• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00211 0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10460 0.19%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%

Condé Nast Traveler Names Kyrgyzstan’s Karakol Among 25 Best Places to Visit in 2025

Condé Nast Traveler has crowned the Kyrgyz town of Karakol as the “adventure capital of Central Asia” and included it in its prestigious list of the 25 best places to visit in 2025​.

Located southeast of Lake Issyk-Kul, and approximately 150km from the Kyrgyzstan-China border, Karakol is Kyrgyzstan’s premier winter tourism hub. The city boasts the nation’s largest and best mountain ski resort.

The magazine highlights Karakol as a prime destination for outdoor enthusiasts, offering activities such as hiking, horseback riding, kayaking, and paragliding. It also praises the Karakol ski base, the highest ski resort in Central Asia, perched at an altitude of 1.8 miles.

Looking ahead, Karakol is set to further solidify its reputation as a winter sports haven. A new resort, Three Peaks, is scheduled to open in 2026 in collaboration with French ski specialists Société des Trois-Vallées. This development is expected to attract even more winter sports enthusiasts to the region.

Beyond adventure, Condé Nast Traveler lauds Karakol’s cultural and culinary diversity. The city is home to a mix of Uyghur, Uzbek, Kyrgyz, Kalmak, Dungan, and Russian communities. This multicultural heritage has given rise to unique attractions, including wooden “gingerbread” houses, cold ashlan-fu soup, and the Dungan Mosque, built in 1907 by Chinese artisans. The mosque reflects Buddhist influences, with a pagoda replacing the traditional minaret.

Condé Nast Traveler suggests visiting Karakol between June and September for trekking and cultural tours, while December through April is ideal for winter sports enthusiasts.

The city has become more accessible with the reopening of its reconstructed international airport in December 2024. This development allows travelers to reach Karakol from Bishkek in under an hour by plane. Alternatively, the journey takes 6-7 hours by car or bus​​.

Indian Students Involved in New Year’s Eve Brawl Deported from Kazakhstan

Six Indian students have been deported from Kazakhstan following their involvement in a mass brawl in Almaty on New Year’s Eve​.

The students, enrolled at a university in Almaty, were the only individuals implicated in the altercation, with no Kazakh citizens involved.

“This was an internal conflict among the students,” Kazakhstan’s Minister of Science and Higher Education, Sayasat Nurbek commented. “The Almaty Police Department is conducting an investigation. We have discussed the matter with the Indian Embassy and reached a joint decision to deport the students.”

The altercation occurred at a café on Kok-Tobe, a popular mountain destination in Almaty​. What began as a quarrel between the students escalated into a violent mass brawl, with video footage showing participants wielding chairs, tables, and batons. The footage quickly circulated online, drawing public attention to the incident​​.

According to the Almaty Police Department, all individuals involved in the fight were identified and taken to the Medeusky District Police Department for questioning.

Kazakhstan Will Not Impose Quarantine for Metapneumovirus

Aizhan Esmagambetova, head of Kazakhstan’s National Center for Public Health, has announced that there is no need for restrictive measures in response to identified cases of human metapneumovirus (HMPV) in the country.

Human metapneumovirus is a respiratory tract infection that can cause inflammation in the upper and lower lungs. Although the virus has been circulating among humans since the mid-20th century, it has not previously caused widespread epidemics. Concerns about the virus were raised after foreign media reported an outbreak in neighboring China in late December 2024. The Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the spread of acute respiratory infections, including HMPV, but Chinese authorities did not impose border closures similar to those during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.

In Kazakhstan, the Ministry of Health reported detecting 30 cases of metapneumovirus between October 1, 2024, and early January 2025. The Committee of Sanitary and Epidemiological Control conducted testing on 8,360 non-influenza virus samples during the epidemic season, with 1,866 (22%) returning positive. Of these, metapneumovirus accounted for only 1.6%.

