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Russia Expands Soft Power Through New Cultural Center in Kyrgyzstan

Russia’s international cooperation organization Evraziya has launched Kyrgyzstan’s first Eurasian Center for Russian Language and Culture in Bishkek. The initiative aims to promote the Russian language, support local educators, and advance bilateral humanitarian projects. The center’s opening came just days before Russian President Vladimir Putin’s state visit to Kyrgyzstan, which begins today on November 25.

Evraziya, a Russian non-profit, presents itself as a vehicle for deeper integration in the post-Soviet space and is widely viewed as a key instrument of Moscow’s soft power strategy in Central Asia.

High-Level Delegation at Launch

The opening ceremony was attended by Russian Ambassador to Kyrgyzstan Sergey Vakunov, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova, Head of the Presidential Executive Office for Strategic Partnership and Cooperation Vadim Titov, State Duma Deputy and Chair of Eurasia’s Coordination Council Alyona Arshinova, and Kyrgyz Deputy Minister of Education and Science Albert Makhmetkulov.

Arshinova noted that Evraziya had spent the past year enhancing cooperation with Kyrgyz institutions by offering teacher support, organizing educational forums, and providing professional development programs.

“Kyrgyzstan is not just a partner; it is a country with which we share common values and a strategic vision,” she said. “The Russian language remains a foundation that connects our countries and opens opportunities for new educational and cultural initiatives.”

Cultural and Educational Programming

The new center will run a range of initiatives for schoolchildren and adolescents, including a theater studio, workshops in art and media, digital culture and programming courses, and the “Unboring Russian” project. For adults, the center will offer film clubs, discussion platforms, and a literary lounge.

It will also serve as a training center for local teachers and coordinate bloggers focused on language and culture, reinforcing the Russian-language educational and cultural environment in Kyrgyzstan.

Deputy Minister Makhmetkulov called the opening “a strategic step for education and interethnic dialogue,” describing the center as a space for both promoting Russian and fostering cultural exchange and professional growth.

Evraziya plans to expand its network to other regions in Kyrgyzstan and eventually to other countries in the region.

Wider Engagement Strategy

Since 2024, Evraziya has intensified its presence in Kyrgyzstan through education, social, and humanitarian projects. In partnership with Russia’s Ministry of Education, the organization has dispatched young Russian teachers to Kyrgyz schools to teach various subjects in Russian.

It has also donated 100 school buses to rural areas and financed renovations at schools in Bishkek and Kyzyl-Kyya.

On August 28, in cooperation with Kyrgyzstan’s Cabinet of Ministers, Evraziya opened a $35 million amusement park in Bishkek. Two days earlier, the group launched its first social store in the capital, offering discounted essential goods to pensioners, veterans, large families, and people with disabilities.

Russian Language as a Strategic Link

The Russian language continues to be a central element in Moscow-Bishkek relations. During a July meeting at the Kremlin, Putin praised Kyrgyzstan’s decision to retain Russian as an official language.

Russian remains one of Kyrgyzstan’s official languages and is widely used in public administration, education, and interethnic communication.

As part of ongoing cooperation, the two countries are constructing nine Russian-language secondary schools across Kyrgyzstan. On November 10, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexey Overchuk and Kyrgyz Prime Minister Adylbek Kasymaliev visited one of the sites in Bishkek, which will accommodate 1,224 students.

Overchuk also announced that Russia will donate 651,000 Russian-language textbooks to Kyrgyz secondary schools.

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Arrests of Opposition Politicians in Kyrgyzstan Sparks Outcry Ahead of Elections

On November 22, law enforcement agencies in Kyrgyzstan launched a large-scale special operation, detaining several opposition politicians, their relatives, and media representatives. The actions were carried out under criminal proceedings initiated under Article 278 of the Criminal Code of the Kyrgyz Republic, “Organization of Mass Unrest”. In three cases, the authorities also alleged attempts to “violently seize power” in what has become an increasingly familiar mantra.

The scope of the operation and the number of individuals involved have drawn significant public attention. The arrests come just days before the parliamentary elections scheduled for November 30, prompting concerns among observers about the government’s approach to managing opposition voices and maintaining stability during the electoral cycle.

Official Version

According to the Ministry of Internal Affairs, a “destructive group” was preparing to stage mass protests following the announcement of the election results in the Jogorku Kenesh (parliament).

The group allegedly included politicians, former deputies, civil servants, and law enforcement officials. Investigators claim the suspects attempted to recruit members of the criminal underworld and sports organizations to provoke violent clashes.

