NATO has opened an alternate supply route to its troops in Afghanistan across Russia and Central Asia. Most NATO supplies enter Afghanistan through Pakistan, but the route has come under increasing attacks by militants in the border region, and NATO has been negotiating alternate routes for months.
Posts Tagged ‘Central Asia’
Tear gas, not tulips
An uprising in Kyrgyzstan watched throughout Central Asia and beyond
FIVE years after the “Tulip revolution” which led to the ouster of one president, Kyrgyzstan has seen another flee the capital, another new government set up and more elections promised. How stable the new regime will be, however, is far from clear.
Violent clashes between thousands of anti-government demonstrators and police in the capital, Bishkek, on Wednesday April 7th left at least 65 people dead and about 500 injured. The police used tear gas, smoke grenades and live bullets to dispel rioters in front of the presidential palace in the city centre—to no avail. The crowds stormed the government building and set fire to the prosecutor’s office. …
Kayani takes centrestage at US-Pakistan strategic dialogue
Ahead of the US-Pakistan strategic dialogue set to begin here Wednesday, the US has focused on building a stronger security relationship with Islamabad giving primacy to the military over the political establishment.
US Defence Secretary Robert Gates Monday met Pakistani Army Chief Gen Ashfaq Parvez Kayani at the Pentagon “to discuss the continuing conflict with the [...]
Food Empire Holdings posts 86% fall in FY09 profit before tax to $4.5m
Food Empire Holdings, the manufacturer of instant beverage products, frozen convenience food, confectionery and snack food, says profit before tax fell 86.2% to US$3.2 million ($4.5 million) while revenue fell 39.3% to US$134 million and for the year ended 31 December 2009.
But the group says it finished the year with a strong rebound in demand for its products resulting in a 58.2% increase in revenue to $48.5m in Q4 2009 compared to the Q3 2009. Compared to Q3 2009, revenue from Russia rose by 63.8% to $25.9 million, in Eastern Europe and Central Asia by 68.4% to $17.1 million and in other markets by 17.4% to $5.5 million.
Greece cancels order for swine flu vaccine
Novosti) Greece has cancelled an order for about eight million batches of the vaccine against swine flu, local media said citing the government sources.
Greece had previously ordered over 11 million batches to vaccinate its entire population, and has received 3.6 million batches, worth 25 million euro ($36 million) from that order.
“The state will pay only [...]
Scientists Considered Pouring Soot Over the Arctic in the 1970s to Help Melt the Ice – In Order to Prevent Another Ice Age
(Environmentalists: Kindly start by reading the end notes to see my background and why I am writing this) On April 28, 1975, Newsweek wrote an article stating:Climatologists are pessimistic that political leaders will take any positive action to compen…
What Empires Have Said Throughout History: “One More Surge”
A leading advisor to the U.S. military, the Rand Corporation, released a study in 2008 called “How Terrorist Groups End: Lessons for Countering al Qa’ida”. The report confirms what experts have been saying for years: the war on terror is actu…
Pakistan-Turkey rail trial starts

Pakistan has begun its first international freight train service from Islamabad to Istanbul.
The 6,500km (4,040 mile) trial service via the Iranian capital, Tehran, is a pilot project of the regional Economic Co-operation Organisation.
Officials expect it to boost Pakistan’s trade with Turkey and Iran – currently estimated at $1bn – by as much as 50%.
There are also hopes the route will eventually provide a link to Europe and Central Asia, and carry passengers.
Pakistan Prime Minister Syed Yusuf Raza Gilani he hoped the route would one day also provide passenger services and boost tourism, reports said.
The train will pull 20 containers on its maiden journey from Islamabad railway station, delivering 14 to Tehran and six to Istanbul a fortnight after it sets off.
The first journey will also take railway experts from the three countries on board to gauge the performance and check for obstacles over the vast terrain.
Mr Gilani described the beginning as "an epic event", Pakistan’s APP news agency reported.
Some operational obstacles also remain to be resolved, and parts of the route need to be upgraded, he added.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Tajik summit to tackle security
Rayhan Demytrie
Central Asia correspondent, BBC News

