• 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

Universities of Kazakhstan and China to Cooperate on Microsatellite Launch

Al-Farabi Kazakh National University and the Northwest Polytechnic University of China have agreed to conduct joint scientific research using microsatellites.

According to the press service of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Republic of Kazakhstan, the agreement was reached during  talks between the President of the Republic of Kazakhstan, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, and Xi Jinping, during the latter’s official visit to Kazakhstan.

The initiative, the first of its kind to be implemented by Kazakh universities,  opens up new opportunities for space research, training qualified specialists, and developing joint satellites, as well as enabling remote sensing studies of the Earth via a microsatellite.

Integral to the project, is an aim to develop equipment for gravimetric measurements, including a specialized ground station and a transmitter on the satellite, designed to detect density inhomogeneities in the Earth’s crust and mantle. The employment of such, will help solve fundamental problems in the study of geodynamic processes at great depths.

The North-West Polytechnic University of China is a leader in launching objects into space whilst Al-Farabi Kazakh National University, the only Kazakh university with experience in launching nanosatellites into orbit , has already launched its own Al-Farabi-1 and Al-Farabi-2 nanosatellites.

Kyrgyzstan and Switzerland Strengthen Cooperation

On July 3, Kyrgyzstan President Sadyr Japarov met the Federal Councilor and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Switzerland, Ignazio Cassis in Cholpon-Ata on Lake Issyk-Kul to discuss strengthening cooperation between the two countries.

Switzerland has long conducted an expansive development program in Kyrgyzstan in sectors including economic development, governance, water, and infrastructure.

The Kyrgyz president expressed satisfaction in their fruitful cooperation to date, with specific reference to the joint implementation of a dairy production enterprise in the Issyk-Kul region, as well as the reconstruction of the At-Bashi hydroelectric power plant, to which Switzerland has contributed over 20 million Swiss francs. Looking ahead, he proposed strengthening cooperation in the banking sector and tourism, and promoting the mining agenda.

Japarov stated that in 2023 the volume of bilateral trade exceeded $1 billion and spoke of the need to increase that figure.

On the same day, the Swiss Minister met the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Kyrgyz Republic, Jeenbek Kulubaev. Following discussions on bilateral relations and the positive outcomes of projects supported by Switzerland and implemented in Kyrgyzstan, both parties agreed to intensify collaboration.

As reported by the Embassy of Switzerland in the Kyrgyz Republic, the visit afforded Minister Cassis the opportunity to witness first hand, the progress of Swiss projects implemented in Kyrgyzstan for over $500 million since 1994.

The visit concluded with an evening reception, organized by the Swiss Embassy, to celebrate the Swiss National Day.

Taking the Necessary Steps to Curb Child Abuse in Kazakhstan

In Almaty, a young woman threw herself off a Ferris wheel, falling to her death. Before committing suicide, she had strangled her five-year-old daughter. The number of children in Kazakhstan has soared over the past decade, but so have the number of crimes committed against minors.

When Mom and Dad are the murderers

In 2023, twenty-five children were murdered in Kazakhstan, seven of them by their relatives according to the country’s children’s ombudsman, Dinara Zakiyeva. This year, Kazakhstanis were shocked by numerous horrifying cases of child abuse.

According to relatives and neighbors, the family of the woman who strangled her daughter lived in the Ile District of Almaty Region and were financially secure and successful. The regional commissioner for children’s rights, Aigul Yesimbekova, explained that the woman had confesses her crime to her sister before committing suicide.

“The child had Down’s syndrome. The mother was most likely in an internal crisis and despair when she decided to do this,”Yesimbekova explained. “She went to her sister and told her that she was going to kill herself. When her sister tried to calm her down, she went to the park (the Central Park of Culture and Leisure in Almaty). Her husband is an IT specialist, and the financial component [of her life] was fine. She was not registered with psychiatrists, her husband makes money, and everything seemed fine, but the child was sick. Probably, her soul was in such a state of crisis; it is hard when a child is sick. Maybe she murdered the child in a rush of emotion, and then, unable to cope with the guilt, she took the step she did.”

According to Zakiyeva, such families are in critical need of psychological support, and child protective services should supervise them. However, the situation with psychologists and child social workers in Kazakhstan is poor.

