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Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers of Kyrgyzstan

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Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers of the Kyrgyz Republic
Кыргыз Республикасынын Министрлер Кабинетинин төрагасы (Kyrgyz)
Председатель Кабинета министров Кыргызской Республики (Russian)
since 16 December 2024
StyleMr. Chairman (informally)
His Excellency (international correspondence)
Member ofCabinet
Security Council
ResidenceAla Archa State Residence, Bishkek
AppointerPresident of Kyrgyzstan
Inaugural holderNasirdin Isanov (modern post: Ulukbek Maripov)
Formation21 January 1991 (prime minister)
5 May 2021 (modern post)
Salary870 000 som annually[citation needed]
Websitegov.kg
The Prime Minister's Office on Old Square, Bishkek.

The chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers of Kyrgyzstan,[a] formerly known as the prime minister of Kyrgyzstan,[b] chairs the Cabinet of Ministers of the Kyrgyz Republic.

Powers

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Until 2010, the president was in a stronger position than the prime minister in Kyrgyzstan, but after the 2010 constitutional referendum, the state transitioned to a parliamentary system, placing greater power in parliament and the cabinet at the expense of the president. This was reverted in 2021 after the Kyrgyz constitutional referendum.

History of the office

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Kubatbek Boronov was the acting prime minister from 16 June 2020, succeeding Mukhammedkalyi Abylgaziev after his resignation due to his cabinet's heavy corruption case.

Following election protests, Boronov resigned and was replaced on 6 October 2020 by opposition party founder Sadyr Japarov[1][2] and again by Artem Novikov on 14 November 2020 to 3 February 2021.

List of officeholders

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No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term of office Party
Prime Minister of Kyrgyzstan
(1991–2021)
1 Nasirdin Isanov
(1943–1991)
21 January 1991 29 November 1991 Independent
2 Andrei Iordan
(1934–2006)
29 November 1991 10 February 1992 Independent
3 Tursunbek Chyngyshev
(born 1942)
10 February 1992 13 December 1993 Independent
4 Almanbet Matubraimov
(born 1952)
13 December 1993 14 December 1993 Independent
5 Apas Jumagulov
(born 1934)
14 December 1993 14 March 1998 Independent
6 Kubanychbek Jumaliyev
(born 1956)
14 March 1998 23 December 1998 Independent
7 Boris Silayev
(born 1946)
23 December 1998 25 December 1998 Independent
8 Jumabek Ibraimov
(1944–1999)
25 December 1998 4 April 1999 Independent
9 Boris Silayev
(born 1946)
4 April 1999 12 April 1999 Independent
10 Amangeldy Muraliyev
(born 1947)
12 April 1999 21 December 2000 Independent
11 Kurmanbek Bakiyev
(born 1949)
21 December 2000 22 May 2002 Independent
12 Nikolai Tanayev
(1945–2020)
22 May 2002 25 March 2005 Independent
Kurmanbek Bakiyev
(born 1949)
25 March 2005 28 March 2005 People's Movement of Kyrgyzstan
(11) 28 March 2005 20 June 2005
13 Medetbek Kerimkulov
(born 1949)
20 June 2005 10 July 2005 Independent
(11) Kurmanbek Bakiyev
(born 1949)
10 July 2005 15 August 2005 People's Movement of Kyrgyzstan
Felix Kulov
(born 1948)
15 August 2005 1 September 2005 Ar-Namys
14 1 September 2005 29 January 2007
15 Azim Isabekov
(born 1960)
29 January 2007 29 March 2007 Ar-Namys
16 Almazbek Atambayev
(born 1956)
29 March 2007 28 November 2007 Social Democratic Party of Kyrgyzstan
17 Iskenderbek Aidaraliyev
(born 1955)
28 November 2007 24 December 2007 Independent
18 Igor Chudinov
(born 1961)
24 December 2007 21 October 2009 Ak Jol
19 Daniar Usenov
(born 1960)
21 October 2009 7 April 2010 Ak Jol
(16) Almazbek Atambayev
(born 1956)
17 December 2010 23 September 2011 Social Democratic Party of Kyrgyzstan
20 Ömürbek Babanov
(born 1970)
23 September 2011 14 November 2011 Respublika Party of Kyrgyzstan
(16) Almazbek Atambayev
(born 1956)
14 November 2011 1 December 2011 Social Democratic Party of Kyrgyzstan
Ömürbek Babanov
(born 1970)
1 December 2011 24 December 2011 Respublika Party of Kyrgyzstan
20 24 December 2011 1 September 2012
21 Aaly Karashev
(born 1968)
1 September 2012 6 September 2012 Respublika Party of Kyrgyzstan
22 Zhantoro Satybaldiyev
(born 1956)
6 September 2012 25 March 2014 Independent
Djoomart Otorbaev[3]
(born 1955)
25 March 2014 3 April 2014 Ata Meken
23 3 April 2014 1 May 2015
24 Temir Sariyev[4]
(born 1963)
1 May 2015 13 April 2016 Akshumkar
25 Sooronbay Jeenbekov[5]
(born 1958)
13 April 2016 22 August 2017 Social Democratic Party of Kyrgyzstan
26 Mukhammetkalyi Abylgaziev
(born 1968)
22 August 2017 26 August 2017 Independent
27 Sapar Isakov
(born 1977)
26 August 2017 19 April 2018 Social Democratic Party of Kyrgyzstan
(26) Mukhammedkalyi Abylgaziev
(born 1968)
20 April 2018 15 June 2020 Independent
28 Kubatbek Boronov
(born 1964)
17 June 2020 6 October 2020 Independent
29 Almazbek Batyrbekov
(born 1970)[6]
Acting Prime Minister (Disputed)
9 October 2020 14 October 2020 Kyrgyzstan
Sadyr Japarov
(born 1968)
6 October 2020 10 October 2020 Mekenchil
30 10 October 2020 14 November 2020
31 Artem Novikov
(born 1987)
14 November 2020 3 February 2021 Independent
32 Ulukbek Maripov
(born 1979)
3 February 2021 5 May 2021 Independent
Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers
(since 2021)
32 Ulukbek Maripov
(born 1979)
5 May 2021 12 October 2021 Independent
33 Akylbek Japarov
(born 1965)
12 October 2021 16 December 2024 Ar-Namys
34 Adylbek Kasymaliev
(born 1960)
16 December 2024 Incumbent Independent

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Russian: Председатель Кабинета министров Кыргызской Республики; Kyrgyz: Кыргыз Республикасынын Министрлер Кабинетинин төрагасы, romanizedKyrgyz Respublikasynyn Ministrler Kabinetinin töragasy
  2. ^ Kyrgyz: Кыргыз Республикасынын премьер-министри, romanizedKyrgyz Respublikasynyn premier-ministri

References

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  1. ^ "PM quits as protesters take control in Kyrgyzstan". BBC News. 7 October 2020. Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  2. ^ "Kyrgyzstan Prime Minister Kubatbek Boronov resigns, reports claim". www.dw.com. Deutsche Welle. Retrieved 8 October 2020.
  3. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 27 October 2014. Retrieved 3 June 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ "Kyrgyzstan PM Sariyev resigns after cabinet accused of graft". Reuters. 11 April 2016.
  5. ^ "Kyrgyz Parliament Approves Atambaev Ally As New Prime Minister". rferl.org. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
  6. ^ "First Deputy Prime Minister Almazbek Batyrbekov performs PM's duties".