Post-Tribune

High-profile murder trial fixates Kazakhstan

Case of ex-official changing views on domestic violence

- By Joanna Kozlowska

The closed-circuit TV footage shown at the domestic abuse trial was disturbing: The defendant is seen dragging his wife by her hair, then punching and kicking her. Hours after the attack, she died of brain trauma.

The trial of businessma­n Kuandyk Bishimbaye­v, Kazakhstan’s former economy minister, in the death of his wife, Saltanat Nukenova, has touched a nerve in the Central Asian country. Tens of thousands of people have signed petitions calling for harsher penalties for domestic violence.

On April 11, senators approved a bill toughening spousal abuse laws, and President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev signed it four days later. It has been dubbed “Saltanat’s Law” in her honor.

Kazakhs are riveted by Bishimbaye­v’s trial, the first in the country of over 19 million people to be streamed online, and debates about it are dominating social media. Many see it as a moment of truth for Tokayev’s promises of reforms and making officials accountabl­e.

The 44-year-old Bishimbaye­v, once seen as a fresh, Western-educated face of Kazakhstan’s government under former leader Nursultan Nazarbayev, was jailed for bribery in 2018 before being pardoned less than two years into his 10-year sentence.

Nukenova, 31, was found dead in November in a restaurant owned by one of her husband’s relatives. Bishimbaye­v, who was charged with torturing and killing her, for weeks maintained his innocence but admitted Wednesday in court that he had beaten her and “unintentio­nally” caused her death.

His lawyers initially disputed medical evidence indicating Nukenova died from repeated blows to the head.

They also portrayed her as prone to jealousy and violence, although no video from the restaurant’s security cameras that was played in court has shown her attacking Bishimbaye­v.

Aitbek Amangeldy, Nukenova’s elder brother and a key prosecutio­n witness, told The Associated Press that he had no doubt his sister’s tragic fate has shifted attitudes about domestic violence.

“It changes people’s minds when they see directly what it looks like when a person is tortured,” Amangeldy said in a video interview, citing the harrowing video played in court.

“Of course, it’s difficult for me to be in court, to listen to various things that the defendant’s side has been saying,” he said. “It’s even more painful to know that (their) words are being broadcast across the country. But I understand that these broadcasts are also educationa­l material, including for lawyers and human rights defenders.”

Like neighborin­g Russia, Kazakhstan largely remains a patriarcha­l society, and progress has been slow on issues such as domestic violence, sexual harassment and disparitie­s in employment.

According to a 2018 study backed by UN Women, the United Nations’ gender equality agency, about 400 women die from domestic violence each year in Kazakhstan, although many abuse cases go unreported.

In 2017, Kazakhstan decriminal­ized beatings and other acts causing “minor” physical injury, making them punishable only by fines or short jail terms. Russia enacted a similar law that year, outraging women’s rights advocates. Kazakhstan’s new law reverses this, increasing penalties for assailants and introducin­g new criminal offenses, including harassment of minors.

Days after Nukenova’s death, her relatives launched an online petition urging authoritie­s to pass Saltanat’s Law to bolster protection for those at risk of domestic violence. It quickly got over 150,000 signatures.

As Bishimbaye­v’s trial began, more than 5,000 Kazakhs wrote senators urging tougher laws on abuse, Kazakh media said.

Still, Amangeldy said the law’s final version failed to include all the provisions his family and allies had wanted, noting that “we still have no legal norms around stalking and harassment” of adults.

Viktoriya Kim, a Kazakhstan-based researcher at Human Rights Watch, said the very notion of “domestic violence” is absent from the country’s criminal code. Including it, she said, would send “a clearer signal.”

But Amangeldy argues that Kazakh society has clearly “passed a point of no return.”

“For years, across Kazakhstan and the whole region, the issue (of domestic violence) was shrouded in silence. Raising the issue is already half the solution,” he said.

Women’s rights advocate Aigerim Kussainkyz­y said Bishimbaye­v’s trial has led to “a collective awakening” among politician­s and ordinary citizens.

“Some may even label it the trial of the century . ... Male politician­s, in particular, have started to consider the implicatio­ns of domestic violence for their own daughters,” said Kussainkyz­y, who was among civil society representa­tives that lawmakers consulted before passing the bill.

The proposals encountere­d fierce opposition from the Kazakh Union of Parents — an influentia­l associatio­n that echoes Russia’s opposition to feminist initiative­s and LGBTQ+ rights.

Tokayev has talked repeatedly about strengthen­ing protection­s for women. In January, he intervened after the Justice Ministry refused to consider the petition by Nukenova’s family.

Despite the inclusion of activists in the legislativ­e process, some Kazakh rights defenders argue the law’s passage has been accompanie­d by continuing pressure on those advocates, independen­t of the government.

Last month, authoritie­s in Almaty — Kazakhstan’s largest city and business hub — blocked a rally for Internatio­nal Women’s Day to show solidarity with victims of domestic abuse. Feminita, the feminist and LGBTQ+ rights group that tried to organize it, has struggled for years for official registrati­on.

In December, Kazakhstan put women’s rights activist Dina Smailova on its wanted list after authoritie­s launched a criminal fraud investigat­ion that she described as likely retributio­n for her work.

Smailova, head of the NeMolchi.KZ foundation, which means “Don’t Be Silent” and advocates for abuse survivors, told the AP that she and her organizati­on were unable to join discussion­s on the new law.

“I’ve lost faith in the authoritie­s, because even as they pass a law protecting women and children from violence, they pass harsher laws against independen­t journalist­s and bloggers,” Smailova said in an interview from Montenegro, where she lives.

She welcomed the bill “as a first step,” but said it can only be adequately implemente­d after tackling “corruption and nepotism” within law enforcemen­t and the courts, citing the fraud case against her.

“Kazakhstan is a country where everyone has a lot of relatives … and if there’s a case concerning a relative of someone in law enforcemen­t, then that person will certainly evade responsibi­lity,” she said, adding that education and media campaigns are needed to change attitudes.

Senate Speaker Maulen Ashimbayev said that properly implementi­ng the law will require “a great deal of work,” including educationa­l campaigns in schools and the media, as well as vigilance from civil society groups.

 ?? KAZAKHSTAN SUPREME COURT PRESS OFFICE ?? Kuandyk Bishimbaye­v, Kazakhstan’s former economy minister, sits in a defendants’ cage at trial in Astana, Kazakhstan, charged with killing his wife. The case has touched a nerve in the Central Asian country.
KAZAKHSTAN SUPREME COURT PRESS OFFICE Kuandyk Bishimbaye­v, Kazakhstan’s former economy minister, sits in a defendants’ cage at trial in Astana, Kazakhstan, charged with killing his wife. The case has touched a nerve in the Central Asian country.

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