Bush urges Kazakh leader to speed up democratic reforms
ALMATY, Kazakhstan (AP) - U.S. President George W. Bush urged his
Kazakh counterpart Nursultan Nazarbayev to follow up the Central Asian nation's recent
economic success with democratic reforms, the president's press office said Tuesday.
Bush's call comes in the wake of anti-government uprisings last spring
in two other ex-Soviet republics in the region. One led to the ouster of an autocratic
leader in Kyrgyzstan, while a revolt in Uzbekistan in May was bloodily suppressed by
government troops, and control over the country was further tightened.
"The latest events in the region have stressed the importance of a balanced economic
growth, responsible governance and democratic development," Bush told Nazarbayev in a
letter sent Monday, the president's press office said. "I urge you to make sure that
economic reforms are backed up with bold democratic reforms in Kazakhstan."
Widespread poverty was one of the triggers leading to the uprisings in Kyrgyzstan and
Uzbekistan.
Bush also urged Nazarbayev to ensure the country's upcoming
presidential elections were free and fair. Nazarbayev, a former communist boss who has
held power for 16 years, has said he intends to run for another seven-year term in
elections expected in December.
The country's parliamentary elections in September were internationally criticized as
falling short of democratic standards.
Nazarbayev allowed limited liberal reforms in the mid-1990s, but has in
recent years been accused of cracking down on the opposition and free media.
Nazarbayev is, however, credited with the country's notable economic progress, driven
mostly by generous foreign investment in its vast energy sector. Kazakhstan has the
highest living standards in the region.
Associated Press, August 2, 2005
|