Politically Targeted, Economically Isolated
How Kazakhstan’s Financing Terrorism List Compounds Human Rights Harms

Large-scale anti-government protests rocked Kazakhstan in January 2022, setting off a cascade of human rights violations by the authorities, including excessive use of force against protesters, arbitrary arrest and detention, and ill-treatment and torture of detainees. Political reforms promised by Kazakhstan’s President Kasym-Jomart Tokaev in recent years have not led to meaningful improvements in the country’s poor human rights record. Free speech and the right to peaceful protest are suppressed. Kazakh authorities have used politically motivated prosecutions to silence government critics, including on the vague and overbroad charge of “inciting discord,” and banned political opposition groups as “extremist.” Independent trade unions face harassment and interference. Impunity for torture and ill-treatment persists. Kazakhstan has ratified the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, but children with disabilities are largely denied a quality, inclusive education.
How Kazakhstan’s Financing Terrorism List Compounds Human Rights Harms
Expand Social Protection; Reform ‘Targeted Social Assistance’ Program
Set Independent Investigation with International Experts
End Abuses, Interference with Lawyers; Investigate Torture Allegations
Submission to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities
Member Countries Highlighted Civil, Political, Women’s and LGBT Rights
Growing Number of Activists, Journalists Imprisoned Across the Region
July 2024
Governments Need to Improve and Enforce Laws, Increase Aid for Survivors
Revise Anti-Free Speech Laws, Uphold Media Freedoms
“All we can think about right now, is how to survive”
Improvements in Fundamental Freedoms, Liberties Are the Bedrock for Closer Ties
Revise Extremism, Terrorism Laws; End Arbitrary Financial Punishments
Crackdown on Freedom of Expression, Including Prosecutions of Comics, Should End