• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00193 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10811 -0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00193 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10811 -0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00193 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10811 -0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00193 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10811 -0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00193 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10811 -0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00193 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10811 -0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00193 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10811 -0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00193 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10811 -0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
10 December 2025

PayPal Set for Integration in Uzbekistan Pending Central Bank Talks

PayPal, Alipay, UniPay, Apple Pay, and Google Pay can be integrated into Uzbekistan. By the end of this year, the Central Bank of Uzbekistan will negotiate with these international online payment companies and take measures to connect them to payment systems and banking services in Uzbekistan.

Uzbekistan is the only country in Central Asia not connected to PayPal. Uzbeks who need PayPal use detours—they register through other countries, such as Kazakhstan. However, this is inconvenient and requires using the system’s limited capabilities. Also, some people use this online payment system to use other toll-free numbers on the internet, even though it is unsafe.

In 2021, PayPal announced that it has no plans to enter the Uzbekistan market.

Independent programmers and freelancers in Uzbekistan use electronic platforms to sell their software and products to foreign customers. However, payments can only be made through the PayPal payment system on some specialized platforms, particularly Upwork, Fiverr, Envato, Storyblocks, and similar token sale systems.

Kazakhstan’s Youth Suicide Crisis: Unraveling the Complex Web of Societal Challenges

A wave of suicides among teenagers and young adults has swept across Kazakhstan. Parents and the Children’s Ombudsman have said children were provoked to do dangerous things by the internet, and deputies have demanded that social networks should be blocked. The media, meanwhile, has been accused of creating a “Werther effect,” fixating on the rash of suicides and thus encouraging teenagers to repeat these acts of self-harm. However, experts believe the cause is much more nuanced and cannot be eliminated by blocking harmful content alone.

Chronicle of a Fateful September

On September 13, a teenager fell from an eighth-story window in Astana. The boy died of his injuries. The very next day, a schoolgirl plummeted from a fifth-floor window in Shchuchinsk. The 12-year-old girl is in hospital, and the causes of both incidents are still under investigation.

On September 16 in Almaty, two seventh-grade students from school No. 25 named after the writer I.Esenberlin, left class and climbed to the attic of a neighbor’s apartment complex. The girls both fell to their death from the roof. “I came, and I saw two girls lying there. They had jumped from the roof,” an eyewitness stated. “The girls were about 13 years old; seventh graders. One had a backpack next to her, and the other had no shoes and was wearing black tights. She had taken her shoes off and placed them neatly. One fell on a car, and her body rolled away. The second was immediately killed on the asphalt.”

Later, it became known that one of the girls was the daughter of a famous Almaty ecologist and artist. Deputy Interior Minister Igor Lepekha said that what happened “is a suicide; the case was opened based on it being suicide.”

On September 21, another schoolgirl fell from a high-rise in Almaty. Allegedly, the girl left the house to perform a routine task, but climbed to the 13th floor, from where she plunged. The Almaty Police Department confirmed the girl’s death and has opened a criminal case.

By this time, in schools, online, and on social networks, parents had started to spread panicked rumors about the impact on children of a particular computer game, similar to the semi-mythical game “Blue Whale.” In the past, Blue Whale has been decried as a malicious game which encourages teenagers to commit suicide and acts of violence, but no convincing evidence has ever been presented. The Almaty police stated that gossip regarding the involvement of dangerous internet games in the girls’ deaths is not valid and reminded the public about their responsibility vis-à-vis spreading false information.

On September 22, in the yard of a multi-story residential building in Almaty, the body of a 3rd-year cadet from the Border Academy of the National Security Committee (NSC) who was on regular leave was found. “The cause of death was a fall from a height,” the NSC press service reported.

On September 23, also in Almaty, multiple sources reported that a young man had tumbled from a high-rise building. Police confirmed this information and the young man’s death.

