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Kazakh Court Orders Current Time Reporter To Leave Country


Zhazgul Egemberdieva, a reporter for Current Time, in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan
Zhazgul Egemberdieva, a reporter for Current Time, in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan

A Kazakh court has ordered a reporter for Current Time to leave the country and banned her from entering for five years, citing violations of the country's immigration regulations.

The court in the Kazakh capital Nur-Sultan on July 5 ordered Zhazgul Egemberdieva, a Kyrgyz national, to leave within 10 days.

Kazakh officials alleged that she failed to notify immigration authorities that she was staying in Kazakhstan longer than 30 days.

The management of Current Time, a Russian-language network led by RFE/RL in cooperation with VOA, said they were investigating the circumstances of the order.

Egemberdieva had been in Kazakhstan since May 3 as part of Current Time’s ongoing coverage of the June 9 presidential election.

The vote, which was won by Qasym-Zhomart Toqaev, the handpicked successor of longtime ruler Nursultan Nazarbaev, was criticized by international observers who cited "detentions of peaceful protesters, and widespread voting irregularities on election day [that] showed scant respect for democratic standards.

Egemberdieva had been scheduled to help in coverage of more antigovernment protests that were taking place in Nur-Sultan on July 6.

Reporters for Current Time and RFE/RL in general have faced increased scrutiny and harassment in Kazakhstan and Central Asia more broadly in recent years.

Ahead of the Kazakh presidential election, more than a half dozen RFE/RL reporters, producers, and videographers were denied accreditation to cover the vote.

During the vote itself, several reporters from RFE/RL and other media were briefly detained by Kazakh authorities.

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