Quick Facts
Born:
August 23, 1950, Osh, Kirgiziya, U.S.S.R. [now in Kyrgyzstan] (age 74)
Title / Office:
president (2010-2011), Kyrgyzstan
Founder:
Ata Dzhurt
Political Affiliation:
Ata Dzhurt

Roza Otunbayeva (born August 23, 1950, Osh, Kirgiziya, U.S.S.R. [now in Kyrgyzstan]) is a Kyrgyz politician who served as president (2010–11) of the interim government of Kyrgyzstan that came to power with the ouster of Pres. Kurmanbek Bakiyev.

An ethnic Kyrgyz, Otunbayeva grew up in Kirgiziya and completed her education in Russia, earning a degree in philosophy from Moscow State University in 1972. She then left Russia to join the philosophy faculty of Kyrgyz State University. In 1981 she began working as a regional undersecretary of the Communist Party in the Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek. Throughout the 1980s Otunbayeva also held governmental posts as Soviet foreign minister and as the Soviet Union’s ambassador to Malaysia. In 1992, a year after Kyrgyzstan gained its independence from the Soviet Union, Otunbayeva was named the country’s first ambassador to the United States. She held this post until 1994, when she was elevated again to foreign minister, this time in the government of Pres. Askar Akayev. Otunbayeva became ambassador to the United Kingdom in 1997. She later acted as a United Nations envoy to Georgia.

In 2004 Otunbayeva broke with former ally Akayev, accusing him of corruption and nepotism. The following year Otunbayeva formed an opposition political party, Ata Zhurt (“Fatherland”), but Akayev’s government blocked it from participating in the 2005 elections. After Akayev was forced from power in March 2005 in the Ata Zhurt-backed postelection revolt that became known as the Tulip Revolution, the new president, Kurmanbek Bakiyev, named Otunbayeva foreign minister. Not long after Bakiyev took power, however, Otunbayeva lost the post when the new parliament refused to approve her appointment.

Otunbayeva won a seat in parliament in 2007 as a member of the Social Democratic Party. By that time she had placed herself in outspoken opposition to Bakiyev, whom she felt displayed the same tendency toward corruption as his predecessor. In time popular opinion turned against Bakiyev as well, and the changing tide culminated in April 2010 in a violent uprising that led to his ouster. A provisional government was put into place with Otunbayeva as interim president, though from afar Bakiyev continued to claim legitimacy for his government. Initially Otunbayeva announced her intention to lead the country for a six-month period—until elections could be held—but later her government announced that she would remain in office until the end of 2011.

In June 2010 Otunbayeva’s hold on power was challenged by an outbreak of ethnic violence between the Kyrgyz majority and Uzbek minority in the south of the country, which resulted in the deaths of scores of Uzbeks and a smaller number of Kyrgyz as well as the dislocation of hundreds of thousands. Otunbayeva, however, was largely able to quell the unrest, and many credited her with bringing stability to the country. Former prime minister Almazbek Atambayev won the presidential election in October 2011, and on December 1, Otunbayeva stepped down in Kyrgyzstan’s first peaceful transfer of power.

Melissa Albert

News

US deports 131 Central Asian migrants to Uzbekistan Apr. 30, 2025, 8:07 AM ET (Straits Times)
C5 embassies, secretariat highlight Central Asia tourism Apr. 28, 2025, 3:51 AM ET (Korea Herald)
Kyrgyzstan launches contest for new national anthem Apr. 21, 2025, 7:05 AM ET (Taipei Times)

Kyrgyzstan, country of Central Asia. It is bounded by Kazakhstan on the northwest and north, by China on the east and south, and by Tajikistan and Uzbekistan on the south and west. Most of Kyrgyzstan’s borders run along mountain crests. The capital is Bishkek (known from 1862 to 1926 as Pishpek and from 1926 to 1991 as Frunze).

The Kyrgyz, a Muslim Turkic people, constitute nearly three-fourths of the population. The history of the Kyrgyz in what is now Kyrgyzstan dates at least to the 17th century. Kyrgyzstan, known under Russian and Soviet rule as Kirgiziya, was conquered by tsarist Russian forces in the 19th century. Formerly a constituent (union) republic of the U.S.S.R., Kyrgyzstan declared its independence on August 31, 1991.

