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Campuses of Three Foreign Universities to Open in Kazakhstan

Student campuses of three major foreign universities will open in Kazakhstan. Branches of the British De Montfort and Coventry universities will appear in Almaty and Astana, and a branch of South Korean university, Woosong, will be located in Turkestan. This was announced by the Minister of Science and Higher Education of Kazakhstan, Sayasat Nurbek, at a press conference of the SCC.

According to him, the agency plans to turn Kazakhstan into a major academic center of the Eurasian region, making it necessary to attract established foreign brands to the country.

Nurbek stated that “23 academic partnerships have been created and opened in just two years. Campuses of 3 reputable foreign universities will open in Kazakhstan in 5 categories. We have permitted foreign universities in Kazakhstan to invest their money in constructing or purchasing a building and training in a foreign format. They work according to special decrees of the government, such as De Montfort University in Almaty. Next year, the first graduates will be there. This British university will award a bachelor’s degree based on its format and academic admission policy.”

Having received a foreign degree, graduates of these educational institutions will then be able to work in the university’s country of origin.

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Askar Alimzhanov graduated from the journalism department of the Kazakh State University named after S. Kirov, then worked as a correspondent for the daily republican newspaper Leninskaya Smen. He then moved to the United States to be a reporter for the daily newspaper "Cape Cod Times" in Hayanis, Massachusetts, (USA) under the journalist exchange program between the Union of Journalists of the USSR and the New England Society of News Editors. Since then, he has helped build transparency and understanding of Central Asia region in various executive level positions at esteemed media organizations including "Akbar"(Alma-Ata) international center for journalism, the Khabar News agency, the Television and Radio Corporation "Kazakhstan" JSC, and MIR- Kazakhstan.

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Is Kazakhstan’s Parliament About to Ban Religious Clothing?

The Kazakh authorities are once again trying to restrict the wearing of religious clothing — hijabs and niqabs — in public places. There have been heated discussions on social media, and Muslim women have appealed to President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev himself.

The hijab (headscarf) has long become an everyday accessory, and today, the secular part of society is trying to prevent its wearing in schools. However, women wearing niqabs — a long, usually black cape that covers the face — are increasingly common on the streets. Many Kazakhs consider the niqab categorically unacceptable.

The issue of wearing religious clothing in public places may be considered in Kazakhstan’s parliament, said Yermurat Bapi, a member of the Majilis (lower house of parliament).

“Now, the most important issue for us is to preserve our country’s national interests, traditions, and culture. And if we look at the current situation, more Kazakhs are dressed in black in society. This situation seriously harms our future national interests,” Bapi said.

“That is why we, a group of deputies, have prepared such a bill. It will be submitted to the Parliament at the fall session. I think that the issue of hijab, niqab, and other religious clothing in society will be solved after its adoption. Then we will be able to regulate the issues of religious dress in some way,” he added.

In May this year, President Tokayev spoke sharply about covered faces. “Dressing in all black contradicts the worldview of our people, is thoughtless copying of foreign norms, conditioned by religious fanaticism. We must not break away from our spiritual roots and erode our national identity,” he said.

Also, in October 2023, Minister of Culture and Information Aida Balayeva said that the new law on religion will prohibit wearing religious clothing in public places.

Kazakhstan has been trying to solve the problem of wearing religious clothing in schools, universities, courts, and other organizations for years. In the past, the ban on wearing hijabs to school repeatedly caused clashes between school administrations, akimats (mayor’s offices), and parents of female students. For example, in Atyrau region in 2023, more than 150 girls refused to attend classes without a hijab. As the Ministry of Education explained, the parents were spoken with, after which the children returned to classes.

Experts believe the hijab and niqab have become fashion elements imposed by foreign influences alien to Kazakhstanis. However, local theologians are virtually unanimous: Kazakh women have never covered their faces.

“After gaining independence, our youth began to study in foreign educational institutions and began to instill in our people certain clothes and dress codes, which were abroad: in Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and other Muslim countries. These are their customs, especially about covering the face. Popularly it is called a burqa — a headscarf with slits for the eyes — but in Arabic it is called a niqab. The niqab, which completely covers the face, is generally unacceptable for our people, and our people do not use it. Today, in some regions of our country, we sometimes see such movements in the streets. But our people have never dressed in black robes,” the well-known imam and theologian Nurlan Baizhigituly said.

Political analysts emphasize an important aspect of domestic politics related to wearing non-traditional religious clothing in Kazakhstan.

“Judging by the public discussions that have begun, the new Law “On Religious Activity and Religious Associations” will introduce a norm on the prohibition of wearing religious clothing that covers the face in public places. And this is a correct measure that should have been implemented long ago. First of all, there is an extremely important issue of ensuring public safety — for some people, niqabs may well be a way of disguise for destructive and criminal purposes. Secondly, it is time to put a real and practical barrier to the spread of the radical ideology of non-traditional pseudo-Islamic movements,” political scientist Urazgali Selteev said on social media.

