Soviet Ethnic Policies Split Kyrgyzstan
Conflict between minority groups still lingers today

Reason's December special issue marks the 30th anniversary of the collapse of the Soviet Union. This story is part of our exploration of the global legacy of that evil empire, and our effort to be certain that the dire consequences of communism are not forgotten.
Kyrgyzstan was already breaking away from the Soviet Union before the latter officially collapsed. A Kyrgyz opposition movement formed in June 1990 and declared full independence in August 1991, four months before USSR President Mikhail Gorbachev stepped down. Still, the aftermath of Soviet ethnic policies led to violent upheaval decades down the line.
Former physicist Askar Akayev was Kyrgyzstan's first president. He built a reputation for striving to create a real liberal democracy but shifted into a more autocratic stance as parliament resisted some of his economic policies.
Akayev's rule lasted until 2005, when his administration fell amid a violent revolution. His successor, Kurmanbek Bakiyev, was toppled by another uprising in 2010. Tribalism, nepotism, corruption, and the meshing of government with organized crime—the nation produces and is a transit point for heroin in international markets—have been hallmarks of Kyrgyz politics for much of the post-Soviet period.
In the early years of its independence, outside observers praised Kyrgyzstan for having one of the best human rights records and the most convincingly Western-style democracy among the former Soviet states in Central Asia, owing to its multiple political parties and relatively free opposition press. The predominantly Sunni Muslim state was also seen as excelling, at least in Central Asian terms, when it came to freedom of religion. Treatment of ethnic minorities, including the country's Uzbeks, was similarly considered good.
This balance proved fragile or illusory in one terrible week in June 2010, when small gangs of Kyrgyz and Uzbeks began fighting in a casino in the southern city of Osh, home to most of Kyrgyzstan's Uzbek population, sparking days of hideous violence. Instigators set fire to people in the streets. Groups of Kyrgyz moved in from other villages to punish Uzbeks, who at the start likely had some advantage in the fighting. Somewhere around 500 people were killed and more than 100,000—some estimates say nearly four times as many—were displaced.
Over the last decade, the Kyrgyz have suppressed or denied evidence of their complicity in the violence. Although the victims were disproportionately Uzbek, hardly any non-Uzbeks have faced legal penalties for murders committed in those days of chaos. The arrested Uzbeks faced what international observers agree was serious police and prosecutorial misconduct, including torture. Kyrgyz security forces at best did nothing to stop the violent assaults and burning of thousands of Uzbek buildings and dwellings, and possibly participated in it.
The Soviet Union baked in some of the problems that erupted between the Kyrgyz and Uzbeks by drawing internal boundaries among the various peoples in what started as the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. That partitioning left various ethnic minorities in nations dominated by majorities that did not fully welcome their civic participation or sometimes even their presence.
What had previously been tribal and family identities among groups divided more by nomadism (Kyrgyz) vs. sedentary agriculture (Uzbek) became ethnically politicized after decades of Soviet rule and the imposition of artificial national borders. Fomenting nationalistic division among the Central Asian tribes, most Turkic in background, served a Soviet need to divide and conquer in the lands it annexed. The Soviet system of ethno-nations caused minorities to be seen as unwelcome strangers in a way that had no salience when the groups were merely nomadic and rural Turkic Muslim tribes with long traditions of interaction and trade.
In Soviet times, those ancient patterns were disrupted by the USSR's command-and-control agricultural policies. Soon, many more ethnic Kyrgyz were living in towns and cities among Uzbeks, creating conflict over land and water. The Soviets kept the ethnic tension its own policies exacerbated from breaking out into violence, but by 2010 that constraint was just a memory. An earlier violent bout of Kyrgyz vs. Uzbek conflict happened in June 1990, killing an estimated 300–600, as Soviet power was visibly fraying. The riots were attributed to a giveaway of Uzbek collective farmland to be used for housing Kyrgyz.
Uzbeks are unfairly targeted to this day in Kyrgyzstan, human rights organizations insist. They face arrests for such vague crimes as "extremist activity" or "possession of extremist materials" (which sometimes could merely mean liking a social media post the government thinks is dangerous). And they are far more likely to be tortured once imprisoned.
Uzbeks, though roughly 15 percent of the population today, make up less than 2 percent of civil servants. Kyrgyzstan's current political situation is still marred by the shadows of corruption, ethnic injustice, and mistrust created by 2010's violence and the Soviet policies that helped fuel it.
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A better offering than yesterday’s article on Belarus, which left put a lot including the massing of migrants along the Polish border.
Think that articles on how post Soviet Warsaw Pact countries would be interesting as well; Romania is forthcoming.
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Funny how this retrospective of misguided Soviet policies looks so much like today's headlines on American policies.
Did you see that crazy bitch from CNN’s question for Butt-edge-edge yesterday?
“Racist highway designs”
You’d think he would like seeing the fresh blacktop.
If Pete don't get none, dat's hiz own asphalt!
Has Mayo Pete endorsed renewable, plant based lubes? What is the carbon footprint of Astroglide?
