Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 29 – Activism in the
from of street protests against specific events like the arms dump explosion in
Arys or against specific regional officials continues, but it is more a cri de coeur
from a population that got used to activism during the election than a
political protest organized by the still weak opposition, Serik Beysembayov
says.
The Kazakh political analyst says
that growing horizontal ties among urban Kazakhs will make demands for greater
political participation and elite responsiveness increase but that it will be
five to seven years before the new social activism transforms itself into any serious
political opposition (camonitor.kz/33284-kakova-sudba-protestnogo-dvizheniya-v-kazahstane-i-chem-otvetit-vlast.html).
That makes the situation, he and
other analysts suggest, both less a threat to the political leadership than one
organized by opposition groups because it cannot be directed in a systematic
way and more dangerous to stability because such popular anger can break out at
any time and place without leadership to mediate between it and the regime.
For Kazakhstan, this is a new situation,
one in which the regime does not fully control the situation but where it has
some freedom of action to try to address the concerns of the population without
such concessions representing a direct threat to the powers of the regime
itself (stanradar.com/news/full/35163-protesty-v-kazahstane-vyhodjat-iz-pod-kontrolja-vlastej.html).
And that is going to be the nature
of the transition from Nursultan Nazarbayev to a new generation of leaders for
some time to come, one in which there will be enough protests to lead some to
conclude that the situation is spinning “out of control” but not enough to make
that a genuine reality anytime soon.
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