Tajikistan is hosting a regional security summit amid fears the conflicts in Afghanistan and Pakistan may be spreading into Central Asia.
The presidents of Pakistan, Russia, Afghanistan and Tajikistan are to meet in the Tajik capital Dushanbe.
Clashes between militants and police have led to concerns that unrest in countries on Tajikistan’s southern border could be spreading there.
The Tajik government says the militants have links to the Taleban.
On the eve of Thursday’s summit, Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari said his country would stand together with Tajikistan to fight extremism.
"It threatens my brother’s country, it threatens my country, and it threatens the neighbourhood," said Mr Zardari, after meeting Tajikistan’s President Emomali Rakhmon in Dushanbe.
In recent weeks there have been a number of clashes between armed militants and Tajik security forces in the eastern Rasht Valley.

On Wednesday, Tajik officials said they had killed a senior militant who belonged to a Central Asian group called the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.
Rasht is a remote area close to the Afghan border, and observers have speculated that the violence in Tajikistan may be related to an intensified campaign by Pakistan’s military against the Taleban and its supporters in the Afghan-Pakistan border area.
Tajikistan’s President Emomali Rakhmon is hosting Mr Zardari, President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.
The four are expected to discuss security issues as well as a future energy project that will link Afghanistan and Pakistan to a proposed hydroelectric power grid supplied by dams in Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Jodie Evans: Put Down The Pom-Poms
Biden must invest his energy in calling for diplomacy, development, investment in infrastructure and accountability from the corrupt leaders in Afghanistan and Iraq that the US supports.
Spies like them

From Ian Fleming to John Le Carre – authors have long been fascinated by the world of espionage. But, asks the BBC’s Gordon Corera, what do real life spooks make of fictional spies
Much of what the public knows about the UK’s Secret Service, or MI6, comes from the world of fiction – whether Ian Fleming’s James Bond or John Le Carre’s George Smiley.
FIND OUT MORE…- MI6: A Century in the Shadowsis a three-part series for BBC Radio 4
- The first episode, Gadgets and Green Ink, will be broadcast on BBC Radio 4 on Monday 27 July at 0902 BST
- Orlisten againvia iPlayer
The intertwining of fact and fiction dates back to the birth of the British intelligence service. In the early years of the 19th Century, the British public was whipped into a frenzy of "spy mania" driven by novelists and newspapers.
It was an era in which the UK was fearful of the rise of Germany and particularly its navy.
William Le Queux wrote the novel, The Invasion of 1910, which was serialised in the Daily Mail. The paper took care to adjust the invasion route the Germans were supposed to take in order to include the towns where its circulation was highest.
There was a widespread belief that the Germans were everywhere, posing as waiters and barbers, stealing secrets and preparing for war. Public pressure grew to do something and so a Secret Service Bureau was established. One half, which would become MI5, was designed to hunt for German spies. The other, which would become MI6, was to steal German secrets.
Older mythology
Even at that early stage, fiction was rubbing off on the real world of espionage, says Alan Judd, the biographer of Sir Mansfield Cumming, who was the first head of what became MI6.
"Le Queux knew some of the people in the War Office, I had no doubt that he had some influence on it all – certainly the culture and the climate," says Judd.

But the mythology created by fiction may have gone back even further, to the era of the Great Game – the battle between the British and Russian empires for supremacy of Central Asia, which began in the early 19th Century.
Britain had no professional spying service at the time, just the occasional gentleman amateur and soldier. But their stories were written up for the public, most dramatically in Rudyard Kipling’s Kim.
These forerunners of the professional spy "did some very brave things" says Sir Colin McColl, MI6′s chief between 1989 and 1994.
"And so there was a sort of general feeling that this was a good thing done by brave people. And that was followed by a whole series of authors in the first part of the 20th Century – [John] Buchan and so on. I mean terrific stuff."

