Staunton,
January 6 – The wave of violence in Zhanaozen in Western Kazakhstan over the
last few weeks that has cost at least 16 lives has also led to the
intensification of separatist attitudes among the population there, although
there is little chance that this region will be able to split away from
Kazakhstan anytime soon, according to a specialist on the area.
Marat
Shibutov, the Kazakhstan representative of the Association of Cross-Border
Cooperation, says that separatist feelings have been sparked less by the
authoritarian response of Astana than by the failure of the central Kazakhstan
government to “consider the interests of regional elites” (www.regnum.ru/news/polit/1485788.html).
He told
the Regnum news agency today that there were always separatist feelings among
people in the region for “one simple reason: the city of Astana at the present
time is a parasite” which takes far more resources from the regions – and Mangistau
oblast is a donor – than it gives back.
That, “together
with the isolated situation of the region, the dominance of a single family
[from elsewhere in official positions], and the insignificant number of
non-Kazakhs” means that “separatist attitudes will always be here and can even
strengthen” if the central authorities continue to treat problems there merely
as ones of control.
But
however strong such attitudes become, Shibutov argues, there are four reasons
for thinking the separatists will never achieve their goal. First, the region
does not have enough water on its own; second, it doesn’t produce enough food
to feed its people; third, its oil is exported through other regions; and
fifth, the region is “one of the smallest” in Kazakhstan.
Those
factors may not be enough to prevent more problems, he says, especially because
oil production in the region is declining and reserves may even run out
sometime in the next decade and because Astana appears to believe that only
people from outside the region can be counted on to be loyal.
What the
central Kazakhstan authorities should be doing, Shibutov insists, is promoting
local people into positions of power in the region itself and including more of
them in the central bureaucracies of the Kazakhstan state. But so far, Astana shows little interest in
doing either, preferring instead to treat a political challenge as a law
enforcement matter.
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