The seventh tragic case in the largest city in Kazakhstan was the death of a student at the prestigious Almaty Management University (AlmaU) on September 25. The student’s body was found on a sports field near a high-rise. The student was in his 20s, was studying to be a director, and was the son of a prominent official. The cause of his death is also believed to be suicide; however, there is no official statement as of yet.

Search for the Guilty

Given that this September has been filled with unexplained tragic incidents, the level of anxiety in Kazakhstan, especially in Almaty, has risen sharply. The media has been chock-full of stories about how a game called “Red Dolphin” has allegedly affected children in the same way it was said Blue Whale did. Photographs of books reportedly found among the belongings of the girls involved in the September 16 suicide were also shared, with unfounded rumors indicative of the widespread panic claiming these books were only available in marketplaces and were not sold in stores; it later transpired that the teen fantasy books were widely available.

The Ministry of Internal Affairs announced it was checking the schoolgirls’ phones. “Participation in suicidal game is not established. The Ministry of Internal Affairs (MIA) constantly monitors networks to identify and respond to illegal content. Since the beginning of the year, about 22,000 illegal foreign internet resources have been identified. Information has been sent to the authorized body to block access to them. The participation of Kazakhstani citizens in internet games with a suicidal orientation has not been established,” the Interior Ministry stated.

The Almaty Education Department also announced the formation of a commission to investigate all aspects of the case, involving representatives from relevant government agencies. Additionally, many schools across the city have held meetings with parents focused on suicide prevention.

Children’s Ombudsman Dinara Zakieva published a memo on her social networks, which is being distributed among teachers and parents. The memo mentions Red Dolphin and dozens of other internet resources that, according to some sources, push children to suicide. It also mentions the teen fantasy books allegedly found in possession of the dead girls.

According to the Interior Ministry, the average age among children who take their own life in Kazakhstan is 15-17 years old. The Ombudsman notes, however, that cases are increasingly common among the age group 11-13. “The main reasons are loneliness, relationships with parents, relatives, peers, and bullying. In addition, social networks significantly impact the modern world,” Zakieva wrote. The Ombudsman also stated that a pilot implementation of the KIVA anti-bullying program has begun in 110 schools, and will be introduced in all schools next year. From January, all schools should have one psychologist per 500 children. Currently, there is one per 1,500.

Editorial staff at Factcheck.kz analyzed the pertinent internet materials and books, finding they “do not contain any calls for dangerous actions or information promoting suicide, but some of them are intended for the age category 16+. Red Dolphin and other groups associated with the RNBWN online community do contain information normalizing homicide and suicide. However, the actual effect of these resources is not entirely clear as of now. History shows that the impact of death groups tends to be greatly exaggerated,” the study concluded.

Several psychologists, meanwhile, have spoken to the media pointing to the “Werther effect,” where the publication of news about suicides increases the risk of copycat actions. The psychologists’ recommendations included increasing control over a child’s phone use, and advising parents to build more trusting relationships with their children.

Without waiting for the results of the investigation, meanwhile, Mazhilis deputy Zhuldyz Suleimenova has called on the authorities to block social networks and messengers across the country.

Fictitious and Real Threats

Unfortunately, youth suicide in Kazakhstan is not a rare phenomenon. At the same time, computer games, books, and social networks do not, in principle, play a significant role in these tragedies.

In this climate of misinformation, in May of this year a schoolgirl threw herself from a multi-story building in Taldykorgan and died. According to some reports, the girl was driven to take such a step after receiving unsatisfactory results in the Unified National Test (UNT), which determines the possibility of receiving a grant to study at university. However, the school said the girl was yet to sit the UNT at the time of her death.

In August, two sisters were hospitalized in Shymkent after trying to end their lives. They told police they had decided to commit suicide because they were being blackmailed over an intimate video they were filmed participating in. A criminal case was opened under the article “Driving to suicide.”

Overall, according to the General Prosecutor’s Office, 2,389 cases of suicide were registered in Kazakhstan in the first eight months of 2024, including 128 cases among children between the ages of 5 and 18.

