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Sex trafficking in Kazakhstan is human trafficking for the purpose of sexual exploitation and slavery that occurs in the Republic of Kazakhstan.
Kazakhstan citizens, primarily women and girls,[1] have been sex trafficked within the country and to other countries in Asia[1] and different continents.[2] Foreign victims are sex trafficked into the country.[2] Children, persons in poverty, and migrants are particularly vulnerable to sex trafficking. Victims are deceived,[2] threatened, and or forced into prostitution or forced marriages.[3] Their passports[2] and other documents are often taken. They suffer from physical and psychological abuse and trauma and are typically guarded and or locked up in poor conditions. A number contract sexually transmitted diseases from rapes. Many victims are afraid to report their experiences to the police because of fears of being stigmatized and rejected by their communities.[2]
The government of Kazakhstan has been criticized for it inadequate anti-sex trafficking efforts and corruption. Police and officials have been accused of being complicit in sex trafficking crimes in the country.[4]
Non-consensual bride abductions, in which women and girls are forced into marriages and pregnancies through force, intimation, or societal pressure, is a form of sex trafficking in Kazakhstan.[3][5]
The International Organisation for Migration supports projects against sex trafficking in the country.[6][2]
The Sana Sezim Legal Centre for Women's Initiatives conducts anti-sex trafficking efforts in Kazakhstan.[6]
This Kazakhstan-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Content is available under CC BY-SA 3.0 unless otherwise noted.

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Kazakh Antigay Campaign Deepens Over Same-Sex Kiss Poster
Kazakh Antigay Campaign Deepens Over Same-Sex Kiss Poster
The accolades were short-lived for a Kazakh poster depicting composer Qurmanghazy Saghyrbaiuly locking lips with Russian poet Aleksandr Pushkin.
Since winning third prize in a Kazakh advertisement contest this summer, the poster has caused public outrage and stoked antigay sentiment in the Central Asian nation -- with one politician stating that blood tests can be used to expose homosexuals.
The producer of the divisive picture, the advertising agency -- Havas Worldwide Kazakhstan -- has been slapped with several lawsuits over what plaintiffs say is an affront to traditional Kazakh values.
Initial proceedings in a $186,000 lawsuit began on October 2 in Almaty.
The case was brought by 34 people studying or working in a conservatory and orchestra named after Qurmanghazy, a cultural icon in Kazakhstan.
The plaintiffs branded the poster "unethical" and claimed it insulted "the honor and dignity" of the artist's descendants and admirers.
Havas Worldwide Kazakhstan designed the poster to promote a gay club in Almaty, Studio 69.
The picture is both a humorous reference to the club's location -- at the intersection of streets named after Pushkin and Qurmanghazy -- and a spinoff of the famous image of Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev kissing his East German counterpart, Erich Honecker, on the lips in East Berlin in 1979.
Some Kazakhs have praised the poster and stressed its creators' right to freedom of expression.
"We have taboos in all genres," Kazakh art critic Valeria Ibraeva told RFE/RL. "What we are now witnessing is an ignorant, cruel reaction."
But authorities in Kazakhstan are not amused. The poster has also sparked a barrage of angry, homophobic comments on social media.
Kazakh Culture Minister Arystanbek Mukhamediuly has described the poster as "ugly," "inhuman," and "a crime."
If people have some kind of weakness, it is their own personal problem. But it is absolutely unacceptable to propagate it in public."
-- Kazakh Culture Minister Arystanbek Mukhamediuly
"If people have some kind of weakness, it is their own personal problem," he told Tengrinews last month. "But it is absolutely unacceptable to propagate it in public, especially by using images of such respected persons."
Mukhamediuly has vowed to bring the designers to justice, despite an apology published by the Havas agency on its Facebook page.
A man who claims to be a descendant of Qurmanghazy, Nurken Khalykbergen, also sued the Havas agency for damages.
His case was eventually dropped, reportedly because Khalykbergen was unable to prove he is a direct descendant of the illustrious composer.
And in August, a court in Almaty fined Havas and its director a total of $1,700 for allegedly violating Kazakhstan's law on advertising.
The complaint was filed by the city's mayor's office, which charged that the image "violates widespread moral norms and behaviors since it shows nontraditional sexual relations that are unacceptable to society."
The wording is strongly reminiscent of Russia's controversial new law banning "propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations" to minors, and there have been calls in recent weeks for Kazakhstan to adopt similar legislation.
Although homosexuality was decriminalized in Kazakhstan in 1998, the onslaught against the Qurmanghazy-Pushkin poster shows hostility toward sexual minorities is still rife.
Last month, the country's Communist Party called for the reinstatement of criminal punishments for homosexuality.
Dauren Babamuratov, the leader of the nationalist Bolashak movement, claimed at a news conference that DNA tests could be used to reveal homosexuality, which he described as "degeneratism."
He urged Kazakh authorities to bar gays from holding public office or serving in the army.
'Legitimate Part Of Free Expression'
The antigay campaign gripping Kazakhstan is drawing condemnation from rights advocates.
"The poster is no doubt provocative, but provocation is a legitimate part of free expression and arguably an inherent part of creative design," says Human Rights Watch's Mihra Rittmann. "Kazakhstan's judiciary should ensure that freedom of expression trumps subjective discomfort about a particular image and that homophobia masked as cultural concern is not allowed to triumph."
Controversy over the poster appears to have reached Russia, where the St. Petersburg branch of the nationalist Rodina party has voiced support for the lawsuits.
The party condemned what it called "rampant impunity of the immoral perverts" and voiced hope that "those responsible for the desecration of the memory of famous Russian and Kazakh poets will be punished," a reference to Pushkin and Qurmanghazy, who was not a poet but a composer.
Claire Bigg covers Russia, Ukraine, and the post-Soviet world, with a focus on human rights, civil society, and social issues.
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty © 2021 RFE/RL, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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