In mid-April 2026, Kyrgyzstan found itself in a familiar post-Soviet toponymic controversy. Several media outlets reported that President Sadyr Japarov had said the republic would finish renaming villages with Russian-language names by the end of 2027. Yet the claim quickly became unstable: the official presidential report on his 13 April 2026 meeting with residents of Alay district did not publicly foreground such a plan, and presidential press secretary Askat Alagozov then said that renaming Russian-named villages “is not on the agenda,” insisting that the discussion had instead concerned a possible ban on giving settlements the names of individuals. In other words, the headline-grabbing promise of a total renaming by 2027 is not currently backed by a published official state program that I could verify online. What is verifiable is something subtler but more important: Kyrgyzstan has indeed been renaming settlements for years, and under Japarov the process has become more active, more ideologically explicit, and more visible.
That distinction matters. If one asks, “Has Kyrgyzstan officially adopted a final, binding plan to eliminate all remaining Russian-language village names by 2027?”, the careful answer is: I could not verify such a formal program from official legal or presidential sources. But if one asks, “Is Kyrgyzstan steadily moving toward a more Kyrgyz-centered rural toponymy, including the replacement of some Russian and Soviet names?”, the answer is clearly yes. The existing law, the presidentially signed renaming acts of 2022–2025, and the language-and-identity politics of the republic all point in that direction.
The legal framework: place names as national property
Kyrgyzstan’s toponymic policy is not ad hoc. The Law “On Place Names in the Kyrgyz Republic” defines place names as part of the national patrimony: they are described as “national property of the people of Kyrgyzstan” and an “integral part of history and culture.” The same law places naming and renaming within a formal state procedure rather than spontaneous symbolic politics alone. This matters because it frames toponymy not merely as signage but as a matter of sovereignty, heritage, and administrative control.
At the constitutional level, the state is officially bilingual in a very specific sense: Kyrgyz is the state language, while Russian is used as the official language. That constitutional formula is important because it shows why renaming debates in Kyrgyzstan are never simply “anti-Russian” or “pro-Russian.” The state is institutionally committed both to strengthening Kyrgyz and to retaining Russian in public life. Any interpretation of the current renaming process has to begin with this duality.
The 2022 amendments to the law on geographical names expanded the recognized grounds for naming and renaming. They explicitly allowed naming administrative-territorial units and villages after prominent state and public figures, historical figures, or in order to restore lost but widely known geographical names. Ironically, this is the very permissive framework that Japarov was reported in April 2026 to be reconsidering, at least in part, when he said villages should no longer be named after people.
What has actually been renamed?
The strongest evidence that the process is real lies not in the disputed 2026 quote, but in the laws and signed acts of the previous years.
In November 2022, Japarov signed a law renaming three rural areas and ten villages in Batken region. The official rationale was telling: the changes were said to be needed to return historical names “within the framework of protecting national interests,” and the background statement added that the law aimed at “strengthening the national ideology” and patriotic education on the basis of national and historical traditions and values. This is not neutral technocratic language. It is classic nation-building language.
In January 2024, another law renamed settlements and rural municipalities in Batken, Jalal-Abad, and Issyk-Kul. Again, the rationale was explicit: to “strengthen the national ideology” and restore geographical names “widely known in the past and present.” Among the changes were Semenovsky aiyl aimak → Kozhoyar aiyl aimak and Semenovka village → Kozhoyar-Ata in Issyk-Kul region, as well as Komsomolskoye → Kytai. These are exactly the kinds of changes that feed the current debate: some names are Soviet-ideological, some are Russian-language, some are hybrid administrative formations, and the replacement names move in a more Kyrgyz symbolic direction.
In October 2024, a further draft law proposed renaming settlements in Batken, Naryn, Talas, and Chüy. The list included highly legible Soviet/Russian examples such as Karl Marx → Birimdik, Communism → Ak-Aryk, Lenin → Iskhak Razzakov, Iskra → Sumbula, and Sadovoe → Masymkan. The explanatory note again used the same two-part formula: strengthening national ideology and restoring names known in the past and present, with local meetings and local councils cited as the procedural basis.
Then, in January 2025, Japarov signed another law renaming villages in Jalal-Abad, Naryn, Talas, Chüy, and Issyk-Kul. This list included Novodonetskoye → Aitmatov and Teploklyuchenka → Ak-Suu, among others. Even without counting all previous post-1991 renamings, these 2022–2025 acts alone show a steady and ongoing renaming campaign affecting well over fifteen settlements.