At the end of June, a court in the Turkestan Region convicted a mother of killing her two children. Their bodies were found in a rented apartment in February 2024 in the city of Turkistan. The mother was sentenced to 15 years in prison. After killing her children, the woman called her friend and told her what she’d done.

Even against the backdrop of Kazakhstan’s high birth rates, the Turkestan Region – as is the entire south of the country – is an outlier. The percentage of people under the age of 18 in Kazakhstan stands at 34.1%, whereas in the Turkestan Region, this figure is 43.3%, followed by the Mangystau Region at 41.9%, and the federal city of Shymkent at 40.6%. Experts say that it is in the regions with the highest birth rates that the highest rates of violence against children are recorded.

In September of last year, a pedophile raped and brutally murdered a five-year-old girl who lived next to him in the village of Zhibek Zholy in the Turkestan Region. He was sentenced to life imprisonment and chemical castration. News of the murder almost sparked a riot and deadly reprisals against the rapist; the police barely managed to save him from enraged villagers. According to some reports, the murder of the child helped secure a toughening of punishments for crimes against children. Indeed, it was after this incident that Kazakhstani President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev raised the issue of amending the legislation pertaining to this. The new law provides more protection for women and minors, including in incidents of sexual assault.

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Kazakhstan commended the “legislative initiatives protecting women’s [and] children’s rights,” calling them a “crucial step towards equality, justice [and] safety for all citizens” that “lay a foundation for a stable, prosperous society.” The OSCE Programme Office in Astana, meanwhile, stated that it “welcomes the adoption and signing of two laws aimed at ensuring and protecting the rights of women and children, including the criminalization of violence towards them.”

In another recent example, in April 2024, in the Karaganda Region, a 21-year-old mother strangled her two daughters, two-year-old Mia and four-year-old Karina. The murder took place in the village of Gagarinskoye, located 15 minutes from the city of Temirtau, and is thought to have occurred due to their difficult financial situation. The woman has another surviving baby daughter.

“She strangled the children at lunchtime on Thursday, April 4, and until the evening she sat with the corpses waiting for her cohabitant. When he came home from work, she showed the children’s bodies on the bed and stated that they had died for no reason, by themselves. The cohabitant called the police. Then she tried to mislead the police too, putting forward a story that the children were poisoned by an unknown substance. The police immediately went to the kitchen to see what they had eaten last, but there was not a crumb of food there,” it was reported.

That same month in Shymkent, a two-year-old boy was thrown out of a third-floor window by his uncle. The court released the man from criminal liability having found him to be insane, and ordered that he undergo compulsory treatment at a specialized hospital.

In 2021, Almaty was the scene of another terrible incident. A young mother threw her son and two daughters out a ninth-floor window before jumping herself. The family was living in a rented apartment. Nasimzhan Ospanova, who chairs Kazakhstan’s Committee for the Protection of Children’s Rights under the Ministry of Education, recently called Kazakhstani parents’ attention to the literal epidemic of children falling out of windows. Ospanova says there were 59 such cases in 2023, while 14 were recorded in the first four months of this year alone. In most cases, the children died, and the very existence of such events suggests they were in most cases left unattended.

In June 2024, a case involving the cruel treatment of adopted children was uncovered in Shymkent. The head of the family did not allow them to wash, didn’t feed them, and forced them to do backbreaking work. According to ombudsman Zakiyeva, the suspect in the case is mentally ill, but had been allowed to take custody of the children after providing documents that confirmed he had no mental illness. There were six children in the family. According to official data, in Shymkent, one of the largest cities in the country, there are only five child social workers.

In January of this year in Almaty, a father rented an apartment and killed his two school-age sons there. “He turned on the TV, fed them, sat at the table, and wrote. He wrote three or four pages – a letter to Alena, my granddaughter,”said the grandmother of the murdered boys. “Then he started chasing them. Both of their throats were cut. Their hands were all closed like this. Usually, dead people’s hands are open, but theirs were all closed; it was impossible to look.” Investigators discovered that the man had murdered the children as an act of revenge against his ex-wife.

The above cases represent only a small part of the overall picture, but they serve to clarify the fact that many Kazakhstani children need immediate help.

New laws must be drafted and funds allocated

As mentioned, in April of this year Kazakhstan passed a law toughening the punishment for domestic abusers and rapists. In particular, life imprisonment is now the only available sentence for murdering a minor. No matter how harsh the new norms are, however, the state must not only ensure that criminals are punished but also take measures to prevent murder, rape, torture, and gross neglect.

