Brussels–Astana: The Constitution as an Instrument of Power
By Kadir Duran – Bruxelles Korner

In Brussels, at the heart of the European quarter, the debate was not merely about institutional reform. It was a fully structured strategic sequence.
The inaugural event of the Shanyraq Dialogues series focused on Kazakhstan’s upcoming constitutional referendum and its implications for EU–Kazakhstan relations.
Kazakhstan Facing “Black Swans”: State Stability and Balance Diplomacy
The chosen date was not incidental: March 1 – Gratitude Day in Kazakhstan.
Established in 2016, this national holiday celebrates unity and coexistence among more than 130 ethnic groups living across the country. In a continental state shaped by Soviet history, forced population transfers, and religious plurality, interethnic stability is a pillar of sovereignty.
In this context, the Constitution is not merely a legal text. It becomes an instrument of internal cohesion and a vector of external projection.

Shanyraq Dialogues: When Kazakhstan Places the Constitution at the Core of Its External Strategy
The sequence observed in Brussels was more than an “embassy–audience” exchange. It was a complete diplomatic staging: mobility (visas), institutional reform, resilience to geopolitical shocks, and repositioning as a middle power — packaged in a distinctly Brussels format: think tanks, academics, consultants, journalists, influence networks.
The conference brought together:
- Roman Vassilenko, Ambassador of Kazakhstan to the European Union
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Georgi Gotev, journalist and editor of EUalive.net
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Alberto Turkstra, Diplomatic World, moderator

