Two Kazakh women ask President Obama to help them get their homes back
03.02.2015
Police in Kazakhstan briefly detained two women who demonstrated outside the US Embassy and appealed to President Barack Obama to help solve economic and social problems in the Central Asian nation.
Gulbarshin Baktybaeva and Rysqaisha Kerkimbaeva were detained on February 2 after they unfurled a sign urging "US President Barack Obama and the US Ambassador to Kazakhstan to ask President [Nursultan] Nazarbaev how we can live without homes and pensions."
Baktybaeva's daughter, Moldir, told RFE/RL that her mother was protesting a court decision on their apartment's foreclosure.
She said the two women decided to demonstrate outside the US Embassy because Kazakh authorities had refused to help them.
The women, both from the northeastern city of Semey, were held for two hours and then released.
Last year, residents of several cities demonstrated in Astana to demand relief from hard-currency mortgage loans whose cost shot up after the National Bank announced a 19-percent devaluation of the national currency, the tenge, in February. Protests have also been held in Almaty, according to RFE/RL.