The Economist - UK (2022-03-26)

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TheEconomistMarch26th 2022 Asia 51

CentralAsiaandUkraine

SilentStans


I


t wasoncepart oftheSovietUnion,
shares along border with Russiaand
countsamongitscitizensa largeethnic­
Russianminority.Russiannationalistslay
claimtoswathesofitsterritoryandPresi­
dentVladimirPutinhasinthepastcastas­
persionsonitsstatehood.GennadyZyuga­
nov,theleaderofRussia’sCommunistPar­
ty,hasaccuseditofRussophobiaandthe
oppression of Russian­speakers. Little
wonderthenthatKazakhstaniswatching
MrPutin’sinvasionofUkrainewithappre­
hensionvergingonhorror.
Thewarhassetnervesjanglingacross
CentralAsia.The“Stans”,astheregion’s
five post­Soviet states are known, are,
broadlyspeaking,alliesofRussia.Butthe
aggressiveexpansionism oftheirformer
colonialmasteristestingthatfriendship
tothelimit.Noneofthecountrieshascon­
demnedtheinvasion.Butnorhasanyof­
feredpublicsupportorsuccumbedtopres­
suretofollowMrPutin’sleadandrecog­
nisethebreakawayregionsofLuhanskand
DonetskineasternUkraine.Ata voteinthe
unGeneralAssemblydeploringtheinva­
sion,onMarch2nd,threeabstainedand
twosimplydidnotshowup.
Kazakhstan,thebiggestandrichestof
thelot,haslongcultivatedwarmrelations
withRussia.Itisa memberofa collective­
securitytreatywithitsbiggerneighbour,
alongwitha handfulofothercountriesin­
cludingKyrgyzstanandTajikistan.InJanu­
ary,whenprotestsinseveralcitiesturned
violentandthreatenedtodestabilisethe
country, Kassym­Zhomart Tokayev, Ka­
zakhstan’spresident,invokedthetreaty’s
mutual­defenceclauseandaskedforhelp
fromMrPutin,whodulydelivered.Butthe

countryalsoenjoysgoodrelationswiththe
WestandhasnodesiretojoinRussiaasan
internationalpariah.MrTokayevhassaid
thathispriorityistosafeguardKazakh­
stan’s“security,sovereignty,territorialin­
tegrity”.HeistheonlyCentralAsianleader
to have spoken to Volodymyr Zelensky,
Ukraine’spresident,sincetheinvasionbe­
gan.(HehasregularchatswithMrPutin.)
Hehasofferedtomediate.
Mostcountriesaretreadinga fineline.
AuthoritiesinAlmaty,Kazakhstan’slargest
city, have allowed anti­war protests—
thoughonlyonce—andKazakhpolicehave
fineddriversdisplayingtheletterZ,a sym­
bolofMrPutin’sinvasion.Yettwobloggers
knownforanti­Russianrhetorichavebeen
jailed, too. Uzbekistan has supported
Ukraine’sterritorialintegrityanddeclined
torecognisethebreakawayrepublics.But
ithas alsoleant onjournalists who are
noisilysympathetictoUkraine.
Kyrgyzstan,whichhostsa Russianmil­
itary base, hascome closest to offering
(muted)supportforRussia.MrPutin’srec­
ognition of Luhansk and Donetsk may
havebeen“anecessarymeasuretoprotect
thecivilianpopulation”,musedSadyrJa­
parov,thepresident,onFacebook.Butthat
was beforetheinvasion. Sincethen his
publicstancehasbeenoneofneutrality.
Uppermostinhismindmaybetheposi­
tionofmillionsofKyrgyzmigrantswork­
inginRussia.Thatisalsoa concernforre­
mittance­dependentTajikistan,whichhas
maintaineda studiedsilence.Sohasisola­
tionist Turkmenistan, which barely ac­
knowledgeswhatishappeningintheout­
sideworldandisinanycasebusyestab­
lishinga politicaldynastyasSerdarBerdy­
mukhamedov,itsnewpresident,assumes
powerfromhisfather,Gurbanguly.
Whatever their leaders’ diplomatic
manoeuvres,it willbehardfortheStansto
avoidtheeconomicfallout.The rouble’s
collapse hasdraggeddowntheircurren­
cies.TheKyrgyzstanisomhasplungedby
15%sincetheinvasionstartedandtheKaz­
akhstanitengeby14%.Inpart,thatisbe­
causeremittancesfromRussiaarelikelyto

