Berliner Boersenzeitung - Shadow of 'Bloody January' unrest stalks Kazakhstan

EUR -
AED 4.307904
AFN 73.899815
ALL 95.662872
AMD 434.930879
ANG 2.099565
AOA 1076.829872
ARS 1618.651174
AUD 1.632069
AWG 2.114363
AZN 1.992847
BAM 1.958583
BBD 2.36309
BDT 143.958683
BGN 1.956712
BHD 0.44314
BIF 3540.192893
BMD 1.173017
BND 1.496648
BOB 8.107108
BRL 5.869426
BSD 1.173282
BTN 111.297967
BWP 15.944814
BYN 3.310873
BYR 22991.13115
BZD 2.359674
CAD 1.596799
CDF 2721.399578
CHF 0.916941
CLF 0.026965
CLP 1061.193093
CNY 8.021383
CNH 8.014568
COP 4274.180313
CRC 533.412565
CUC 1.173017
CUP 31.084948
CVE 110.432755
CZK 24.368603
DJF 208.925592
DKK 7.472851
DOP 69.836384
DZD 155.381419
EGP 62.898218
ERN 17.595253
ETB 183.200509
FJD 2.574714
FKP 0.869553
GBP 0.863452
GEL 3.155344
GGP 0.869553
GHS 13.134616
GIP 0.869553
GMD 85.630285
GNF 10295.639803
GTQ 8.963616
GYD 245.456588
HKD 9.189239
HNL 31.193651
HRK 7.539566
HTG 153.694127
HUF 364.64508
IDR 20363.573304
ILS 3.463298
IMP 0.869553
INR 111.236048
IQD 1536.947835
IRR 1543103.726083
ISK 143.800082
JEP 0.869553
JMD 183.841244
JOD 0.831693
JPY 183.823604
KES 151.530649
KGS 102.545727
KHR 4704.025441
KMF 495.013024
KPW 1055.540059
KRW 1735.701244
KWD 0.360527
KYD 0.97776
KZT 543.444797
LAK 25765.139063
LBP 105122.299676
LKR 374.97962
LRD 215.291537
LSL 19.668778
LTL 3.463614
LVL 0.709546
LYD 7.4596
MAD 10.837162
MDL 20.215191
MGA 4879.412171
MKD 61.654035
MMK 2462.963049
MNT 4197.171468
MOP 9.467239
MRU 46.527679
MUR 55.167343
MVR 18.128944
MWK 2034.473164
MXN 20.546679
MYR 4.657088
MZN 74.961608
NAD 19.668946
NGN 1613.12837
NIO 43.175587
NOK 10.915726
NPR 178.068185
NZD 1.992504
OMR 0.451014
PAB 1.173252
PEN 4.134981
PGK 5.099747
PHP 71.92998
PKR 326.960977
PLN 4.257523
PYG 7215.961555
QAR 4.291018
RON 5.192593
RSD 117.397879
RUB 87.912793
RWF 1715.261736
SAR 4.399083
SBD 9.429695
SCR 16.073569
SDG 704.392817
SEK 10.855585
SGD 1.494048
SHP 0.875776
SLE 28.855387
SLL 24597.573291
SOS 670.498528
SRD 43.938904
STD 24279.081423
STN 24.537274
SVC 10.266596
SYP 129.787374
SZL 19.673886
THB 38.145317
TJS 11.005036
TMT 4.111424
TND 3.424566
TOP 2.824343
TRY 53.00324
TTD 7.964064
TWD 37.086074
TZS 3055.709113
UAH 51.553313
UGX 4411.701686
USD 1.173017
UYU 46.791079
UZS 14003.271958
VES 569.602641
VND 30916.033295
VUV 139.009915
WST 3.181443
XAF 656.938134
XAG 0.016007
XAU 0.000254
XCD 3.170137
XCG 2.114539
XDR 0.818435
XOF 656.954961
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.911145
ZAR 19.593722
ZMK 10558.563409
ZMW 21.910724
ZWL 377.710962
  • RYCEF

    0.7800

    16

    +4.88%

  • RBGPF

    0.2800

    63.75

    +0.44%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    22.8

    -0.09%

  • AZN

    4.6300

    189.83

    +2.44%

  • BTI

    1.3200

    58.77

    +2.25%

  • BP

    0.6310

    47.431

    +1.33%

  • GSK

    1.0350

    52.435

    +1.97%

  • RELX

    0.5600

    36.36

    +1.54%

  • NGG

    2.8700

    88.85

    +3.23%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    23.66

    +1.69%

  • VOD

    0.4800

    15.82

    +3.03%

  • BCC

    -0.2900

    78.71

    -0.37%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    23.09

    +0.13%

  • RIO

    3.2300

    99.72

    +3.24%

  • JRI

    0.1970

    12.937

    +1.52%

Shadow of 'Bloody January' unrest stalks Kazakhstan
Shadow of 'Bloody January' unrest stalks Kazakhstan / Photo: Alexandr BOGDANOV - AFP

Shadow of 'Bloody January' unrest stalks Kazakhstan

Red plastic embellishes the canvas of painter Saule Suleimenova, depicting the starting point of the lethal unrest that shook Kazakhstan at the beginning of the year.

