"MOSCOW — Thousands of people
returned to the streets across Kazakhstan on Wednesday for a fourth straight
day of demonstrations driven by outrage over surging gas prices, in the biggest
wave of protests to sweep the oil-rich country for decades.
Protesters stormed government
buildings and captured police vehicles despite a strict state of emergency and
government attempts to concede to their demands, including by dismissing the
cabinet and announcing the possible dissolution of Parliament, which would
result in new elections. Kazakhtelecom, the country’s largest
telecommunications company, shut off internet access throughout the country on
Wednesday afternoon.
Anger has been building since
Sunday, when Kazakhs began protesting after the government lifted price caps
for liquefied petroleum gas — frequently referred to by its initials, L.P.G. —
and the cost of the fuel doubled.
Many people in the country of 19
million found the price increase particularly infuriating because Kazakhstan is
an exporter of oil and gas. It added to the economic misery in a country where
the coronavirus pandemic has exacerbated severe income inequality.
In the days since, demonstrators
have demanded the ouster of the authoritarian political forces that have ruled
the country without any substantial opposition since it achieved independence
from the Soviet Union in 1991.
The developments have plunged
Kazakhstan, which had been regarded as politically and economically stable and
is at the heart of what President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia sees as the
Kremlin’s sphere of influence, into chaos and upheaval.
The president of Kazakhstan,
Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, announced on Wednesday that he was dismissing the prime
minister and his entire cabinet, and imposing a strict two-week state of
emergency in much of the country.
After these measures failed to
appease the protesters, Mr. Tokayev made another televised address, announcing
his decision to assume all formal levers of power and promising to “act with
maximum toughness.”
Mr. Tokayev said that he now led the
country’s Security Council, a role previously occupied by Nursultan Nazarbayev,
Kazakhstan’s longtime leader, who handpicked Mr. Tokayev as his successor.
Mr. Nazarbayev is formally
recognized as “leader of the nation,” and the country’s capital was renamed in
his honor in 2019 to “Nur Sultan.” He has been regarded by many as the shadow
leader of Kazakhstan despite a formal transition of power to Mr. Tokayev.
On Tuesday, Mr. Tokayev dismissed
Samat Abish, Mr. Nazarbayev’s nephew, from the position of first deputy head of
the country’s national security service.
Speaking about the unrest, Mr.
Tokayev said the protests were “highly organized” as part of a “meticulously
thought-out plan of conspirators, who were motivated financially.” He said that
people had been “killed and wounded” and that “crowds of bandit elements beat
and mocked servicemen, took them naked through the streets, abused women, and
robbed shops.”
On Tuesday he imposed a state of
emergency including an overnight curfew; restrictions on movement, including
curbs on entering and leaving Almaty, the country’s biggest city; and a ban on
mass gatherings.
The government blocked social
networking sites and chat apps including Facebook, WhatsApp, Telegram and, for
the first time, the Chinese app WeChat. All public protests without a permit
were already illegal.
In spite of the government’s
attempts to quell the protests, footage posted online on Wednesday showed
thousands of people storming the main government building in Almaty.
Smoke billowed from City Hall as the
crowd began to disperse. The regional branch of the Nur Otan party, which is
without opposition in Parliament, was also set on fire, according to local news
media reports, as was the former presidential residence.
News services reported renewed
clashes between protesters and the police, who used stun grenades and tear gas
to quell the crowd. Protesters also set fire to the prosecutor’s office in
Almaty and then headed to the president’s residence.
According to the Almaty police, more
than 500 civilians were beaten and protesters burned 120 cars, including 33
police vehicles, and damaged about 400 businesses. More than 200 have been
detained.
The protests began on Sunday in the
southwestern oil town of Zhanaozen, where at least 16 oil workers striking for
improved working conditions were killed by the police in 2011. The public
displays of anger quickly spread across the country.
In Aktau, a city on the Caspian Sea
which serves as the country’s main oil and gas processing hub, protesters
stormed the Akimat, the local government building. Local activists tried to
control the crowd and prevent violence, according to Mukhtar Umbetov, a rights
activist who took part in the protest.
The gas price increase was a spark
that ignited long-simmering discontent over the past few years over income
disparities in the resource-rich country, Mr. Umbetov said.
The coronavirus pandemic has
exacerbated inequality, with rapidly rising prices hitting the poor the
hardest, he said. The main problem, however, was more fundamental: The Kazakh
government, he said, “has removed all legal ways to participate in politics.”
“People don’t have any political
intermediaries who would solve problems that exist in the country,” he said in
a phone interview from Aktau. “Kazakhstan is rich, but its natural resources
are not working in the interests of all — they work in the interests of a small
group of people.”
The income disparity was
particularly stinging during the holiday season, he said. Although some Kazakhs
went on vacation in Dubai, he said, most had to figure out how to survive on
meager salaries.
The average salary in Kazakhstan is
the equivalent of $570 a month, according to the local statistics
authority. Most people earn only a fraction of that amount, according to Mr.
Umbetov, with the average skewed in favor of oil industry workers.
As the protests have unfolded, the
demands of the demonstrators have expanded to include a broader political
liberalization. Among the changes they seek is the direct election of
Kazakhstan’s regional leaders by voters; in the current system, they are
directly appointed by the president.
For almost 30 years, Kazakhstan was
ruled by Mr. Nazarbayev, a former Communist Party boss, who is now 81.
The ascension of Mr. Tokayev created
two centers of power. Mr. Nazarbayev and his family enjoy wide authority, while
the new president, even though he is loyal to his predecessor, is trying to
carve out a stronger role for himself, disorienting Kazakhstan’s bureaucracy
and elites. This divide has contributed to the government’s slow reaction to
the protesters’ demands, according to Arkady Dubnov, a Central Asia expert in
Moscow.
“The government has been slow
because it is divided and has no idea what young people in Kazakhstan really
want,” Mr. Dubnov said. “On the other hand, the protesters don’t have a leader
who would articulate it clearly.”"
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