Accessibility links

Breaking News

Qishloq Ovozi (Archive)

Sooronbai Jeenbekov addresses supporters during a campaign event in the village of Nyrmambet on October 8.
Sooronbai Jeenbekov addresses supporters during a campaign event in the village of Nyrmambet on October 8.

Sooronbai Jeenbekov has won Kyrgyzstan’s presidential election by a wider margin than anyone could have predicted during the campaign.

It was apparent several weeks ahead of polling day that the election would essentially be a contest between Jeenbekov, the candidate from the Social Democratic Party of Kyrgyzstan (SDPK) who had the support of incumbent President Almazbek Atambaev, and Omurbek Babanov, the multimillionaire leader of the Respublika party.

But polls by media outlets and predictions by the pundits suggested a much closer race than was actually the case on October 15.

Barely an hour after polls closed, preliminary results already showed Jeenbekov receiving more than 900,000 votes, easily more than the 50 percent-plus-one vote needed to be declared the outright winner of the election.

Kyrgyzstan’s Central Election Commission said some 1.65 million eligible voters cast ballots.

Babanov will undoubtedly challenge the results.

As voters were still casting ballots, Babanov declared, “There is no fair election today.… Law enforcement authorities are interfering with the election. Is this what they call a fair election?”

Babanov’s complaints are unlikely to change anything. Atambaev anticipated such a response, saying as he voted on October 15 that “nobody will allow any nullification of the election results. Whoever the people elect will be elected.”

The final weeks of the campaign were marred by attacks on Babanov by some state media outlets, who insinuated the candidate had connections to oligarchs in Kazakhstan, especially after he met with Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbaev on September 19; accused Babanov of inciting Kyrgyzstan’s ethnic Uzbeks to violence during a speech in southern Kyrgyzstan at the end of September; and said he may have been part of a plot to unleash a campaign of unrest in Kyrgyzstan if he lost.

An election campaign banner for Sooronbai Jeenbekov in the village of Kok-Zhar, near Bishkek
An election campaign banner for Sooronbai Jeenbekov in the village of Kok-Zhar, near Bishkek

Jeenbekov was equally dogged by accusations that administrative resources were being used to boost his chances on election day, accusations that will likely be repeated in the coming days as many question how Jeenbekov was able to gather so many votes.

For months there has been the question of who would win. But equally important was the question of how any announcement of victory would be received by Kyrgyzstan’s population.

The specter of revolutions in Kyrgyzstan in 2005 and 2010 that ousted previous presidents haunted this latest campaign. It remains to be seen how the country’s people will react to an outcome that just a few weeks ago seemed all but impossible.

There will be many doubts expressed about the results of the October 15 presidential election.

Babanov might have lost officially, but he still received more than one-third of the votes cast, including nearly 90 percent of the votes cast in his native Talas Province.

Much now will depend on whether Babanov gracefully accepts the results of this election.

As the apparent victor, Jeenbekov inherits a raft of problems, foremost the current feud with Kazakhstan, touched off by Atambaev’s continued criticism of what he believes was Kazakh interference in the election.

Atambaev’s public jabs at Kazakhstan, and at Nazarbaev, led Kazakhstan to tighten control over border crossings with Kyrgyzstan on October 10, a situation that remained as of election day in Kyrgyzstan.

Since Atambaev publicly supported Jeenebekov, it will likely now fall to Kyrgyzstan’s president-elect to figure out how to repair this damage to relations with one of Kyrgyzstan’s key partners, especially since, as Kazakh officials reminded, Kyrgyzstan’s main routes to the outside world run through Kazakhstan.

And while Jeenbekov vowed to continue the policies of Atambaev, many question how effective Atambaev’s policies have actually been for Kyrgyzstan.

While Kyrgyzstan has not suffered unrest under Atambaev, the country is far from prosperous, with hundreds of thousands of Kyrgyz working abroad as migrant laborers, mainly in Russia and Kazakhstan, making Kyrgyzstan one of the most remittance-dependent countries in the world.

There are still no signs Kyrgyzstan’s economic prospects stand to improve anytime soon.

And there is the security problem.

Since citizens of Kyrgyzstan are accused of being involved in the deadly bombing of the St. Petersburg subway in April, Kyrgyzstan’s security forces have been hunting for, and finding, people allegedly connected to extremist groups.

Detentions of such people are reported regularly now, whereas not long ago such detentions happened but were infrequent, raising the question of just how bad Islamic militancy is in Kyrgyzstan.

Jeenbekov’s victory -- with some 55 percent of the vote -- represents the smallest percentage of votes ever received by a winner in a presidential election in Kyrgyzstan. So while Jeenbekov may have won, his mandate is not as solid as those of any of his predecessors.

The views expressed in this blog post do not necessarily reflect those of RFE/RL.
Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov (file photo)
Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov (file photo)

A familiar kind of weird is returning to Turkmenistan.

