Asia | Banyan

Central Asian countries are subtly distancing themselves from Russia

Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has not gone down well in the region’s capitals

ON CITY STREETS, say visitors to Almaty in Kazakhstan, to Bishkek in Kyrgyzstan and to Tashkent in Uzbekistan, a change in the ethnic mix makes it feel surreally as if the Soviet Union has been reconstituted. Since Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, invaded Ukraine in February, huge numbers of Russians have fled, many ending up in the former Soviet states of Central Asia.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Tightrope act”

A house-price horror show

From the October 22nd 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Asia

Bangladesh’s dictator flees—leaving behind a dangerous vacuum

The army tries to restore order after Sheikh Hasina, the country’s “iron lady”, escapes

America remains Asia’s military-exercise partner of choice

A new report shows just how far China is falling behind


How Asia’s wild west shakes up the modern world

James C. Scott, an anthropologist, shed light on an ungovernable region


Indian cities are utterly unprepared for what is about to hit them

The urban population is set to double by 2050

America recreates a warfighting command in Japan

The threat from China hastens the biggest military transformation in the Pacific in decades

Taiwan is beefing up its military exercises to counter China

The island’s new defence minister wants more practice and less performance