Kazakhstan Arrests Ex-Intelligence Chief on Suspicion of Treason
The detention of the former head of Kazakhstan’s security
services chief on suspicion of high treason, announced on January 8, has
sparked increased speculation that President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev is struggling
to quash vicious palace infighting that could derail his attempts to take firm
control of the crisis-stricken country.
Karim Masimov—who became known as the “grey cardinal” of the
regime of Nursultan Nazarbayev, a political goliath who ruled Kazakhstan for 29
years until he was succeeded by handpicked successor and protege Tokayev in
early 2019—was detained just three days after he was fired by Tokayev from his
post as head of the National Security Committee, or KNB.
Adding to the intrigue, January 8 brought a dismissal from
Nazarbayev’s press secretary of heavy speculation that the 81-year-old
ex-leader had fled the Central Asian nation amid its unprecedented unrest.
Nazarbayev “calls on everyone to rally around the president of Kazakhstan to
overcome current challenges and ensure the integrity of the country,” Aidos
Ukibay said on Twitter. Using Nazarbayev’s state-bestowed honorific, “Elbasy”,
or “Leader of the Nation”, Aidos also stated that “Elbasy is in the capital of
Kazakhstan, Nur-Sultan”. Nazarbayev, he added, had been “holding a number of
meetings and is in direct contact with President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev” and
“held several conversations with heads of state friendly to Kazakhstan”.
Such statements from Aidos jar with the hypothesis that the
Nazarbayev clan and elite networks are fighting a rearguard action to prevent
Tokayev from using the country’s turmoil to put his own loyalists in charge of
the country’s public administration and assets. Tokayev dismissed Nazarbayev
from his position of head of the national security council on the same day that
he fired the former president’s close ally and long-time political heavyweight
Masimov and personally took over the running of the security apparatus. Whether
or not Nazarbayev willingly gave up the national security post and the state of
relations between Tokayev’s people and the Nazarbayev clan—including business
oligarch Timur Kulibayev, thought to be an ally of Masimov, who has mixed
Kazakh-Uighur ethnic heritage, twice served as prime minister and at one time
was Nazarbayev’s chief of staff—are matters that remain far from clear.
'President's nightingale'
Eurasianet, on January 8 reporting that the charges of
treason against Masimov point to the possibility that he was involved in a bid
to topple Tokayev, observed that Yermukhamet Yertysbayev—a one-time adviser to
Nazarbayev, nicknamed “the president’s nightingale” as he became known for
expressing thoughts Nazarbayev wished to put in the public domain with
plausible deniability—declared on state television that he had received
information that Kazakhstan had been targeted by an “armed rebellion” that
amounted to an “attempted coup d’etat”.
Offering evidence for his theory, Yertysbayev told Khabar TV
that his information was that an order was given to remove the security cordon
around Almaty airport just 40 minutes before protesters stormed and occupied it
on January 5. Such an order could likely only have come from the very top.
Rumours that Tokayev fears he does not have the loyalty of
the armed forces and law enforcement also remain unresolved. The suggestion is
that the president was so quick in calling for Russia and other regional allies
to send troops to help him crush the unrest because he feared the military and
police might turn on him should the protests intensify much further.
Triggering Article 4
The assistance of thousands of Russian troops, and smaller
numbers of Belarusian, Kyrgyz, Tajik and Armenian troops was secured via an
appeal to the Collective Security Treaty Organization, or CSTO. To qualify for
such CSTO assistance, Tokayev had to trigger the security bloc’s Article 4 by
declaring that the popular unrest was incited by violent and armed mobs working
with “terrorist groups trained outside the country”. However, Tokayev, who has
issued a shoot-to-kill order to soldiers going after those identified as
involved in violent unrest, has not presented any evidence that the
demonstrations have foreign or “terrorist” origins.
One person abroad who has confessed to contacting protesters
on the streets of Kazakhstan to give instructions is self-exiled France-based
Kazakh Mukhtar Ablyazov, who leads the two-decade-old Democratic Choice of
Kazakhstan (QDT) party, banned in his homeland. Ablyazov is a hugely
controversial figure. A former Kazakh energy minister, he headed one of
Kazakhstan’s largest banks, BTA Bank, from 2005 to 2009, and has refugee status
in France. However, he is a fugitive whom Kazakhstan has tried and sentenced to
life imprisonment in absentia for the murder of a former banking colleague and
the embezzlement of billions of dollars from BTA. Ablyazov—who in 2016 faced an
extradition request from Russia that was blocked by France’s highest
administrative authority as politically motivated—has suggested to news
agencies he might return to Kazakhstan to lead the “popular uprising”.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned on January 7
that Kazakhstan was pursuing a dangerous strategy by inviting in the Russian
armed forces, saying the country would find it difficult to lower Russian
influence in the wake of the move. “One lesson in recent history is that once
Russians are in your house, it’s sometimes very difficult to get them to
leave,” Blinken said.
In response, Russia's Foreign Ministry described Blinken's
comments as a "boorish attempt" at humour and defended the deployment
of CSTO troops in a Facebook post as a "totally legitimate response".
'Terrorist hotbeds'
Tokayev told Russian President Vladimir Putin in a “lengthy”
phone call that the situation in Kazakhstan was stabilising, the Kremlin said
on January 8. “At the same time, hotbeds of terrorist attacks persist.
Therefore, the fight against terrorism will continue with full determination,”
Tokayev’s office cited him as saying.
The protests erupted in the western region of Mangystau on
January 2 over the doubling in the price of subsidised liquefied petroleum gas
(LPG), used as a car fuel by many Kazakhs, before spreading and evolving into
anti-government demonstrations.
Authorities say security forces killed 26 demonstrators in
the unrest across the week, while 18 law enforcement officers died. More than
4,400 people have been arrested, the interior ministry said on January 8.
Public buildings across Kazakhstan were ransacked and
torched in what was the worst violence seen by the former Soviet republic since
it secured independence 30 years ago. Commercial capital and largest Kazakh
city Almaty, where around two million people live, was worst hit. Some
businesses and petrol stations began reopening in the city on January 8, local
media reported.
Information flows from the country have been disrupted by
the imposition of internet blackouts by the Tokayev administration.
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