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WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
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Kazakstan
Index
In June 1990, Moscow declared formally the sovereignty of the central
government over Kazakstan, forcing Kazakstan to elaborate its own
statement of sovereignty. This exchange greatly exacerbated tensions
between the republic's two largest ethnic groups, who at that point were
numerically about equal. Beginning in mid-August 1990, Kazak and Russian
nationalists began to demonstrate frequently around Kazakstan's parliament
building, attempting to influence the final statement of sovereignty being
developed within. The statement was adopted in October 1990.
In keeping with practices in other republics at that time, the
parliament had named Nazarbayev its chairman, and then, soon afterward, it
had converted the chairmanship to the presidency of the republic. In
contrast to the presidents of the other republics, especially those in the
independence-minded Baltic states, Nazarbayev remained strongly committed
to the perpetuation of the Soviet Union throughout the spring and summer
of 1991. He took this position largely because he considered the republics
too interdependent economically to survive separation. At the same time,
however, Nazarbayev fought hard to secure republic control of Kazakstan's
enormous mineral wealth and industrial potential. This objective became
particularly important after 1990, when it was learned that Gorbachev had
negotiated an agreement with Chevron, a United States oil company, to
develop Kazakstan's Tengiz oil fields. Gorbachev did not consult
Nazarbayev until talks were nearly complete. At Nazarbayev's insistence,
Moscow surrendered control of the republic's mineral resources in June
1991. Gorbachev's authority crumbled rapidly throughout 1991. Nazarbayev,
however, continued to support him, persistently urging other republic
leaders to sign the revised Union Treaty, which Gorbachev had put forward
in a last attempt to hold the Soviet Union together.
Because of the coup attempted by Moscow hard-liners against the
Gorbachev government in August 1991, the Union Treaty never was signed.
Ambivalent about the removal of Gorbachev, Nazarbayev did not condemn the
coup attempt until its second day. However, once the incompetence of the
plotters became clear, Nazarbayev threw his weight solidly behind
Gorbachev and continuation of some form of union, largely because of his
conviction that independence would be economic suicide.
At the same time, however, Nazarbayev pragmatically began preparing his
republic for much greater freedom, if not for actual independence. He
appointed professional economists and managers to high posts, and he began
to seek the advice of foreign development and business experts. The
outlawing of the CPK, which followed the attempted coup, also permitted
Nazarbayev to take virtually complete control of the republic's economy,
more than 90 percent of which had been under the partial or complete
direction of the central Soviet government until late 1991. Nazarbayev
solidified his position by winning an uncontested election for president
in December 1991.
A week after the election, Nazarbayev became the president of an
independent state when the leaders of Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus signed
documents dissolving the Soviet Union. Nazarbayev quickly convened a
meeting of the leaders of the five Central Asian states, thus effectively
raising the specter of a "Turkic" confederation of former
republics as a counterweight to the "Slavic" states (Russia,
Ukraine, and Belarus) in whatever federation might succeed the Soviet
Union. This move persuaded the three Slavic presidents to include
Kazakstan among the signatories to a recast document of dissolution. Thus,
the capital of Kazakstan lent its name to the Alma-Ata Declaration, in
which eleven of the fifteen Soviet republics announced the expansion of
the thirteen-day-old CIS. On December 16, 1991, just five days before that
declaration, Kazakstan had become the last of the republics to proclaim
its independence.
Data as of March 1996
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