The Manila Times

Kazakh capital Astana flaunts role as platform for peace

- AFP

ASTANA, Kazakhstan: The next Syria peace talks are not taking place in a storied European city but in Kazakhstan’s capital Astana, a as an internatio­nal mediator and platform for peace efforts.

Built opulently on former marshland, Astana – which was a minor provincial steppe town before replacing Almaty as the Kazakh capital in 1997 – has become an unlikely gathering place for those pushing for solutions to

Clashing with the barrenness of the surroundin­g landscape, Astana’s towering, ultramoder­n - volving minor Syrian opposition groups in 2015, the city’s debut in helping to end a seemingly

On Monday representa­tives for Syria’s rebel groups, President Bashar al- Assad’s regime and the United Nations – as well as descend on Astana in a bid to bolster a frail nationwide truce.

- position delegation composed exclusivel­y of rebel groups and the Assad regime sit at the same negotiatin­g table since the conflict erupted in 2011, and the - tions to take place in Astana.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said last month that the next stage in ending Syria’s bloody civil war was getting all sides to and suggested they could agree to take part in fresh peace talks in Kazakhstan.

Monday’s talks, which will be held in the city’s luxury Rixos President Hotel, will give an extra boost to Astana’s efforts to brand itself as a “new Geneva”, the Swiss city that has hosted several rounds of ill- fated talks on the Syrian crisis.

“This location worked out very well for everybody, the government and all the opposition groups,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Friday, praising Astana for “offering its services in a civil and nonintrusi­ve way”.

Analysts say that Kazakhstan’s push to hold high- level peace talks in its capital allows the country to present itself as a regional power and internatio­nal economic player, raising its prestige on the world stage.

The Central Asian nation’s role in hosting high- level talks “boosts its status as a regional power, which can give it economic opportunit­ies,” said Moscowbase­d political analyst Dmitry

He stressed that ex- Soviet republic Kazakhstan had forged solid partnershi­ps with Russia, Turkey and a number of Western and Middle Eastern countries.

Peacemakin­g president?

Viewed as a guarantor of stability at home, Kazakhstan’s President Nursultan Nazarbayev has projected himself similarly abroad, remaining close to Russia while engaging with the West, China and the Middle East.

height of tensions over Russia’s annexation of Crimea and the pro-Russian separatist insurgency in eastern Ukraine, he arranged a visit by French President Francois Hollande to Moscow to meet with an isolated Putin.

He is also said to be a key figure successful­ly mediating between Moscow and Ankara after their bitter dispute over the 2015 downing of a Russian jet by the Turkish airforce near the Syrian border.

Nazarbayev’s diplomatic outreach initiative­s are a way for the 76-year-old leader to bolster his image in the face of internatio­nal scrutiny for rights abuses and crackdowns on freedom of informatio­n.

- er, Nazarbayev has worked hard to convey an image as a “bridge builder”, said Alex Vatanka, a senior fellow at the Middle East

“This is not something he has only recently discovered,” Vatanka told AFP. “This is the fruit of many years of attempting to convince others that this is something he can do.”

Vatanka added that when Almaty, Kazakhstan’s largest city, hosted nuclear programme in 2013, the country “didn’t have to do that”.

come across as a helpful mediator to an internatio­nal audience, ultimately hoping to reap ben the world.

“Kazakhstan is a large country that happens to be landlocked,” Vatanka said. “President Nazarbayev’s multivecto­r foreign policy has really been about overcoming this geographic handicap.”

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