slump,too:bya thirdinKyrgyzstananda
fifthinTajikistan,reckonstheWorldBank.
Thatwillhurt.Remittancesareworthnear­
lya thirdofgdpinKyrgyzstanandovera
quarterofgdpinTajikistan.
Kazakhstan,TurkmenistanandUzbek­
istanareenergy­richandmayhopetocash
inonbuoyantoilandgasprices.Buteven
thatcan be held hostage.Russia saysa
pipeline,whichcrossesitsterritorytothe
BlackSeaandcarriesmostKazakhoil,may
closeforrepairsfortwomonths.Themove
isseenbymanyasa responsetosanctions,
with Kazakhstan as collateral damage.
“ThereisthisfamoussayingthatifRussia
sneezes,Kazakhstangetsa cold,”saysa se­
niorKazakhofficial.“Thiswillbe nota
sneezebut perhapspneumonia, andwe
willgetcovidorsomething.” n

A LMATYANDTASHKENT
SupportforVladimirPutin’sinvasion
hasbeenconspicuousbyitsabsence

UZB
EKI
STA
N

Dushanbe

Tashkent

Bishkek Almaty

Novorossiysk

Nur-Sultan

Novosibirsk Krasnoyask

Tehran Ashgabat

Kyiv

Baku

RUSSIA

KAZAKHSTAN

IRAN
IRAQ

TURKEY

SYRIA

UKRAINE

GEORGIA

AZER.
ARM.

KYRGYZSTAN

TAJIKISTAN

Caspian CHINA
Sea

Yekaterinburg

Aral
Sea

TURK
MEN
ISTA
N

Donetsk and Luhansk
(partially controlled by
pro-Russian separatists)

Ukrainian
territory
annexed
byRussia

Black Oil pipeline
Sea

500 km

SouthKorea

Yoon’s first move


A


rranged in twostraight lines as if in
formation,  protesters  outside  South
Korea’s  defence  ministry  pumped  their
fists in time with a martial beat. “How ma­
ny livelihoods are going to be killed by this
move?”  one  demonstrator  shouted.  Ordi­
narily they would be found in Gwanghwa­
mun,  a  wide  plaza  a  few  hundred  metres
from the presidential palace, known as the
Blue House after the azure tiles on its soar­
ing roof. But news that Yoon Suk­yeol, the
president­elect, wants to move the admin­
istration  to  the  ministry  complex,  a  few
miles south, had brought them to its gates. 
Mr Yoon revealed his decision at a press
conference  two  days  earlier,  on  March
20th.  He  described  the  Blue  House,  nes­
tling at the foot of an imposing mountain
and  sequestered  behind  security  barri­
cades and a long driveway, as an “isolated
royal  palace”  and  a  “symbol  of  imperial
power”. Instead, the man from the conser­
vative  People  Power  Party  plans  to  bring
power closer to said people upon his inau­
guration on May 10th. An existing building
within the defence ministry’s grounds is to
be converted into the presidential office (a
residence  has  yet  to  be  decided).  A  new
park will be built around it, giving citizens
a view of their government hard at work. It
is  in  keeping  with  Mr  Yoon’s  victory­
speech  promise  to  “listen  to  the  valuable
opinions of the people”.
The people’s opinion is that it is a waste
of money and a risk to national security. Mr
Yoon’s transition team estimates the price
tag at just under 50bn won ($40m). But that

S EOUL
The president-elect wants to be close to
the people. They would rather not
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