The referendum, scheduled for mid-March, unfolds in an environment marked by systemic shocks: the war in Ukraine, tensions around Iran, energy fragmentation, and Sino-American rivalry.
In this context, Astana pursues three objectives:
Institutional predictability
Economic attractiveness
Diplomatic balance
The Constitution is framed as a resilience mechanism against “black swans.”
1) Mobility: The Invisible Infrastructure of the EU–Kazakhstan Relationship
A central point was established from the outset: a strategic partnership presupposes the circulation of people.
Since 2017, Kazakhstan has unilaterally applied a visa-free regime for EU and OECD member states. The European Union remains more procedurally cautious.
Visa facilitation is not a technical detail. It constitutes the material condition of a relationship based on:
Academic ecosystems
Business flows
Media and think tanks
Logistical supply chains
Without mobility, partnership remains documentary. With mobility, it becomes organic.
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2) Gradualism versus Rupture
The diplomatic discourse insists on progressive reform.
The underlying narrative is clear: abrupt transitions generate instability and allow opportunistic networks to capture power — an implicit reference to post-communist deviations in parts of Eastern Europe.
“Gradualism” versus “shock therapy” becomes a legitimizing framework.
This positioning allows Kazakhstan to:
Justify structured transformation
Neutralize criticism regarding the pace of democratization
Present itself as a state that has learned from post-Soviet transitions
The model promoted is reform without systemic rupture.
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3) The Constitution as an Architecture of Resilience
The core of the ambassador’s intervention framed the Constitution as a tool of resilience in an unstable world.
Two messages dominated:
a) The 2022 reforms: necessary but incomplete
Following the January 2022 events, a rebalancing of President–Parliament–Government relations was initiated.
The referendum aims to deepen this restructuring.
b) Organized legal continuity
Gradual entry into force
Adoption of complementary constitutional laws
Maintenance of existing legislation unless amended
The logic is explicit: adjust the architecture without creating a normative vacuum.
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4) Vice Presidency: Clarifying Succession
The proposed reform introduces a structured succession mechanism:
President → Vice President → Speaker of the Kurultai → Prime Minister
Formally, the vice presidency holds general competences exercised upon presidential instruction.
Strategically, however, it:
Reduces institutional uncertainty
Ensures stability in case of vacancy
Guarantees continuity of political steering
In a volatile regional environment, such clarification sends a signal to investors and partners.
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5) Ukraine, Iran and Caspian Centrality
The war in Ukraine has affected exports via the CPC pipeline infrastructure.
Tensions around Iran reinforce the strategic dimension of the Caspian basin.
The Caspian Sea is now described as a connector of the Middle Corridor, linking the EU to the Caucasus and Central Asia.
Regional security thus becomes an indirect constitutional variable:
Internal stability → External credibility → Logistical security
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6) The United States and Strategic Diversification
Historically, relations with Washington rested on:
Nuclear disarmament
Oil majors (Chevron, Exxon)
Today, the pillars expand to:
Critical raw materials
Energy transition
Eurasian logistics
South Caucasus stability
Kazakhstan’s objective is clear: multiply strategic anchors to avoid exclusive dependence.
This aligns with a middle-power doctrine: be useful — therefore indispensable.
7) Societal Rights: Managing Frictions
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The constitutional text maintains the definition of marriage as a union between a man and a woman.
Diplomatic messaging emphasizes:
Decriminalization of same-sex relations (since 1998)
Absence of criminalization
Diversity of European models
The signal: social stability before normative rupture.
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8) Language: Subtle Equilibrium
Kazakh remains the state language.
Russian maintains official usage “alongside” Kazakh — a nuanced shift from full equality.
Legally subtle, politically strategic, this adjustment allows:
Affirmation of national identity
Reassurance of minorities
Avoidance of identity shock
In a multiethnic state, language remains a strategic variable.
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9) The Assumed “Middle Power” Doctrine
Kazakhstan presents itself as a responsible middle power:
Reliable energy supplier
Peacekeeping contributor
Mediation platform
Multilateral initiator (CICA, interreligious congresses)
The metaphor used is revealing: middle powers as cartilage between the bones of great powers.
The function is not domination, but connection.
Conclusion: The Constitution as Positioning Tool
In Brussels, Astana was not defending merely a text.
It was defending a model:
Reform without rupture
Succession clarity
Legal stabilization
Strategic indispensability in energy–critical minerals–logistics value chains
In a fragmented world, intermediate states rely on internal coherence to preserve external maneuverability.
Brussels observes.
Astana calibrates.
The Constitution exceeds the legal framework.
It becomes an instrument of power.
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Speech by Ambassador Roman Vassilenko
Inaugural Event of the Shanyraq Dialogues – Brussels, March 2, 2026
Ambassador Roman Vassilenko opened in Brussels the first edition of the Shanyraq Dialogues, a platform conceived as an open and forward-looking space for exchange among experts, policymakers, and representatives of civil society. Inspired by the symbolism of the shanyraq — a traditional architectural element representing unity, stability, and a shared home — this initiative seeks to strengthen trust, mutual understanding, and sustainable partnerships.
Geopolitical Context and Kazakhstan’s Position
Before addressing the constitutional reform, the Ambassador referred to the situation in the Middle East, particularly in Iran. President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev expressed solidarity with several Arab countries and condemned any military actions undermining the sovereignty of states.
Kazakhstan called for restraint and for the resolution of conflicts exclusively through diplomatic means, in strict accordance with international law and the UN Charter. The Kazakh Ministry of Foreign Affairs also extended condolences to the people of Iran for the recent civilian casualties, while reaffirming the importance of respecting international humanitarian law.
The March 15 Constitutional Referendum
On February 11, President Tokayev signed a decree setting March 15, 2026, as the date for a nationwide referendum on the adoption of a new Constitution.
This reform forms part of a broader process initiated last September, when the President proposed the establishment of a unicameral Parliament to modernize the political system and adapt the state to contemporary challenges, particularly those linked to artificial intelligence and digital transformation.
An Unprecedented Participatory Process
Establishment of a working group in October.
More than 2,000 proposals reviewed in the initial phase.
Creation of a 130-member Constitutional Commission representing all regions and social groups.
Public broadcasting of the Commission’s sessions.
Nearly 10,000 comments submitted via official digital platforms.
The draft is thus presented as the outcome of broad civic consultation, giving it a genuinely popular character.
Key Innovations of the Draft Constitution
1. Primacy of Human Rights
The text places strong emphasis on human dignity, fundamental freedoms, and the protection of rights, including in the digital environment.
The permanent abolition of the death penalty is reaffirmed.
2. Core Values
Sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Unity and interethnic harmony.
Affirmation of a unitary and secular state.
Marriage defined as a voluntary and equal union between a man and a woman.
3. New Institutional Architecture
Establishment of a unicameral Parliament (Quryltai) composed of 145 deputies elected under a proportional system for five-year terms.
Introduction of the position of Vice-President.
Creation of a new nationwide dialogue platform: the Halyq Kenesi (People’s Council).
These reforms aim to enhance political accountability, institutional efficiency, and civic participation.
A Strategic European Dimension
The Ambassador emphasized that the adoption of the new Constitution could provide fresh momentum to the strategic partnership between Kazakhstan and the European Union.
Strengthened governance, increased institutional transparency, and the centrality of human rights would bring Kazakhstan closer to the core principles it shares with the EU: rule of law, dialogue, and public accountability.
Conclusion
According to the Ambassador, the March 15 referendum represents a defining moment for Kazakhstan.
Beyond a legal reform, it is a decision about the country’s trajectory. If adopted, the new Constitution would embody a commitment to a more modern, balanced, and citizen-centered model of governance — and a political signal addressed both to European partners and to the broader international community.










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