One should also add the symbolically charged 2022 renaming of Isfana to Razzakov. That was not a “Russian-to-Kyrgyz” case in the narrow linguistic sense, but it is part of the same broader politics of memorial landscape, state symbolism, and titular-national narration under Japarov.
So is this a thirty-year process? Yes.
The 2026 controversy makes sense only in the context of a much longer post-Soviet trajectory. The core logic of language and symbolic policy in Kyrgyzstan has been debated since the late Soviet period. Eugene Huskey’s classic article on “The Politics of Language in Kyrgyzstan” analyzed the late-Soviet and early-independence struggle over the status of Kyrgyz vis-à-vis Russian, while Britta Korth’s monograph on language attitudes in post-Soviet Kyrgyzstan and the work of Orusbaev, Mustajoki, and Protassova showed how deeply asymmetrical Kyrgyz–Russian bilingualism remained in the republic after independence. Russian retained prestige in urban life, education, and mobility, even as Kyrgyz became central to the symbolic project of sovereignty.
That asymmetry helps explain why toponymy becomes so politically potent. When a titular language is constitutionally elevated but a former imperial language remains highly functional in administration, education, and daily communication, symbolic domains become especially important. Names are among the most visible domains in which a state can “Kyrgyzize” public space even while maintaining Russian as an official language. In that sense, the renaming of settlements is not an isolated policy; it is one branch of a broader post-Soviet balancing act.
Why are northern regions central to the story?
Much of the remaining Russian or Soviet village nomenclature has been concentrated in the north and northeast of the country, especially in Chüy, Issyk-Kul, and to some extent Talas. That geography is not accidental. It reflects the history of Russian imperial peasant settlement and later Soviet demographic layering in northern Kyrgyzstan. Historians of Russian colonization in Central Asia have long shown that peasant colonization was especially marked in Kazakhstan and northern Kyrgyzstan, and that Chüy and Issyk-Kul became major settlement zones. This historical settlement geography left not only churches, street plans, and cemeteries, but also village names.
This is why the current renaming wave often appears geographically uneven. In the south, many rural names were already more thoroughly Kyrgyzized earlier or were never deeply Russified in the same way. In the north, however, Russian-language village names remained more visible as fossilized traces of settlement history and Soviet administration. The place-name landscape thus preserves an older ethnohistorical map that no longer corresponds to present demography.
The demographic backdrop
The demographic shift since independence is fundamental. According to the National Statistical Committee’s open data, the number of Russians in Kyrgyzstan fell from 348,935 in 2019 to 335,237 in 2022, while the total population rose from 6.39 million to 6.75 million in the same period. By 2022, Russians represented roughly 5% or slightly below, depending on the dataset and timing used. This does not by itself justify renaming, but it helps explain why the political cost of replacing Russian-language rural names is lower today than it would have been in the 1990s.
Yet demography cuts both ways. The shrinking Slavic share may make renaming easier politically, but it also means that the names now under pressure often outlast the communities that gave them social depth. That is precisely why the debate is so charged: are these names merely colonial leftovers, or are they part of Kyrgyzstan’s own layered history? The law itself says place names are part of history and culture, which means renaming is never only replacement; it is also historical selection.
Nation-building, decolonization, and symbolic repair
From a scholarly point of view, the Kyrgyz case fits broader patterns in critical toponymy. Maoz Azaryahu’s work on commemorative naming and subsequent research in critical toponymy have shown that place names are not innocent labels: they are instruments of memory, power, and political pedagogy. Regime changes and nation-building moments often produce waves of renaming precisely because names naturalize an “authorized” past in everyday space. Jaroslav David has similarly emphasized the special political role of commemorative place names.
Applied to Kyrgyzstan, this means the current renamings are best understood not as random cultural nationalism, but as an attempt to rebalance the symbolic landscape after empire and socialism. The official phrases used in Kyrgyz legal and administrative texts - “strengthening national ideology,” “returning historical names,” “protecting national interests” - are textbook examples of state-sponsored mnemonic restructuring. The map is being edited so that sovereignty appears more visibly Kyrgyz.
There is also a decolonial reading. Recent work on Kyrgyzstan’s decolonization discourse notes that post-Soviet language and identity debates increasingly frame Russian cultural dominance as a colonial legacy rather than simply a neutral bilingual inheritance. That does not mean all renaming is decolonial in a scholarly sense, nor that all new names are historically superior. But it does mean that many supporters of renaming see the issue as one of symbolic repair: replacing a namescape shaped by imperial settlement, Soviet ideology, or Russian-language administration with one anchored in Kyrgyz historical and linguistic legitimacy.