The ministry alleges that the planned unrest would start in the south of the country and then spread to Bishkek and other regions, creating an “effect of mass discontent.”

The group reportedly operated through a defined structure, with “coordination groups” tasked with articulating political demands and criminal organizations responsible for applying pressure. Some participants allegedly pre-assigned themselves roles in a proposed political configuration.

Investigators also claim the group intended to issue “unconstitutional appeals” and possibly seize government buildings, television channels, law enforcement facilities, weapons, and penitentiary institutions.

Separately, the Interior Ministry announced the arrest of Social Democratic Party leader Temirlan Sultanbekov and said he had been charged with organizing mass riots.

Waves of Searches and Detentions

Local media reported that Kadyrbek Atambayev, the son of former President Almazbek Atambayev, and former first lady Raisa Atambayeva were brought in for questioning. Raisa Atambayeva was released later the same day.

Former head of the State Service for Combating Economic Crimes, Syimyk Zhapykeyev, was detained in the Issyk-Kul region and transported to Bishkek for questioning before also being released that evening.

Searches were conducted at the home of former deputy Shailoobek Atazov, while other prominent figures, including former Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs and ex-MP Kubanychbek Kadyrov, and the former CEO of the April TV channel, Dmitry Lozhnikov, were also questioned. Authorities linked Lozhnikov to the detained politicians.

The Interior Ministry stressed that all actions were authorized by court orders and were part of an ongoing investigation into the organization of mass riots.

Court Rulings: Arrests and Preventive Detentions

On November 23, the Pervomaisky District Court in Bishkek issued preventive detention orders for ten individuals, including Temirlan Sultanbekov, Shailoobek Atazov, Ermek Ermatov, Damir Musakeev, Kadyrbek Atambayev, Kubanychbek Kadyrov, and businessman Urmat Baryktabasov (also known as Askarbekov). The identities of three additional detainees have not been publicly disclosed.

Kadyrbek Atambayev has been remanded in custody until January 17, 2026, according to his lawyer Sergei Slesarev, who confirmed that the defense intends to appeal the decision.

Similar detention measures were issued for Sultanbekov and Ermatov. Sultanbekov’s arrest was confirmed by his sister, Kanykey.

Urmat Baryktabasov was also sent to a pre-trial detention center for two months. No official information has been released on the status of the other detainees.

Relatives of the accused reported being denied entry to the courthouse on the grounds that it was a non-working day.

Background: Atambayev, Legal Conflicts, and Political Tensions

In June 2025, the Pervomaisky Court in Bishkek delivered a verdict in the long-running Koi-Tash case, sentencing former President Almazbek Atambayev to eleven years in prison in absentia and ordering the confiscation of some of his property.

Commenting on the case, President Sadyr Japarov told Kabar News Agency that the judiciary acts independently and that “no one, including the president, can change a court decision”.

Kadyrbek Atambayev later claimed that the government was using the case as a tool for political pressure and possibly as leverage, hinting at a broader political deal involving the potential return of former President Kurmanbek Bakiyev to the country, an assertion that President Japarov has denied.

Crackdown on Media

In October 2025, three independent media outlets, Temirov Live, Kloop, and Ait Ait Dese, were labeled “extremist” by a Bishkek district court and banned from online activity. The Communications Regulation and Supervision Service, under the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, is tasked with enforcing the bans.

Earlier in the year, seven current and former journalists from Kloop were detained and interrogated without legal representation. In August, four former Kloop employees were tried on charges of “inciting unrest.” Authorities alleged that their content posed a threat to national stability. Two former camera operators received five-year prison sentences based on video materials that, according to trial reporting and rights groups, were not created by them.

The sweep of arrests, searches, and criminal charges has intensified long-standing tensions between the government and its critics, particularly amid a broader crackdown on independent media and opposition-linked figures. With parliamentary elections set for November 30, the timing of the operation has raised fresh concerns about the shrinking space for dissent and the methods the authorities are willing to employ to manage political uncertainty in the days leading up to the vote.

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Mark Cuban warns the AI wars could end like the search engine crash — with one winner and a lot of losers

Mark Cuban at a Senate Committee on Aging hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on October 22, 2025.
Mark Cuban says Big Tech’s AI arms race is barreling toward a Google-style shakeout.

  • Mark Cuban says Big Tech’s AI race mirrors the 1990s engine search wars, and could end the same way.
  • He warns that major players, such as Google and OpenAI, are overspending in a winner-takes-all race.
  • The investor says an AI bubble could burst soon, leaving one giant standing and everyone else broke.