Other respiratory infections were more prevalent, including:

  • Rhinovirus: 680 cases (36.4%)
  • Respiratory syncytial (RS) virus: 433 cases (23.2%)
  • Adenovirus: 226 cases (12.1%)
  • Coronavirus: 206 cases (11.1%)
  • Parainfluenza: 178 cases (9.5%)
  • Bocavirus: 113 cases (6.1%)

The Ministry of Health stated that HMPV is primarily transmitted via airborne droplets and, to a lesser extent, through household contact.

Despite this, Esmagambetova emphasized there is no justification for a quarantine:”The epidemiological situation in the country is stable. While we are in the midst of the epidemic season, a comparison of this year and last year shows a 20% decrease in acute respiratory viral infections (ARVI) for the same period,” she explained. “As is typical, morbidity rises in January and declines by mid-February, but there are no grounds for quarantine or other restrictive measures. We are monitoring the epidemic situation, including morbidity and virus circulation, almost daily.”

Esmagambetova also highlighted that approximately 70% of cases in Kazakhstan occur in children under 14. She advised parents to keep children with signs of respiratory infections at home and avoid sending them to schools or kindergartens. She further recommended that citizens avoid crowded places, wear masks, and ensure proper ventilation.

Kazakhstan’s Minister of Education, Gani Beisembayev, stated during a government meeting that the country’s education system is prepared to switch to distance learning if necessary. However, any decision to transition will depend on the Ministry of Health.

This update comes after The Times of Central Asia reported outbreaks of seasonal and non-seasonal diseases across Central Asia last year, including influenza, measles, and hepatitis​.

Art Against All Odds: The State Museum of Karakalpakstan’s Tale of Survival and Defiance

Once a flourishing hub of agriculture, Karakalpakstan has been transformed into one of the most perilous environments on Earth. Rampant health crises, including respiratory diseases, typhoid, tuberculosis, and cancer, plague its population. Birth defects and infant mortality rates are alarmingly high. The root of this devastation lies in the deliberate collapse of the Aral Sea, drained for irrigation, which has triggered toxic dust storms blanketing a 1.5 million square kilometer area. Carrying carcinogens and nitrates, these storms, once rare, now strike ten times per year, spreading sickness and despair.

The State Museum of Karakalpakstan; image: TCA, Stephen M. Bland

Amid this harsh and desolate landscape lies a surprising beacon of cultural preservation — the State Art Museum of the Republic of Karakalpakstan, located in its capital, Nukus. Its existence is extraordinary, not least because of how it came to be and how it has endured. Protected by the remoteness of the region, this museum safeguards one of the most remarkable collections of banned avant-garde art, amassed through the daring vision of Igor Savitsky. The Ukrainian-born painter, archaeologist, and art collector defied the Soviet regime, risking being labeled an enemy of the state, to rescue thousands of prohibited works. These pieces, forged by a forgotten generation of artists, now provide an extraordinary glimpse into a turbulent period of history.

Aleksandr Volkov, Chaikhana with a Portrait of Lenin; image: TCA, Stephen M.. Bland

Among the luminaries memorialized in the museum is Aleksandr Volkov, whose vibrant oil paintings brim with the energy and colors of Central Asian life. Born in Ferghana, his Cubo-Futurist style clashed sharply with Stalin’s Soviet ideals, leading to his ostracism as a bourgeois reactionary. Dismissed from his roles and expelled from Russian galleries, Volkov lived out his final years in isolation, banned from contact with the artistic community. Though he escaped the gulags, he was silenced until his death in 1957 under orders from Moscow. Volkov’s work, a symphony of geometric brilliance, survive today as a testament to his resilience.

Lev Galperin, On His Knees; image: TCA, Stephen M. Bland

Painted defiance is also seen in Lev Galperin’s surviving piece, On His Knees. A unique fusion of Dada and Cubism, it represents his bold challenge to Soviet authority. Galperin, a well-traveled artist from Odessa, returned to the Soviet Union in 1921 only to be ensnared. Arrested on Christmas Day in 1934 for his so-called counter-revolutionary art, his trial marked him as an outspoken critic of the regime. Sentenced to execution, his sole piece saved from oblivion speaks of his courage and the high cost of dissent.

