Chaos In Kazakhstan
The protests that erupted across Kazakhstan on 2 January
quickly turned into riots in all of the country’s major cities. What do the
protesters want, and what will be the outcome of the country’s most severe
civil unrest since independence in 1991?
Although the initial trigger was a doubling of fuel prices,
the protesters soon demanded the dissolution of parliament and new elections.
Moreover, they want former President Nursultan Nazarbayev to exit the political
scene for good.
Nazarbayev, the country’s ruler for the first 30 years of
independence, gave up the presidency in 2019, but not before having himself
named “leader of the nation” and thus ensuring that he would maintain a tight
grip on the country’s politics.
Protesters toppled a statue of him in Taldykorgan, the
capital of the Almaty region, with chants of “Shal ket!” (“Old man, go away!”).
As of 7 January, clashes had killed dozens of law
enforcement officials and demonstrators, and Nazarbayev’s hand-picked
successor, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, had declared a state of emergency
and requested assistance from the Kremlin. Russian President Vladimir Putin
quickly answered the call, deploying Russian troops to help quell the protests.
Tokayev has given the security forces permission to “fire without warning” on
protesters.
With conditions on the ground changing by the hour, it is
too early to predict how the confrontation will end. Nonetheless, some
preliminary conclusions are already possible.
For starters, the authorities clearly panicked when the
protests erupted. How else to explain Tokayev’s frantic call for foreign troops
to enter the country to impose order? Instead of recognising that the protests
are an angry – and predictable – response to the government’s own policies, he
has conjured the spectre of an external aggressor.
Tokayev claims that the rioters received extensive training
abroad. In his appeal to the members of the Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO) he insisted that his government needed help to overcome a
“terrorist threat.” But the rationale for appealing to the CSTO remains in
question: Why would any other country bother to offer “serious training” to
“bandit formations” to disrupt Kazakhstan’s regional centres?
By calling on Putin, Tokayev has made a risky bet. What
would happen if Russian paratroopers started mowing down Kazakhstani women or
children, or if a Russian military helicopter were to crash in some densely
populated area? Any such event would deepen the crisis, as well as the scale of
Russia’s intervention. In fact, it is hard to see how the presence of CSTO
“peacekeepers” could do anything other than inflame the situation and awaken
anti-Russian and nationalist sentiment in Kazakhstan.
Obviously, the real issue concerns the government’s own competence
and legitimacy. With well-trained police and security forces and a fully
equipped army, why couldn’t the authorities manage the protests on their own?
Most likely, they could have done so.
But by seeking Putin’s help, Tokayev hopes to shape the internal
situation in ways that will buttress his own rule vis-à-vis rival factions.
And, indeed, Tokayev is clearly worried, having ordered the detention of Karim
Massimov, a former chairman of the National Security Committee, on suspicion of
treason.
Although the protests and rallies initially were relatively
peaceful, comprising mostly young men and women, organised groups showed up on
4 January and started seizing warehouses and weapons. The government’s official
line is that these groups are foreign mercenaries; but that claim does not
withstand scrutiny.
Since Kazakhstan neighbours my own country, I know
first-hand that it has an effective border service. The idea that several
thousand foreigners could suddenly appear in the country, undetected, is nonsense.
It is far more likely that these quasi-military groups
received special training and funding from local oligarchs who are seeking to
influence events in their own favour. According to former Kazakhstani officials
with whom I have communicated, some of this support has even come from
officials who are currently in power.
Yermukhamet Yertysbayev, a former minister of information
and ex-adviser to Nazarbayev, recently acknowledged that, “The National
Security Committee of Kazakhstan for years hid information about the training
camps of militants in the country.” There are well-founded rumours that the
Nazarbayev family, which was ousted from power during the protests, is trying
to use these military groups to regain influence.
These oligarchs reportedly want to be able to mobilise
paramilitary groups to influence elections. Their preparations often take place
under the cover of oligarch-sponsored “sports clubs,” where young people
gather, train, and receive cash allowances. (One can find similar schemes in my
country.)
While these informal groups have been deepening their roots
in Kazakhstan for many years, the current crisis seems to have brought them to
the surface. Several organised-crime figures have “unexpectedly” returned to
Kazakhstan from abroad.
According to the Kazakh Interior Ministry, “Six members of
the organised criminal group, led by Dikii [Wild] Arman [Dzhumageldiev], were
detained during a special operation by the Almaty police department.”
We know that these “thieves in law” – a typical phenomenon
in post-Soviet politics – hold real authority, especially among unemployed
youth. The question, then, is whose interests they are serving.
If the riots and more violent forms of protest really are
being fuelled by these shadow groups, there simply are no legal grounds for
introducing CSTO troops into Kazakhstan. What started as a protest over
socioeconomic issues has quickly escalated into a chaotic battle among
oligarchs for political influence.
And, because the demonstrations were driven not by the
organised opposition, but by ordinary citizens, the authorities can
conveniently dismiss participants as opportunistic bandits, hooligans, and
looters, rather than seeking a settlement through dialogue.
But I believe that Kazakhstan will soon become a country
where there is no room for corruption, authoritarianism, and nepotism. The
Kazakh people will no longer allow this.
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