Kazakh leader moves premier to powerful insider post

Updated 25 September 2012
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Kazakh leader moves premier to powerful insider post

ASTANA: Kazakh leader Nursultan Nazarbayev yesterday moved his Prime Minister Karim Massimov to the post of presidential administration chief amid jostling over the succession in the oil-rich state.
Former First Deputy Prime Minister Serik Akhmetov was swiftly confirmed by Parliament as the new premier in the Central Asian nation, which has been ruled by Nazarbayev since before the fall of the Soviet Union.
Analysts said the rare reshuffle was the clearest indication to date of whom Nazarbayev holds in most favor, with Massimov’s new job a promotion rather than a move sideways. “The presidential administration is an institution that impacts all aspects of Kazakh life,” said political analyst Dosym Satpayev.
“Massimov had economic duties before. Now he is a political manager,” the analyst said. “He definitely does not lose from this — he only wins.” The 72-year-old Nazarbayev enjoys ultimate authority and after winning a new five-year term with 95.5 percent of the vote last year said he had the ability to rule the country for another decade.
But analysts and investors believe this centralization is a liability for the booming nation of 17 million which is on good terms with world powers and a top global supplier of energy and natural resources such as uranium.
The man known as “leader of the nation” appeared to tear up one succession plan last year by ousting his son-in-law Timur Kulibayev — husband of his daughter Dinara — from a top energy post in the wake of deadly worker strikes.
Massimov, who preferred to stay out of the public limelight and orchestrate policy from behind the scenes, was seen by some as Kulibayev’s main rival. “We all have to stay on our president’s team — that is the most important thing,” Massimov, who has been premier since 2007, told his last government meeting yesterday. “This is an important time,” he added before being formally presented to his administration by Nazarbayev.
Investors credit the 47-year-old, a quiet man who has Nazarbayev’s ear more than anyone would ever suspect, with helping raise new interest in Kazakhstan through business-friendly policies. Kazakhstan has also been credited by the World Bank with making some of the biggest strides among emerging power nations while achieving strong annual growth of 10 percent over the past decade.
Massimov replaces Aslan Musna as administration chief. An official statement said Musna — who analysts said has failed to make an impression on Kazakh political circles — was assigned a budget oversight role.
Massimov has already served at the vital natural resource ministry and worked as Kazakhstan’s trade representative to Hong Kong.

 


Australia calls on Trump to respect NATO soldiers

Updated 3 sec ago
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Australia calls on Trump to respect NATO soldiers

  • ‘Those 47 Australian families who will be hurting by these comments, they deserve our absolute respect, our admiration’
  • US President Donald Trump lamented efforts of non-US troops in Afghanistan as ‘completely unacceptable’
SYDNEY: Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Sunday that comments from US President Donald Trump lamenting the efforts of non-US troops in Afghanistan were “completely unacceptable.”
Trump said in a Fox News interview that NATO sent “some troops” but “stayed a little back, a little off the front lines.”
Trump appeared to be partially walking back his remarks on Saturday amid growing outrage from European and now Australian allies.
Speaking on the ABC’s Insiders program on Sunday morning, Albanese said Australian families of fallen soldiers would be “hurting” as a result of Trump’s comments.
“Those 47 Australian families who will be hurting by these comments, they deserve our absolute respect, our admiration,” Albanese said.
“The bravery that was shown by 40,000 Australians (who) served in Afghanistan, they were certainly on the frontlines in order to, along with our other allies, defend democracy and freedom and to defend our national interests,” he added.
“They deserve our respect.”
On Saturday, a day after British Prime Minister Keir Starmer condemned Trump’s remarks as “appalling,” Trump appeared to change his position — at least as far as British troops were concerned.
“The GREAT and very BRAVE soldiers of the United Kingdom will always be with the United States of America!” Trump said on his Truth Social platform.
“In Afghanistan, 457 died, many were badly injured, and they were among the greatest of all warriors. It’s a bond too strong to ever be broken.”
Albanese referenced Trump’s later comments, suggesting he also appreciated the Australian effort in Afghanistan.
“I think President Trump’s comments overnight indicate a very different position. He’s acknowledged the contribution,” Albanese told the ABC, but added that Trump’s previous comments were “entirely not appropriate. Completely unacceptable.”
‘I don’t like you either’
Albanese also announced Australia’s next Ambassador to the United States, recommending Greg Moriarty for the job.
Earlier this month, Australia announced its ambassador to the United States, Kevin Rudd, would leave after a three-year tenure overshadowed by Trump’s verdict on him: “I don’t like you either.”
Former Australian prime minister Rudd, who departs his post on March 31 to become president of the Asia Society think tank in New York, had sharply criticized Trump while he was out of office.
Trump expressed disdain for Rudd during a televised US-Australia meeting at the White House in October last year, prompting some Australian opposition calls for his posting to be ended.
Albanese said Moriarty was an “outstanding Australian public servant,” and he had consulted with the Trump administration on his selection.