The fiction created a romanticism around spies which attracted many people to work for the service.
Among them was Daphne Park, who joined in the 1940s and rose to become a controller at MI6.
"I suppose it did start with reading [Rudyard Kipling's] Kim, reading John Buchan and reading Sapper and Bulldog Drummond and I think from a quite early age I did want to go into intelligence. I didn’t know what kind or how it would be. But I always wanted it."
As well as attracting individuals to sign up for desk jobs, the daring antics of fictional spies also helped MI6 in its core work of recruiting agents – people willing to spy for the service and pass on secrets.
"There have been a lot of people with whom we’ve dealt across the world… [that] have come to us or worked with us because they felt we knew far more than anybody else knew," says Sir Colin.

And much of the world knows MI6 though the man known as 007. James Bond’s creator Ian Fleming never served in MI6 but he did work in naval intelligence during World War II and modelled Bond on a number of real life intelligence officers.
His creation – particularly once it moved to cinema – has done much to define public perceptions of MI6, although the real chief is called C not M. Egyptian intelligence services reportedly bought up copies of Fleming’s books to use on their training courses.
So do people think it is like Bond
"They usually do," says Sir Colin. "[But] no it isn’t you see… we were not in the business of going out and shooting people down dark allies. That was a completely different world."
But Bond still has his uses. "Everybody watches Bond. And so why shouldn’t a little bit of Bond rub off on our reputation," says Sir Colin. "If you looked at the number of people who helped us at any one time, a large number of them were Brits who were doing it for nothing – perhaps a bottle of whisky at Christmas. You know we had wonderful support and that is hugely valuable… based on the reputation."
However, Fleming’s character seems to have made less of an impression on the Russians, according to former KGB colonel Mikhail Lyubimov.

"Bond was never considered to be a serious film in the KGB," says Mr Lyubimov, curtly.
The other figure who has done much to shape the public understanding of MI6 is John le Carre. The portrayal of often flawed characters draws a mixed reception from real life spies.
"I mean there were two feelings I think in the service over the years," explains Sir Colin McColl. "There were those who were furious with John Le Carre because he depicts everybody as such disagreeable characters and they are always plotting against each other and so on… So people got rather cross about that.
"But I thought it was terrific because, again, it carried the name that had been provided by Bond and John Buchan and everybody else, it gave us another couple of generations of being in some way special."
Ms Park, it’s fair to say, is not a fan.
"He dares to say that it is a world of cold betrayal. It’s not. It’s a world of trust. You can’t run an agent without trust on both sides." Le Carre, who served briefly in MI5 and MI6, declined to be interviewed.
As the British Secret Service has come out of the shadows, some of the myth and mystery has certainly disappeared. Some insiders believe this is inevitable and for the best, laying to rest some of the crazier ideas about the world of MI6.
But there are a few, all the same, who may rather miss it.
Send us your comments using the form below.
<p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Wall ‘could stop desert spread’
By Jonathan Fildes
Technology reporter, BBC News, Oxford

A plan to build a 6,000km-long wall across the Sahara Desert to stop the spread of the desert has been outlined.
The barrier – formed by solidifying sand dunes – would stretch from Mauritania in the west of Africa to Djibouti in the east.
The plan was put forward by architect Magnus Larsson at the TED Global conference in Oxford.
A 2007 UN study described desertification as "the greatest environmental challenge of our times".
"The threat is desertification. My response is a sandstone wall made from solidified sand," said Mr Larsson, who describes himself as a dune architect.
The sand would be stabilised by flooding it with bacteria that can set it like concrete in a matter of hours.
North African nations have promoted the idea of planting trees to form a Great Green Belt to prevent the spread of the sand.
A similar proposal – known as the Green Wall of China – has also been proposed to stop the spread of the Gobi Desert.
Ballooning idea
In 2007, the UN issued a report that said that one third of the Earth’s population – about two billion people – are potential victims of desertification.
"The idea is to stop the desert using the desert itself"
Magnus Larsson
It is concerned that the slow creep of the sands will displace people and put new strains on natural resources and societies.
Problem areas include the former Soviet republics in central Asia, China and sub-Saharan Africa.
"It affects about 140 countries," Mr Larsson told BBC News.
Mr Larsson showed pictures of a village called Gidan-Kara in Nigeria which had had to be moved because of the creep of the dunes. He said it was one of many examples.
The architect’s proposed wall across the desert would be a complement to, rather than a replacement, of the Great Green Belt proposal.
"It would provide physical support for the trees," he said.
Crucially, he said, it would leave a barrier even if the trees were removed.
"People are so poor in these countries and these regions that they chop them down for firewood."
The wall would effectively be made by "freezing" the shifting sand dunes, turning them into sandstone.
"The idea is to stop the desert using the desert itself," he said.
The sand grains would be bound together using a bacterium called Bacillus pasteurii commonly found in wetlands.

