• 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

London University Installs Bust of Persian-Tajik Cultural Force Rudaki

A bust of Abu Abdullah Rudaki, the founder of Tajik-Persian literature, was installed last week at the University of London School of Oriental & African Studies (SOAS).

The bust is the latest initiative of the Tajik embassy in Great Britain. Tajikistan’s ambassador Rukhshona Emomali was at SOAS for the presentation of the bust, and in a speech mentioned the contributions that Rudaki made to strengthening the Tajik-Persian language, and the foundations of Tajik literature and poetry. Thanks to him, in the centuries that followed, Central Asia, the Caucasus, Asia Minor, Pakistan, and India recognized the Tajik-Persian language as a language of science, literature, and statehood.

Following the presentation on 16 March, over 200 guests attended an event honoring Abu Abdullah Rudaki’s life. Staff from Tajikistan’s Ministry of Education and Science met with members of SOAS, as well as the University of Oxford’s Faculty of Persian Studies and the University of Portsmouth, to discuss forming educational partnerships in future.

Tears and Laughter: An Evening at an Uzbek Theater

Tashkent, Uzbekistan – The action unfolds in the Soviet Union in the 1960s.

An Uzbek man goes to Russia for compulsory military service and falls in love with a Russian woman. Back with her betrothed in his homeland, the Russian slowly wins over her recalcitrant mother-in-law and learns to love Uzbek culture.

So goes the plot of “Uzbek Dance,” a play being performed in the colonnaded Uzbek National Academic Drama Theater in Tashkent, the capital. The tragicomedy made its debut in Uzbekistan in 2009 and has been re-staged several times, immersing audiences in Uzbek history and culture and making them laugh and cry.

The Times of Central Asia attended a performance on March 9. So did hundreds of other people. Ticket prices in the Uzbek currency, the sum, cost the equivalent of about USD4 to USD5.60. Before the start, people in the atrium gazed at portraits of actors who helped to build the Uzbek theater scene over the last century.

People mingle in the museum of the National Academic Drama Theater in Uzbekistan. Portraits of actors who contributed to the development of Uzbek theater in the past century are hung there. Photo: TCA

 

In the early days, the “Turon” troupe performed around Uzbekistan. The first performance of the theater group was held in 1913 in the garden of the 14th century Tashkent mausoleum of an Islamic leader, or sheikh. In 1918, the state took over the troupe.

Written by Nurillo Abbaskhan, “Uzbek Dance” explores tension and reconciliation between the Russian woman and her Uzbek mother-in-law, whose verbal and cultural missteps make for mutual suspicion and comedy.

The play invites reflection on the nuanced relationship between Russia and Uzbekistan today (at least 2% of Uzbekistan’s population are ethnic Russians, according to government data in 2021; the population is estimated today at nearly 37 million).

There’s a dark side to the drama. The family saga happens against the backdrop of a real-life 1980s corruption scandal surrounding a campaign to supply more Uzbek cotton for the Soviet Union.

Spectators await the performance of “Uzbek Dance,” a play that has been staged in different productions several times since making its debut in 2009. Photo: TCA

 

The cotton campaign was marred by falsified production numbers and a backlash from Soviet officials who rounded up thousands of Uzbek people, prosecuting many on false charges. Additionally, pesticides took a devastating toll on the environment and workers’ health.

In the play, the Uzbek man, Tursunboy, drives a tractor in the cotton fields. Eventually, he gets falsely accused in the purge and imprisoned. He eventually gets out of jail, but the harsh conditions and years of exposure to toxic chemicals have left him fatally ill.

Then there is Panamaryova Maria Visilevna, who took the name Maryam after converting to Islam on the insistence of her Muslim mother-in-law, Kumri Aya.

The two women don’t get along at first. But they get closer. Maryam, who gives birth to six children before Tursunboy’s decline, learns the Uzbek language, dances, hat-making and other customs from Kumri Aya. They exchange hugs and sing lullabies together.

One day, Kumri Aya asks Maryam for forgiveness for hurting her in the past. The next day, she dies. The Russian daughter-in-law mourns.