Pretty sure lube isn't renewed once it's used. (Ew!) Also, vegetable oil is plant-based, but not recommended due to the viscosity breakdown it causes condoms. Oh, and it only has a footprint if that's the fetish involved. (Don't do that on hardwood floors, only the other hard wood.)
Did you see Stephen Colbert's show last night? You have to start watching it. It's hilarious. Here's a link to get started.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/stephen-colbert-ted-cruz-big-bird_n_618a064ee4b0c8666be15aa1
I prefer humor with my comedy.
Please just watch it. It's hilarious. You can't not laugh at it.
No. Have seen enough of his schlock. He is for people that think they are smart but are not. A five and dime Bill Maher.
The Hannah Gatsby of late night?
I did see the little statement Butthead made about the supply chain issue as it related to the trucking industry. The primary problem of course is the lack of vaccinations, but beyond that we need more unionized truck drivers and new regulations to update the old-fashioned methods of operation for the trucking industry. He may have said something beyond that, but that was the point where I had a stroke and starting flopping around on the floor.
How dare you, you little megalomaniac prick! What the fuck do you know about the trucking industry that makes you think you're even entitled to have an opinion on the matter? There are trucking industry officials that have decades of experience and successfully run multi-billion dollar businesses and you once owned a Tonka truck and that makes you think you know more than they do? Fuck you, you piece of shit, you belong in a lunatic asylum beside every other goddamn politician that's never held a real job in their lives, never had to meet a payroll, never had to successfully compete to deliver a product to market, never had to deal with the rules and regulations of operating a business, and yet for some unfathomable reason believe you're qualified to tell people who have how it should be done? What the hell is wrong with you that you can possibly believe such an insane thing?
Jesus Christ, I once built a model rocket, does that make me qualified to be the head of NASA? By your lights, it might - depending on whether or not I'm a trans-gendered black immigrant. See, you only got your job because you're gay and this is the pathetic result of hiring for diversity purposes rather than hiring people who actually might know a little something about what the fuck they're talking about. You're a goddamn unqualified idiot who's too goddamn stupid to know just how ignorant you are. You should be beaten to death with a goddamn baseball bat before you have a chance to fuck up all kinds of shit you have no business messing with. Fuck Joe Biden for giving a whole troop of retarded chimpanzees like yourself loaded machine guns and turned you loose on society.
So, not a fan?
Tell us how you really feel!
Don't get me started on John Kerry and his insane belief that he is both capable and qualified to order the lives of some 8 billion people in order to control the weather of the entire planet. That's some kind of villainy not even the scriptwriters for the cheesiest James Bond movie would think plausible.
Fuck Buttigeig!
Well, the problem of over-regulation humming up the works is about to be solved. Long haul trucking will probably be the first place that automated vehicles land.
We just had a study released that showed that autonomous vehicles saved 13% on fuel because they could be driven optimally. The article about that also mentioned trucking companies idling trucks waiting for drivers due to mandatory work time limits.
Robot trucks eliminate this bottleneck, and save on the top two costs in the industry, labor and fuel.
So, good job Biden and Newsome, you definitely accelerated the replacement of an entire segment of our vital transportation infrastructure.
Relax! Have some Sanka!
https://youtu.be/epODIxzaCfw
And look on the bright side, Jetty: Buttigieg most likely knows what "Good Buddy" means in C.B. lingo. 😉
I concur entirely. And certainly not just about Pete. Bernie and Elizabeth piss me off for the same reason, and it's the unmitigated *arrogance* on display.
I think Bernie might actually piss me off the most. It's one thing to have an oil tanker full of arrogance about the operation of a business sector, but his "nobody needs that many kinds of deodorant" is an Evergreen full of arrogance crashing into the side of the Suez Canal every second, forever. It's the arrogant presumption not just that he knows what's best for an industry he's never worked in (which would be all of them, yes) but for absolutely every single person in the country, and if we asked for his scope on the matter, likely everyone on the entire planet.
In a just world he'd be tarred, feathered, and flogged out of the country.
"Conflict between minority groups still lingers today"
Democrats taking notes.
There is only one race, the human race but don't forget that the international white man is responsible for all the historical crimes of the world.
That's false. The Good Book teaches that God made different races because man in his arrogance tried to build a tower to heaven. And you know that's like a big no no.
Ackchyually, according to the Biblical legend, JHVH-1 split mankind into different languages over The Tower of Babel, not different "races."
And members of our species have gone 238,000 miles in space to the Moon and untold millions of miles orbiting around the Earth and has sent unmanned Voyager 2 outside the 4 billion mile edge of The Solar System, so that trumps any Tower of Babel umpteen times over.
By Biblical logic, for this much Heavenly ambition, we should all be schizoid beings speaking hundreds of languages all to ourselves by now.
Fortunately, while all humans have physical differences, all divisions between humans are human-made and arbitrary and, of course, God does not exist, M'Lady.
Once, I was speaking Spanish to a customer who needed directions to a product in my store. One of my Managers saw this and asked if I could speak Spanish. I said: "Yo hablo poquito Español, Senora., I speak some Spanish, Ma'am."
She then said: "Ew, I don't believe in that! I believe God split us into different tongues when man tried to build the Tower of Babel and kept us apart that's how it's meant to be!"