"It is a microorganism which chemically produces calcite – a kind of natural cement."
Mr Larsson got the idea for using the bacteria from a team at the University of California Davis, which had been investigating its use for solidifying the ground in earthquake prone areas.
Mr Larsson envisages injecting the dunes with the bacteria on a massive scale or using a barrage of giant bacteria-filled balloons.
"We allow the dune to wash over this structure then we would pop the balloon," he told BBC News.
The scheme would also have advantages for nearby populations, he said. For example, it could be excavated he said to provide shade, shelter or as a structure to collect water.
However, Mr Larsson admitted that the scheme faced numerous practical problems.
"There are many details left to explore in this story: political, practical, ethical, financial. My design is fraught with many challenges," he said.
"However, it’s a beginning, it’s a vision; if nothing else I would like this scheme to initiate a discussion," he added.
TED Global is a conference dedicated to "ideas worth spreading". It runs from the 21 to 24 July in Oxford, UK.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
India has signed agreement on Trans Asian Railway Network: Govt.
Union Minister of State for Ministry of Railways K.H. Muniyappa on Thursday said that India has signed the Inter Governmental Agreement on the Trans Asian Railway Network in June 2007 at United Nations Headquarters in New York.
In a written reply to the Lok Sabha, Muniyappa stated that the agreement has come into force in June [...]
David Calleo: European Alarm Over Obama
The authors of “An Open Letter to the Obama Administration from Central and Eastern Europe” are nervous about recent US efforts to repair relations with Putin’s Russia.
Gearing up to vote
By Rayhan Demytrie
BBC News, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan

"Together We Can" is Almazbek Atambayev’s presidential campaign slogan.
The former prime minister and main opposition candidate, Mr Atambayev is hoping an Obama-style message will carry him through to victory in Thursday’s elections.
He promises to end the governance of one family and fight the country’s high level of corruption.
Outspoken politician Bakyt Beshimov, Mr Atambayev’s campaign chief, sifts through the "Together We Can" printed T-shirts, flags, bandanas and stickers.
He sounds convinced the Kyrgyz public will back them. "Our concept is to show that together, united we can win," he says.
But he faces an extremely tough battle. Six candidates are competing for the presidency on 23 July, including Kurmanbek Bakiyev, the incumbent leader.
The brains behind his campaign have chosen not to feature Mr Bakiyev’s picture. Instead ordinary citizens smile from the billboards with the simple captions "Bakiyev is our president" or "Bakiyev is good".
PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES- Kurmanbek Bakiyev – the incumbent leader
- Almazbek Atambayev – former prime minister and the main opposition candidate
- Temir Sariyev – who broke off from the coalition of opposition parties to run for president
- Zhenishbek Nazaraliyev – a celebrity doctor who, if elected, promises to legalise opium cultivation
- Toktaim Umetalieva – a female Krygyz activist
- Nurlan Motuyev – an entrepreneur allegedly linked to a coal-mining scandal
But even though his picture is not on display, Mr Bakiyev is still the most visible candidate – his campaign billboards significantly outnumber the rest of the contenders.
Two days prior to the poll, a concert featuring local and Russian pop stars was held in Bishkek’s largest stadium in support of Mr Bakiyev’s candidacy.
A recent report published by the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe’s election observers says that broadcast coverage of opposition campaigns has been limited, and state media has been predominantly focusing on the activities of President Bakiyev "both as candidate and president".
Grip on power
The last presidential elections in impoverished Kyrgyzstan took place four years ago.
In March 2005, the country underwent a popular uprising which became known as the Tulip Revolution. Then president Askar Akayev was forced to flee the country.

