KZBlog is going down (2)
After some thought, I have decided not to renew KZBLog’s lease. As you may have noticed, I don’t do a lot of posting here anymore. I don’t have time to blog regularly. Thus I am taking the site down–it does generate some ad revenue but not as much as it costs to keep it up. […]
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Always nervous when I turn on CNN and they are giving a bio of someone famous–RIP Dennis Hopper
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Anyone know any international retail stores that ship to KZ? Need to order some stuff.
“An individual must never forget those public forces that bestow trust upon him and support him.” (Comments Off on “An individual must never forget those public forces that bestow trust upon him and support him.”)
Interfax has an interview with Yermukhamet Yertysbayev, advisor to the President and former Minister of Information and Culture, where he discusses the “Leader of the Nation” law.
In the interview, Yertysbayev claimed that there was nothing unusual about the speed with which the law went through Parliament:
Decisions of that kind are usually made very quickly. The same happened in 1991 when presidential elections were announced quite unexpectedly and Nursultan Nazarbayev was elected president uncontested on December 1…The Kazakh elite was no less surprised in 1995 when the president’s term was extended and the Constitution adopted. There is no point in waiting till June 25 when we have a one-party parliament where all the seats are occupied by the members of the Nur Otan Party who adhere to a strict party discipline.
He also later points out that NurOtan, in contrast to the opposition, has “ideological monism and iron discipline”.
As to whether the President will veto the law, Yertysbayev would advise against doing so because it would show a lack of faith in the Parliament which respects the President. Vetoing this proposal would hurt his position as keeper of stability and steady development…”as long as his stays in office till 2020.” Is the reference to 2020 a figure of speech or is there some kind of plan for Nazarbayev to retire in 10 years time?
As for rumors as to whether the President will step down soon, Yertysbayev says:
Theoretically, it may happen this year, but I am strongly against it. The people of Kazakhstan gave their trust and support to Nazarbayev in December 2005. It’s his duty to remain in power until December 2012.
He goes on to say that the President is not at all a power hungry dictator, and he rarely asks people to obey him without questioning him: “He can be argued with, though with caution, and even convinced.” And he has no intention of trying to control his successor, since his successor will naturally seek the President’s advice anyway: “I totally disagree with the opinion that the second Kazakh President will be fully accountable to Nursultan Nazarbayev, a leader of the nation….You must understand that the next president will be asking Nazarbayev for advice on strategic issues in foreign and domestic policy, even if the law on the leader of the nation never comes into force.”
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Why language policy needs to be handled delicately RT @neweurasia: More on Language http://bit.ly/9SjSM2
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I hope the Council of Elders under the new National Doctrine is as cool as this: http://councilofelders.net/
Kak Belii Chelovek (6)
Another foray into Cosmopolitian, Kazakhstan edition (I read it for the articles) led me to an ad for Garner Light, a skin whitener. Full disclosure: The ad pictured here isn’t the exact ad printed in the Cosmo I read. I was disturbed that l’Oreal felt that there was a market for skin whitener in Kazakhstan.
In Russian there is an expression, “like white people” which means to do something like normal people, in the proper way. Before a night of drinking several years ago, a Kazakh friend of mine once surveyed the table full of snacks like anchovies, pickles, sausage, croutons, ham and pig fat and said, “Now we are sitting down like white people.” I laughed because of course white Americans don’t eat any of these things when drinking, but he explained that in this case “white” had no racial undertones. When I see ads like this one, I wonder how much that is true. Do Kazakhs really feel whiter skin is more beautiful or is this a big mistake?
Of course in light of this study by CNN, I can’t condemn internalized racism on the part of Kazakhs too much.
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RT @robertsreport: A Kazakh prankster in DC? Zhovtis pic outside KZ embassy sent to me by some Kuat Dikibaev… http://twitpic.com/1qwmma
Periodic Review By OHCHR (1)
Recently in Geneva, the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights conducted its periodic review of Kazakhstan and it’s adherence to the Convention on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Every 3-years all signatories to the convention have to be reviewed. The Committee takes reports from the government and human rights organizations and private citizens. Many of the documents can be found here (scroll down to Kazakhstan). The conclusions should be coming out soon, but the rumor mill has it that major issues included problems with trials and the judiciary system in Kazakhstan, corruption in the government, negative stereotypes and lack of support for women and women’s issues and lack of the provision of procedural rights–in other words, the ability to appeal decisions by government bodies or in other ways protect your primary rights.
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