WELCOME TO IWPR'S REPORTING CENTRAL ASIA, No. 645, March 25, 2011

WEST KAZAKSTAN CITY LIMITS DEMOS AHEAD OF VOTE  Authorities in Uralsk impose 
tight regulations on public gatherings.  By Sanat Urnaliev

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WEST KAZAKSTAN CITY LIMITS DEMOS AHEAD OF VOTE

Authorities in Uralsk impose tight regulations on public gatherings.

By Sanat Urnaliev

As Kazakstan’s presidential election draws near, the mayor of Uralsk in the 
west of the country has imposed restrictions on public meetings, which must now 
be held in a designated location well away from the city centre.

Rights activists say the regulations go against the state’s obligation to allow 
freedom of assembly.

The mayoral decree, which came into force on March 10, a day after it was 
approved by Uralsk city council, means that rallies and demonstrations will be 
confined to a public park ten kilometres away from the centre of town.

The document cites a 1995 law which requires public meetings to conform to 
safety and environmental rules and not to obstruct traffic. In effect, it 
formalises the existing practice of ensuring that outdoor gatherings, 
particularly those led by opposition or rights groups, take place some way away 
from the city centre.

The decision comes on top of other rules that require permission from the local 
authorities before a public meeting can be held. If this is not forthcoming, 
the event in question will be deemed illegal if it goes ahead, and organisers 
can face a fine or a short period of detention.

It used to be extremely difficult to get permission for a demonstration in 
central parts of Uralsk, but now even that small hope has gone.

Although more than 20 hopefuls have put their names down as candidates for the 
April 3 ballot, there is little doubt that Kazakstan ‘s first and only 
president, Nursultan Nazarbaev, will be awarded a landslide victory when the 
results are announced.

Kazakstan’s opposition parties are boycotting the ballot, which was called so 
suddenly that it left them no time to prepare. Nazarbaev announced the snap 
election in February, in place of a widely criticised plan for a nationwide 
referendum that would have extended his current term in office until 2020.

Human rights activists and opposition party representatives in Uralsk accused 
the city authorities of clamping down on dissent.

“Of course we are against it,” Anargul Abenova, head of the local branch of the 
opposition Alga party.

Alga, whose status as a party is not recognised by the government, was the 
first to use the park outside town after the mayor issued his decree. The March 
13 demonstration, in support of an election boycott, was attended by about 50 
people.

Oxana Ternovskaya, head of the regional branch of the opposition Communist 
Party, predicted that the new rules would be applied unevenly, so that approved 
parties like Nazarbaev’s Nur Otan could meet wherever they wanted while 
government opponents would be subject to rigid controls.

“At a time when the president is talking about democratic reforms, and given 
that the constitution guarantees our freedoms, people are being herded into 
remote parks,” she added.

Pavel Kochetkov, head of the local branch of the Kazakstan Bureau for Human 
Rights and Rule of Law, argues that the mayor’s decree is legally questionable 
since decisions of this kind are supposed to be taken by elected bodies, not an 
appointed official.

“The [city] administration doesn’t have a right to issue such decrees. 
Moreover, the document contradicts international agreements on civil and 
political rights which Kazakstan has ratified and which clearly state that all 
citizens have a right to express their view wherever they want,” Kochetkov said.

In an interview for IWPR, Mayor Samigolla Urazov denied that the decree was 
unconstitutional. He insisted the regulation applied to all organisations and 
would be applied without discrimination.

“It’s for all the parties,” he said. “Everyone is equal before the law.”

Sanat Urnaliev is a journalist in Kazakstan.

This article was produced jointly under two IWPR projects: Building Central 
Asian Human Rights Protection & Education Through the Media, funded by the 
European Commission; and the Human Rights Reporting,

Confidence Building and Conflict Information Programme, funded by the Foreign 
Ministry of Norway.

The contents of this article are the sole responsibility of IWPR and can in no 
way be taken to reflect the views of either the European Union or the Foreign 
Ministry of Norway.

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REPORTING CENTRAL ASIA provides the international community with a unique 
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