Quick Facts
Kyrgyzstan
See article: flag of Kyrgyzstan
Audio File: National anthem of Kyrgyzstan
Head Of State And Government:
President: Sadyr Japarov, assisted by Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers: Adylbek Kasymaliev
Capital:
Bishkek
Population:
(2025 est.) 7,358,000
Form Of Government:
republic with one legislative house (Jogorku Kenesh, or Supreme Council [90])
Official Languages:
Kyrgyz; Russian
Official Religion:
none
Official Name:
Kyrgyz Respublikasy (Kyrgyz); Respublika Kirgizstan (Russian) (Kyrgyz Republic)
Total Area (Sq Km):
199,945
Total Area (Sq Mi):
77,199
Monetary Unit:
Kyrgyzstan som (KGS)
Population Rank:
(2025) 107
Population Projection 2030:
7,196,000
Density: Persons Per Sq Mi:
(2025) 95.3
Density: Persons Per Sq Km:
(2025) 36.8
Urban-Rural Population:
Urban: (2023) 34.7%
Rural: (2023) 65.3%
Life Expectancy At Birth:
Male: (2022) 68 years
Female: (2022) 76.3 years
Literacy: Percentage Of Population Age 15 And Over Literate:
Male: not available
Female: not available
Gni (U.S.$ ’000,000):
(2023) 12,517
Gni Per Capita (U.S.$):
(2023) 1,760

Land

Relief

Kyrgyzstan is above all a mountainous country. At its eastern extremity, next to the Uighur Autonomous Region of Sinkiang, China, rises Victory (Pobedy) Peak, at 24,406 feet (7,439 metres) Kyrgyzstan’s highest peak. Mount Khan-Tengri (22,949 feet) is on the border with Kazakhstan. These mountains stand in the core of the Tien Shan system, which continues eastward into China. On the southern border lie the Kok Shaal-Tau, Alay, Trans-Alay (Zaalay), and Atbashi ranges.

To the southwest are two great hollows, the Fergana Valley and another valley close to Mount Khan-Tengri. The latter valley is bounded by the westward-thrusting arms of the Kungey-Alatau and Terskey-Alatau ranges and contains Lake Ysyk (Issyk-Kul), whose clear deep waters are fed by the snow-covered peaks. The rugged mountain-and-basin structure of much of the country, and the high alpine plateau of the central and eastern regions, are separated from the Fergana Valley on the west by the Fergana Range, running southeast to northwest, which merges into the Chatkal Range. The Chatkal Range is linked to the Ysyk-Köl region by a final enclosing range, the Kyrgyz. The only other important lowlands in the country are the Chu and Talas river valleys in the north, with the capital, Bishkek, located in the Chu. The country’s lowland areas, though occupying only one-seventh of the total area, are home to most of its people.

Drainage

Snow and ice perpetually cover the crests of Kyrgyzstan’s high mountain ranges. The Naryn River, draining into the Fergana Valley, continues northwestward as a tributary of the Syr Darya. The Chu River runs parallel to and forms part of the northern boundary with Kazakhstan. Both the Chu and the Naryn are of major importance to the country.

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Climate

Kyrgyzstan’s great distance from the oceans and the sharp change of elevation from adjacent plains strongly influence the country’s climate. Deserts and plains surround Kyrgyzstan on the north, west, and southeast, making the contrast with the climate and landscape of its mountainous interior all the more striking. The lower parts of its fringing ranges lie in belts of high temperature and receive hot, drying winds from the deserts beyond. The amount of precipitation the country’s westward- and northward-facing slopes receive increases with their height. The valleys have hot dry summers, with a mean July temperature of 82 °F (28 °C). In January the average temperature is −0.5 °F (−18 °C). Annual precipitation varies from 7 inches (180 mm) in the eastern Tien Shan to 30 to 40 inches (760 to 1,000 mm) in the Kyrgyz and Fergana ranges. In the most populous valleys, rainfall ranges from 4 to 20 inches (100 to 500 mm) a year.

Plant and animal life

Woodlands run along the lower valleys and on slopes of the north-facing ranges. These are coniferous forests, containing the striking Tien Shan white spruce and occupying 3 to 4 percent of the country’s area. The brown bear, wild pig, lynx, gray wolf, and ermine live in the woodlands. Wooded ravines and the valleys of the mountainous steppe regions provide the abode of the argali, a mountain sheep, along with mountain goats, deer, and snow leopards. In the desert, yellow gophers, jerboas, hares, and a large-eared hedgehog are typical.

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