Mr Bakiyev was elected the following July with an overwhelming 89% of the popular vote.
But despite this mandate, he has still faced some tough challenges – notably when opposition politicians sought to combine their efforts to him bring down earlier this year.
The United People’s Movement (UPM), a coalition of opposition parties, attempted to stage mass protests, accusing him of squandering the opportunity given to him by the Kyrgyz people.
They demanded electoral reforms and an end to the harassment of opposition members, threatening to hold more rallies if their demands not met.
But in the event, turnout was poor and Mr Bakiyev lived to fight another day.
Base race
In his inaugural speech four years ago, Mr Bakiyev pledged to fight corruption and nepotism.
Kyrgyzstan, he said, will not become a place for the fulfilment of someone else’s geopolitical interests – particularly those of the US and Russia.

Now the country is perhaps best known for precisely that – with debate centring on the only US military base in Central Asia, which Kyrgyzstan announced in February that it would shut.
Manas, as the base is known, is the main transit hub for tens of thousands of US and Nato forces on their way in and out of Afghanistan. The decision to close the base came just as US President Barack Obama signalled that the US would double its number of troops in Afghanistan.
On the same day that President Bakiyev made his decision public, Russia offered Kyrgyzstan almost $2bn (£1.2bn) in loans, and a $300m grant.
In June parliament voted in favour of a new deal allowing the Americans to stay, and just in the past week a high level Russian delegation has visited Kyrgyzstan to discuss the expansion of its military presence by opening a second base in the country.
Cracking down on dissent
Another problem facing Kyrgyzstan at the moment is that, since the beginning of this year, there have been a series of attacks on independent journalists.

In the latest incident, just two weeks before the election, Almaz Tashiev – who worked for the opposition Agym newspaper – died following surgery for injuries sustained after he was beaten by police officers in the town of Nookat.
The interior ministry has promised to investigate the case and "severely punish" those found guilty. In an unprecedented move, the authorities have dismissed the head of Nookat’s police and several of his deputies.
In March, a reporter from the opposition newspaper Reporter Bishkek was also brutally attacked – it has been reported that he can no longer write.
Bakyt Beshimov, back at his campaign headquarters, says the abuses are continuing.
"There was a journalist in my office just now; she came to say that the editor of her newspaper has been threatened for publishing an interview with our candidate," says Beshimov.
It remains to be seen how far journalists dare report this coming election.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Nato warning over Afghan mission

Nato head Jaap de Hoop Scheffer has warned that walking away from the alliance’s mission in Afghanistan would have a "devastating" effect.
Speaking in London, the Nato secretary-general said failure would give free run to al-Qaeda.
His comments come as Afghanistan suffers a spike in violence ahead of elections on 20 August.
More foreign troops have been killed in July than in any other month since the US-led invasion in 2001.
In a speech at a think tank, Mr de Hoop Scheffer said Nato allies could not afford to abandon their campaign.
"If we were to walk away, Afghanistan would fall to the Taliban, with devastating effect for the people there – women in particular," he said.
‘Burden sharing’
He also said any such move would have an impact on the wider region.
"Pakistan would suffer the consequences, with all that that implies for international security," he said.
"Central Asia would see extremism spread. Al-Qaeda would have a free run again, and their terrorist ambitions are global."
He said Nato members had to realise that the mission was "essential" to their security.
"As much as we may long for the near-perfect security of Cold War deterrence, we must accept that security today requires engagement in far away places – engagement that is dangerous, expensive, open ended, and with no guarantee of success."
Earlier on Monday, the Nato-led force in Afghanistan announced the deaths of four US soldiers in the east of the country.
The deaths bring the number of Nato soldiers killed in July to 55.
Seventeen of those are from the UK, where the rising toll has sparked debate over the country’s participation in the Nato-led mission.
Mr de Hoop Scheffer, who met UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown earlier on Monday, acknowledged the sacrifices being made by soldiers from the UK and other allies.
He also called for what he called more equitable "burden sharing" between members of the Nato alliance.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Malou Innocent: Afghanistan: The Deadliest Month and It’s Time to Get Out
July has been the deadliest month yet for U.S. forces in Afghanistan. At least 27 troops have died so far this month, and an estimated…
Corruption drive