“I am sure that any cross-section of public opinion will show dominant support in favor of this legislative measure. However, the implementation process will require firmness from the authorities. We must be prepared for massive information pressure from both external actors and internal ones, which have an active pseudo-Muslim lobby in many spheres in our country. In all likelihood, there will be a lot of information throw-ins, bloggers instigating conflicts in social networks, etc. But here, the state should not retreat in any case,” Selteev added.

Sources said the pressure has already begun. Kazakhstani lawyer Diana Meyrbek published an appeal to Tokayev over a planned ban on religious dress. On behalf of an unspecified number of Muslim women in Kazakhstan, she took offense to the Parliament’s intention to pass a law regulating the wearing of relevant paraphernalia.

“Banning the hijab violates freedom of conscience, religion, speech, and expression. Women who wear the hijab do so within the framework of their religious beliefs and cultural traditions, and their right to self-expression should be protected,” Ulysmedia.kz quoted Meyrbek.

In the fall of 2023, Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev signed a law prohibiting the wearing of the niqab in public places. The violation is punishable by a fine of more than $800. It is prohibited to cover the face in most European countries, as well as in some countries with a large Muslim population, such as India.

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Times of Central Asia

Askar Alimzhanov graduated from the journalism department of the Kazakh State University named after S. Kirov, then worked as a correspondent for the daily republican newspaper Leninskaya Smen. He then moved to the United States to be a reporter for the daily newspaper "Cape Cod Times" in Hayanis, Massachusetts, (USA) under the journalist exchange program between the Union of Journalists of the USSR and the New England Society of News Editors. Since then, he has helped build transparency and understanding of Central Asia region in various executive level positions at esteemed media organizations including "Akbar"(Alma-Ata) international center for journalism, the Khabar News agency, the Television and Radio Corporation "Kazakhstan" JSC, and MIR- Kazakhstan.

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Kyrgyz-German Business Forum

On June 20, First Deputy Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers of the Kyrgyz Republic Adylbek Kasymaliev presided over a Kyrgyz-German business forum hosted by Frankfurt am Main.

Kasymaliev noted that during 32 years of bilateral cooperation, his country’s German partners have implemented several socially significant projects in Kyrgyzstan, including the establishment of an Anti-TB Clinic and a Perinatal Center in Bishkek.

Referencing the facts from 2019-2023, bilateral trade turnover had increased 5.5-fold and over 180 joint Kyrgyz-German enterprises currently operate in Kyrgyzstan, first deputy prime minister emphasized that “the potential of cooperation between the two countries has not been fully realized.”

Calling on German businesses to further their investment in projects in Kyrgyzstan, Kasymaliev stated, “The undertaken fiscal reforms have made it possible for Kyrgyzstan to instigate the most liberal tax regime in Central Asia”, to the great advantage of German companies and entrepreneurs investing in joint ventures.

 

Times of Central Asia

Times of Central Asia

Laura Hamilton MA, is the former Director of the Collins Gallery at the University of Strathclyde. She first visited Kyrgyzstan in 2011 to research and curate a major exhibition of contemporary textiles and fashion. Since 2012, she has worked as an editor on over thirty translations of Central Asian novels and collections of short stories. In more recent years, her work has focused on editing translations of Kyrgyzstan's great epics -'Ak Moor', Saiykal', Janysh Baiysh', 'Oljobai and Kishimjan', 'Dariyka', 'Semetey' and 'Er Toshtuk' for The Institute of Kyrgyz Language and Literature, and the Kyrgyz-Turkish Manas University.

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Suspected Attackers of Kazakhstan Blogger Aidos Sadykov Identified

Three days ago, Kazakhstan political blogger and erstwhile opposition figure, Aidos Sadykov was shot in the head at a parking lot near his residence in Kyiv whilst standing next to his wife, Natalya Sadykova.

Sadykov is the author of the Telegram channel, ‘Base’, which has 59,000 subscribers, and has been permanently residing in Kyiv since 2014.

Two suspects have already been identified. Both are Kazakhstan citizens, 33-year-old Meiram Karataev and 36-year-old Altay Zhakanbaev, whose names have been corroborated by the Prosecutor General of Ukraine’s website.

According to the Kazakhstan Ministry of Internal Affairs, M. Kartayev was dismissed from the ministry in January of 2019 and is not currently a police officer.  They further elaborated that the Head of State (of Kazakhstan) had instructed the Ministry to clarify all circumstances of the case.

Immediately following the attack, President Tokayev of Kazakhstan said that “the official bodies of the Republic of Kazakhstan are ready to join the investigation.”

The Prosecutor General’s Office of Ukraine reported that on the day of the crime the suspects crossed the border into Moldova and according to Ukrinform, the Ukrainian National News Agency, they have been placed on the international wanted list.

Over the years, Sadykov has frequently criticized the Kazakh authorities, including the current president. In 2020, Base, together with the initiative to create the opposition Democratic Party, were co-organizers of a rally in Almaty demanding a boycott of the parliamentary election. The Democratic Party of Kazakhstan, an unregistered political party, was founded and led by Zhanbolat Mamai, a former journalist who in 2017 was convicted of receiving funds from Mukhtar Ablyazov, a fugitive former minster with judgements against him in numerous jurisdictions, including the U.S. and the U.K., where he was found to have committed “fraud on an epic scale.” Natalya Sadykova previously worked for Ablyazov’s since shuttered newspaper, Respublika.

