Foreign Policy Blogs

Kazakh hunger strikers hospitalized; martial law a possibility?

The Kazakh Prime Minister has compared the economic situation to wartime and told his cabinet that the “government will be ruling the economy manually”. He warned that “wartime regulations” may be a necessary step.

Obviously, this is a bad sign. Four of the sixteen laid-off oil workers who are on a hunger strike have been hospitalized. The other twelve are continuing the protest, which began March 20, after the private Burghylau oil company laid off a bunch of workers in the town of Zhanaozen.

According to Radio Liberty, “their major demand is that the company be nationalized and merged with the state KazMunayGaz company”. The workers feel that they have no other recourse for having their voices heard.

 

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Elina Galperin

Elina Galperin was born in Minsk, Belarus and grew up in Brooklyn, NY. After graduating from Stuyvesant High School in 2004, she attended the University of Massachusetts at Amherst where she majored in History and Russian Studies. After finishing her senior thesis on the politics of education among the Kazakhs in the late Imperial period, she graduated in February 2008. In September 2010, she received a Masters of Arts Degree in History, having passed qualifying exams on the Russian and Ottoman empires in the 18th and 19th centuries. In Fall 2011, she advanced to doctoral candidacy, having passed exams in four fields: Russian Empire, Ottoman Empire, Soviet Union, Mongol Empire, focusing on administrative practices and empire-building.

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