According to information for 2023, the number of suicides among minors in Kazakhstan increased by 48% – from 94 to 139, and the number of attempted suicides from 210 to 233 cases. In this regard, a Comprehensive Plan for 2023-2025 to protect children from violence and prevent suicide was adopted. The Comprehensive Plan envisages the development of anti-bullying programs based on foreign experience and several other measures that include rapid responses to incidents of violence.

In February of this year, Aigul Kadirova, coordinator of the adolescent and youth development program of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) in Kazakhstan, outlined the leading causes of mortality among children and youth.

Kadirova said that according to the Bureau of National Statistics, the leading causes of death among young people aged 10 to 34 includes accidents, poisoning, injuries, transportation accidents, and suicide. She noted that the study shows that traffic accidents and self-harm are the leading causes of death among young people. “This conclusion applies to all age groups of adolescents. Starting from the age group of 15-19 years, self-harm, which includes suicide, comes in first place,” said Kadirova.

In 2023, a statement by Professor Muslim Hasenov, a  PhD in law and associate professor at the Narikbayev KazSLU, argued that according to his data, about 170 children end their lives by suicide every year in Kazakhstan. There is a “very high latency, very unclear reasons in many cases. I analyzed all the statistics for eight years and came to shocking conclusions. Every year in Kazakhstan, an average of 172 children commit suicide, and the number of suicide attempts among minors reaches 350 cases a year,” wrote Hasenov. But, he noted, only about 40 cases a year are registered under the article, Driving to suicide.

“We should not simplistically perceive suicide as a voluntary departure from life, especially if it concerns a child, because this is a very cynical and dangerous approach,” Hasenov stated. “We must realize that any suicide, especially child suicide, has reasons when a person, especially a child, is driven to despair, and, in addition to internal psychological factors, there are external ones. And the science of criminal law has already formed the concept of ‘criminal suicide’ [where] a suicide is caused by an external negative impact of a physical, mental, or informational nature.”

According to statistics, 40% of all child suicides in Kazakhstan are committed for unspecified reasons, leading Hasenov to argue it is impossible to establish the reasons behind such actions if this remains the case. “If there is no investigation or collection of evidence, it is practically impossible to establish guilt and bring the guilty to justice. There are also facts when relatives of persons who committed suicide, for some reason, do not apply or refuse to initiate proceedings due to fear, bribery, or simply unwillingness due to the tragic circumstances,” said Hasenov in calling for a full investigate into all the facts in cases of children’s suicides.

President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev has also expressed his opinion on the situation, stating that violence provokes children to commit suicide. “Unfortunately, cases of abuse and even violence among students do not stop, which, in turn, provokes children into suicide. Bullying causes irreparable damage to the mental state and health of children and adolescents, hurts the learning process, and leads to exclusion from the social environment and mental disorders. The State must ensure the protection of the rights and safety of children. It is necessary to eradicate bullying forever,” the president said last year, adding that he constantly receives letters from desperate parents.

Tokayev instructed his administration to take control of the situation regarding the safety of children in schools. “The Prosecutor General’s Office should finally fulfill the duties assigned to them as far as the safety of children is concerned. The Ombudsman for Children’s Rights should record all such cases and report to me. We will take the toughest measures,” said Tokayev.

Immediately after the wave of suicides, on September 30, Children’s Rights Ombudsman Zakieva published a report on her trip to the Turkestan Oblast; the report clearly identifies the leading causes of children’s suicidal behavior.

Located in the country’s south, Turkestan Oblast is Kazakhstan’s most populated and “multi-child” region. It is also heavily influenced by religion and patriarchal traditions, including the subordinate, dependent position of women and children.

“In a rural school in the Saryagash district, children complained of bullying and extortion in questionnaires and surveys. In the same school, a boy committed suicide in the spring; at the same time, a 15-year-old girl was found to be pregnant after being raped. It transpired that these students had earlier signaled in their drawings, which psychologists had collected, that they felt bad. However, no one paid attention,” Zakieva said.

