• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00192 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10879 0.28%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28571 0%
12 December 2025

Tajikistan Aims to Employ AI to Achieve 5% of GDP by 2040

As previously reported by TCA, Tajikistan is the only Central Asian country with a national strategy for the development of AI.

In 2022, President Emomali Rahmon signed off a national strategy to achieve 5% of the GDP from developing artificial intelligence by 2040.

On August 1, the Minister of Industry and New Technologies of Tajikistan, Sherali Kabir, announced at a press conference  that work had begun in securing the first patent for the artificial intelligence algorithm ‘zGAN’ , developed by the local research laboratory of Tajikistan, and stated: “At a time when two-thirds of the world’s countries have yet to develop their national AI strategies, these steps highlight Tajikistan’s ambition to take a key position in technology and innovation.”

Referencing Tajikistan’s progress in the field, Azizjon Azimi, chairman of the Council on AI under the Ministry of Industry, said more than 300 experts had been trained in artificial intelligence and its applications in the economy were expanding. “The leading case is using ‘zGAN’ algorithms for credit scoring. More than 30 banks in over ten countries have already implemented this algorithm by the Tajik fintech zypl.ai, which automatically issued loans worth over $200 million. To date, zypl.ai has attracted more than $3 million in private direct investment in the development of AI in Tajikistan.”

Azimi emphasized that in addition to the impact of ‘zGAN’ in the economic sphere, plans are in place for its application in agriculture, industry, and healthcare. He also reiterated that an agreement had been signed to develop AI programs for the Emirate of Ras al-Khaimah based on Tajikistan’s national AI development strategy.

Central Asian Boxers Poised for Olympic Medals This Week

Mark your calendars: boxers from Central Asia are going for gold in Paris.

On Wednesday, Kazakh boxer Nurbek Oralbay will fight for Olympic gold in the 80-kilogram class final. Then, on Friday, Lazizbek Mullojonov of Uzbekistan will do the same in the 92-kilogram final.

Kazakhstan’s Oralbay, 24, defeated Dominican boxer Christian Pinales in a 3-2 decision on Sunday and will face Oleksandr Khyzhniak of Ukraine in the middleweight final on Aug. 7.

Oralbay’s twin brother, Aibek, is also a boxer. He competed in the 92-kilogram class at this year’s Olympics but lost in the quarterfinals.

“Their father, a former freestyle wrestler, wanted Nurbek and his brother to follow in his footsteps,” olympics.com reported. “But money was tight at home and boxing coach Askar Yerkebayev (KAZ) offered to train the boys in boxing for free, saying he had a dream to take twins to the world championships – and their father agreed.”

The Olympics Games website also reported that Nurbek once pretended to be Aibek in a bout because Aibek was ill. It didn’t offer more details on that subterfuge.

Meanwhile, Uzbekistan’s Mullojonov is up against Loren Alfonso of Azerbaijan in the Aug. 9 heavyweight final. Mullojonov, 25, defeated Tajikistan’s Davlat Boltaev in the semifinal on Sunday, and the Tajik boxer gets a bronze medal.

Mullojonov, who comes from Uzbekistan’s Ferghana region, was a super heavyweight gold medalist at the 2022 Asian Championships.

They call him “The Big Uzbek.”

Another Central Asian boxer to watch in Paris this week is Uzbekistan’s Bakhodir Jalolov, who competes against Nelvie Raman Tiafack of Germany in a semifinal of the 92-kilogram-plus class on Aug. 7.

Jalolov, 30, is a defending champion. He was the super heavyweight champion at the Tokyo games in 2021. He has said he wants to become a professional boxer.

Nariman Kurbanov of Kazakhstan brought home silver in the men’s pommel horse, the first Olympic medal in gymnastics for the Central Asian country.

“20 years of hard work, 35 seconds on the Olympic podium. And now – History!” Kurbanov, 26, said on Instagram.

Kurbanov scored 15.433 on Saturday, just falling short of Ireland’s Rhys McClenaghan, whose score of 15.533 propelled him to gold.

The road to Olympic success has indeed been arduous for Kurbanov, whose father got him into the sport when he was a young boy.