Aidos Sadykov and Mamai both actively supported protests in January 2022 in Kazakhstan, which were widely seen as an attempted coup. Sadykov is wanted in Kazakhstan under articles on the incitement of discord.

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Chinese Company to Build Automobile Plant in Uzbekistan for $1.5 bln

China Xiaou Group intends to launch a large automobile manufacturing complex in the Ferghana region of Uzbekistan, the Khokimiyat (regional authority) of the Ferghana press service has reported. The agreement on constructing a large automobile complex with China Xiaou Group for $1.5 billion, at the expense of direct Chinese investments, was signed during a visit by a delegation of officials and businessmen from the Ferghana region to China.

It is reported that in the first stage of the project, a $50 million investment is planned to set up production lines for 60,000 electric, hybrid, and special cars per year. In the second phase, $350 million will be invested, and $1.1 billion in the third phase. Most of the components will be localized, and the number of cars produced will be increased to 110,000 per year.

The project is planned to be fully completed within five years.

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Times of Central Asia

Askar Alimzhanov graduated from the journalism department of the Kazakh State University named after S. Kirov, then worked as a correspondent for the daily republican newspaper Leninskaya Smen. He then moved to the United States to be a reporter for the daily newspaper "Cape Cod Times" in Hayanis, Massachusetts, (USA) under the journalist exchange program between the Union of Journalists of the USSR and the New England Society of News Editors. Since then, he has helped build transparency and understanding of Central Asia region in various executive level positions at esteemed media organizations including "Akbar"(Alma-Ata) international center for journalism, the Khabar News agency, the Television and Radio Corporation "Kazakhstan" JSC, and MIR- Kazakhstan.

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Kazakh MP Accuses Nazarbayev’s Relatives of Raiding

MP Yerlan Sairov believes that relatives of former president Nursultan Nazarbayev, Rakhat Aliyev and Kairat Satybaldy are involved in a business seizure. The parliamentarian demanded that the General Prosecutor’s Office return the property to the affected businessmen, Kursiv has reported. During a meeting of the Majilis, the deputy stated that representatives of the Old Kazakhstan, taking advantage of their impunity, had initiated a series of business takeovers. “Such a system was formed by Rakhat Aliyev (Nazarbayev’s former son-in-law) and his supporters,” Sairov stated.

Now, the victims have begun demanding the return of seized property. According to him, Nurlan Bimurzin and Megdat Kaliyev lost their oil business worth 170 million tenge ($369,000) in 2003. Zharkyn Kurentayev and Sholpan Karaneeva also “fell victim to the greed of the above-mentioned persons. The same group selected several vacation spots in the town of Konaev and the Altyn Bulak sanatorium in the Turkestan region,” Sairov specified.

Referring to the victims’ posts on social networks, Sairov said that a group linked to Nazarbayev’s nephew, Kairat Satybaldy, and his former sister-in-law, Gulmira, allegedly annexed the Hilton Hotel in Almaty and German citizen Robert Schumacher’s construction company. The latter is now considered bankrupt.

“The Prosecutor General’s Office needs to take steps to protect the economic interests of the victims from representatives of the Old Kazakhstan and return the property,” added Sairov.

Rakhat Aliyev, the husband of Dariga Nazarbayeva from 1983 to 2007, was one of the most influential people in Kazakhstan in the early 2000s. In 2007, he was charged with kidnapping and preparation for a coup d’état and sentenced in absentia to 40 years; Aliyev fled to Austria, where he was arrested in 2014, and found hanged in a cell in Vienna in 2015. The official cause of death was suicide.

In late February 2024, businessmen Bimurzin and Kaliyev announced that they had applied with the Prosecutor General’s Office to reclaim assets they claimed to have transferred under duress to the former president’s daughter, Aliya Nazarbayeva, in 2003. Nazarbayeva sued them for libel and lost

Furthermore, earlier this year, businesswoman Sholpan Karaneeva reported that the Hilton Hotel was taken by Kairat Satybaldy and his supporters in 2021. After the nephew of the former president was behind bars, the transfer of his assets to the state, among them the hotel, was initiated.

Kairat Satybaldy and his former wife, Gulmira Satybaldy, have been sentenced under articles on laundering money and the embezzlement of others property.

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Times of Central Asia

Askar Alimzhanov graduated from the journalism department of the Kazakh State University named after S. Kirov, then worked as a correspondent for the daily republican newspaper Leninskaya Smen. He then moved to the United States to be a reporter for the daily newspaper "Cape Cod Times" in Hayanis, Massachusetts, (USA) under the journalist exchange program between the Union of Journalists of the USSR and the New England Society of News Editors. Since then, he has helped build transparency and understanding of Central Asia region in various executive level positions at esteemed media organizations including "Akbar"(Alma-Ata) international center for journalism, the Khabar News agency, the Television and Radio Corporation "Kazakhstan" JSC, and MIR- Kazakhstan.

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