New Eastern Europe - November-December 2017

(Ben Green) #1

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“It is quite unbelievable to even picture such a situation but I won’t be surprised
if some local young men show support to such little green men,” Anatoliy, a retiree
strolling through the city’s main pedestrian street in a recent autumn afternoon,
suggests. “But we are living in peace in Kazakhstan, so I simply cannot see such a
scenario unfold.”
Another city resident in his mid-thirties, who refused to give his name, said he
did not see any conditions for such a situation to develop because “we have too
many police and other security forces in the country. People do not even discuss
the situation and talk about it because it is so unrealistic.”

No room for separatism

Kazakh authorities closely monitor the media and the internet and harshly pun-
ish what is deemed an incitement of interethnic or social strife. In December 2016,
a court in the North Kazakhstan region sentenced a local resident to five and a half
years in prison for online posts calling for separating the northern Kazakh regions
and incorporating them into Russia. Kazakhstan also
has a history of local separatist incidents. In 1999, for
instance, Kazakh security forces thwarted an attempt
by a Russian citizen, named Viktor Kazimirchuk, and
21 of his accomplices (both Kazakh and Russian citi-
zens) to seize power in the East Kazakhstan region and
establish a breakaway Russian republic. The members
of the group received lengthy prison terms but since
their conviction was in 2000, they have long been re-
leased.
“Hypothetically speaking, there may be such peo-
ple [supporting armed men in green uniforms] but
for this to happen there should be a certain situation like the one that emerged in
Ukraine, when the previous government collapsed and a new government started
discriminating against ethnic Russians. In reality, there are no conditions for this
situation to emerge in Kazakhstan”, Chebotarev, an expert in Almaty, explained.
Yaroslav Razumov, an Almaty-based journalist, believes that the Crimean sce-
nario could not be repeated in Kazakhstan because of different historical, social
and political links between Crimea and eastern Ukrainian regions with Russia
and Kazakhstan’s northern regions with Russia. Yet, he admits that the Ukrainian
events have revived old phobias in Kazakhstan. “The calm and ideology-free analy-
sis shows, and I am fully convinced, that the Crimean scenario cannot be staged in

Kazakh authorities
closely monitor
social media and
harshly punish
what they deem
to be incitement
of interethnic or
social strife.

Opinion & Analysis The crawling threat of the Crimea scenario, Naubet Bisenov
Free download pdf