Central Asian Leaders to Attend WWII Parade in Moscow Alongside Putin

Image: TCA, Stephen M. Bland

Central Asian Leaders to Attend WWII Parade in Moscow Alongside Putin

Russian state media have reported that leaders of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) will attend the 80th anniversary celebration of the victory over Nazi Germany in Moscow on May 9.

The CIS, a regional group that was set up as the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, includes the Central Asian countries that were Soviet republics: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, The Caspian Post reports citing foreign media.

Those leaders have traditionally attended the Moscow parade. But the event drew more international scrutiny in the last few years as Russian President Vladimir Putin tried to showcase diplomatic contacts in the face of Western efforts to isolate him, and display Russian military might as the war in Ukraine dragged on.

“I am happy and pleased, just like you, to announce that all heads of state of the CIS will be at the celebrations in Moscow on May 9,” CIS Secretary General Sergey Lebedev told the council of the group’s inter-parliamentary assembly. He was quoted by Russia’s RIA Novosti news agency. The Russian news outlet TASS issued a similar report.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said more than 20 heads of state and government are expected to join Putin at the victory parade in Moscow.

Some Central Asian countries, whose ancestors fought for the Soviet Union against Germany in WWII, hold their own events around the anniversary of the end of the war against the Nazis. Kyrgyzstan, for example, plans a parade on May 8 in the capital of Bishkek, allowing President Sadyr Japarov to catch the Moscow parade on the next day. Similarly, the Kazakh capital of Astana will host a military parade on May 7 after canceling several previous commemorations.

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Russian state media have reported that leaders of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) will attend the 80th anniversary celebration of the victory over Nazi Germany in Moscow on May 9.