Central Asia’s Evolving Censorship: From Physical Threats to Algorithmic Purges

Independent journalists across Central Asia, particularly in Kazakhstan, are facing a new wave of digital repression as governments shift from physical intimidation to algorithmic and technical censorship.
In Kazakhstan, journalists Luqpan Akhmediyarov and Vadim Boreiko had their popular YouTube, Facebook, and Instagram accounts suddenly deleted or cloned — a trend experts link to government–tech cooperation aimed at silencing dissent. The accounts were removed over suspicious copyright complaints or alleged content violations, and fake duplicate profiles appeared in their place.
These incidents followed a meeting between Kazakhstan’s Information Minister Aida Balaeva and Meta’s regional policy chief, after which a joint working group was formed to “improve content moderation” — raising suspicions that state pressure on tech platforms is facilitating targeted removals of critical voices.
Authorities have also cracked down on traditional media: in June, six RFE/RL correspondents and their bureau chief were denied accreditation on vague “national security” grounds. The move follows 2021 amendments tightening control over media licensing and foreign journalists.
Beyond Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan passed a controversial media law in June 2025 reinstating registration requirements for all online outlets and capping foreign ownership at 35%, leading to the closure of Aprel TV for allegedly “weakening state authority.”
Regional analysts and rights groups warn of a coordinated rollback of press freedom across Central Asia. According to Nadejda Atayeva of the Association for Human Rights in Central Asia, governments are “learning from each other”, adopting shared tactics of legal, digital, and algorithmic suppression to control information and marginalize independent journalism.





