Tag Archives: security

Gunman in Kazakhstan states his motives

JULY 27 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Ruslan Kulekbayev, who shot and killed six people and injured six others in Almaty in a shooting spree that triggered a major terrorism alert earlier this month, said that there were no religious motives involved in his rampage. The newspaper Vremya published extracts of Kulekbayev’s deposition, where the shooter dismissed any ties with religious organisations. Instead he said that he was protesting against what he said was unfair treatment from the authorities.

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(News report from Issue No. 291, published on Aug. 1 2016)

 

Angolan soldiers get injured in Kazakhstan

JULY 27 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Ten Angolan soldiers were injured in an explosion during an exercise in Kazakhstan, media reported. The injured soldiers were part of the Angolan team that was scheduled to participate in the International Army Games competition in Kazakhstan next week. It is unclear what caused the explosion.

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(News report from Issue No. 291, published on Aug. 1 2016)

Gunman kills 5 people in Kazakh city, sparks terror attack warnings

ALMATY, JULY 18 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A lone gunman killed five people in Almaty, sparking a rare terror alert in Kazakhstan’s financial centre.

Initially Kazakh officials drew a link between the gunman, Ruslan Kulikbaev, who shot dead four policemen and a passerby and Salafism, a devout Arabic form of Islam blamed for terror attacks, suggesting that he had become radicalised while in prison for an earlier crime.

This triggered a red terrorism alert in Almaty. Shops closed; people stayed inside.

But before the day was out, officials changed their story and reported that Kulikbaev was a lone gunman with criminal rather than religious intentions who had killed a prostitute the day before his Almaty rampage. He was later captured alive.

For analysts critical of the government, officials’ quick use of the terrorism label, underlined their knee-jerk reaction to play the security card to bolster President Nursultan Nazarbayev’s popularity.

Others, though, were more sanguine.

This year Kazakhstan has warned about a growth in attacks linked to the IS radical group which has targeted Central Asia as a prime recruiting ground and Aidos Sarym, an Almaty-based analyst, said Monday’s terror alert would damage the country’s reputation for stability.

“It’s definitely terrorism and it may damage Kazakhstan’s stability and security image prior to EXPO 2017 (in Astana),” he said

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Kazakh court jails IS activist

JULY 19 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A court in Petropavlovsk, in northern Kazakhstan, sentenced a man to seven years in prison for joining the IS extremist group. According to the court, the man travelled to Syria in 2012. Warning of a growing IS recruitment drive, Kazakhstan’s security services have said they will intensify their clampdown on Islamic extremism.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

IS threat worsens in Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan

JULY 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Russian defence minister Sergei Shiogu said that if countries in Central Asia and the South Caucasus ever sink into Syria-like civil war scenarios, Russia will use its military to intervene. Russia has carried out airstrikes in Syria against the IS extremist group. According to official sources, the number of South Caucasus and Central Asian citizens fighting for IS in Syria is rising.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

 

Tajik court sentences Salafist activist

JULY 19 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A Tajik court jailed Mukhammadi Rakhmatullo, alleged leader of Salafi, a banned conservative Islamic movement in Tajikistan, for seven years in prison. Rakhmatullo had allegedly returned to Tajikistan after a period working abroad and had continued to run the banned Salafi opposition movement. He was arrested in February during a mass security operation that jailed dozens of Salafists.

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(News report from Issue No. 290, published on July 22 2016)

Azerbaijan and Armenia peace talks closer, says Lavrov

JULY 12 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Russia’s foreign minister Sergei Lavrov said that a peace agreement on Nagorno-Karabakh, a region that Armenia-backed forces and Azerbaijan have fought over, could be closer than ever. Mr Lavrov met with Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev in Baku a week after meeting Armenia’s foreign minister Eduard Nalbandyan. Russia has mediated between the two governments after clashes erupted in April, breaking a 20-year ceasefire.

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(News report from Issue No. 289, published on July 15 2016)

 

Kyrgyz President arranges anti-extremist posters

JULY 14 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev said that he arranged the financing of several posters across Bishkek designed to warn against the spread of more extreme foreign forms of Islam in Kyrgyzstan. Mr Atambayev was questioned on the posters during a joint press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel. He said that even minor changes in a country’s tradition, such as clothing or words, can foster radicalisation.

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(News report from Issue No. 289, published on July 15 2016)

 

Kyrgyz President talks about Islamic extremism recruitment techniques

JULY 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Basking in the reflected glory of German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s first ever trip to Central Asia, Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev seems to have seized his moment to boast of his country’s commitment — and his own personal efforts — in combating Islamic extremism.

During a 30-minute joint press conference with Ms Merkel, Mr Atambayev said he had ordered his office to pay for posters campaigning against Islamic extremism across Bishkek.

With the rise of the extremist group IS, Central Asian leaders have emphasised the role of external pressure on the radicalisation of their citizens and how their security forces respond to it.

These strategies have served the governments’ objectives of cracking down on opposition forces, shifting blame and establishing a constant ‘emergency mode’.

Some governments, like Turkmenistan, and to a lesser extent Uzbekistan, outright deny any radical Islamic presence within their borders. Even those countries that do, tend to blame foreign zealots for wiping up extremist sentiment.

Now, it seems, Mr Atambayev has changed the tone.

His decision to allocate public funds to posters that showed a correlation between the contamination of Kyrgyz traditional folklore and Islamic extremism is a bold one. The posters, plastered across motorways around the capital, showed a group of smiling girls in traditional white Kyrgyz dresses transitioning to a picture of a subjugated group of women wearing black hijabs that are alien to Central Asian cultures.

At the press conference, Mr Atambayev said that he supported the posters and wished there would be more across the city.

“[This] is where it all starts. We start with the adoption of foreign clothing, foreign words, and we end up with people who cut heads off,” Mr Atambayev said.

This is one of the first admissions from a Central Asian leader that radicalisation could be homegrown, albeit fuelled by adopting foreign custom.

It is still unclear whether Mr Atambayev was consciously trying to blaze a new trail in the fight against radical Islam or he was just trying to promote Kyrgyz people as traditionally peaceful.

Regardless, standing next to Ms Merkel he broke new ground in the radical Islam conversation in Central Asia.

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(News report from Issue No. 289, published on July 15 2016)

 

Georgian IS commander gets killed

JULY 12 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Abu Omar Al-Shishani, a Georgian- born IS commander, was reported dead, according to IS-linked news outlets. Known as ‘Omar the Chechen’, Al-Shishani reportedly died in combat in Mosul, in northern Iraq. A native of Georgia’s Pankisi Gorge, Al-Shishani had served as the extremist group’s de facto minister of war.

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(News report from Issue No. 289, published on July 15 2016)