Kazakhstan
President Nazarbayev has introduced increasingly severe restrictions on freedom of expression. The work of civil society is obstructed by legislation passed in 2016 to regulate foreign funding received by NGOs. The government’s plans to pass a new media law threatens to further limit independent media. Critical journalists and human rights defenders face trumped-up criminal charges and groundless defamation cases. State surveillance of online communications is pervasive and several social media users have been imprisoned on dubious ‘incitement’ charges. Freedom of assembly is also heavily restricted. Following peaceful demonstrations against land reform in 2016, protest leaders received lengthy jail sentences. Violence and hate speech against LGBT people are prevalent among politicians, the media and society.
ARTICLE 19 works to build resilience of independent journalists, civil society and activists in Kazakhstan to the range of risks they face. We support local lawyers to defend expression related cases through international human rights mechanisms and organise trainings and protection programmes for independent media outlets. Working with local partners, we engage on legislative reform: challenging proposals to introduce new restrictions. We also work to increase participation of LGBT activists in broader civil society initiatives, through capacity building and increasing activists’ abilities to protect themselves when speaking out and challenging hate speech.
All Kazakhstan

UK: Drop legal threats against media outlets reporting in public interest

Kazakhstan: Report on the right to freedom of expression and ‘extremism’ restrictions

Kazakhstan: Legal reforms essential to protect expression
Supporting media reform in Kazakhstan

HRC43: Oral statement during the Interactive Dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on Counter Terrorism and Human Rights
HRC39: Oral statement on countries’ violations to human rights
Kazakhstan: Ratel.kz journalists detained and website blocked
Challenging hate: Monitoring anti-LGBT “hate speech” and responses to it in Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia and Ukraine