But there are limits — and they are real
Still, the story is not one of straightforward de-Russification. Kyrgyzstan remains structurally bilingual. Russian is constitutionally protected as the official language. It remains strong in urban communication, education, and cross-border mobility. Research on language attitudes and education in Kyrgyzstan has repeatedly shown that Russian retains high instrumental value, especially in employment and higher education. Even where the state renames a settlement, everyday speech may lag behind. Studies of post-socialist toponymy elsewhere have shown that old names often persist in lived practice through habit, memory, and routine, even after official replacement.
That is why the April 2026 denial is so revealing. It suggests that the Kyrgyz state still wants room to maneuver. A steady, piecemeal renaming policy is one thing; a loudly announced plan to eliminate all Russian-language village names by 2027 is another. The former can be presented as legal normalization and historical restoration. The latter sounds like a frontal symbolic break with a sensitive bilingual order. The rapid retreat from the stronger formulation therefore makes political sense even if the underlying trend remains intact.
Is the policy justified?
That depends on the criterion one applies.
If the criterion is post-colonial nation-building, then the renamings are easy to defend. Independent states routinely revise inherited namescapes, especially where imperial or ideological labels remain out of sync with the language, memory, and self-description of the titular nation. Kyrgyzstan is hardly unique in this respect.
If the criterion is historical pluralism, the picture is murkier. Some Russian-language place names are indeed Soviet commemorations or ideological labels with little local rootedness; others are part of the social history of colonization, migration, and multiethnic settlement. A blanket campaign against “Russian names” risks flattening those differences. From a toponymic standpoint, there is a meaningful difference between removing Komsomolskoye or Karl Marx and erasing names that testify to older settlement histories, however uncomfortable those histories may be.
If the criterion is public utility, practical objections remain. Renaming costs money. It requires changes in signs, seals, databases, cadastral records, educational materials, and routine administration. And official renaming does not guarantee popular uptake. One reason post-socialist name changes often produce friction is that maps can be changed faster than habits.
Conclusion
So how far has de-Russification of place names gone in Kyrgyzstan?
Far enough that it is clearly a real and continuing state project, but not so far that one can honestly describe the 2027 deadline as an officially settled fact. What is documented is a long-running, legally regulated, and ideologically framed renaming process that accelerated under Japarov and that has already transformed dozens of rural toponyms, especially through laws signed in 2022, 2024, and 2025. What remains undocumented, at least in official sources I could verify, is a formal decision mandating the complete elimination of all remaining Russian-language village names by 2027.
The most accurate conclusion, then, is this: Kyrgyzstan is not suddenly beginning a de-Russification of rural toponymy; it is continuing one. The April 2026 episode matters not because it launched the process, but because it briefly exposed the endpoint some nationalists would like to see - and the political caution with which the authorities still prefer to approach it.
Dr. Eugen Schochenmaier
Selected academic references
For readers who want to pursue the broader scholarship behind this debate, the following works are especially useful:
Eugene Huskey, “The Politics of Language in Kyrgyzstan,” Nationalities Papers 23(3), 1995.
Britta Korth, Language Attitudes towards Kyrgyz and Russian: Discourse, Education and Policy in Post-Soviet Kyrgyzstan (Peter Lang, 2005).
Abdykadyr Orusbaev, Arto Mustajoki, and Ekaterina Protassova, “Multilingualism, Russian Language and Education in Kyrgyzstan,” International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism 11(3–4), 2008.
Asel Murzakulova and John Schoeberlein, “The Invention of Legitimacy: Struggles in Kyrgyzstan to Craft an Effective Nation-State Ideology,” Europe-Asia Studies 61(7), 2009.
Erica Marat, National Ideology and State-Building in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan (Silk Road Paper, 2008).
Marlène Laruelle, “The Paradigm of Nationalism in Kyrgyzstan,” Communist and Post-Communist Studies 45(1–2), 2012.
Maoz Azaryahu, “The Critical Turn and Beyond: The Case of Commemorative Street Naming,” ACME 10(1), 2011.
Jaroslav David, “Commemorative Place Names — Their Specificity and Problems,” Names 59(4), 2011.
Duncan Light, “Habit, Memory, and the Persistence of Socialist-Era Street Names,” Annals of the Association of American Geographers 104(3), 2014.















