Despite the inflammatory comments towards Russians, the Kremlin said judgements will be made based on his conduct in his new role
The recently appointed Kazakh Minister of Information and Social Development, accused of overwhelmingly anti-Russian sentiment, will not get a warm welcome at the Baikonur cosmodrome, the head of Roscosmos has insisted.
Writing on Telegram on Wednesday, Dmitry Rogozin bluntly stated that “we will not welcome Minister Askar Umarov,” who assumed his new post when Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev reshuffled the government following protests that turned violent.
The general director of Moscow’s space agency added that “we won’t wait for him there.” Baikonur, situated in southern Kazakhstan, is long-term leased to Russia. After the collapse of the USSR, the cosmodrome – where the Soviet Union made its greatest space achievements – became part of what is now Nur-Sultan’s territory.
While Rogozin didn’t provide any context for the lack of appetite to receive the former head of the international news agency Kazinform to the site, Umarov has launched several remarks deemed Russophobic in the past.
Umarov received another snub, this time from the head of the Russian Foreign Ministry’s international cooperation agency Rossotrudnichestvo, on Tuesday. Yevgeny Primakov wrote on social media that his department “doesn’t cooperate with Russophobic trash.”
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Several of the comments that Primakov linked to the minister were critical of Russians living in the former Soviet republic, dubbing them as “colonizers who should be grateful that their rights are observed.”