Kyrgyzstan: SCO summit

The heads of states will land at the capital Bishkek's Manas airport. The road into town is the scene of some hectic beautification work, which LJ user morrire documents in pictures:

gv_bishkek.jpg

In fact, the whole town is undergoing some crazy last-minute construction frenzy. Azamat comments:

The Mayor of Bishkek, as the main implementer, has done “incredible” things: whitewashing trees and facades of buildings on the road from the Manas Airport to Bishkek and the main streets in Bishkek. As with buildings’ being painted only on frontal sides, so are the trees, as you can see from the morrire's picture […]. If only these changes were regular and less superficial, we would be living in another country.

Mirsulzhan digged into the Kyrgyzstani Russian LJ community to see what the bloggers were saying about this summit preparation.

Zigeunerin is amazed (RUS) that the whole circus could be completed in such short time:

The construction work will be completed within record time – just 157 days! The builders worked both at day and at night.

All residents of a house with windows facing the Philharmonic, where the SCO summit will take place, will be forbidden to open their windows and balcony doors from August 14 until the end of the summit. LJ user lena writes (RUS):

“It’s for your own safety,” representatives of the police reassured the tenants, “because everyone who appears in the window will be at risk of beeing shot. There will be Russian snipers around”

Bishkek is also plastered with large banners carrying slogans of Kyrgyz President Bakiev. antipodean_world wonders (RUS) whether one of these slogans has not been borrowed from Confucius – and that perhaps the visiting Chinese delegation could raise some intellectual property rights issues with the hosts.

Ahead of the SCO summit, the member states are convening a joint military exercise in both Xinjiang (Western China) and Chelyabinsk (Russia). While Uzbekistan only sent observers to “Peace 2007″ (so the name of the exercise), Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan are set to learn something from their more powerful neighbours. Bonnie Boyd comments:

Learning security cooperation might not help craft better political policies for border regulation between these three states, but it will help ensure that security forces have a basis for cooperation–once border coordination is allowed politically.

Bonnie Boyd also links to a video clip of CCTV9's coverage:

Fourth World War thinks that Western media coverage of these military exercises is not reflecting the real importance of the event:

To recap, Russia and China are wargaming together, and through the SCO, Mongolia, Iran, India, Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan are all involved in some capacity with the war games, and the expansion of solidifying of military and security ties amongst the SCO member and observer nations. [Editor's note: Turkmenistan, Armenia and Belarus are no SCO members while Mongolia, Iran, India and Pakistan have observer status only.]

It's a remarkable and historic event, worthy of more than the minimal attention it has recieved in the Western media, so far.

2 comments

  • […] bilateral talks; and thence to Kazakhstan & Russia. –Global Voices Online rounds up the Kyrgyzstani preparations for the SCO summit, which include beautification and security measures.  It’s not all fun, […]

  • nanheyangrouchuan

    Alot of small nations in central Asia are invited to participate, but the function of the SCO is to push US and some NATO influence completely out of central Asia so that China and Russia can have complete political control and therefore complete control of the region’s oil and gas resources.

    Of course, Russia and China have alot of political tension between them…and India has chosen the US over the SCO as its political and economic partner.

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