The performance ends with the Russian woman teaching the national Uzbek dance “Tanovar” to the young Uzbek wife of one of her sons. The wife had lived in the city and barely knew her own heritage.

Scandal on Khabar TV Raises Discussions About Domestic Violence in Kazakhstan

A scandal which erupted on Kazakhstan’s state television channel, Khabar, has caused huge public outrage. At the center of events was a woman named Gulmira, who had suffered years of abuse at the hands of her husband. Her story became the subject of discussion on the talk show, Birak, which is dedicated to family relations.

On Khabar, Gulmira spoke about the eighteen years of beatings and violence she had suffered in her marriage. She ran away from her hard drinking husband with her six children, but he found her in Astana, and arranged another humiliation, with the talk show hosts secretly and without any warning bringing her husband to the studio, which caused Gulmira to break down live on air. The shows hosts even tried to reconcile the spouses, which only served to aggravate the already extremely strained situation.

On social networks, the public actively discussed the abhorrent behavior of the presenters and espoused their support for Gulmira. Videos were created which commented on the show, and many media outlets spoke out in defense of the woman, emphasizing the fact that such things should not be staged on national television.

As a result of the wave of indignation, the state television channel Khabar decided to stop airing the talk show Birak. The Minister of Culture and Information of Kazakhstan, Aida Balayeva, promised to shut down the talk show, stating that the problem of family violence requires serious attention.

This event took place against the background of huge public attention on the trial of former Minister of the National Economy, Kuandyk Bishembayev, who is accused of murdering his wife. In such an environment, any justification for the actions of an aggressor on state TV was deemed hugely inappropriate and only served to highlight the issue of domestic violence.

Kazakhstan: A Rising Global Player in Trade and Diplomacy

Over the past decade, Kazakhstan has become an increasingly important land-bridge between East and West, both in terms of trade and diplomacy. A vast nation the size of Western Europe with powerful neighbors in the form of China and Russia, yet on the doorstep of Europe with access to the Caspian Sea, Kazakhstan’s location has elevated it to the cusp of becoming a global power.

Given its geography, it is reasonable to assert that many decisions in Kazakhstan are, out of necessity, the result of a geopolitical tightrope act necessitating a balanced and far-reaching policy outlook. This strategic position has been described by Ariel Cohen, a Nonresident Senior Fellow at the Eurasia Center of the Atlantic Council, as a “visionary multi-vector policy pioneered” by President Tokayev. Indeed, “mutually beneficially cooperation” and “mutually beneficial strategic partnership” have become watchwords of Tokayev’s presidency.

Due to projects such as the Belt and Road Initiative and the Middle Corridor, Kazakhstan’s location has made it an indispensable ally to China. Playing a pivotal role in the expansion of transcontinental trade has led the whole of Central Asia to, in the words of Tokayev, “become a global stakeholder.” Trade turnover between Kazakhstan and China continues to expand, reaching $31.5 billion in 2023 (a 30% increase on 2022), and new transit routes are continuously under construction, with the Bakhty-Ayagoz railway line set to lead the opening of a third border crossing with China and increase the throughput capacity between the two nations from 28 million to around 48 million tons. Both cultural and political ties continue to grow, with a 30-day visa-free travel regime coming into force in November 2023. As for the total amount of Chinese investment in Kazakhstan over the past eighteen years, estimates vary from $23.2 to over $36 billion.

Even these huge sums, however, are dwarfed in comparison to the Netherlands, which, in the last five years alone, has invested a colossal $33.8 billion in Kazakhstan. Meanwhile, according to Kazakhstan’s Bureau of National Statistics data for January to December 2022, Italy was Kazakhstan’s largest exporter, accounting for 16.4% of exports worth $13.9 billion during this period. The strength of this partnership was evinced by President Tokayev paying an official visit to Italy in January 2024, during which he held talks with Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and spoke about the two nations’ “dynamically” developing relationship and its “enormous potential”. As a block, the EU is Kazakhstan’s biggest overall trading partner, the destination for 39% of total exports and accounting for 29.4% of its total trade in 2021.