At a school in the Tole Bi district, four children from the same class wrote that they had been beaten, including with a stick, and were being mistreated at home. However, as the Ombudsman noted, psychologists and school administrators failed to report this to the authorized bodies, and the necessary actions were not taken. “A girl made a suicide attempt at school in the Sairam district, but no further work including the involvement of health services and psychiatrists was done,” Zakieva wrote. Several other similar cases are cited in the report.

No matter how attractive the idea of declaring social networks, books, or computer games the cause of suicides may be, the facts do not bear out this theory. On the contrary, there is evidence that Kazakhstan’s children decide to kill themselves because of violence, adult indifference, and disenfranchisement.

According to the World Health Organization, more than 720,000 people commit suicide each year. Suicide is the third leading cause of death for people aged 15 to 29. Globally, 73% of suicides occur in low- and middle-income countries.

There are helplines for people who find themselves in a difficult life situation in Kazakhstan. Kazakhstanis of any age can call this number with their problems and worries – the operators will not refuse them in counseling. The call is anonymous. The contact center is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
National helpline for children and youth at 150 or 1303.
You can also write to WhatsApp at +7 708 106 08 10.

South Korea to Help Build Dry Ports in Uzbekistan’s Syrdarya and Jizzakh Regions

The Ministry of Transport of Uzbekistan announced on October 2 that it had signed a Framework Agreement with the Port Investment Department of the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries of South Korea to jointly develop a feasibility study for the construction of dry ports and terminals in Uzbekistan’s Syrdarya and Jizzakh regions.

According to the Uzbek ministry, the project will help improve the country’s transport and logistics infrastructure. Creating inland terminals will be an important step towards increasing Uzbekistan’s logistics independence and strengthening its role as the main logistics hub in Central Asia. The project is expected to significantly improve the country’s transport infrastructure and attract new investments to the Syrdarya and Jizzakh regions, supporting the goals of the “Development Strategy of New Uzbekistan for 2022-2026.”

The project is scheduled for completion in September 2025.

As one of only two double-landlocked countries in the world (the other being Liechtenstein), Uzbekistan has to ship its exports over long distances through other landlocked countries — Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Afghanistan.

In recent years, the government of Uzbekistan has made substantial progress in improving existing international transport corridors running through the country and in developing new corridors that will allow Uzbekistan to access the markets of the Eurasian Economic Union and European countries, Iran, Turkey, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, and China.

Uzbekistan and South Korea Increase Flights Between Countries

During talks in Seoul this week, Uzbekistan’s Ministry of Transport and South Korea’s civil aviation authority reached agreements to increase the number of regular flights between Uzbekistan and South Korea from the current 10 to 24 per week for airlines of each country, raising the total weekly number of flights to 48.

According to the Uzbek ministry, airlines of both countries will operate up to 12 weekly flights between Tashkent and Seoul and up to four flights from South Korea’s regions to Tashkent.

Up to four flights per week will be performed from Uzbekistan’s regions to Seoul, and there will be up to four weekly flights between Uzbekistan’s regions and other South Korean cities.

An agreement was also reached on the bilateral use of the Open Skies regime at the international airport of Jeju, the second-largest airport in South Korea, and Uzbekistan’s Samarkand airport for airlines of both countries.

From the Uzbek side, flights between the two countries will be operated by the national air carrier, Uzbekistan Airways, and new airlines created by Uzbekistan — Qanot Sharq, My Freighter, and Air Samarkand.

According to the Uzbek ministry, these agreements will help develop trade and economic relations between the two countries, increase bilateral passenger and cargo turnover, and attract Korean tourists to the historical cities of Uzbekistan.

The Times of Central Asia earlier reported that South Korea is one of the most popular destinations for Uzbeks, both for work and studies. The Uzbeks occupy fifth place by size of the foreign diaspora in the country and number more than 69,000.

