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New report: NAPOLEON COMPLEX The Corruption of Kazakh Prime Minister Karim Massimov

In Kazakhstan in ear­ly January 2022, 227 peo­ple were trag­i­cal­ly killed when pop­u­lar demon­stra­tions over gas prices turned into vio­lent riots. Over a year lat­er a for­mer prime min­is­ter of Kazakhstan, Karim Massimov, was jailed for trea­son for his appar­ent role in the unrest. His impris­on­ment marked an incred­i­ble fall from grace for one of Kazakhstan’s most impor­tant polit­i­cal fig­ures, one who had spent over eight years as the country’s prime minister.

Many of those who were protest­ing in January 2022 were ral­ly­ing against Nazarbayev’s lega­cy of cor­rup­tion and klep­toc­ra­cy – where a country’s lead­ers siphon off the country’s wealth for per­son­al gain and to main­tain pow­er. ‘Napoleon Complex’ exam­ines that lega­cy by tak­ing a deep dive into the cor­rup­tion of Massimov, who main­tained the klep­to­crat­ic sys­tem under Nazarbayev while reap­ing the per­son­al ben­e­fits for him and his fam­i­ly. The report analy­ses nev­er-before-seen doc­u­ments in order to under­stand how Kazakhstan’s klep­toc­ra­cy worked in practice.

Key findings

  1. While deputy prime min­is­ter, Massimov was a ben­e­fi­cial own­er of Kazakhstan’s main tele­coms provider, Kazakhtelecom JSC, cir­ca 2006, and received $25 mil­lion in a poten­tial­ly fraud­u­lent and high­ly sus­pi­cious share trans­fer in 2006 that appears to have been a bribe for him.
  2. Massimov con­tin­ued to ben­e­fit from Kazakhtelecom and oth­er tele­coms com­pa­nies using a proxy, Aigul Nuriyeva, a Kazakh busi­ness­woman now res­i­dent in the United Kingdom with her six chil­dren. Nuriyeva – who now uses her mar­ried name Aigul Ikhsan – was instru­men­tal in arrang­ing the sus­pi­cious $25 mil­lion pay­ment via Kazakhtelecom.
  3. In 2010, Massimov planned to receive a bribe of €12 mil­lion in rela­tion to a deal struck between Airbus and Kazakhstan regard­ing the latter’s pur­chase of satel­lite equip­ment and helicopters.
  4. According to alle­ga­tions made by a for­mer insid­er, Massimov used a Kazakh bank, Eximbank, to laun­der over $100 mil­lion dis­guised as fic­ti­tious loans issued to var­i­ous front corporations.
  5. Massimov used his cor­rupt­ly obtained wealth to pur­chase dozens of lux­u­ry items, includ­ing sev­er­al let­ters writ­ten by Napoleon Bonaparte worth €97,500. Massimov used staff in Kazakhstan’s Embassy in Paris to source these let­ters and sub­se­quent­ly smug­gle them out of France to Kazakhstan via diplo­mat­ic mail and oth­er methods.
  6. Massimov lived a life of lux­u­ry, spend­ing hun­dreds of thou­sands of dol­lars on fam­i­ly trips to Europe, Hong Kong and Singapore, includ­ing mak­ing around $500,000 of flight book­ings for these and oth­er per­son­al trips. He also received $313,000 worth of med­ical treat­ment from American doc­tors who were flown to Kazakhstan, and donat­ed $200,000 to a pri­vate school in Washington D.C. in which his youngest daugh­ter was enrolling.

The trans­fer of illic­it cap­i­tal from klep­toc­ra­cies such as Kazakhstan into the West deprives their cit­i­zens of much-need­ed rev­enue, but it also has an effect on the recip­i­ent coun­tries in the West – wit­ness, for exam­ple, the effect that ‘Londongrad’ and the bil­lions of dol­lars of Russian oli­garchic mon­ey has had on the United Kingdom in the last two decades. Since Russia’s fullscale inva­sion of Ukraine, the UK gov­ern­ment has sanc­tioned dozens of Kremlin-linked busi­ness­men and oli­garchs, yet despite Kazakhstan’s klep­toc­ra­cy and the trag­ic events of January 2022, not a sin­gle indi­vid­ual from Kazakhstan has been sanc­tioned either in the UK or the US.

This blind spot risks under­min­ing the ratio­nale for cre­at­ing the Global Anti-Corruption sanc­tions leg­is­la­tion, and allows those who have loot­ed Kazakhstan to escape with impuni­ty. The report also looks at the impor­tance of net­works in klep­toc­ra­cies, with an exam­i­na­tion of how Massimov forged ties with every­one from Hunter Biden to Tony Blair. Ultimately, the report is a call for action against the grow­ing tide of dirty mon­ey from klep­toc­ra­cies that is seep­ing into our insti­tu­tion­al sys­tems and con­cludes that in order to coun­ter­act klep­toc­ra­cy we not only must inves­ti­gate, sanc­tion and pros­e­cute the klep­to­crats them­selves, but also scru­ti­nize the enablers who facil­i­tate these deals.

DOWNLOAD THE REPORT

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UPCOMING REPORT DISCUSSION:

Th, May 9, 2025, 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM EDT

Hosted by George Washington University. More details to follow.

SPEAKER BIOS

Thomas Mayne is a Director at Freedom for Eurasia. His research focus­es on anti-mon­ey laun­der­ing leg­is­la­tion, espe­cial­ly in regard to grand cor­rup­tion and klep­toc­ra­cy. He is also a Research Fellow at the University of Exeter, and a for­mer Visiting Fellow at the Royal Institute of International Affairs, Chatham House. For twelve years he worked as a Senior Campaigner for Global Witness, an anti-cor­rup­tion NGO that works to end the exploita­tion of nat­ur­al resources, and was respon­si­ble for inves­ti­ga­tions in Eurasia.

Leila Nazgul Seiitbek, is an exiled lawyer, anti-cor­rup­tion and human rights advo­cate from the Kyrgyz Republic, who was grant­ed asy­lum in Austria in 2021. She is a Chairwoman of Freedom for Eurasia, which doc­u­ments and reports on human rights and cor­rup­tion abus­es in Eurasia (the for­mer Soviet Republics of Eastern Europe and Central Asia).

David Szakonyi is Associate Professor of Political Science at George Washington University, co-Director of PONARS Eurasia, and co-founder of the Anti-Corruption Data Collective. His aca­d­e­m­ic research focus­es on cor­rup­tion, clien­telism, and polit­i­cal econ­o­my in Russia, Western Europe and the United States. His most recent book–Politics for Profit:Business, Elections, and Policymaking in Russia (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge Studies in Comparative Politics, 2020)–examines why busi­ness­peo­ple run for polit­i­cal office and how their firms ben­e­fit. He has also led numer­ous inves­ti­ga­tions into polit­i­cal cor­rup­tion and opac­i­ty in the pri­vate equi­ty and real estate indus­tries pub­lished in the Washington Post, Foreign Policy, the Daily Beast, and the Miami Herald, among oth­er out­lets. He received his PhD in polit­i­cal sci­ence from Columbia University and his BA from the University of Virginia.

SEE STORY PUBLISHED BY THE TELEGRAPH ON REPORT
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2025/05/02/blair-pictured-kazakh-dictators-right-hand-man/

DOWNLOAD THE BLAIR/MASSIMOV PHOTO

Original arti­cle: FREEDOM FOR EURASIA

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