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Kyrgyzstan’s march to smother the free press

Kyrgyzstan is sliding down to full blown autocracy. The country has traditionally stood out for offering greater protections for free speech, political parties, and NGOs than any other Central Asian nation. However, this began to change after President Sadyr Japarov came to power, reshaping the nation’s political landscape. Today, the once-free press is no longer truly free.

Novastan 

Edited by: Julian Postulart

Logo of the investigative news outlet Kloop, which is known in Kyrgyzstan for its reporting on corruption in the highest circles of the state.
Logo of the investigative news outlet Kloop, which is known in Kyrgyzstan for its reporting on corruption in the highest circles of the state.

Kyrgyzstan is sliding down to full blown autocracy. The country has traditionally stood out for offering greater protections for free speech, political parties, and NGOs than any other Central Asian nation. However, this began to change after President Sadyr Japarov came to power, reshaping the nation’s political landscape. Today, the once-free press is no longer truly free.

On October 28, 2025, the Oktyabrsky District Court in Bishkek declared three independent media outlets – Kloop Media Foundation, TemirovLive, and Ait Ait Dese (TemirovLive’s Kyrgyz-language sister channel) – as extremist organisations. In Kyrgyzstan, anyone who now shares materials produced by these outlets can face criminal charges. This move marks yet another step in the ongoing repression of independent media in the country.

Just a month ago, on September 17, 2025, two video makers from the Kloop, Alexander Alexandrov and Joomart Duulatov, were sentenced to a penal colony for five years. Both were charged for involvement in the production of videos for TemirovLive, that would allegedly have incited public unrest. The lack of evidence was striking throughout the trial. No connection could be proven between the work of Alexandrov and Duulatov with TemirovLive, or between Kloop and TemirovLive. On top of that, even the prosecutors themselves admitted that the videos concerned contained no direct incitements to civil unrest.

These accusations came after eight (former) Kloop employees were arrested in late May 2025, and held for questioning by the security forces, the GKNB. None were initially allowed to see their lawyers. The next few days, all suspects were released except for Alexandrov, Duulatov and two accountants. The GKNB subsequently published videos in which the (former) employees confessed to inciting civil unrest. These videos were likely taken under duress, as Alexandrov seemed to indicate himself. All four were taken to court, where the two journalists retracted their confessions. The accountants denied their involvement in the case. While shocking, the sentencing comes as no surprise.

The crackdown on Kloop and TemirovLive is the latest example of tightening repression under the regime of President Sadyr Japarov.

Read more on Novastan: Leaving the Island – Japarov’s campaign to silence independent media

The TemirovLive link

Kloop and TemirovLive have, for many years, been strongholds of independent journalism in Kyrgyzstan. Apart from this, the alleged link between Kloop and TemirovLive seems to come mostly from both outlets’ reporting on corruption. Resultingly the two organisations, as well as their founders and staff, have been repeatedly pressed with legal charges in the past.

Most infamous is the case of Bolot Temirov, the founder of TemirovLive, who was arrested on January 22, 2022, for the possession of drugs, which he claims were placed on him. This happened two days after he and his platform TemirovLive published a new investigation, accusing the head of the GKNB, Kamchybek Tashiev, of corruption.

Kloop and the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), a US NGO supporting investigative journalism on organised crime and corruption, subsequently discovered that TemirovLive and Temirov himself were monitored long before the publication. In May 2022, Temirov was stripped of his Kyrgyz citizenship, after which he was acquitted on practically all charges laid against him later that year, in September 2022, because the investigation against him had been prejudiced. Still the harassment did not stop: Temirov was forcibly exiled to Russia in November 2022 in just a few hours’ time. His lawyers, friends and family did initially not know what had happened to him.

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New laws and the beginning of the end for free media

Japarov has taken numerous steps to restrict free journalism since coming to power following the 2020 October Revolution. First, on July 28, 2021, he implemented a law that would allow an “authorised state body” – whatever that may be – to block websites that publish so-deemed “false or inaccurate information”. To date, the Ministry of Culture has been its principal executor, as it has been actively persecuting free media under this new law.

