Putin to visit Central Asia as Russian influence wanes

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 08 October 2025
Follow

Putin to visit Central Asia as Russian influence wanes

  • The region is home to millions of Russian speakers, while millions of Central Asian migrants have moved across the border to work in some of Russia’s most labor intensive industries
  • All five Central Asian states maintain close cultural and economic links with Russia

DUSHANBE: Russian President Vladimir Putin will meet Central Asian leaders in Tajikistan on Thursday, for only the second such summit since the fall of the Soviet Union, as Moscow jostles with China and Europe for influence.
Weakened by the war in Ukraine, Russia’s historic grip over the region has waned in recent years.
At the first summit with Central Asia’s five leaders in 2022, Putin got a tongue-lashing from the president of Tajikistan, who accused Moscow of neglecting the post-Soviet states and of showing them little respect.
China and Europe have meanwhile rushed to fill the power vacuum. Both have held high-level summits in Central Asia this year and are hoping to expand their access to the region’s vast natural resources.
Putin is expected to arrive in Tajikistan on Wednesday.
The leaders of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan are set to attend Thursday’s meeting, which will take place in the Tajik capital Dushanbe.
Central Asian countries will use the summit to “advance their positions,” as well as to build trust with Russia and develop trade ties, Kazakhstan’s foreign ministry told AFP.
Russia said it expected “significant and interesting results from the talks.”

- ‘We want to be respected’ -

All five Central Asian states maintain close cultural and economic links with Russia.
The region is home to millions of Russian speakers, while millions of Central Asian migrants have moved across the border to work in some of Russia’s most labor-intensive industries.
Russia is set to build Kazakhstan’s first nuclear plant and its relations with its neighbors are largely friendly.
But after more than a century of Russian domination, Central Asia’s five republics are increasingly looking beyond Moscow — their former imperial ruler — for trade and security.
The region is increasingly looking to China and Turkiye for arms supplies, while the European Union announced a $14 billion investment package in the region following its summit in April.
Neighbouring China has already established a strong presence there through its Belt and Road Initiative, a colossal infrastructure project that aims to boost trade between Beijing and the rest of the world.
Russia has said it is not competing with Beijing for influence in Central Asia but the rivalry with other powers — including Europe — is “hard to ignore,” Kyrgyz-based analyst Ilya Lomakin told AFP.
“One could say that this is the latest iteration of the so-called New Great Game,” he said, referring to a 19th-century power struggle between the British and Russian empires in the region.
“Whether Russia will be able to maintain its position in this area, let alone expand it, remains to be seen,” he added.
At the last Central Asia-Russia summit in October 2022, Tajik leader Emomali Rakhmon demanded Russia show “respect” in a seven-minute tirade that left Putin squirming.
“Yes, we’re small nations, not 100 million or 200 million people... But we have history, culture. We want to be respected,” he added.
In response, Putin said he “largely agreed” and called for them to focus on “concrete matters.”


Cambodia, Thailand trade accusations of fresh border clashes

Updated 3 sec ago
Follow

Cambodia, Thailand trade accusations of fresh border clashes

  • Five days of hostilities erupted between Thailand and Cambodia this summer, killing 43 people
  • The dispute between Thailand and Cambodia centers on a century-old disagreement over their borders
PHNOM PENH: Cambodia and Thailand traded accusations of fresh clashes along their border on Wednesday, after Bangkok said it was pausing the implementation of a US-backed peace deal.
Five days of hostilities erupted between Thailand and Cambodia this summer, killing 43 people and displacing around 300,000 before a truce backed by US President Donald Trump took effect.
However, Thailand on Monday paused implementation of a follow-on deal to wind down hostilities, claiming a blast from a newly laid land mine had wounded four of its soldiers.
Just two days later, officials on both sides have reported gunfire across the boundary between Thailand’s Sa Kaeo province and Cambodia’s Banteay Meanchey province.
“Thai soldiers opened fire on civilians,” Cambodian information minister Neth Pheaktra said, citing a toll from local authorities that reported five wounded.
Royal Thai Army spokesman Winthai Suvaree said Cambodian soldiers “fired shots into Thai territory” around 4:00 p.m. (0900 GMT) and that its troops “took cover and fired warning shots in response.”
“The incident lasted about 10 minutes before calm was restored,” he said in a statement. “No Thai casualties were reported.”
Cambodia’s information ministry shared images and video which it alleged showed wounded civilians, including one man being treated in an ambulance with a bloodied leg.
AFP was not able to verify the provenance of the images.
‘I am so frightened’
Cambodian villager Hul Malis said by phone that gunfire from across the border had wounded at least three people in her area.
“They just shot at us. We did nothing,” she said. “I am so frightened, I am running away now.”
Her husband, Thong Kimleang, said the Thai military “fired a lot of shots” for around 15 minutes.
The dispute between Thailand and Cambodia centers on a century-old disagreement over their borders mapped during France’s colonial rule in the region, with both sides claiming a smattering of border temples.
Back in July, the region ignited with open combat along the frontier waged with fighter jets, missile strikes and ground troops.
A truce began on July 29 after intervention by Trump, as well as Chinese diplomats and Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, who chairs the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) bloc.
They signed a joint declaration last month, agreeing to withdraw heavy weapons and allowing ceasefire monitors access to the border.
While experts said the deal failed to adjudicate the core territorial dispute, Trump flew into Kuala Lumpur to oversee the pact he cited as evidence of his presidential peace-making abilities.
But the apparent fresh land mine blast and renewed clashes have thrown its future into doubt.
Thailand has already delayed the release of 18 captured Cambodian soldiers, a key plank of the joint declaration.