Monday, October 30, 2017

Kazakhstan's leader changes country's name to 'Qazaqstan' in rebuff to Putin interference


ibtimes.co.uk - The central Asian country of Kazakhstan is changing its name to Qazaqstan in a challenge to Russian influence over the country.

The former Soviet state announced on Friday (October 27) it will appoint a national committee to oversee the country's transition to the Latin alphabet by 2025. As a result the spelling of the country will change in line with a more accurate Latin spelling.

"[Latin] is used by approximately 70% of all countries, making it an essential part of communicating across the globe, especially in terms of technology, business, science and education," its foreign ministry said.

Currently the country uses a Cyrillic alphabet, which was introduced in 1940 by the then ruling Soviet Union. The adapted Kazakh Cyrillic alphabet contains 42 letters, including 9 reserved for Kazakh language sounds.

Although Kazakh is the government's official language, Russian is still widely spoken and around one-fifth of the nation's 18 million citizens use Russian on a day-to-day basis.

Kazakh is from the family of Turkic languages and was originally written in Arabic up until the 1920s, when Russian authorities introduced the Latin alphabet. They subsequently changed it to Cyrillic two decades later.

Observers believe the move is likely to anger the Kremlin, which still exerts control over the oil-rich nation. Since independence in 1991, Kazakhstan's large ethnic Russian population has resulted in close political ties with Moscow. During the Crimean crisis in 2014, Vladimir Putin pledged to protect ethically Russian populations around the region, which has deeply worried officials in Astana, Kazakhstan's capital.

Nursultan Nazarbayev, the country's 77-year-old president, has long touted a move away from Russian influence and has recently accelerated plans for a Latin alphabet. In a newspaper column in April, he stated that teaching of Roman alphabet would begin in 2018, alongside the introduction of new school textbooks.

Nazarbayev has been in charge of Kazakhstan since the fall of communism in 1991 and is officially styled as 'Leader of the Nation.' The long-serving politician has been subject to criticism by human rights organisations such as Amnesty International, who have accused him of presiding over an authoritarian regime. He successfully fought a presidential election in 2015 and won 98% of the vote.

RelatedKazakhstan to change from Cyrillic to Latin alphabet

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