“I had no other choice. My father is a gymnastics coach. He brought me into the gym literally from the cradle. At first, I just ran there, jumped, fooled around. But at the age of five my dad began to train me professionally,” Kurbanov said, according to the International Gymnastics Federation.

Kurbanov had failed to qualify as an apparatus specialist for the last Olympic Games in Tokyo.

Veteran sprinter Valentina Meredova of Turkmenistan has competed in Paris, 16 years after making her Olympic debut in Beijing.

The 39-year-old ran a 12:01 in the preliminary round of the 100 meters on Friday, finishing fourth in her group and advancing to the next round. Later in the day, she ran a season best of 11.95 but didn’t qualify for the semifinals.

There was anguish in Meredova’s preliminary round when another runner, Lucia Moris of South Sudan, collapsed with an injury during the race. Meredova was among those who tried to comfort Moris before medics arrived to help.

New Cargo Train Covers China-Kazakhstan-Uzbekistan Route In Record Time

Kazakhstan’s national railway company, Kazakhstan Temir Zholy (KTZ), announced on August 5 that Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan have launched the fastest ever cargo train service on the China-Kazakhstan-Uzbekistan route.

The train on this new route now covers a distance of 4,486 km in a record five days.

The train departed from the Kazakh-Chinese terminal in Xi’an, China. The containers were then transshipped at the KTZE Khorgos Gateway dry port on the Kazakh-Chinese border, and traveled through Kazakhstan to the Saryagash station on the border with Uzbekistan, before reaching its final destination — Tashkent rail station, one of Central Asia’s major transport hubs.

The short-term increase in cargo transportation is attributed to the utilization of KTZ terminal capacities in China, and the collaborative efforts between the railway administrations of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan to enhance their border infrastructure. Reconstruction and technological process improvements have increased the capacity of the Saryagash interstate junction station, a key hub for cargo flow between Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, by 50%.

In 2023, the volume of cargo transportation between Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan exceeded 31 million tons, an increase of 17.2% compared to 2022.

Kazakhstan Resolves Dispute with Stati Amid Allegations of Litigation Profiteering

Kazakhstan’s government and representatives of the Stati family have reached an agreement to cease all legal proceedings regarding the case (Republic of Kazakhstan v. Ascom Group SA) with approval from major creditors, including an offshore  investment vehicle of the Stati parties called Tristan Oil Ltd. The Stati side includes the family, as well as investors in Argentem Creek Partners (the investment manager of funds that lent money to Tristan Oil), and other possible shareholders. While the agreement comes after a fourteen-year dispute over oil and gas assets in Kazakhstan, its precise details remain confidential.

Daniel Chapman, CEO of Argentem Creek Partners, was quoted in the Ministry of Justice statement as saying: “We support the framework agreement and commend President Tokayev’s decision to create a Fair Kazakhstan as part of his admirable reforms. With the settlement of this dispute, Kazakhstan is honoring international treaty obligations and, thereby, opening its doors to increased investment and heightening its economic growth potential. We welcome this new era for Kazakhstan.”

Kazakhstan’s Minister of Justice, Azamat Yeskarayev said the agreement “was made in view of the public interest and does not involve the spending of budgetary funds,” and added: “We believe that this move will have a positive effect on attracting new investments in our country and on the growth of the economy.”

 

A brief history of the dispute

In 1999, Tristan Oil Ltd., an offshore company, was granted exploration and production rights at the Borankol oil field and the Tolkyn gas field located in the Mangistau region of Kazakhstan through the acquisition of Kazpolmunai LLP and Tolkynneftegaz LLP in the same year. Additionally, Tristan Oil Ltd. made investments towards the construction of a modern liquefied gas processing plant to become operational by the end of the 2000s.

In 2010, assets of the Stati family were nationalized with the authorities citing their unlicensed activities, and were transferred to the trust management of KazMunayGas JSC structures. Moldovan businessmen decried the seizure as violating provisions of the Energy Charter Treaty, filed lawsuits claiming illegal seizure of their property, and began a legal battle in international jurisdictions that lasted for fourteen years. This event became a core component of the Republic of Kazakhstan v. Ascom Group SA case involving Tristan Oil Ltd.