According to Ombudsman Zakiyeva, six criminal offenses and three sex crimes are committed against children every day in Kazakhstan. One or two children attempt or commit suicide daily in the country.

“The most important thing is zero tolerance for violence in society. Of course, we need laws, and of course, we need trained [child social] workers and competent personnel. But first, we need to develop zero tolerance for violence in society. According to international experts, only 40% of victims, for example, of domestic violence seek help, and only 10% of them turn to the relevant bodies, i.e., law enforcement, for help,” says Zakiyeva.

In addition to the conservative mentality of many Kazakhstanis – which discourages reporting crimes which occur within the family to the police – the country has an acute shortage of personnel. With a full workload, many social workers perform their duties perfunctorily and don’t visit families with problems.

“The Ministry of Education and I have worked on amendments regarding fixing the number of child protective services workers in legislation – one worker for every 5,000 children. This is the international standard. We now have a national average of one worker for every 22,000 children. For example, in Shymkent, there are five workers for 480,000 children, about 96,000 children per worker. In this regard, we worked on the necessary changes to the legislation, prepared amendments, and sent them to the Mazhilis. Having been supported by MPs, they were sent to the government for final consideration,” stated the ombudsman.

In addition to the lack of social workers, there is also a severe shortage of support centers and call centers where women and children can turn for protection. However, some steps are already being taken to address this issue. “From September, lessons regarding child safety will be introduced in schools. Children will be regularly given basic rules for ensuring their own safety and helpline numbers, which must be constantly repeated so that a child knows where to turn. In addition, rules for safety on social media and the internet will be explained,” concluded Zakiyeva.

Astana Unveils Monument to Great Turkmen Poet Pyragy

On July 4, a monument to the great Turkmen poet and thinker Magtymguly Pyragy (1724-1807) was unveiled in Kazakhstan’s capital, Astana. The ceremony was attended by the National Leader of the Turkmen people, Chairman of the People’s Council of Turkmenistan Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov, Chairman of the Senate of the Parliament of Kazakhstan Maulen Ashimbayev, and Astana Mayor Kassymbek Zhenis.

The International Organization of Turkic Culture (TURKSOY) declared 2024 “The Year of the Great Poet and Thinker of the Turkic World – Magtymguly Pyragy,” while the 300th anniversary of the poet’s birth Pyragy was included in the UNESCO List of Memorable Dates for 2024-2025.

Speaking at the opening ceremony, Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedov announced that the erection of the monument in the capital of Kazakhstan testifies the eternity and inviolability of Kazakh-Turkmen friendship. The National Leader of Turkmenistan also emphasized the continuous, important role played by culture, music, poetry, and creativity in general, in maintaining close and cohesive ties between peoples.

Hailing the legacy of Pyragy the property of all humanity, the Chairman of the Kazakh Senate Maulen Ashimbayev stressed that just like the poems and philosophical prose of the great Kazakh writer Abai, the poetic heritage of the brilliant son of the Turkmen people is perceived in Kazakhstan as an integral part of the common treasury of Turkic culture.

 

Astana Qazaqhstan Team’s Stellar Rise from the Ashes

On July 4, the official website of the National Olympic Committee of the Republic of Kazakhstan announced that Astana Qazaqstan Team member, Mark Cavendish, won the fifth stage of the Tour de France.  Winning the Tour for the 35th time, Cavendish surpassed the previous record set by Eddy Merckx and demonstrating the management’s rise from recent troubles, his victory revived his team’s former glory.

Two names

Alexander Vinokurov and Danial Akhmetov are the two cyclists who first turned the spotlight on the Astana Qazaqstan Team.

In May 2006, “Operation Puerto”, the code name of the Spanish police investigation into the doping system in cycling, led by Dr. Eufemiano Fuentes, resulted in a series of searches and arrests involving numerous cyclists. The implication of the Spanish team Liberty Seguros-Würth, of which Kazakh cyclists Alexander Vinokurov and Andrey Kashechkin were key members, led to its sponsors’ withdrawal.  Vinokurov sought assistance from the then Prime Minister and head of the Cycling Federation of Kazakhstan, Danial Akhmetov. With support from the latter, the Astana team was established that year and Vinokurov celebrated by winning the Vuelta a España, with Kashechkin finishing third.