Nadezhda Borovaya, Sawing Firewood; image: nukus.open-museum.net

The gallery also hosts haunting sketches by Nadezhda Borovaya, which vividly document life in the Soviet gulags. Borovaya’s tragedy began in 1938 when her husband was executed, after which she was exiled to the Temnikov camp. There, she clandestinely captured the harrowing realities of camp life. Savitsky acquired these pieces by obtaining funding after convincing party officials they depicted scenes from Nazi concentration camps, preserving Borovaya’s testimony.

More than a gallery, the State Art Museum in Nukus holds the stories of artists crushed yet remembered through their work. Despite being plagued by further political turbulence over the course of the last decade – purportedly for attracting attention to Karakalpakstan – against a backdrop of environmental catastrophe, it stands as a monument to the enduring spirit of art and resistance.

Two Weeks After Crash, Russia Closes City Airspace and Azerbaijan Cancels Flight

Azerbaijan Airlines canceled a flight to the southwest Russian city of Kazan on Wednesday after the airspace over the city was closed as a security precaution, Azerbaijan’s state media reported.

The cancellation of the Baku-Kazan-Baku flight came two weeks after an Azerbaijan Airlines passenger plane crashed in Kazakhstan after, according to Azerbaijan, the aircraft was accidentally hit by Russian ground fire and diverted from a planned landing in Grozny, Chechnya. Russian President Vladimir Putin has not confirmed the Azerbaijani account, though he apologized and said Russian air defenses were repelling Ukrainian drones over Grozny and two other Russian areas at the time.

Azertac, an Azerbaijani state news agency, said the cancellation of the Kazan-bound flight came after Russia’s announcement of its so-called “Kovyor,” or “carpet,” operation, in which airspace over an area is closed temporarily because of a perceived threat. Kazan has previously been targeted by long-range Ukrainian drones.

The Kovyor protocol came under scrutiny after an Azerbaijani airliner crashed on Dec. 25 in Aktau, Kazakhstan, killing 38 people and leaving 29 survivors.

Without naming Putin, President Ilham Aliyev has harshly criticized Russian officials for alleged attempts to cover up what happened by floating false theories about the cause of the crash and said the Kovyor plan was activated after the plane was shot at, indicating criminal liability.

“If there was a threat to Russian airspace, the captain of the plane should have been informed about it immediately. The airspace should have been closed immediately and the plane should have turned back,” Aliyev said, according to APA, another Azerbaijani government news agency. “I should also note that about 10 days before the accident, a similar incident occurred near the city of Grozny. An AZAL plane was turned back halfway. Why was the crew not warned about it this time? Naturally, the investigation will show this.”

Kazakhstan is leading the investigation team, which includes officials from Azerbaijan and Russia as well as input from Brazilian technicians who have examined the flight data and cockpit voice recorders from the Brazil-produced Embraer 190 plane. Kazakhstan has said a preliminary report is expected within 30 days of the crash.

Azerbaijan Airlines suspended flights to some Russian cities after the crash.

Heads of Kyrgyz, Tajik, and Uzbek Governments Meet… Finally

It took more than 30 years, but the prime ministers of the three Central Asian countries that share the Ferghana Valley finally met to discuss a range of important issues that concern all three states.

Tajik Prime Minister Kohir Rasulzoda, Uzbek Prime Minister Abdulla Aripov, and Chairman of Kyrgyzstan’s Cabinet of Ministers (Kyrgyzstan does not have a post of prime minister) Adylbek Kasymaliyev met on January 8 at a desolate area where the borders of the three countries meet.

Image: gov.kg

The group touted agreements on the completion of the delimitation process along the Uzbek-Kyrgyz border and the early December 2024 agreement on the Kyrgyz-Tajik border.