President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov’s recent decrees seem like echoes from more than a decade ago, when his predecessor, Saparmurat Niyazov, was in power.

About 11 years after independence, Niyazov started raising the status of a body called Halk Maslahaty, a group numbering between 2,000 and 3,000 with representatives from various sectors of the government, the business world, state enterprises, and social organizations.

In Niyazov’s case, the decision came after a reported attempt on his life in November 2002. Authorities apprehended many of the alleged perpetrators, but the details of the plot were never made clear. However, it appears to have involved killing Niyazov, then getting parliament to recognize a new leader.

The logic for boosting the powers of the Halk Maslahaty, eventually to a position higher than parliament, seemed to be that it would be difficult to assemble the more than 2,000 members quickly to make any decision, thus harder for a coup to receive official status from the completely compliant parliament.

Berdymukhammedov came to power at the end of 2006, shortly after Niyazov's death, and eliminated the Halk Maslahaty in 2008.

Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov (left) presents a Turkmen shepherd dog, an Alabai, to his surprised Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, during a meeting in Sochi on October 11, 2017.
Turkmen President Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov (left) presents a Turkmen shepherd dog, an Alabai, to his surprised Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, during a meeting in Sochi on October 11, 2017.


Now, about 11 years after he came to power, for reasons that are not clear, he is essentially recreating the body.

Berdymukhammedov already said after his reelection in February 2017 that the Elders Council would become the highest legislative body in the country; now he says younger colleagues will be admitted.

An anonymous, but clearly knowledgeable, author did a thorough job covering the new People’s Council for Eurasia Net.

Berdymukhammedov is also shaking up national holidays.

Independence Day, which was coming up on October 27, is being moved to September 27.

That was the final day of the 10-day Asian Indoor and Martial Arts Games (AIMAG) that Turkmenistan hosted last month.

However, it seems that for this year, at least, Independence Day will be on October 27, as scheduled, as people throughout the country are being driven to stadiums for marching drills, or “marshirovkas,” as part of rehearsals for any major celebrations in Turkmenistan. But next year, Independence Day celebrations will remind people of the country’s glory on the day AIMAG was concluded.

Flag Day is being shifted from February 19, the day it has been marked since it became an official holiday in 1997, to May 18.

May 18 is Constitution Day; henceforth it will also be Flag Day.

February 19 was not only Flag Day, it was Niyazov’s birthday.

No holiday will be marked on February 19 from now on.

Constitution Day was already a dual holiday as it also marked the birthday of legendary 18th century Turkmen poet Magtumguly.

Magtumguly’s birthday is being moved -- from now on, it will be marked on June 27, which, by less than amazing coincidence, happens to be Berdymukhammedov’s birthday.

Strangely, however, June 27 will not be a day off work.

The Soviet-era Victory Day, May 9, marking the end of World War II is now just a regular day in Turkmenistan.

Other holidays -- New Year's; International Women’s Day; Navruz, the Day of Commemoration and National Mourning; October 6 (marking the anniversary of the devastating 1948 earthquake that hit the Ashgabat area); and Neutrality Day, December 12, remain as they were.

Berdymukhammedov demonstrated his blade-and-gun skills in a bizarre video early this year that made him look like a Hollywood action-hero.
Berdymukhammedov demonstrated his blade-and-gun skills in a bizarre video early this year that made him look like a Hollywood action-hero.

The shuffle of holidays seems reminiscent of the August 2002 decision, officially from the Halk Maslahaty, to rename the days of the week and months of the year, which was, of course, President Niyazov’s idea, and something else Berdymukhammedov eliminated after coming to power.

In his recent remarks, Berdymukhammedov also made some impossible promises, such as spending a lot of money Turkmenistan does not currently have on boosting production of oil and natural gas, Turkmenistan’s major exports.

It’s okay if he doesn’t because Turkmenistan doesn’t have customers for the oil and gas it produces right now.

Okay, at the Qishloq we’re used to “weird” and “Turkmenistan.”

That’s been going on for years.

But it used to be infrequent blasts of erratic or eccentric behavior.

Turkmenistan was normally the isolationist country its leadership wants it to be and it rarely generated any news.

Since 2016, Turkmenistan is a different country.

Strange decrees, reshuffling of officials, restructuring of the government, and antics by Berdymukhammedov are regular events lately.

RFE/RL Turkmen Service Director Farruh Yusupov contributed to this report
The views expressed in this blog post do not necessarily reflect those of RFE/RL.

Load more

About This Blog

Qishloq Ovozi is a blog by RFE/RL Central Asia specialist Bruce Pannier that aims to look at the events that are shaping Central Asia and its respective countries, connect the dots to shed light on why those processes are occurring, and identify the agents of change.​

The name means "Village Voice" in Uzbek. But don't be fooled, Qishloq Ovozi is about all of Central Asia.

Subscribe

Blog Archive
XS
SM
MD
LG