the secret police, communication in this language could be (and was used) to foment separatism, according to the Soviet authorities. Hence, it was criminalized.

TCA: “More than a sanctuary, Tashkent was a crucible of sound. Nestled between Europe and Asia, its legacy as a key hub along the ancient Silk Roads gave it a cosmopolitan flair for centuries. As a mainstay of Soviet recording, it welcomed artists from across the Asian expanse of the USSR, like Uyghur bands from Kazakhstan via Xinjiang in western China.” Can you elaborate on this?

The sound you hear on the record is not only a sound that was formed during the Soviet era, but the sound of Uzbekistan and Central Asia is distinct and houses many cultures given that travelers and traders have been traversing the region for centuries to move peoples and goods between Europe and Asia. During this ancient trade, musical ideas also left their imprint.

In the Soviet era, Tashkent was a sanctuary, and artists found a welcoming home and a sense of creative freedom. So, Uyghurs, Kazakhs, Tajiks, Tatars, Koreans, and many ethnicities that formed the rich ethnic tapestry of the Soviet Union made Tashkent something like Brooklyn, London, or Berlin today. Tashkent opened its doors to everyone without exception, from our research, and this gave rise to the rich music scene we tried to capture.

TCA: Some musicians, like Davron Gaipov, founder of the cult Uzbek band Original, faced harsh punishment during routine law enforcement at the height of the disco club era in the 1980s. Despite being a “disco divo,” Davron was incarcerated in a hard labor camp in the Ikurst region of Siberia for five years on charges of “repeatedly organizing events accompanied by the use of alcohol and narcotic substances.”’ In the U.S., where disco originated, it was considered a musical movement associated with black and queer/LGBT artists and clientele. Was that the case in the Soviet Union? Were there similar prejudices in the Soviet Union towards non-ethnic Russians or Central Asians? Did disco offer more opportunity for Central Asians to excel against any such prejudices? Was there an early gay culture associated with Soviet and Uzbek disco? If so, were artists or people involved in the scene also persecuted for their sexuality by the Soviet Union?

We did not come across any information regarding the LGBT scene in Soviet Uzbekistan, nor did the artists discuss this.

As for attitudes and prejudices – this is an interesting phenomenon in the Soviet Union. It did not share the rigid racial hierarchies that exist in the United States. In fact, one of the legacies of the Soviet Union in Uzbekistan was a strong culture of anti-discrimination when it came to things like getting a job or renting an apartment. Musically, there was a political imperative to celebrate all cultures in order to create a strong connected identity within the Soviet Union to prevent separatism, which was a constant risk given the sheer size and diversity of the USSR.

Having said that, this is in practice, but one would be lying if they said there was no discrimination or there wasn’t some sort of ethnic stratification. It just did not operate, or perhaps was not as severe, as it does in the settler Anglosphere (United States, Canada, Australia, etc.). The Soviet Union also had a history of aiding countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America in their liberation struggles as well as educating their youth at universities, so it had garnered a reputation in many non-Western countries as a tolerant society. From our time in Uzbekistan, one of its most endearing qualities was its sheer diversity and what we saw as a strong sense of national identity that surpassed ethnicity.

TCA: Can you tell us more about the Tajik women artists?

Tajikistan remains a more conservative country than Uzbekistan, according to what we were told while in Tashkent, hence Tajik women artists found greater freedom, appreciation and a more liberal atmosphere across the border. All of the Tajik women artists included on this record came to Uzbekistan to record – which in itself says something.

It’s worth getting this collection for the liner notes alone. They’re meticulously researched, with historical events and political circumstances woven to paint a vivid picture. If you love music and history, and how they form the zeitgeist, this is a must read as well as a must listen. You can buy this amazing time capsule capturing this sonic Soviet underground movement here SYNTHESIZING THE SILK ROADS.

Visit Osinato Records Bandcamp here: www.ostinatorecords.bandcamp.com

Ola is a DJ and radio broadcaster Ola’s Kool Kitchen, and you can listen to her show here.