A number of senior government officials have fallen to an anti-corruption drive in Kazakhstan, but some are questioning the motives behind the latest campaign, says the BBC’s Central Asia correspondent Rayhan Demytrie.
The government has introduced a series of anti-corruption measures, some more gimmicky than others.
The latest is for civil servants to wear badges stating: "I am against corruption."
"We thoroughly studied anti-corruption methods used in other countries before coming up with these suggestions," says Mirbulat Kunbayev, a member of the anti-corruption council of the ruling Nur Otan party.
"I understand that it will not eliminate corruption, but I think anyone wearing the badge will think twice before asking for a bribe. This method has been successfully used in Malaysia."
Other suggestions have been to hold a competition for the best anti-corruption song and introduce life sentences for government employees found guilty of stealing "particularly large sums" from state funds.
‘Ten slashing punches’
Other measures are much more serious.
"The media misinterpreted us," says Mr Kunbayev, who is unhappy that only these novelties were singled out from the anti-corruption drive.
"The country has been hit badly by the global economic crisis, and this big scale anti-corruption war could be one of the means to take the public’s attention away from real problems"
Andrei Chebotaryov, political analyst
"We suggested a whole list of measures aimed at creating a powerful anti-corruption system."
In April, President Nursultan Nazarbayev suggested paying cash rewards to ordinary citizens for turning in any corrupt state officials they encounter.
Last year the president said corruption in the country had to be fought with "10 slashing punches". He ordered the creation of a special programme aimed at eliminating fraud and dismissing top government officials implicated in corruption.
Some have not had to wait too long.
According to official figures, close to 1,000 corruption investigations have been opened this year, many of them against government employees.
Transparency plea
In a recent survey conducted by the International Republican Institute – a US-funded organisation that promotes good governance – Kazakhs consider traffic police, the customs service and the general prosecutors office as the country’s most corrupt institutions.
But the current wave of sackings and arrests over allegations of corruption mainly involves high-ranking officials.
In early June, President Nazarbayev fired his ex-Defence Minister Danial Akhmetov, a long time loyalist and former prime minister.
No official reason was giving for his dismissal.
Just weeks before, Mr Akhmetov’s deputy Kazhimurat Mayermanov was arrested on corruption charges.