In April 2024, the Kyrgyz parliament also passed a foreign agent law, akin to the one in Russia, which further limits the possibilities of NGOs and media that receive funds from abroad. The rationale for passing the foreign agent law is clear: to silence dissenting voices. Under the previous administration, numerous articles were published exposing large scale corruption, particularly in the Matraimov case, where a large politically connected corruption scheme was exposed in the Kyrgyz customs agency, stealing several million dollars.

Furthermore, Kloop’s election observation missions documented blatant violations during the 2020 and subsequent elections, prompting a partial recount and rerun of the 2021 parliamentary elections. These findings, along with Kloop’s daily reporting, underscore the vital role that that independent media has played in Kyrgyzstan, even in the face of mounting repression.

Read more on Novastan: In Central Asia, the Freedom of Press is in Decline

The autocrat’s way: closing publications and arresting critics

Kloop is not the first to meet the ire of Kyrgyzstan’s government. Over the past years, the authorities have adopted two main tactics for targeting media. One involves targeting key figures within organizations, through arrests, exile, intimidation or constant surveillance by security forces. The other focuses on restricting media outlets, including forced closures and the blocking of their websites.

In January 2024, eleven journalists from TemirovLive and Ait Ait Dese were arrested, even after Temirov himself had been exiled. During the same time, their offices (and that of 24.kg, another independent media outlet) were raided by the GKNB. Three journalists were eventually sentenced to long prison terms for calling for civil disobedience. According to Kyrgyz law it is illegal to call “for active disobedience to legitimate demands of the representatives of the authorities (…)”. Those found guilty of violating this law can face a minimum sentence of five years imprisonment.” The law’s ambiguous phrasing makes it easy to target journalists and other government critics.

The first victim of the earlier-mentioned disinformation law from July 2021 was the local branch of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), known as Azattyk. In October 2022, Azattyk was forced to close down over materials published about the September 2022 border conflict between Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, which became a highly sensitive political issue. The Ministry of Culture argued that the materials published contained false information. The website remained blocked until July the next year, when Azattyk and the Ministry of Culture reached a settlement. For their part, Azattyk had to delete a video they had made about the conflict. In return they were allowed again to operate in Kyrgyzstan.

The laws on civil disobedience and disinformation have been used repeatedly against free media all across Kyrgyzstan, for instance against 24.kg, Kaktus media, Next TV, and Aprel TV. Most recently, in August this year, a new law was passed restricting foreign ownership in media organisations to 35%.

Read more on Novastan: Closure of Radio Azattyk sparks discontent from civil society and international human rights activists

The repression of Kloop

The recent arrests are not the first time that Kloop was targeted. On August 28, 2023, Kloop was taken to court over allegedly failing to name all media activities it was engaged in, as per its foundational charter, and not registering as a mass media outlet. The next month, its website was blocked.

During the court case, more allegations were levelled against Kloop: their alleged criticism would spur people on to protest against the government and lead to their reader’s ‘zombification’. The brunt of the lawsuit focused on the alleged ‘negativity’ of Kloop’s reporting. According to the prosecutors, this negativity could also lead to sexual anomalies or “chemical (…) addictions.”

In the end, Kloop was formally liquidated. It tried to go to the Supreme Court over the case, but the Court denied the request without informing the defendant within one month – as is legally required. Afterwards, Kloop continued its work under the legal entity of Koomar Media. Despite the blocking and outlawing of the Kloop legal entity, the Kloop journalists continued their investigations. This included an investigative piece on the president and his close associate Kamchybek Tashiev, head of the GKNB. The eki dos (two friends), as they are commonly called, would be involved in various corruption schemes.

The sentencing of Alexanderov and Dulaatov served as yet another stark warning that Kyrgyzstan’s democracy is in retreat. At best, those engaged in anti-corruption journalism must now fear for their freedom; at worst, it signals that no journalist is safe. With the declaration of TemirovLive, Kloop, and Ait Ait Dese as extremist organisations, the threat extends beyond journalists. Anyone who reads or shares independent media content can now face prosecution, even if they are not directly involved in journalism. The future of Kyrgyzstan’s independent press remains uncertain – but one thing is clear: the outlook is bleak.

Written by Stijn van der Veen

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Comment (1)

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Hauke, 2025-10-29

Great article!

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