NurSultan, Kazakhstan
Kazakhstan’s president appointed a top aide to the senate Monday after dismissing his powerful predecessor’s daughter in a shock move that sparked speculation of a power struggle.
An order published on President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev’s website said that the former deputy head of his administration, Maulen Ashimbayev, would become a senator following the dismissal of Dariga Nazarbayeva on Saturday.
Ashimbayev was on Monday unanimously elected as speaker of the upper house — the position that Nazarbayeva held prior to her dismissal, and which had positioned her second in line to the presidency.
Nazarbayeva is the 56-year-old daughter of Kazakhstan’s first post-independence leader Nursultan Nazarbayev, who retains significant formal powers despite retiring last year after three decades at the helm.
Nazarbayev, 79, has not spoken publicly about his daughter’s dismissal which was announced on Saturday.
Yet he recently called on the country to back Tokayev as the oil-producing Central Asian country battles the dual shock of rock bottom energy prices and the coronavirus pandemic.
Ashimbayev’s unanimous election as senate speaker was confirmed by Tokayev’s press secretary in a Facebook post.
Like most parliaments in Central Asia, Kazakhstan’s bicameral legislature is widely viewed as a rubber stamp with no independence from the executive.
Many observers had viewed 66-year-old Tokayev, a former foreign minister, as a loyal seat-warmer who might make way for a member of the Nazarbayev family at a later date.—APP