Foreign Policy Blogs

Kyrgyz President consolidates his rule via his patronage network

According to the Jamestown Foundation, on October 29, Kyrgyz President Kurmanbek Bakiyev promoted his son, Maksim Bakiyev, to lead the Central Agency on Development, Investment, and Innovation. This agency controls all foreign funds entering the country, along with control of major national hydroelectric and gold companies.

Kurmanbek Bakiyev’s network of clients is growing stronger, to the detriment of the country’s population. Kurmanbek has streamlined his power by removing a number of ministries and parliamentary structures, essentially giving himself more power vis-à-vis the bureaucracy. On October 19, Prime Minister Igor Chudinov resigned and Kurmabenk ordered parliament to support his replacement, Daniyar Usenov, who had previously served as the chief of the presidential staff. Family members run the security services. Maksim is also one of the country’s wealthiest entrepreneurs. Now with control of Russia’s $2 billion in credit, and with a governmental regime firmly under his father’s rule, he has nearly no limits on what he can do.

Let’s hope he spends at least some of the money increasing Kyrgyzstan’s domestic capacity for electricity production so as to avoid having gas supplies turned off by Uzbekistan. Currently, Kyrgyzstan is heavily in debt to Uzbekistan and on September 22nd, suspended gas supplies to some cities in the Ferghana Valley. On September 24th, Kyrgyzstan’s government announced plans to ration electricity this winter. With few checks and balances in place, the Kyrgyz people will likely have another difficult winter ahead.

 

Author

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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