Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 13 – Two of the five
Central Asian countries – Tajikistan and Turkmenistan – have not taken many
steps to contain the coronavirus and in both the pandemic isn’t be discussed
openly; but in the other three – Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan – the authorities
have imposed draconian, Chinese-style restrictions, Arkady Dubnov says.
In Kazakhstan, with a population of
18.6 million, there were 802 cases registered and nine deaths from the pandemic
as of April 10. A quarter of the cases were in the capitals, Nur-Sultan and
Alma-Ata. The government acted quickly and imposed tight controls. It even
welcomed a group of Chinese advisors on the issue (newtimes.ru/articles/detail/193111?fcc).
All indications are that quarantines,
social distance and isolation at home measures are being obeyed, the Moscow
commentator says.
In Uzbekistan, with its 34 million
people, there were 624 cases and three deaths registered as of April 10. Tashkent imposed a quarantine early on. It
closed schools and recreational facilities. And it stopped all forms of public
transportation. Moreover, although Uzbeks tend to conform, the government set
steep fines for anyone who violated these orders.
On April 1, the
authorities prohibited anyone in Tashkent, Nukus, and oblast centers over the
age of 65 from leaving home except to go to drug or food stores. Five days later,
it extended that to all the residents regardless of age.
Part of Uzbekistan’s medical effort has
been supported by a 20 million US dollar grant from Uzbek businessman Alisher
Usmanov who returned to the republic so that he could provide additional help
if needed.
A major problem is bringing the
enormous number of Uzbeks who are living and working abroad home. In the past month, 6,000 have been returned
by charter flight; and 9,000 by train. But that is only a tiny fraction of the
more than a million who are now working in the Russian Federation. All the
returnees are subject to quarantine.
One government rule has sparked real
dissent. Tashkent said that Uzbeks could no longer walk their dogs more than
once a day. But Uzbeks have gone ahead anyway and indicated they plan to
continue to do so. Dubnov suggests that the strictness of this measure has been
reduced by the impossibility of actually enforcing it.
And in Kyrgzystan, with its 6.5
million people, there were by April 10, 339 confirmed infections and five deaths. The government acted as quickly and in the
same way as Kazakhstan’s, but officials in the capital and in regional centers objected
to many of the arrangements and so not all of them have been put in place.
The authorities require that those
who want to move about the republic get special passes. Almost 20,000 Kyrgyz have
applied for these in the capital, but so far only 990 – about five percent –
have received them. In Osh, the
authorities are more permissible: some 12,000 passes have been issued there
already.
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