And this woman actually works with a global corporation...with stores in many nations with different languages...and holds to a religion whose founder said: "Go ye unto the world and teach all nations..." (Matthew 28:19-20.)...and she actually had clout over me!
Oh well, more proof of The Peter Principle!
I'll take the autocrat who imposes liberal economics, over the liberal democracy that opposes liberal economics.
I read an article about the Polish politician Janusz Korwin-Mikke stating that Hitler had a more economically liberal attitude that the European Union. Korwin-Mikke also has a lovely singing voice.
His singing has spit and polish?
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=_Efr6Q0QIYI
Judging from his cracks about Hitler, it sounds like "Strawberry Fields Forever" is more his speed.
I hope and trust you wouldn't believe that.
Oh, yeah, Hitler's economics had so liberal an economic policy, that he'd have you singing: "Jump Down, Turn Around, Pick A Bail of Mannah", right, Harvey?
Pick A Bil O' Cotton--Leadbelly
https://youtu.be/dJAXmLJgAxk
I wouldn't go that far. So long as we remain in a classically liberal democracy, the economic failures of the government will be blamed on the left's economics when they're power, and they'll be held accountable for their policies in elections. The real problem is people not understanding the consequences of the left's economics until after they materialize. If we only realize that shooting ourselves in the face is a bad idea after we've done it, it's too late.
It should also be noted that the alternatives are rarely so neatly defined. Because South America dictators overthrew leftist governments before they could become leftist dictatorships doesn't necessarily mean there was a clear choice between liberal democracy and the right's economics. Daniel Ortega is now a full blown autocrat in Nicaragua. In the former Soviet republics, likewise, liberal democracy was one possibility, but it probably wasn't the most likely outcome during a power vacuum.
I'll take the system that allow neither.
"The Soviet Union baked in some of the problems that erupted between the Kyrgyz and Uzbeks by drawing internal boundaries among the various peoples"
I disagree with this statement. Diversity was a strength of the Soviet Union. America just barely defeated the Soviet Union by being a majority white European country. Thankfully, the open border policy of the Democrat party will ensure we have enough diversity of skin colors, religions, genders, and sexualities to take on authoritarian China if they challenge the independence of the Republic of China (Taiwan).
You would think all the deterrence China needs to keep from messing with us is seeing with what horrors we are willing to inflict upon ourselves, the horrors we are willing to inflict upon our enemies must be unimaginable.
Taiwan, the other Transnistria.
This balance proved fragile or illusory in one terrible week in June 2010, when small gangs of Kyrgyz and Uzbeks began fighting in a casino in the southern city of Osh, home to most of Kyrgyzstan's Uzbek population, sparking days of hideous violence.
I'm pleased to know that at least one of these gangs has a vowel.
I was about to say, it would make communication between everybody easier. 🙂
The Soviet Union baked in some of the problems that erupted between the Kyrgyz and Uzbeks by drawing internal boundaries among the various peoples in what started as the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. That partitioning left various ethnic minorities in nations dominated by majorities that did not fully welcome their civic participation or sometimes even their presence.
There is a very stark lesson to be learned here that is almost universally ignored by the Western Elite.
What had previously been tribal and family identities among groups divided more by nomadism (Kyrgyz) vs. sedentary agriculture (Uzbek) became ethnically politicized after decades of Soviet rule and the imposition of artificial national borders.
What's interesting is a good chunk of my life I had been "taught" that International Socialism and Marxism had eliminated the ethic strife by lumping all of the disparate ethnic groups together by forcing them into communities via these "artificial national borders".
This same kind of thinking often pops up in descriptions on the "causes of WWI". The flip response usually being "tribalism caused WWI" when in reality, it was globalism that caused it. It was an elite cabal of internationalists who were going around drawing circles around disparate cultures, lumping them together in political districts which satisfied their imperial masters and all it did was heighten resentments and ethnic tensions. These tensions then get written off as 'nationalism'.
"elite cabal of internationalists"
Cool it with the anti-Semitism, buddy.
On the flip side, to the extent the U.S. practiced Free-Market Capitalism, it destroyed ethnic neopotism and brought together people who had been warring for centuries in "Old Country."
> The Soviet Union baked in some of the problems that erupted between the Kyrgyz and Uzbeks by drawing internal boundaries among the various peoples in what started as the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic.
So, basically what Belgium did in Africa, or England did in the Middle East.
Biden is following the Soviet Unions playbook, but not just dividing by ethnicity, but all sex, age, religion and race. We will soon be a nation of many nations inside one big political mess.
IIRC, when maps of the Soviet "Republics" were drawn, boundaries were intentionally set to lump conflicting groups together, and divide the more power groups between neighboring republics exactly to keep the central power strong and the local powers weak.
Pretty much the same plan as what the Brits did in the mid-East, although with more malice (I think). (Did the Brits do it intentionally, or just clumsily?)
I think the bit in the Middle East is just that Anglophones love themselves some motherfuckin' straight lines on a map. Just look at the western half of the US.
Amazing write-up!”
“Useful post”