Kazakhstan’s representatives claimed that Stati’s creditor, Argentem Creek Partners, had conspired to enforce a tainted award. However, the lawsuit was dismissed by the Supreme Court of Sweden in a final June 2023 decision awarding $497.6 million to Stati parties. The court’s decision mandated the Kazakhstan Government to disburse the initial instalment of approximately $76 million to the Stati family, along with accrued interest based on six-month U.S. Government bond rates, starting from April 2009. Additionally, the ruling included an allocation of $1.5 million to cover legal expenses.

Despite the final and binding decision in Sweden, the legal battle showed no signs of abating, with cases continuing in England, the U.S., the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Belgium and Italy.  The Ministry of Justice of Kazakhstan appeared intent on prolonging these cases. For example, on 9 August 2023, they filed a demand for a jury trial in the U.S. District of Columbia based on resurrected fraud claims.

Beyond the financial implications, Kazakhstan suffered reputational harm due to the case’s high-profile, which drew attention to foreign investment risks. This situation posed a challenge to Kazakhstan’s pursuit of Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) with the U.S., particularly given the involvement of U.S. pension funds in Argentum Creek. PNTR offers favorable trade terms that could greatly enhance foreign investment and trade between the two nations.

 

Scrutiny falls on Nazarbayev-era appointees

According to a source interviewed by the TCA, who served in Kazakhstan’s previous government under Nursultan Nazarbayev, the former president gave an order to deal with the Moldovan businessmen to Karim Massimov, who was at the time the country’s prime minister and later became the chairman of the National Security Committee.

Massimov involved his close ally, Marat Beketayev, the deputy minister of justice from 2007 to 2016 and the minister of justice from then until his dismissal from the position in January 2022. Beketayev oversaw the international arbitration which involved both the prosecution of the Stati family and the legal defense of Kazakhstan in various international jurisdictions.

The Beketayev-led Ministry of Justice appeared to embark on a legal strategy that sought to outspend their opponent. The Stati’s legal defense budget could never match a state’s immense funds, and the strategy was presumably that by continuing and expanding the litigation, Stati and its creditors would eventually run out of capital.

In May 2024, journalists made an unsuccessful attempt to get answers from the Ministry of Justice about the spending issue. The Ministry’s spokesperson only mentioned the country’s total 2024 budget for international cases, which was a third of what it was under Beketayev before his abrupt departure from the post. In March 2024, Azat Peruashev, a member of the Mazhilis (the lower house of Kazakhstan’s parliament) and the head of the Aq Jol faction suggested that Kazakhstan’s expenditures on the legal proceedings in the Stati case were indeed exorbitant: “The decision of the Stockholm arbitration court on Kazakhstan’s payment of $544 million to the Statis has not been cancelled. Meanwhile, according to some media reports, Kazakhstan has spent twice as much on these legal battles as the amount claimed by the Statis.”

Former minister Beketayev was arrested in October 2023 at an airport while trying to flee Kazakhstan, according to the country’s Prosecutor General. The pending criminal trial and a flurry of Telegram channel posts suggest that Beketayev’s motive in pursuing the Stati case despite these high expenses was “litigation profiteering”.

 

Involvement of a suspicious consulting company

In dealing with the Stati case, former minister Beketayev turned to Bauyrzhan Baibek, a connection through the alumni association of the government’s Bolashak scholarship program. Baibek’s father, Kydyrgali Baibek, was Nazarbayev’s classmate. This relationship is often cited as the reason for Bauryrzhan Baibek’s meteoric rise from chief of the Presidential Administration’s protocol office to deputy leader of the Nur Otan party, then headed by Nazarbayev himself. From this position, Baibek became the mayor of Almaty, the wealthiest city in the country and in Central Asia. After the violent protests in January 2022, he left the country and is rumored to currently be residing in Northern Cyprus.

Baibek’s second wife, Zhanar Rakhmetova, owns a consulting firm called Bolashak Consulting Group, who was contracted to defend the interests of Kazakhstan in international courts in the Stati case as well as others.

