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Kazakhstan arrests former security chief for treason as Putin’s troops restore order

  • Karim Masimov has been detained as Russian troops helped end the biggest protests in decades in central Asia’s largest oil producer
  • China’s President Xi Jinping has praised Kazakhstan’s president Tokayev for taking ‘strong measures’

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The former head of Kazakhstan’s counter-intelligence and anti-terror agency Karim Masimov has been detained. Photo: AP

Kazakhstan authorities arrested Karim Massimov, the former head of the National Security Committee and a two-time prime minister, on suspicion of treason as Russian troops helped bring an end to the biggest protests in decades in central Asia’s biggest oil producer.

Massimov, who also served as chief of staff for former President Nursultan Nazarbayev, was detained along with other unidentified officials on January 6, the committee said in a statement Saturday, without providing additional details.

The announcement came after President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev declared victory in a bloody confrontation with people protesting widespread corruption and poverty in what is the most serious challenge to Kazakh leadership since independence in 1991. Russian troops led efforts by the Collective Security Treaty Organisation to help restore order.

Massimov is a key ally of Nazarbayev, Kazakhstan’s long-time leader who turned over the presidency to Tokayev in 2019 while retaining much of his political and economic power. Nazarbayev, 81, has not been seen in public since the protests exploded this week.

The former president remains in the capital of Nur-Sultan and in contact with Tokayev, his spokesman Aidos Ukibay said on Twitter Saturday. Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko spoke with Nazarbayev Friday evening, according to a statement from the Belarusian president’s press service.

“Massimov’s arrest fits into the narrative that these protests exposed a power struggle among the elite,” Kate Mallinson, the founder of Prism Political Risk Management in London, said. “The fact that Tokayev asked the Russians for help is a sign that he does not have the support of the security services.”

04:08

Russian troops arrive in Kazakhstan as president issues ‘fire without warning’ order

Russian troops arrive in Kazakhstan as president issues ‘fire without warning’ order

The protests were sparked initially by anger at fuel price rises and quickly spiralled into nationwide anti-government demonstrations accompanied by widespread looting. Thousands took to the streets and seized government buildings in the country of 19 million that is as large as western Europe and rich in oil and minerals.

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