The UK
has secured £3bn in business deals with Kazakhstan, despite profound
international concern about human rights and corruption in the former Soviet
state.
David Cameron said that the 40
trade deals, which include agreements to support four new gas plants and a
steel production facility in Kazakhstan, were “not bad for one afternoon’s
work”.
Kazakh
president Nursultan Nazarbayev, who was re-elected in April with 98 per cent of
the vote in a vote heavily criticised by international observers, is visiting
the UK, and will have lunch with the Queen at Buckingham Palace on Wednesday.
He will be accompanied by his daughter Dariga Nazarbayeva, who is also his
deputy prime minister.
Downing Street said that human
rights and political reform were discussed during talks.
Amnesty
International UK said Kazakhstan had a “terrible track record over the torture
of criminal suspects and in crackdowns on peaceful protesters and journalists.”
The Prime Minister said he saw
the two countries as “partners in prosperity and partners in progress”. The
talks came two weeks after the state visit of Chinese president Xi Jinping, and
two days before Egyptian president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
Mr Nazarbayev congratulated Mr
Cameron on winning this year’s general election.
“You have carte blanche now to
carry out completely new policy. I hope that in this policy there is going to
be some place for Kazakhstan,” he said./writer Charlie Cooper,
editing by flashnews.
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