Kamchybek Tashiev

"[3] He accused Keneshbek Duishebaev, head of the GKNB in the cabinet of transitional president Roza Otunbayeva, of attacking him.

Bakiyev's regime was marked by family and clan rule, corruption at all levels of government and the murders of politicians and journalists.

[10] Kamchybek Tashiev became one of the lobbyists in the transfer of the Kempir-Abad reservoir to the possession of Uzbekistan, the preparation of the agreement was carried out in complete secrecy and this aroused the suspicions of the public masses.

At a public hearing, Kamchybek Tashiev made a series of threats against politicians, promising to tear their mouths.

During the discussion of the issue in parliament, Tashiev personally threatened to imprison and break the arm of the leader of the opposition Butun Kyrgyzstan faction, Adakhan Madumarov,[14] and also cursed and insulted the mother of deputy Omurbek Bakirov.

Omurbek Bakirov, after a dispute with the head of the State Committee for National Security, Kamchybek Tashiev, was deprived of his mandate.

[17] On February 13, 2012, the Civic Anti-Fascist and Anti-Nationalist Committee (CAAC) of Kyrgyzstan issued an appeal in which it drew the attention of the public of the republic to the statements of MP Kamchibek Tashiev, who, according to CAAC, “leads purposeful propaganda of nationalism" and "voices frankly fascist ideas, raising the question of the purebredness of this or that politician.

The journalist notes that even before coming to power, the head of the State Committee for National Security was associated with the fuel business.

Journalist-investigator Bolot Temirov stated:“In two days, an intermediary company earns almost a quarter of its annual profit by selling the products of a state-owned enterprise.

At the same time, the heads of the state plant and the intermediary firm are connected with the chairman of the State Committee for National Security”[25]The company Tomas and Co, previously owned by Kazybek Tashiev, brother of Kamchybek Tashiev, won tenders totaling approximately 58 million soms (more than $1 million) between 2016 and 2020.

[26] The company of the son of the chairman of the State Committee for National Security Kamchybek Tashiev Taimuras won several tenders in Jalal-Abad.

[27] In addition, Temirov Live investigators suggested that the 19-year-old son of Shaiyrbek Tashiev, Elmirbek, plans to participate in the tenders.

Journalist Bolot Temirov was arrested, stripped of his Kyrgyz citizenship and expelled from the country for his investigations on Tashiev and his family clan.

[29] Kyrgyzstan has dropped 50 positions in Reporters Without Borders' freedom of speech rating in the three years since president Sadyr Japarov and head of SCNS Kamchybek Tashiev came to power.

[30] Prominent Kyrgyz political scientist Marat Kazakbaev was detained in April 2021 on suspicion of high treason.

Before that, he released a number of critical publications that ridiculed the activities of Kamchybek Tashiev as head of the State Committee for National Security.

[31] However, under mysterious circumstances, Marat Kazakpaev died in the pre-trial detention center of the State Committee for National Security on June 10, 2022.

The political scientist was kept in a pre-trial detention center until he fell into a coma, without providing medical assistance and refusing treatment - his eye was leaking.

[32] After coming to power, the named son of Kamchybek Tashiev - Absattar Syrgabaev - became the presidential envoy in the Jalal-Abad region.

Son-in-law Tagaybek Kazakbaev is a member of the board of directors of Kyrgyzaltyn, Nurgazy Matisakov's nephew is the prosecutor of the Uzgen district, his brother Baigazy Matisakov is the head of Kyrgyz Petroleum Company CJSC, an employee of his TV Channel - Ramis Kaimov - became the director of one of the state resorts in the Jalal-Abad region.

Many relatives of the head of the State Committee for National Security were also found before in the civil service in the Jalal-Abad region and among employees of law enforcement agencies.