Kazakhstan drafts media law to increase use of Kazakh language over Russian | Kazakhstan | The Guardian Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
View of the presidential palace in Astana, Kazakhstan.
View of the presidential palace in Astana, Kazakhstan. There has been a governmental plan to promote the Kazakh language. Photograph: JTB Photo/UIG/Getty Images
View of the presidential palace in Astana, Kazakhstan. There has been a governmental plan to promote the Kazakh language. Photograph: JTB Photo/UIG/Getty Images

Kazakhstan drafts media law to increase use of Kazakh language over Russian

Legislation under debate stipulates share of state language on television and radio should grow to 70%

Kazakhstan has announced efforts to promote the use of the Kazakh language over Russian in its media, amid growing scepticism over Moscow’s influence in the country since the invasion of Ukraine.

Kazakh is the official language of the former Soviet republic in central Asia, but Russian is recognised too and is widely spoken among the tightly controlled country’s population of about 20 million.

“The draft law on the media stipulates an increase in the share of the state language in television and radio from 50% to 70%,” the culture minister, Aida Balayeva, told reporters in the capital, Astana.

The legislation is being debated by lawmakers but is likely to be approved by parliament, which is seen as loyal to the president, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev.

skip past newsletter promotion

“This transition will take place at a rate of 5% per year from 2025 onwards,” Balayeva said, referring to government plans to promote the Kazakh language since the collapse of the Soviet Union three decades ago.

Kazakhstan, where ethnic Russians comprise about 15% of the population, shares a long border with Russia and retains close political, economic and military ties with Moscow. It has sought to strengthen ties with western countries and China since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.

Neighbouring Kyrgyzstan, where Russian is a recognised language, passed similar legislation earlier this year. The law requires civil servants in the former Soviet country to be fluent in Kyrgyz, and for the media to produce 60% of content in the local language.

In Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan – other ex-Soviet countries in central Asia – Russian has no official status but is used by residents and officials.

More on this story

More on this story

  • UK MP and peer on Kazakhstan visit denied access to opposition leader

  • ‘His family robbed the country’: personality cult of ex-Kazakh leader crumbles

  • ‘I have not gone anywhere’: former Kazakh leader denies fleeing country

  • Where is Kazakhstan’s former longtime leader Nursultan Nazarbayev?

  • Scepticism in uneasy Kazakhstan as president promises reform

  • Leading campaigner urges UK to target wealth of Kazakhstani elite

  • Foreign meddling behind Kazakhstan unrest, Putin claims

  • Kazakhstan says 164 people were killed in week of unrest

Most viewed

Most viewed