Mark Cuban says the race to build the world’s most powerful AI model looks eerily similar to the 1990s search-engine boom — and could end the same way: with one dominant player and everyone else left behind.

“You’ve got five, six, whatever it is, companies that are trying to create the ultimate foundational model that we all depend on,” Cuban said on the “Pioneers of AI” podcast.

“It’s almost like in the ’90s when all the search engines were competing pre-Google… There were all these different [ones] and you didn’t know if it was going to be a winner-take-all, or a top five.”

“Now, we know with search engines it’s Google, and then there’s Bing, as, like, 1 or 2% and DuckDuckGo has got a half a percent. So it’s effectively a winner-take-all,” he added. “And that’s going to be really scary because there will come a time where they have to live up to the economics.”

Inside the AI arms race

Cuban said the major AI players — including Google, Meta, and OpenAI — are “spending everything, consuming every resource that they can just in case it’s winner take all.”

But he warned that this race to build the most powerful model could create its own kind of bubble — a view shared to varying extents by many tech and business leaders, including Sam Altman, Bill Gates, and Ray Dalio.

“They may be overspending,” he said. “And if they overspend or get too caught up, the bubble is in the competition between all those models because that could pop just like that with any new technology.”

The billionaire investor said he’s also concerned about the infrastructure behind AI — particularly the vast and expensive data centers now being built to power large models.

“I just can’t imagine over a 10-year period that we aren’t going to improve the technology enough that if you overspend on today’s technology,” he said. “It just doesn’t feel right to me.”

Cuban believes the real disruption won’t come from incremental improvements but from something “incredible” that no one sees coming.

“Somebody’s going to come up with some incredible shit, right? If I knew what it was, I’d do it,” he said.

He’s seen this movie before

Cuban has lived through this kind of moment before. The former Shark Tank star made his fortune during the dot-com boom and said he recognizes the same combination of excitement, hype, and overspending now playing out in AI.

“They anticipate for at least another decade spending every penny they have,” he said of the major model developers.

“I mean, if that’s not ripe for disruption to come up with better ways, I don’t know what is.”

For Cuban, the outcome of the AI wars will depend not just on who builds the biggest model, but on who builds the smartest one.

And, he warned, history suggests most players won’t survive long enough to find out.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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Uzbekistan and Taliban Sign Trade Deals as Coal Shipments Pivot from Pakistan

Afghanistan International has reported that the Taliban administration in Afghanistan’s Balkh province has signed new trade agreements with Uzbekistan, signaling a shift in Kabul’s commercial strategy amid growing tensions with Pakistan. According to Haji Zaid, spokesperson for the Taliban-appointed governor in Balkh, Afghan coal will now be exported to Uzbekistan under the newly signed agreements, replacing previous shipments to Pakistan.

In exchange, Uzbekistan will export cement and pharmaceuticals to Afghanistan. Zaid stated that the Taliban, in response to border closures and disrupted trade with Pakistan, is seeking to strengthen economic ties with neighboring countries, particularly Uzbekistan and Iran.

Persian-language media also reported that Taliban officials are increasingly urging Afghan traders to seek alternative commercial and transit routes. The Taliban’s Ministry of Finance has claimed that the deterioration of trade with Pakistan has had “no negative impact” on Afghanistan’s overall trade volume, asserting that customs revenues have remained stable. The ministry added that it would fully support traders using new trade corridors.

However, Afghan economic experts have challenged the Taliban’s claims. Economist Reza Farzam told local media that assertions about Pakistan’s trade freeze having no impact are misleading, arguing that Afghanistan currently lacks sufficient substitutes for its traditional transit infrastructure through Pakistan. Earlier, Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper reported that the month-long closure of the Torkham border crossing caused more than $4.5 billion in economic losses on both sides of the border.

The latest agreements build on earlier announcements that Uzbekistan plans to import Afghan coal as part of broader efforts to balance bilateral trade. During a recent visit to Kabul, an Uzbek delegation expressed interest in purchasing coal, resulting in private-sector deals worth $4.5 million. Discussions also covered trade incentives, joint exhibitions, and a proposal from Uzbekistan to construct a cement plant in Afghanistan’s Samangan region.

The Taliban administration has further stated that Afghan agricultural products will be exported to Central Asia, South Asia, and Europe via air corridors through Uzbekistan, as part of a wider strategy to diversify the country’s trade routes.

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