Text size:

The dark, brooding wall-sized piece shows the main square of the Central Asian country's largest city, Almaty, with its distinctive Soviet-era buildings and independence-era monument celebrating Kazakh statehood.

With her distinctive "cellophane painting" technique, Suleimenova sought to capture a violent moment in Kazakhstan's modern history that remains full of unanswered questions six months on.

The republic's winter of discontent began with peaceful protests over a hike in fuel prices before descending into chaos, leaving 238 people dead and becoming known as "Bloody January".

Government critics say the authorities' handling of the protests was full of abuses.

The state, meanwhile, insists that the country witnessed a terrorist-led coup attempt in January -- a narrative that has been met with widespread scepticism.

Painter Suleimenova has tried to convey the sense of injustice surrounding the events in her work.

She said her motivation to convey a collective mood during January grew stronger after Russia -- which sent troops to Kazakhstan to help bolster a regime in disarray -- invaded Ukraine the following month.

"With the colour (red), I wanted to express the condition we have been living through this year," she told AFP at an exhibition of her work in Almaty.

- Stripped and beaten -

Metal worker Akylzhan Kiysimbayev -- who was wounded during the events in January -- was still on crutches when AFP spoke to him.

He thought little about politics before he found himself on the sidelines of a fierce clash between police and protesters.

Now, he faces up to eight years in prison if convicted in taking part in mass disorder.

Kiysimbayev said he was guarding a property that his company was renovating on January 5 when stray bullets pierced the building's windows.

He was shot in the leg as he attempted to escape. While he was still recovering from an operation in hospital, police arrested him and beat him in the hospital corridors.

Thrown into jail, he was stripped of his clothes and beaten again, he said.

"They hit us in the places where our injuries were," he told AFP.

"They told us: you are terrorists, you are Wahabbists!"

He was forced to appear in front of a judge wearing nothing but his underwear.

Public uproar ensured that some detainees, Kiysimbayev among them, were released from pre-trial detention.

Authorities acknowledge some incidents of torture -- including several leading to death -- but there has been little progress in more than 240 investigations into the abuses.

None of the officers who Kiysimbayev says tortured him have been charged with any offence.

President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, meanwhile, has tried to move on from the events that shook his rule, pledging a "New Kazakhstan".

Last month, his government passed constitutional changes that appeared to bring to an end the influence of his 82-year-old predecessor Nursultan Nazarbayev, who dominated the country's politics for 30 years -- a key demand in the January protests.

But Moscow's invasion of Ukraine brought newfound uncertainty for Tokayev, whose position was strengthened after the Kremlin agreed to send forces to Kazakhstan to help quell the unrest.

- 'Toxic partner' -

Russian President Vladimir Putin's decision to launch a full-scale assault on Ukraine on February 24 came just over a month after a Moscow-led security bloc intervened in Kazakhstan.

Since then, Kazakhstan's neutral stance on the conflict has angered the Kremlin.

Although Tokayev partly owes his survival to Moscow, the war in Ukraine "changed the format of relations", political analyst Dosym Satpayev told AFP.

The war itself, he said, divided opinion in Kazakhstan -- an ethnically diverse country with a large Slavic minority concentrated near Russia's border.

"Tokayev understands Russia is a toxic partner," he said.

Fresh tensions in the partnership were epitomised by an awkward exchange between Tokayev and Putin in June, in which the Kazakh leader publicly disagreed with the Kremlin chief over Ukraine.

Sitting next to Putin in Saint Petersburg, Tokayev said Kazakhstan would not recognise "quasi-state territories" like eastern Ukraine's rebel republics, as Russia has.

Kazakhstan's foreign ministry even pledged to blacklist Russian public figure Tigran Keosayan, who branded its leadership ungrateful and threatened Kazakhstan with a Ukraine-style invasion.

Ruslan Rafikov, an artist who sported a pro-Ukrainian T-shirt at Suleimenova's exhibition, told AFP that he thought the unrest in January could be repeated if authorities failed to improve living standards and ease political repression.

"The activism of citizens has not gone anywhere," said Rafikov at the event coinciding with former leader Nazarbayev's birthday.

"To the contrary, it is getting stronger."

(K.Müller--BBZ)