Kazakhstan's Assassinated Democracy. Yerzhan Psy.D. Dosmukhamedov

Kazakhstan's Assassinated Democracy - Yerzhan Psy.D. Dosmukhamedov


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forces in Kazakhstan, or else risk the recreation of dictators who have cost the Western allies so much blood and treasure in the recent past.

      A Roadmap towards Democracy

      What should the US do now in the context of the 2011 State of the Union?

      The constant amendments on the extension of President Nazarbayev's authority, by referendum or premature elections, confirm Mr. Nazarbayev's inability to change and his plain thirst for power, not democratization.

      The world's leading democracy should therefore set out clear expectations that Kazakhstan should not lapse back into authoritarianism for yet another decade. Any legislative attempt to further curtail democratic freedoms should be strongly condemned. The best instant message would be to urge President Nazarbayev to step down and let the fair and open elections take place this year.

      One immediate step which would demonstrate President Obama’s genuine willingness to support our democracy would be to freeze all the assets of Nazarbayev, his son-in-law Timur Kulibayev, and other cronies acquired or kept in the democratic jurisdictions.

      All the prisoners of conscience – opposition activists, independent journalists, and dissidents - must be freed.

      All the political parties earlier denied official registration must be allowed to exercise their freedoms and rights.

      The Kazakh people want economic opportunity, political participation and the chance to build a better future. Young Kazakh people especially need to have a meaningful role in the decisions that shape their lives. Addressing these concerns will be challenging after 20 years of authoritarian rule by Nazarbayev, whose regime was aptly defined as "despotic" by the British Times.

      We hope that the United States will stand ready to help the democratic forces of Kazakhstan, which is highly educated, secular, geographically and culturally close to Europe and thus is a good candidate for democracy in Central Asia.

      The new amendments to the Kazakh Constitution are the road to the final execution of the remaining democracy. If this wrong turn is again ignored by the United States and its democratic allies, it will be paved by new assassinations, economic mismanagement, tortures, religious discrimination, corruption, misery, and the poverty of millions of ordinary Kazakhs.

      The naive unwillingness of the US administration to stop the ever-growing appetite of President Nazarbayev and his highly corrupt family and cronies, in exchange for US aircraft flying rights or lucrative uranium and oil transactions, says more than the sincerity of President Obama's commitment to defend democracy around the world. We Kazakhstanis pay too high a price for miscalculations by the US administration.

      We still trust Western democracies, so when the change comes, I surmise the vacuum will be filled with democratic and progressive ideals, not the anti-Western extremism of an impoverished and angered nation hopelessly disappointed in the Western approach to development.

      We hope that the current administration will get on the right side of history and at last give us its hand of support.

      THE MOCKERY OF DEMOCRACY

      Der Standard (Austria)

      14 January 2010

      Dr. Yerzhan Dosmukhamedov is Chairman of the Kazakhstan opposition party "Atameken" and lives in London since 2007. He served as advisor to Timur Kulibayev, son-in-law of the President of Kazakhstan, at the National petroleum company "KazMunaiGaz", and deputy ambassador to Germany.

      For the first time an Asiatic, post-Soviet and predominantly muslim Republic of Kazakhstan has taken charge of the Organisation for Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

      The world's major human rights defender is headed by the despotic and anti-democratic regime for the first time in its history.

      Kazakhstan's chairmanship undermines the integrity of the institution's fundamental principles.

      Kazakhstan's human rights record may now rival Zimbabwe and Burma in its ferocity. Facts speak for themselves:

      Prominent opposition leaders like Altynbek Sarsenbayev were killed in Kazakhstan by the KGB special forces.

      President Nazarbayev amended the Constitution and proclaimed himself a president for life literally after the decision by 55 OSCE member-states to grant Kazakhstan the 2010 Presidency.

      The recently released documentary book by the exiled former Kazakh Ambassador to the OSCE and chief of the KGB confirms the fact of gross falsification of the presidential elections which makes the regime illegitimate, but still acceptable for the OSCE presidency.

      The Kazakh journalists operate in an environment of anxiety, facing intimidating lawsuits, personal threats and physical attacks. Just four months ago, Ramazan Yesergepov, my friend and editor of an opposition newspaper Alma Ata Info, was jailed for reporting on the KGB anti-democratic methods of activities.

      Public assembly is very tightly controlled, and any politically motivated public meeting is to be denied a permit or broken up by police, or both.

      The 2009 Report by the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture has now officially confirmed the state-sponsored practice of torture in Kazakhstan.

      President Nazarbayev has been delaying the full registration of our political party - ATAMEKEN - for more than 3 years since its Founding Convention held on 27 October 2006. The archaic reason is my refusal to give him a secret oath of personal loyalty on the Quran and thus become his puppet to fool the Kazakh people and Western public opinion. This procedure is not stipulated by the Constitution. Thus, my party's refusal to be a pseudo-democratic rattle in the hands of the dictator prevents it from official registration. My relatives remaining in Kazakhstan have become hostages in order to control my mind and political activities.

      All the above facts prove a genetic systemic unwillingness of Nazarbayev's regime to transform Kazakhstan into a genuinely democratic society.

      US and European politicians, who made the decision to grant Kazakhstan the OSCE presidency, were well aware of the above facts. They were therefore insincere when publicly arguing that the presidency of the OSCE will contribute to the process of democratization of Kazakhstan.

      My colleagues and I feel betrayed by the US and Europe. We are convinced that the decision was bought by the despotic regime's petrodollars to perpetuate its survival and further crackdown on the remaining political opposition.

      After a short-sighted endorsement given by Western leaders to dictator Nazarbayev, Europe must now show unwavering support for democratic forces in Kazakhstan, the last hope of the entire Central Asian region, or else risk the recreation of dictators that have cost the Western allies so much blood and treasure in the recent past.

      Yerzhan Dosmukhamedov

      THE BOOK "THE GODFATHER-IN-LAW" CONFIRMS THE GENETICALLY INHUMANE AND ANTIDEMOCRATIC NATURE OF THE NAZARBAYEV REGIME

      Radio "Liberty" (USA)

      28 May 2009

      In an interview with the radio station "Liberty" the leader of the Atameken party speaks about his impressions of the recently released book "The Godfather-in-law" by Rakhat Aliyev.

      Dr Dosmukhamedov, are you aware of any reaction by the West, particularly in political circles, to the book by Rakhat Aliyev? How was it received by the Western press?

      The reaction was rather critical of the current ruling regime in Kazakhstan. I yesterday read an interview of Mr Aliyev by the Spiegel magazine, a report by the Financial Times and some other major Western newspapers.

      Definitely, the book has already attracted a significant interest in the Western press, from analysts and in political circles. I think that the snowball of the West's attention has just started to roll.

      Do you think that


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