• KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
  • KGS/USD = 0.01144 0%
  • KZT/USD = 0.00196 -0%
  • TJS/USD = 0.10899 -0%
  • UZS/USD = 0.00008 -0%
  • TMT/USD = 0.28490 0%
08 December 2025

Dangerous Afghan Sodas Seized in Kyrgyz Stores

An unscheduled inspection to detect and seize from circulation the non-alcoholic carbonated pomegranate drink, “Golden Life” produced in Afghanistan was conducted in Bishkek. Earlier, the Ministry of Health of the Kyrgyz Republic reported that the Department of Disease Prevention and State Sanitary and Epidemiological Surveillance ordered that this drink be withdrawn from sale everywhere. Afghan-made sodas contain the dye azorubin E 122, which can negatively impact children’s activity and attention spans.

According to the Center for State Epidemiological Surveillance, 58 retail outlets, trading and market complexes were checked. The heads of enterprises were handed 65 sanitary prescriptions requiring them to withdraw these products from sale and return them to suppliers and resellers. In total, 7,356 cans of the drink were withdrawn. The heads of trade networks were instructed to prohibit the sale of this product in the future.

Cardiff University to Open Branch in Astana

A branch of Cardiff University will open in Astana next year.

Cardiff University, in Wales, founded in 1883. It is one of the leading research universities in the UK, and is part of the prestigious Russell Group.

Kazakhstan’s ministry of science and higher education has reported that 14 branches of global universities have been opened in the country since 2021. Preparatory work is underway on eight other educational projects.

Kazakhstan Intensifies Efforts to Combat Extremism

There appears to be a small, but growing problem with terrorism and extremism in Kazakhstan.

More than 30 people from regions around the country have been detained in Kazakhstan so far in 2024, and in March, Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) killed two Kazakh citizens who were in Russia, allegedly to carry out a terrorist attack.

In response, the country’s Committee for National Security (KNB) had conducted dozens of raids. Kazakhstan’s government gave the KNB additional powers to monitor the internet, and authorities are tightening the law on religion.

Kazakhstan’s southern neighbors, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan, border Afghanistan. Tajikistan and Uzbekistan have had problems with the Taliban and other militant groups during the last 25 years. These include domestic terrorist groups, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and the Tajik-led Jamaat Ansarullah, both of which have been based in northern Afghanistan.

Kazakhstan has largely avoided problems with Islamic radicals.

Citizens from all the Central Asian states have gone to Afghanistan and Middle Eastern countries to join jihadist groups, including a small number of Kazakh citizens.

Turkey extradited a 22-year-old Kazakh citizen back to Kazakhstan on January 27, 2024. The Kazakh national, according to the KNB, was a “native of the Turkestan region [who] went to Syria in 2020, where he joined one of the armed groups operating there.”

The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) released a propaganda video in November 2014 that showed Kazakh nationals, including children, in a training camp in Syria. The video described them as “some of our newest brothers from the land of Kazakhstan.”

A group of some 25 men whom authorities said were Islamic militants staged attacks in the northwestern Kazakh city of Aktobe, near the Russian border in early June 2016. The group robbed two stores that sold hunting rifles and were involved in shoot-outs with the police and soldiers. At least 25 people were killed, most of them the attackers.

Deputies in Kazakhstan’s Mazhilis, the lower house of parliament, voiced concerns in October 2023 that radical forms of Islam were spreading in Kazakhstan. Controversial MP Yermurat Bapi said followers of these radical Islamic groups were taking over bazaars in the Atyrau, Aktobe, Mangystau, Ulytau, and Almaty provinces.

Bapi and 13 other deputies called on the government and KNB to take measures against these groups and stem extremist and terrorist propaganda from being disseminated inside Kazakhstan.

On February 17, 2024, the KNB staged a combined 49 raids on eight unspecified religious extremist groups in the Aktobe, Atyrau, East Kazakhstan, Zhambyl, West Kazakhstan, Turkestan, and Zhetysu provinces. The KNB said it detained 23 people and seized weapons, ammunition, religious literature, narcotics, and cash.

On April 1, 2024, the KNB detained a man in the Caspian coastal city of Aktau and found material for making explosives. According to the KNB, the suspect was a follower of a “radical religious ideology,” and was planning to carry out a terrorist attack.”

At the start of July, five people were detained in KNB raids in the Atyrau and Zhambyl provinces, and in the capital, Astana, and southern city of Shymkent. The five, one of whom was a “foreigner,” were suspected of “participation in terrorist activities, promoting terrorism, organizing extremist activities, and recruiting people for these purposes.”

The KNB has also been targeting recruitment over the internet. A Shymkent resident was convicted on May 6 of sharing ISIS videos on TikTok and sentenced to seven years in prison.

The day before that conviction, the KNB detained three people in Astana and the northeastern city of Pavlodar on suspicion of disseminating terrorism propaganda and participating in the activities of a banned religious extremist organization.

Most disturbing was the incident involving Kazakh citizens Sabit Ashiraliyev, 35, and Zhanibek Taskulov, 38. Both were from the Saryagash district some 100 kilometers from Shymkent, both were married with children.

On February 28, the two men flew to Russia and went to village of Koryakovo, in Russia’s Kaluzhsky Oblast. The FSB raided the flat where Ashiraliyev and Taskulov were staying on March 7 and killed them both after, according to the FSB, they offered resistance to being apprehended.

According to the FSB, the Kazakh nationals were members of the “Khorasan Willayat,” also known as the Islamic State of Khorasan Province (ISKP), a splinter group of ISIS that is based in Afghanistan but has expanded its operations to other countries.

The FSB said Ashiraliyev and Taskulov planned to attack a synagogue.