Kazakhstan’s Respublika outlet reported that Beketayev “received from contractors involved in the legal battle with the Moldovan Stati businessmen a decent ‘bonus’ of allegedly $300,000 a year.” A recent update from Kazakhstan’s Anti-Corruption Agency reported that the pre-trial investigation of Beketayev had been completed although no details were provided. He is suspected of embezzling public funds “on an especially large scale”, as well as fraud and illegal participation in business activities, with the damages estimated at over KZT1 billion (around $2.1 million).

Kazakhstan appears to have ended its engagement with Bolashak Consulting after Beketayev was dismissed from his role as the Minister of Justice in January 2022.

Given the damages being sought against Beketayev, one of the most important questions related to the Stati case remains how much the Kazakhstan Government has spent to fight it. More details are likely to emerge after the start of Beketayev’s trial. Despite periodic rumors that a criminal case is being opened against Beketayev’s possible accomplice Bauyrzhan Baibek, there has been no official confirmation.

Several widely-known international firms were contracted by Bolashak Consulting.

 

A positive step forward

What is clear is that the main losers now are those who wanted the Stati case to continue. While the leadership of ‘Old Kazakhstan’ created the problem, its reputational costs and accrued damages landed on the shoulders of the new leadership. The new authorities will hope that their successful efforts to correct the country’s course will bring in foreign funds and further increase the confidence of potential investors.

South Korea Launches $4 Million Railway Project in Tajikistan

As reported by Asia-Plus, the Ministry of Transport of Tajikistan and the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) have signed a memorandum of negotiations on the $4 million economical and technical development of the Jaloliddin Balkhi–Nizhniy Pyanj railway project.

“The main goal of this project is to enter the market of South Asian countries—Afghanistan, Pakistan, India,” stated Azim Ibrahim, Minister of Transport of Tajikistan after explaining and that the railway will ensure the development of regional trade, help maintain the condition of roads, and reduce the burden and intensity of traffic on the streets.

“If the project is successfully implemented, Tajikistan will become an attractive railway transit country,” he continued. “And the increase in the volume of cargo and product transportation with neighbouring countries will prove very beneficial for Tajikistan and other countries in the region.”

Acting Ambassador of South Korea to the Republic of Tajikistan, Kim Jeon Sik, hailed the project as another step towards the country’s progressive future and said that with direct access to the sea,  Tajikistan had the potential to become the main link in international cargo transportation.

He closed by expressing his hope that South Korea’s first railway construction project in Central Asia would be completed within three years.

Uzbekistan Pushed to Clean Up Cities Amid Air Pollution Protests

Uzbekistan’s capital Tashkent continues to suffer from high levels of air pollution. According to the IQAir portal, on the morning of August 2 the concentration of PM 2.5 (fine particles in the air) in the city was 5.4 times higher than the WHO base indicator.

Protest groups have been holding flash mobs in Tashkent this summer. One participant, Temurkhan Jahangir, believes that the main factor for the city’s dangerous air is the government’s poor urban planning policy. “The urban development strategy, implemented at the expense of urban densification, was a complete mistake from the start. It is foolish to sell land in the city center and build more buildings between multi-story buildings,” he said.

According to the Ministry of Ecology, about 49,000 trees have been illegally cut down in the Tashkent region recently, which has also had a negative impact on air quality.

At a meeting on January 29, the country’s president Shavkat Mirziyoyev spoke about ecological problems. In particular he criticized the implementation of construction projects that don’t consider environmental protection. He instructed the ministry to develop a “master plan” for each city and district of Uzbekistan, for local governors to improve the ecological situation by the end of the year.

“On average, 730,000 motor vehicles move in Tashkent every day. In addition, 160,000 to 300,000 motor vehicles enter from the regions. Engines using A-80 gasoline, which does not meet international standards, emit harmful emissions into the atmosphere, exceeding the norm,” the Ministry of Ecology says.

Mirziyoyev has also tasked the ministry with comprehensively abandoning A-80 gasoline from 2025 onwards, and developing sustainable public transport. He added that encouraging the population to switch to electric cars must be introduced to support green energy, prevent environmental problems, and reduce harmful emissions.