In recent years, the government of Uzbekistan has established regulations for legal and safe labor migration to South Korea. At the start of 2024, the government announced its intention to attract 100,000 Uzbeks to work in South Korea.

Kyrgyz Prime Minister: Labor Migrants From EAEU Should Not Be Discriminated Against on Territory of the Union

Speaking at a meeting of the Eurasian Intergovernmental Council in Yerevan, Kyrgyz Prime Minister Akylbek Japarov said that tightening migration laws should not apply to citizens from EAEU countries. According to Akylbek Japarov, increasing trade between EAEU countries and developing cooperative ties is the basis for sustainable economic growth. However, the main participants in any integration are people, so the attitude toward the citizens of the EAEU countries in any state of the Union should be the same.

“Such a level of integration has been reached, when business and citizens of member states understand and deeply believe in the unity of the economic union (EAEU), and respectively require the same attitude to themselves being on the territory of any of the EAEU countries,” said the head of the Cabinet.

Therefore, according to Japarov, the leadership of the EAEU countries should pay special attention when tightening migration legislation and adjust their attitudes toward migrants from union countries.

Following the terrorist attack on the Crocus City Hall near Moscow, the Russian authorities significantly tightened migration legislation. Thousands of citizens, mainly from Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, were subjected to forced deportation. The restrictions also affected Kyrgyz citizens, although the country is a member of the EAEU.

“We proceed from the fact that legislative initiatives should not contradict the norms of the EAEU treaty; that is, they should not apply to our working citizens and members of their families. Both in the documents initiated by state structures and in the public space, it is necessary to separate the rights of citizens of the EAEU countries from those of countries that are not part of it,” Japarov emphasized.

According to official data, about half a million Kyrgyz citizens work in Russia. The unofficial figure may be two or three times higher.

Alisher Usmanov Wins Court Case Against German TV Channel ARD

The Hamburg court news about Uzbek-born billionaire Alisher Usmanov was broadcast by the German TV channel ARD as unreliable. ARD accused Alisher Usmanov of creating a system of bribing International Fencing Federation (FIE) judges.

According to the report, the court found the information published by the ARD channel unreliable and banned its distribution as “inappropriate news based on suspicion.” If the court order is violated, the violator will be fined up to 250,000 euros per episode or imprisoned.

Alisher Usmanov’s press service highlighted that between 2022 and 2024, several European media outlets, particularly in Germany, acknowledged their inability to substantiate accusations against the businessman and signed written agreements to cease their unlawful dissemination of information. To date, approximately 30 such declarations have been made in favor of Usmanov. As a result of legal proceedings, the businessman’s legal team obtained numerous orders preventing the spread of false information by European media.

“One of the most significant was the court decision issued in January 2024 to ban the statements made about Usmanov by the American magazine Forbes, which became one of the key elements in justifying the introduction of EU sanctions against him. Earlier, Usmanov also won a lawsuit against the Austrian newspaper Kurier,” the press service emphasized.

The court appeal was triggered by two articles and a video report about fencing at the Paris Olympic Games, aired by Germany’s ARD channel in August 2024. In them, journalist Hans-Joachim Seppelt accused Alisher Usmanov, who stepped down as FIE president in early 2022 due to EU sanctions, of creating a system to “bribe referees.” The FIE management officially denied these accusations.

According to the press service, the German Internet publication Sport1.de and the Austrian newspaper Krone.at, which republished ARD’s false statements, corrected their materials at the request of Usmanov’s lawyers. However, the ARD TV channel refused to fix the inaccurate information voluntarily.

“There is no evidence other than gossip spread by dubious witnesses, invented insinuations, speculation, and rumors. Respect for truth, human dignity, and the dissemination of reliable information are the foundations of the German code of journalistic ethics, which was grossly violated by the state broadcaster,” summarized lawyer Joachim Steinhöfel, representing Usmanov in court.

As of August 15, 2024, Russian billionaire Alisher Usmanov is the 132nd richest person in the world, with a wealth of estimated $15.4 billion.