Om March 22, barely two weeks after the Kazakh citizens were killed, terrorists attacked the Crocus City Hall in Moscow, killing more than 140 people. ISKP claimed responsibility for that attack.

Mazhilis Deputy and member of the parliamentary Committee for International Affairs, Defense and Security, Konstantin Avershin, said at end of March that ”it is impossible to exclude that there are (ISKP) sleeper cells… on the territory of Kazakhstan.”

At the end of May, KNB chief Yermek Sagimbayev met with President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev and said since the start of 2024, 26 people have been convicted of involvement in terrorism or extremism, and 22 more were awaiting trial.

Shortly after Ashiraliyev and Taskulov were killed, the Kazakh government gave the KNB additional powers, among them the right to “use information systems and electronic information resources” for monitoring the internet and “protection of information systems.”

After MPs called for action in October 2023, then-Kazakh Prime Minister Alikhan Smailov said in November that amendments to the law on religion were being prepared that would introduce the “concepts of ‘destructive religious trends’ and ‘religious radicalism’” and impose severe punishments for those found guilty of subscribing to them.

The proposed amendments are still under discussion.

The numbers of people apprehended and convicted in Kazakhstan this year for involvement in terrorist or extremist groups is not large, but it is more than has been seen in previous years, and they’ve been caught in areas all over the country.

It seems clear that the problem is growing, and now it falls to the Kazakh authorities to effectively neutralize this challenge without taking such severe measures that the government ends up alienating people and driving them into the groups the state is seeking to eliminate.

Tajikistan-Born Singer, Criticized in Russia, Prepares to Release an Anti-War Song

In 2023, Tajik-Russian singer Manizha Sanghin, harshly criticized in Russia for her public comments on sensitive issues, travelled to the picturesque “Valley of the Forty Girls” in southern Tajikistan to record an anti-war song to be released on Friday.

The mountainous location, known to Tajiks as Childukhtaron, derives its name from ancient lore about a group of girls who turned into towering rock formations when an invading force swept through their homeland. Whether the girls-turned-rocks were meant to block the invaders, or simply bear silent witness, depends on the telling.

Tajikistan-born Sanghin said she felt an affinity for the girls as standing at the foot of the rock, she recorded ‘Gun’. Written a decade ago, the song was originally about the devastating civil war in Tajikistan in the 1990s but had been put to rest after being abandoned by music producers in Britain.

Following  Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, they talked about the song again and the singer, a goodwill ambassador for UNHCR, the U.N. refugee agency, said in YouTube video, “I thought, I have to release it. Because now, it’s not just a song about war in Tajikistan. It’s a song about war in Ukraine, in Gaza, and all wars around the globe.”

Music producer Liz Horsman who described Sanghin as” brave in the face of ongoing investigations into her anti-war stance,” readily agreed to record the song and since the war made travel between Britain and Russia impossible, the pair arranged to meet in Tajikistan. Seven months pregnant with her daughter, Sanghin described her return to her homeland as “very poetic”.

Over the years, the singer has sparked a fair share of controversy. In 2021, when she represented Russia at the Eurovision contest with a song called “Russian Woman,” she was condemned for advocating women’s and LGBT rights.

She was then denounced online and Russian promoters cancelled many of her concerts after she criticized the invasion of Ukraine. She was further alienated following her comments about the brutal treatment of several Tajik suspects in a terrorist attack that killed 144 people at a Moscow music venue in March. Sanghin condemned the attack but described the abuse of the suspects as “public torture.”

“I am a systemic victim of cyberattacks and cyberbullying. Sometimes I have to block thousands of bots a week and sometimes daily… They follow, mass unfollow and report my profile,” Sanghin said on Instagram in May. “Instagram’s algorithm then thinks that I am breaking community rules and doesn’t show my posts to most of my followers. (Sometimes it can last for months).”

Sanghin asked followers on the social media platform to leave a comment or just a heart emoji as a possible way to help her “get out of this ‘shadow ban.’”

 

Signs of Ancient Urban Culture Unearthed in Turkmenistan

Archaeological excavations in Dashoguz Velayat, Turkmenistan, have unearthed various artefacts that suggest the region had a flourishing urban culture in ancient times. Jugs, the remains of clay water conduits and shards of terracotta domestic wares have indicated sophisticated development in the art of pottery. In addition, on the territory of the current Kunyaurgench reserve, jugs for chigir – used for raising water -and a wheel with buckets were found. Presumably, chigir was also used to water city gardens and parks, indicating a developed agricultural industry.

Experts suggest that chigir irrigation in Khorezm existed in the 5th-6th centuries AD, and was actively used to water high-lying lands. It is quite possible that in the city, there were workshops for producing clay jugs for chigir, which were in demand not only in Khorezm itself, but also in other regions, where they may have been sent for sale along the Great Silk Road. Artifacts found during excavations give reason to assume that potters of that time were not only busy making various dishes, but gradually mastered the production of clay products for other purposes, such as pipes for water conduits, architectural elements for the external and internal decoration of buildings, and clay interior decorations.

Kyrgyzstan Raises Price of Coal Exports to Uzbekistan

The Government of Kyrgyzstan has increased the price of coal exported to Uzbekistan by 37%, according to the publication Tazabek.kg. As stated in a report issued by the National Statistics Committee of Kyrgyzstan,  from January to May this year, Kyrgyzstan exported 302,000 tons of coal worth $12.7 million to Uzbekistan, 1,000 tons less than in the same period last year, when Uzbekistan paid $9.2 million for 303,000 tons. Coal suppliers did not comment on why the prices were so high.

In the first five months of 2024, the average price per ton of exported coal was $42. Last year, this indicator was reported to have not exceeded $30.9.