Paul
Goble
Staunton, Sept. 5 – Beijing’s
decision to begin publishing the Peoples Daily in Kazakh has sparked a
debate in Kazakhstan as to whether this is simply a propaganda move designed to
attract Kazakh support of China, a means to win over ethnic Kazakhs in China,
or a recognition by Beijing of Kazakhstan as a Kazakh rather than a Russian
speaking country.
Some analysts say that it is nothing
more than an effort to spread Chinese influence among those who are less than
thoughtful about what is going on. Among these is nationalist leader Erbol
Dauletbek, head of the Homeland Volunteers group (365info.kz/2021/09/kitajskaya-gazeta-na-kazahskom-priznanie-ili-ekspansiya-obzor-kazsmi).
In his view, “this is a conquest
without war” because “an individual who reads the site begins to think about
China as a future super power, and as a result seeks to study it and even live
and work there.”
But other Kazakhs see this as a more
positive development. Omarali Adilbekuly, head of the Zhebeu movement,
says that in the past, China viewed Kazakhstan as a Russian-speaking country
but now it recognizes that Kazakhstan is a Kazakh-speaking republic and is
promoting the study of the language by its officials and diplomats.
In recent years, he says, Kazakh language
departments have appeared in the universities of Beijing, Shanghai, and Xian,
supplementing those that have long existed in Kuldzha and Urumchi. “This means,”
Adilbekuly says, “that the Chinese have begun to focus their attention on the
Kazakh-language reader.”
Dos Koshim, a Kazakh political
scientist, says that China’s actions simply shows that Beijing is recognizing
reality and wants to ensure that it reaches people in their own language rather
than in another that is or may be becoming foreign to them. It is important
that Kazakhs know what China is thinking, and this new service will help.
He adds that “it would not be a bad
thing if the authoritative publications of Europe or the Washington Post
would also decide to place materials in Kazakh” on their portals.
So far, the author of these lines
has not seen any Russian reaction to what China has done, but if in fact,
Beijing now views Kazakhstan as a Kazakh-speaking country rather than a Russian-speaking
one, that is unlikely to be something that many in Moscow will welcome as it
will only encourage Nur-Sultan in its promotion of the national language.
And that promotion not only is
leading to more Russian flight from the country but also is creating a greater
divide between Moscow and a country with which the Russian side has long
assumed it does not face serious problems.
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