Scandals, intrigues, investigations

The first scandal broke out immediately. When the owner of the ProTour license, which belonged to Liberty Seguros-Würth, refused to sell it to Astana, the team submitted an application to the International Cycling Union. The initial response from the  IUW was that it could not guarantee the license until the 2007 Tour.  Meanwhile, organizers assured Astana that it would be allowed to participate  in major international competitions and on December 20, 2006, the team was granted a four-year license.

In July 2007, a doping scandal broke at the Tour de France, at the centre of which, was Astana’s team leader , Alexander Vinokurov. A test performed after his winning a stage of the classic race showed the presence of different types of red cells in his blood, indicative of a blood transfusion prior to competing, and Vinokourov was disqualified for two years.

Andrei Kashechkin was similarly caught and during the second season, two more Astana athletes, suspected of doping, were likewise suspended from racing. All these troubles led to the Kazakh team’s absence from the 2008 Tour de France season in the Giro d’I and other Grand Tours.

By then, the team was under the direction of  Johan Brunel renowned for bringing on winner of the Tour de France, Alberto Contador, and many other strong riders.

Both Johan Brunel and Alexander Vinokurov were connected with the doping scandal that followed in 2009.  As soon as his disqualification period had expired the famous rider intended to return to “Astana triumphantly.” Brunel invited American cyclist Lance Armstrong to Astana to pair with Contador. He persistently objected, however, to the contract with Vinokurov and Kashechkin. Ultimately, he left the team, unable to withstand the confrontation with the famous Kazakh. Armstrong and most of the team went after him, and Contador’s contract was delayed for another year.

The outcome of the scandals forced the team to rebrand and it became known by its current name: Astana Qazaqstan.

The team’s problems however, did not end there and in 2017,  it was almost crippled by the ousting of the former management of the Samruk-Kazyna holding company and the revision of funding for Astana-branded sports clubs. As reported on its official website, the cycling team was in dire need of more monetary resources.

Impact on the masses

Across Kazakhstan’s cities, the impact of Astana’s and Alexander Vinokurov’s successes are clear to see in the ever-increasing popularity of bicycle lanes and bike-sharing. Young people are turning to cycling for leisure and as a means of transport. Athletes hone their stamina and speed on customized trails and locals and visitors alike, flock to mass cycling races and events in Almaty and elsewhere.

All this and much more was made possible by examples set by Vinokurov, Kashechkin, Contador, Armstrong, and other athletes, as well as the direct support of Kazakhstan’s cycling federation in tandem with influential officials, starting with Danial Akhmetov.

Mark Cavendish, a British athlete riding for the Astana Qazaqstan Team, achieved a notable victory. Despite struggling with the heat on the first stage of the Tour of the Apennine Mountains and his team’s support, he performed well. He then had to fight hard in the  Florence to Rimini stage to stay in the race. His unexpected yet well-deserved victory will inspire and motivate new athletes to compete in the spirit of nomadic sports.

Travel Guide to Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan Presented in Seoul

A presentation of the book, A Travel Guide to Three Countries of Central Asia, took place in the capital of South Korea on July 2, and was attended by the heads of the diplomatic missions of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan, as well as representatives of leading South Korean tour operators, airlines, and journalists, the Kazakh Foreign Ministry has reported.

During the event, Korean writer Seo Byung Yong spoke in detail about his book, which describes the unique tourist destinations of the region. The author spoke about the huge potential for tourism development in Central Asia, noting the visa-free regimes, the availability of direct flights, and the rich gastronomic culture and variety of destinations.

Speaking at the event, the Ambassador of Kazakhstan to the Republic of Korea, Nurgali Arystanov, emphasized the importance of expanding cooperation in the field of tourism, and invited Korean citizens to visit the 5th World Nomad Games, which will be held in Astana from September 8 to 13, 2024.

The Executive Director of the Central Asia – Republic of Korea Cooperation Forum’s Secretariat, Rhee Jong Kook, spoke of the importance of further strengthening cooperation with the countries of Central Asia in light of the recently adopted K-Silk Road strategy, as well as the successful negotiations of President of South Korea, Yoon Suk Yeol, with the President of Kazakhstan and leaders of other Central Asian nations.