Through initiatives such as the C5+1 and the B5+1, meanwhile, the United States has increasingly sought to engage with Central Asia, and with Kazakhstan in particular. With investment totaling $19.4 billion, the U.S. ranks second in terms of foreign investment over the past five years. A driving force behind this engagement has been the huge untapped reserves of Rare Earth Elements (REEs) located in Kazakhstan. According to the Brookings Institute, whilst China is the dominant player in REEs, producing approximately 60% and processing 85% of the global output, Kazakhstan is the world’s largest producer of uranium – responsible for 33% of global output as of 2021 – a large amount of which is found in rare earth deposits.

As stated by Wesley Hill, an International Program Manager at the Energy, Growth, and Security Program of the International Tax and Investment Center, “in the same way we competed and continued to compete for other energy resources, most especially crude oil, we will be competing for REEs. It’s happening already, this geopolitical clash primarily driven by competition between the United States and China.”

Of course, given its shared history as part of the Soviet Union and a vast 4,700-mile shared border, Russia remains of huge significance to Kazakhstan. In 2023, trade turnover with Russia amounted to $26 billion, although this represented a 3.7% decrease on the previous year. Whilst preserving its ties with Moscow, however, Kazakhstan has consistently distanced itself from Russia’s war in Ukraine, with the authorities allowing large-scale rallies against the invasion to be staged. Even the death of Alexei Navalny – historically not a friend of Central Asia – saw makeshift memorials erected in several cities.

Some U.S. experts have characterized Kazakhstan’s relationship with Russia as “very fraught” and defined by “multi-generational trauma”, whereas others, citing facts such as Russia’s control over the Caspian Pipeline Consortium and 25% of Kazakhstan’s uranium production, have argued that Russian influence over Kazakhstan continues to grow. Given Kazakhstan’s membership in the CSTO and Tokayev’s meeting with Vladimir Putin in Moscow in October 2023, the depth of Russian influence in Kazakhstan is currently a hot topic for observers of the region.

In a sense this in itself speaks to the effectiveness of Tokayev’s multi-vector foreign policy, an approach based not on choosing sides, but on maximizing potential benefits for the nation. The fact that its foreign policy carries such significant consequences for both East and West speaks to Kazakhstan’s emergence as an international facilitator and a power in its own right. As a nation with an ever expanding reputation as a facilitator of mediation and dialogue, the second edition of the Astana International Forum in June could well serve to further enhance Kazakhstan’s burgeoning global standing.

Swiss Holding to Invest in Kazakhstan

At a meeting on March 19th between Yerzhan Yelekeyev, chairman of Kazakh Invest, and representatives of Eurasia Swiss Holding AG, the latter announced its intention to invest in two new projects in Kazakhstan.

The Swiss holding company plans to build an innovative medical centre equipped with positron emission tomography and computed tomography services. According to Gulmira Amatova, director of Eurasia Swiss Holding Investment LLP, a subsidiary of Eurasia Swiss Holding AG, the centre will provide wide public access to new technologies and methods of tomography which will significantly enhance the quality of life of cancer patients.

The second initiative planned by the Swiss holding company at a cost of $62 million, comprises the construction of dairy farms and a dairy plant in Kazakhstan’s northern Kostanay region.

Eurasia Swiss Holding AG looks forward to concluding an investment agreement with the Government of Kazakhstan on both projects.

Kazakhstan And Uzbekistan To Install Transboundary Water Meters

Since the use of transboundary water resources for irrigation remains a pressing issue in Central Asia, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan have agreed to install meters to calculate the exact volume of water consumed by both countries.

Kazakhstan will install meters on the territory of Uzbekistan, and the Uzbek side will install meters in Kazakhstan. Experts from both countries are currently determining the best locations of the meters. Negotiations are also underway for the involvement of international organizations in the project.

Emphasizing the importance of the agreement for Kazakhstan, which is located downstream of the region’s rivers, the Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation of Kazakhstan, Nurzhan Nurzhigitov stated, “The installation of meters will make it possible to monitor the volumes of water consumed by both countries online. In April, we plan to begin negotiations on the implementation of similar projects with Kazakhstan’s other neighbours.”