Kyrgyzstan

After his election as Kyrgyzstan’s president in October 2017, Sooronbai Jeenbekov inherited an economically uncertain state, which has failed to address more than twenty years of misrule despite emerging from two episodes of upheaval. Central Asia’s only nominal parliamentary democracy, Kyrgyzstan is divided along ethnic and regional lines, deeply corrupt and facing religious radicalisation in absence of a strong state. Crisis Group monitors ethnic and political tensions as well as wider regional relations.

CrisisWatch Kyrgyzstan

Unchanged Situation

UN Secretary General António Guterres expressed optimism about future Kyrgyz-Tajik border deal, and President Japarov attended various regional summits. 

UN secretary general expressed hope for Kyrgyzstan-Tajikistan border deal. UN Sec Gen Guterres 2 July met with President Japarov in Cholpon Ata city as part of regional tour. Pair discussed progress on sustainable development goals and regional peace and security issues. Guterres praised Bishkek’s border delimitation deal with Uzbekistan in 2023 and expressed confidence in resolution of border issue with Tajikistan through diplomatic means. 

In important international developments. President Japarov 3-4 July attended two-day summit of Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) – Eurasian regional security organisation – in Kazakh capital, Astana, which saw Belarus’ admittance into bloc; members also signed flurry of documents, including declaration lauding emergence of “fairer and multipolar world order”. Days later, Japarov 6 July attended summit of Organization of Turkic States in Azerbaijan’s Shusha city, which focused on deepening cooperation in defence, economy, energy and transportation between Turkic nations.

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