Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Prime minister of Kazakhstan plans to visit Israel

Kazakhstan premier Askar Mamin expressed hopes for expanding bilateral trade between the two countries.

Kazakhstan Prime Minister Askar Mamin. Credit: Yakov Fedorov via Wikimedia Commons.
Kazakhstan Prime Minister Askar Mamin. Credit: Yakov Fedorov via Wikimedia Commons.

The prime minister of Kazakhstan, Askar Mamin, told a delegation of Jewish leaders from around the world about his plans to visit Israel by official invitation of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and expressed hopes for expanding bilateral trade between the two countries, according to a statement by the Euro-Asian Jewish Congress (EAJC).

EAJC met with Mamin and Kazakhstani President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev on Monday.

The delegation of Jewish leaders from around the world noted that the Jewish community of Kazakhstan has been thriving and receiving all the support it needs from the government. The leaders urged Tokayev to support Israel on the international stage and thanked the head of state for taking a firm stand in denouncing anti-Semitism and supporting the Jewish community.

At the summit, the leaders discussed a wide range of issues pertaining to the current situation of the Jewish community and bilateral relations between Kazakhstan and Israel.

The delegation held business meetings with the Israeli ambassador in Kazakhstan, Liat Vekselman, as well as religious and secular leaders of Jewish communities from across Kazakhstan that receive the support and assistance from EAJC. Members of the delegation were invited to join a session of the Assembly of People of Kazakhstan.

After visiting Kazakhstan, the delegation headed to Azerbaijan for the next round of top-level talks.

Although AIPAC supports Goldman, a source on the congressman’s campaign told JNS that “it makes no sense to suggest that we’re in the hands of AIPAC.”
“To have that full commitment and engagement, both at the public level, but also in the faith school system, is incredibly powerful,” Heather Mann, a project officer with UNESCO, told JNS.
The Israeli Foreign Ministry called the decision a “major step in holding the Palestinian authority accountable for its long-lasting terror support—financially and legally.”
The program aims to address “antisemitism as both a rhetorical challenge and an ever-shifting but persistent social reality,” Kelly Carr, an associate professor at the university, stated.
The U.S. president told reporters that the next 24 hours were a “critical period” as Iran faces a deadline to reach a deal.
Prosecutors said Dalin Brown, 24, allegedly broke into a house under construction, started a fire and carved antisemitic messages into the walls.