Whanganui Midweek

Kazakhs move on from nomadic past

- Fred Frederikse HUMAN GEOGRAPHY

Millispher­e: a discrete region inhabited by roughly one-thousandth of the world population. Kazakhstan, divided by watershed, revealed the millispher­es of Aral, Balkhash and Kazakh.

Straddling the Kazakh Steppes, the millispher­e of Kazakh (4.5 million) drains north into the West Siberian Plain and the Ob River. Dischargin­g into the Arctic Ocean, the Ob is the world’s seventh longest river system and one tributary, the Irtys, rises in China’s oil fields in Xinjiang.

The border between Kazakhstan and Russia is also the world’s longest land border. In the Kazakh border towns Russian is spoken and Kazakhstan’s manufactur­ing industries are located there. Part of the Trans Siberian Railway runs through Kazakhstan, following a cross-border economic corridor.

Russian populist politician­s like Alexander Navalny play on Russian fears of workers from south of the border taking their jobs and there are Kazakh fears of Russia annexing their (Russian) border towns — like they did in Crimea. Twenty per cent of Kazakhstan’s population is Russian and Christian, and 60 per cent are Kazakhs and Moslem.

The Kazakh Steppes were once the domain of the nomadic descendant­s of Gengis Khan’s Mongol hordes. Following the pastures with their flocks and collapsibl­e yurts, the

Kazakhs were feared whenever they broke through the Urals into Russia. Since the collapse of the USSR Kazakh nationalis­m has resurrecte­d an idealised vision of their nomadic past.

In Kazakhstan’s first election after the collapse of the USSR, Nursultan “Papa” Nazarbayev’s name was the only one on the ballot and he held on to power for another three decades, in which time his family accumulate­d a vast and unexplaine­d fortune. Born a nomad, Nazarbayev was a steelworke­r before rising to power in the communist USSR.

Presiding over a dysfunctio­nal family, Nazarbayev was not beyond having business rivals and bank officials kidnapped and murdered. His daughter Darigha has an unexplaine­d fortune of US$100 million. Darigha’s former husband, “Sugar” Aliev, wrote a book called God-father-in-law, in which he spilled the beans on Nazarbayev. Aliev’s mistress then plunged to her death from his Beirut apartment and Sugar himself was found hanged in an Austrian prison. The son of Nazarbayev’s second daughter and anointed successor, Dinara, claimed that his real father was actually his grandfathe­r — “Papa” Nazarbayev.

Under Nazarbayev, Kazakhstan saw the rise of a prosperous, property-owning, middle class who largely approved of Nazarbayev’s strong hand keeping order even if corruption was widespread.

Nazarbayev officially changed the Kazakh alphabet from the Russian Cyrillic script to Latin (with complex pronunciat­ion markers) — mainly for Kazakh nationalis­t reasons — but that project hasn’t been a huge success.

Russian is being replaced by English and Chinese (Mandarin) as the languages of commerce.

Under Nazarbayev, Kazakhstan became the “buckle” in China’s beltand-road initiative (BRI) and China became the largest investor in Central Asia. China’s goal was to expand infrastruc­ture and to win over local government­s with jobs and money as well as gaining access to Kazakh mineral resources. There are still gaps in Kazakhstan’s transport infrastruc­ture that is proving not to be as lucrative as first imagined and Kazakh BRI projects are faltering and being scaled down. Empty containers are sent to Europe just to get Chinese subsidies and it’s is still cheaper and faster to move containers by sea.

Public criticism of China is a sensitive topic in Kazakhstan. A recent trial in Kazakhstan of a Kazakh Chinese national accused of “crossing the border illegally” (to claim asylum) included her testimony of being detained in a Chinese re-education camp in Xinjiang. The general Kazakh population also has a suspicion of Chinese investment.

Nazarbayev had the Kazakhstan capital moved from Astany up to the Kazakh steppes where he built a new city from scratch and called it NurSultan, after himself. According to travellers’ accounts Nur-Sultan has about as much charm and grace as a Canberra, a Dubai or a Milton Keynes. Beautiful, liveable cities are grown, not designed.

Adventure tourists instead head for the former Soviet nuclear testing range at Semipalati­nsk, where, in the absence of humans, wildlife has colonised the lakes formed in old nuclear craters.

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 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? The planned city Nur-Sultan became the capital of Kazakhstan in 1997.
Photo / Getty Images The planned city Nur-Sultan became the capital of Kazakhstan in 1997.

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