Since 1991, unmarked areas of the borders in the Ferghana Valley were often the scenes of conflicts between communities on either side of the frontier. Border guards sometimes fired on trespassers and dozens of people were killed or wounded, sometimes simply because they inadvertently strayed over unmarked territory into the neighboring country.

The Ferghana Valley is the most densely populated region in Central Asia. This is due to the rich agricultural land which makes the region to this day the breadbasket of Central Asia.

Soviet mapmakers drew lines to create Soviet republics in the region, though these borders mattered little since they were internal administrative boundaries inside one country.

Image: gov.kg

After the USSR collapsed, these often-arbitrary, zigzagging borders took on meaning, and disputes quickly broke out about what land historically belonged to which nation and who had rights to water use. These issues were greatly complicated by the existence of enclaves created during the Soviet period such as Uzbekistan’s Soh and Shahimardon and Tajikistan’s Vorukh, all three of which are surrounded by Kyrgyzstan.

 

Looking Ahead

The three prime ministers discussed hydropower plants (HPP), an important topic for all three countries, especially as key HPPs are located in the mountains ringing the Ferghana Valley and more are currently under construction.

Central Asia is one the regions most affected by climate change, so HPPs and water use in general are crucial issues, especially given that agriculture in the Ferghana Valley is vital to all three countries. All three countries face electricity shortages and hydropower is seen as a means of alleviating or even totally resolving this dilemma, but at the same time waters flowing from the mountains of Kyrgyzstan are important for agriculture in every Central Asian state.

Uzbek media noted Uzbek Energy Minister Jurabek Mirzamahmudov was part of the delegation attending the January 8 talks. Reports did not mention if energy ministers from Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan were also present.

Image: gov.kg

Central Asia is also taking on a new importance as a trade corridor between Europe and China, and from Europe and China into Afghanistan and on further to Pakistan. Reports noted logistics were high on the agenda at the meeting of the three prime ministers.

Trade between the three countries, specifically in the Ferghana Valley, was also discussed not only for economic reasons but also as a confidence-building measure now that the borders in the region have finally been set.

 

A New Era of Friendship and Cooperation?

The January 8 meeting of the three prime ministers was significant simply because it happened.

It took 30 years for officials from the three countries to get together under the same roof, and that happened on April 23, 2021, when the governors of Uzbekistan’s Ferghana Province, Kyrgyzstan’s Batken Province, and Tajikistan’s Sughd Province met for talks on economic cooperation. That there were no follow-up meetings until 2025 illustrates how thorny the issues are in the Ferghana Valley, and that no one wanted to risk making the delicate situation worse by raising contentious issues.

The catalyst for this meeting of prime ministers was likely the Kyrgyz-Tajik border agreement that came after the militaries of the two countries fought brief, but devastating battles along areas of their border in late April 2021 and September 2022.

Uzbekistan, with a population (and army) more than twice as large as Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan combined, called for calm during both conflicts, but refrained from taking a more active role in mediating. Perhaps, now that Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan have reached agreement on their common border, Uzbekistan felt more comfortable participating in a “Ferghana troika” meeting.

In any case, the borders of these three countries have often been closed over the course of the last 33 years, and frequently even when they were open, it was slow and difficult to cross from one country into another.

When the terrorist Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan was roaming the mountain areas where the three countries borders meet in 2000, Uzbekistan put landmines along its borders with Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.

Those were only removed a few years ago.

All this has hindered the development of the Ferghana Valley.

Meetings like the one on January 8 should have happened much sooner.

It would have saved a lot of suffering and hard feelings that still might take years to soothe.

However, at least the prime ministers of the three countries have finally come together, and that meeting could lead to a summit of the three countries’ leaders sometime in the future.

The Ferghana Valley is probably the most important piece of land in Central Asia for the survival of the people of the region. Until now it has been one of the leading sources of problems between the countries that share it, but perhaps the January 8 meeting is the start of a more harmonious and prosperous period for the valley.