A social earthquake in Eurasia
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Since late March, much of Eurasia from Armenia to Mongolia has been transfixed by a court case of a former top official in Kazakhstan who killed his wife. On May 13, the man was sentenced to 24 years in prison. Not only was his violent action caught on camera, but the trial was also livestreamed 鈥 a first in Kazakhstan 鈥 for millions to watch.
More than two-thirds of Kazakhs followed the trial over six weeks. Even a famous Russian TV news presenter was in the courtroom, writing on social media that a 鈥渜uiet revolution鈥 was taking place in Kazakhstan, a country of some 20 million at the heart of Eurasia.
In a region not strong on women鈥檚 rights and equality before the law, the trial of Kuandyk Bishimbayev, once a member of Kazakhstan鈥檚 political elite, had an impact even before the guilty verdict. The legislature passed a law 鈥 widely known as 鈥淪altanat鈥檚 Law,鈥 for the first name of Mr. Bishimbayev鈥檚 wife 鈥 that criminalizes domestic violence. The law takes effect June 15.
In another sign of progress in a largely patriarchal society, both the judge and the prosecutor were women. 鈥淔amily and domestic violence is a pressing problem,鈥 prosecutor Aizhan Aimaganova told Tengrinews. 鈥淚 hope that after this trial, women will realize that going to law enforcement is not useless.鈥
An estimated 80% of women of working age in Kazakhstan have been victims of domestic abuse. Only 2 out of 10 survivors ever file a case against their offenders.
The slain wife鈥檚 brother, Aitbek Amangeldi, told Nikkei Asia that the trial has changed public attitudes, 鈥渢hat is to say, that violence is now becoming unacceptable to society.鈥 According to two scholars writing in Foreign Policy, the trial snapped the people of Kazakhstan 鈥渙ut of their despair and has become a symbol of hope that the law can lead to justice 鈥 not just be used by the government to repress dissent.鈥
Just over half of countries have comprehensive laws addressing domestic violence, according to the World Bank. In Kazakhstan, the trial has not only changed the law but has also led President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev to admit the high level of violence against women and girls 鈥 and the need for further work to end it.
鈥淓veryone should be equal before the law,鈥 he said last November after the killing of Saltanat Nukenova. 鈥淎 just Kazakhstan is a country where law and order triumph.鈥