Squatting in Kyrgyzstan explained

During the Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic (1936–1991), land squatting occurred when there was insufficient housing. There was another wave of squatting when the USSR collapsed and people internally migrated to cities such as the capital Bishkek in search of employment.[1] In the wake of the Tulip Revolution in 2005, the disturbed social order allowed squatters to occupy land, one example being the Ak Jar settlement in the Chuy Region north of Bishkek, where the squatter leaders (Kyrgyz:) gave plots to their families and then sold other ones to newcomers.[2] Other informal settlements (Kyrgyz:) were called Ak-Bata, Kelechek and Nijnyaya Ala-Archa.[3]

The new president Kurmanbek Bakiev did little to stop the occupations and therefore they continued. Coupled with weak governance, the lack of affordable housing pushed people into illegal occupation. Political leaders condemned the squatting actions, but were unable to stop them. Academics argued against the negative perceptions of squatters and NGOs such as Arysh, the Children's Protection Centre and the Red Cross supplied aid. Following the Kyrgyz Revolution of 2010, Kyrgyz nationalists attacked Mayevka, a village near Bishkek, on 19 April 19. They pillaged and claimed land from Meskhetians and Russians, then were evicted; five people were killed in the disturbances.[4] Bakiev's residence was occupied and in the following months land owned by Uzbeks was invaded.[5] [6] The Bishkek Mayor's Office estimated that there were 260,000 squatters in 2012, living in 48 settlements.[7] By 2013, Ak Jar remained an illegal settlement and continued to grow; at that point it covered 120 hectares.

Notes and References

  1. Isabaeva . Eliza . From denizens to citizens in Bishkek: informal squatter-settlement residents in urban Kyrgyzstan . Журнал исследований социальной политики . 2014 . 12 . 2 . 1727-0634.
  2. Isabaeva . Eliza . Transcending Illegality in Kyrgyzstan: The Case of a Squatter Settlement in Bishkek . Europe-Asia Studies . 2021 . 73 . 1 . 60–80 . 10.1080/09668136.2020.1861222. 231722923 .
  3. Hierman . Brent . Nekbakhtshoev . Navruz . Whose land is it? Land reform, minorities, and the titular "nation" in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan . Nationalities Papers . March 2014 . 42 . 2 . 336–354 . 10.1080/00905992.2013.857298.
  4. Web site: Nichol . Jim . The April 2010 Coup in Kyrgyzstan and its Aftermath: Context and Implications for U.S. Interests . Congressional Research Service . 1 March 2021.
  5. News: Sanghera . Balihar . Why are Kyrgyzstan’s slum dwellers so angry? . 14 October 2024 . Open Democracy . 15 June 2010.
  6. Web site: Melvin . Neil . Promoting a Stable and Multiethnic Kyrgyzstan: Overcoming the Causes and Legacies of Violence . Open Society Foundations . 14 October 2024 . 31 . en . 2011.
  7. Hatcher . Craig . Illegal geographies of the state: the legalisation of a "squatter" settlement in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan . International Journal of Law in the Built Environment . 13 April 2015 . 7 . 1 . 39–54 . 10.1108/IJLBE-01-2014-0004.