Kazakh Press
Monitoring.
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Kazakhstan 21st Century Foundation |
Voice of Democracy
Published by Kazakhstan 21st Century Foundation · Washington, D.C. June 5, 2003
MAKING SILK PURSE FROM SOW'S EAR -- The Kazakh dictator is
planning to spend another million dollars -- from those oil company bribes the Justice
Department is investigating? -- to polish his image in the United States. A million
dollars buys a lot of polish, but it may not be enough even for the high profile Patton
Boggs lobbying firm to make Nursultan Nazarbayev look squeaky clean. And if he's indicted
on corruption charges similar to those already filed against his long-time American
advisor, James Giffen. Since Giffen's arrest in the largest alleged violation of the U.S.
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, US-Kazakh "relations have suffered," reports the
Financial Times. " Mr Giffen was accused of funnelling more than $78m in payments
from Mobil and other oil companies to two senior Kazakh officials. Swiss legal documents
reveal that at least one of the accounts where the money was stashed was controlled by Mr
Nazarbayev," FT said. Although U.S. and European governments have criticized
Nazarbayev's increasingly autocratic rule, his new lobbyists will try to convince American
officials that he is really building a democracy. They also will attempt to quash the
Justice Department's investigation into high level bribery and corruption, and portray
Kazakhstan as a safe place to invest, FT reported. Nazarbayev was probably convinced to
put his million dollar investment in Patton Boggs because of the firm's links to the Bush
White House and not because of its failure to improve the image of another corrupt,
oil-rich client, Saudi Arabia. Nazarbayev wants Patton Boggs to improve his relations with
the Congress, the Bush Administration and the American media. Instead of Patton Boggs he
should be talking to Johnny Cochran. http://search.ft.com/search/article.html?id=030530001390&query=kazakhstan&vsc_appId=totalSearch&state=Form
ONLY ONE RAPED WAS JUSTICE -- A report prepared for the Organization of Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) by Dutch legal experts has thoroughly discredited the
Kazakh government's assault case against independent journalist Sergei Duvanov. The new
document leaves little doubt that the only assault that took place was on Duvanov's rights
and the rule of law. An investigative reporter and human rights activist, he had been
threatened, harassed and brutally beaten as a result of stories about high level
corruption in the Nazarbayev regime, culminating with charges last Oct. 28 that he had
raped an underage girl; three months later to the day he was convicted and sentenced to
three-and-a-half years in prison. International human rights and journalism groups and
assorted governmental bodies condemned the charges and trial, calling them politically
motivated and legally unsound. That was confirmed by the just published OSCE report. The
two experts -- Ferdinand J.M. Feldbrugge and William Simons -- found: the government had
committed "serious procedural violations"; its "evidence was not sufficient
to reach a conviction"; that the defense's theory of a conspiracy against Duvanov
"has not been adequately refuted," and the police investigation "cannot be
considered to have been full and objective." http://www.osce.org
SMEAR CAMPAIGN BACKFIRES -- The bribery scandal that could
result in the indictment of President Nursultan Nazarbayev by an American grand jury
actually began as an attempt by the Kazakh dictator to smear one of his political rivals,
according to the Moscow Times. Nazarbayev and his operatives had reportedly tried to sic
Belgian authorities on the rival -- widely believed to be former Prime Minister Akezhan
Kazhegeldin, the leader of the pro-democracy movement -- to deflect attention from
themselves. The investigation, which began in Belgium and quickly spread to Switzerland
and America, shifted focus and soon shone its spotlight on Nazarbayev and his American
advisor, James Giffen, who has since been indicted on bribery, tax evasion and several
other charges. The investigation by a Manhattan grand jury is continuing despite personal
pleas to the White House by Nazarbayev himself to derail it. http://www.themoscowtimes.com
For the full stories, see the web citations above or contact us at News@Kazakhstan21.org or see VOD Archives [http://iicas.org/english/enlibrary/libr_16_03_01kp.htm].
The Kazakhstan 21st Century Foundation promotes democracy and human rights in Kazakhstan
through public affairs and educational programs in the United States and Europe. This
material is distributed by Kazakhstan 21st Century Foundation.
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