MAY 13 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Liberal, Western forces in Kyrgyzstan have scored a major victory by defeating a bill that had the Kremlin’s fingerprints all over it.
Essentially, the so called foreign agents bill aimed to blacklist NGOs which had links with foreign governments and organisations.
This blacklist would have meant more surveillance, checks and interference. It would have put many NGOs, which operate on tight margins and may not be pushing the preferred Kyrgyz government line, into liquidation.
Instead, by mounting a serious-minded campaign and targeting MPs who had a vote on the issue, those against the law were able to at first get it watered down and then scrapped altogether.
This is good news too for Kyrgyzstan’s fledgling parliamentary democracy, only five-years-old last year. It shows resilience and that the system is working. This was democracy in action in Central Asia.
The result of the MPs’ vote may also show that this term’s MPs, voted in last year, are more liberal bunch.
ENDS
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(Editorial from Issue No. 280, published on May 13 2016)