Explainer: From stability to turmoil - what's going on in Kazakhstan
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[January 08, 2022]
(Reuters) - Dozens of people have
died and thousands have been detained in Kazakhstan over the past week
during the worst violence seen in the Central Asian nation since it
became independent in the early 1990s.
Security forces appeared to have reclaimed the streets of the country's
main city on Friday, a day after Russian paratroopers arrived to help
quash the uprising.
Here is a snapshot of Kazakhstan, its economy and political system.
WHERE IS KAZAKHSTAN AND WHY DOES IT MATTER?
Kazakhstan, located between Russia and China and also sharing borders
with three other ex-Soviet republics, is the largest economy in Central
Asia, with rich hydrocarbon and metal deposits. It has attracted
hundreds of billions of dollars in foreign investment since becoming
independent in 1991.
Strategically, it links the large and fast-growing markets of China and
South Asia with those of Russia and Europe by road, rail, and a port on
the Caspian Sea. It has described itself as the buckle in China's huge
'Belt and Road' trade project.
Kazakhstan is the top global producer of uranium and this week's unrest
prompted an 8% jump in the price of the metal that fuels nuclear power
plants. It is the world's ninth biggest oil exporter, producing some
85.7 million tonnes in 2021, and its 10th largest producer of coal.
It is also the world's second largest miner of bitcoin after the United
States. Bitcoin's "hashrate" - the measure of computing power of
machines plugged into its network - dropped by over 10% on Wednesday
after Kazakhstan's internet was shut off, according to crypto mining
firm BTC.com.
WHY ARE PEOPLE ANGRY?
The uprising began as protests in oil-rich western regions against the
removal of state price caps on New Year's Day for butane and propane,
which are often referred to as 'road fuels for the poor' due to their
low cost.
The reform, aimed at easing oil shortages, quickly backfired as prices
more than doubled. The protests spread, tapping into a wider sense of
discontent over endemic state corruption, income inequality and economic
hardships that have all been compounded by the coronavirus pandemic.
Although the richest of the Central Asian republics in per capita
income, half of the population in Kazakhstan - the world's ninth largest
country by territory - live in rural, often isolated communities with
poor access to public services.
While the country's vast natural resources have made a small elite
incredibly wealthy, many ordinary Kazakhs feel left behind. About a
million people out of a total population of 19 million are estimated to
live below the poverty line.
Annual inflation is running at close to 9%, the highest in more than
five years, prompting the central bank to hike interest rates to 9.75%.
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A view shows a burnt car following the protests triggered by fuel
price increase outside the city administration headquarters in
Almaty, Kazakhstan January 7, 2022. REUTERS/Stringer
WHO IS IN CHARGE?
Career diplomat Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, 68, was elected president in
2019 on promises to continue the broadly pro-business policies of
his long-serving predecessor, Nursultan Nazarbayev. But Nazarbayev,
a former Soviet Politburo member who led Kazakhstan for nearly three
decades, was widely seen as the real power behind the throne.
Tokayev has used the protests - which have sometimes targeted
symbols of the Nazarbayev era including statues - to fire the
81-year-old former president from his post as chief of the powerful
Security Council.
Nazarbayev has made no public comments or appearances since the
protests erupted and it remains unclear to what extent the uprising
will weaken the considerable influence he and his family have
continued to wield in politics and business.
Tokayev also sacked Nazarbayev's nephew, Samat Abish, as
second-in-command of the security police. Nazarbayev's eldest
daughter Dariga, a former speaker of the Senate and still a
lawmaker, has been spoken of in the past as a possible future
president.
ECONOMIC PROSPECTS
Kazakhstan’s per capita gross domestic product in 2020 was $9,122,
World Bank data show, slightly above that of Turkey and Mexico but
below its annual peak of nearly $14,000 in 2013.
Tokayev's government introduced a stimulus package worth 6% of
national output to help smaller and medium-sized businesses weather
the COVID-19 pandemic.
The World Bank has forecast economic growth of 3.5% in 2021, rising
to 3.7% this year and 4.8% in 2023. It has urged Kazakhstan to boost
competition and limit the role of large state-owned enterprises in
the economy, tackle social inequality and create a more level
economic playing field.
HUMAN RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS
Western countries and rights groups have long criticised Kazakhstan
for its authoritarian political system, its intolerance of dissent,
curbs on media freedoms and lack of free and fair elections, though
it has also been viewed as less repressive and volatile than its
ex-Soviet neighbours.
Amnesty International said this week's protests were a result of the
authorities' "widespread repression of basic human rights" and it
called for the release of all those arbitrarily detained and for
investigations of past state abuses.
"For years, the government has relentlessly persecuted peaceful
dissent, leaving the Kazakhstani people in a state of agitation and
despair," said Marie Struthers, Amnesty's Director for Eastern
Europe and Central Asia.
(Compiled by Gareth Jones; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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