A statement from the National Security Committee (KNB) said that Mr Mayermanov and several other defence ministry officials were accused of purchasing defective military equipment from Israel and misappropriating $82m from the defence budget.
"Ahmetov’s dismissal was somehow expected ever since the whole corruption scandal at the defence ministry began. It was just a matter of time," says Daulet Zhumabekov, an ex-soldier who has battled corruption at the defence ministry.
In May Mukhtar Dzhakishev, the head of the state-owned nuclear firm "Kazatomprom", was arrested along with a number of his deputies.
The authorities say Mr Dzhakishev appropriated 60% of Kazakhstan’s uranium deposits, worth billions of dollars, and sold them to foreign firms.
His arrest caused a stir in Kazakh business circles, prompting a group of businessmen to write an open letter to President Nazarbayev urging transparency in Mr Dzhakishev’s criminal case.
The businessmen said a secret investigation would tarnish Kazakhstan’s international image and deter potential investors.
But the authorities are releasing little information about the case. Mr Dzhakishev’s wife and family are not allowed to visit him and lawyers have been denied access.
"Dzhakishev was known as an honest and talented manager," says Sergey Smirnov, an energy expert from the journal Expert-Kazakhstan.
"Any Kazatomprom contract has to be approved by the government and the ministry of energy and natural resources. Technically it is impossible that Dzhakishev could have appropriated 60% of uranium deposits," says Mr Smirnov.
During his 10-year tenure Mr Dzhakishev led Kazatomptom to become one of the world’s top uranium producers.
There is also an ongoing case against former Environment Minister Nurlan Iskakov and two of his deputies, who are charged with financial manipulation and embezzling more than $6m from the state budget.
Power struggle
In a recent interview with Interfax-Kazakhstan news agency, the head of Kazakh national security Amangeldi Shabdarbayev said that there was no political implication in the cases against top government officials.
"Every case is a result of a thorough investigation by the general prosecutor’s office and other institutions," Interfax-Kazakhstan quoted Mr Shabdarbiyev as saying.
But some are questioning the timing of the latest anti-corruption drive.
"The country has been hit badly by the global economic crisis, and this big scale anti-corruption war could be one of the means to take the public’s attention away from real problems," says political analyst Andrei Chebotaryov.
Others suggest the anti-corruption drive is part of a bigger power struggle and an excuse to purge unfavourable figures from Kazakhstan’s ruling elite.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Turkmenistan to create desert sea

Turkmenistan has launched the latest stage of a plan to channel water across thousands of kilometres of desert to create a vast inland sea.
The lake will be filled with drainage water from the country’s cotton fields.
President Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov said the "Golden Age Lake" plan showed his country was preserving nature and improving the environment.
But critics say the water will be full of fertiliser and insecticides, and will evaporate quickly.
The project is one of the biggest and most ambitious in the world, and could cost up to $20bn (£12bn).
President Berdymukhamedov, wielding a spade, opened up the first tributary to bring water to a natural depression in the Karakum Desert. The desert covers more than 80% of Turkmenistan.
He told the crowd that the lake would make the desert bloom.

"Our initiatives to provide water and environmental security… demonstrate that Turkmenistan is making huge efforts to contribute to common work on preserving the nature and improving the environment," he said.
The water from the canals, he said, would attract wildlife and open up new land for agriculture.
Village elders in traditional clothing helped the water flow into the new channel.
After the opening ceremony, Mr Berdymukhamedov mounted a bejewelled horse to ride back to the helicopter which brought him in from the capital, Ashkhabad.
‘Dead sea’ fears
The Turkmen government, on its website, said the project "would go down in history of the epoch of New Revival as one of its brightest pages".
Work on the project began in 2000, with the construction of two canals which bisect the country.
Thousands of smaller feeder channels will funnel the water from Turkmenistan’s irrigated cotton fields to the new lake. Treatment plants are planned to clean the water.
It could take many years to fill the lake – in the Karashor depression – but it will eventually cover 2,000 sq km (770 sq miles).

Environmentalists say a lot of the water will simply disappear into the desert’s permeable soil. Large amounts, they say, will also evaporate in the high temperatures, leaving the soil extremely salty.
They predict that the Golden Age Lake will simply become a new "Dead Sea".
Analysts also fear that Turkmenistan might be tempted to help fill the new lake with fresh water from the Amu Darya, a river on the Uzbek border, which Uzbekistan relies on for irrigation. This, they say, could start a war.
Water is a precious resource in Central Asia. Drought and overuse have caused ecological disasters like that of the Aral Sea to the north, which has shrunk by 90% in recent decades.
Under the rule of former President Saparmurat Niyazov, Turkmenistan was renowned for its huge, Soviet-style construction projects. Mr Niyazov, who died in 2006, initiated the Golden Age Lake project.
Mr Berdymukhamedov came to power vowing to break with the past. But he has already approved $1bn projects for Ashkhabad, including a new five-star hotel, government buildings, a new stadium and a "Palace of Happiness" for weddings. </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




