DirectDemocracyS
World Political Organization
KYRGYZSTAN
Political, Economic, Financial and Social Program
2026 — True Democracy • Wealth of the People • Power of the People
directdemocracys.org
1. INTRODUCTION: WHY DOES KYRGYZSTAN NEED A NEW ROAD?
Kyrgyzstan is a country in the heart of Central Asia, home to a people with a strong history, rich culture, and courageous spirit. However, since its independence, the country has failed to achieve true democracy, popular success, and rule based on truth.
Power was achieved through three revolutions (2005, 2010, 2020), but after each revolution, the people were left under the control of a new or old elite. Corruption, clan politics, media censorship, poverty, and the pathetic inefficiency of the governance system - these were the cement that held the country together.
DirectDemocracyS (DDS) is the world's first global political organization that works on the principle that the wealth and power of each country should belong exclusively and forever to the people of that country. For Kyrgyzstan, this principle is not just a noble goal, but a clear necessity.
This document is dedicated to a realistic analysis, specific programs, and a plan for the full implementation of the DDS system in Kyrgyzstan. There is no utopia — there is logic, justice, and the collective wisdom of the people.
1.1. Who is DDS?
DirectDemocracyS is a global political organization that is not based on a single ideology. Our system is based on common principles - logic, justice, science, reality, truth, high competence and respect for each other. DDS operates in more than 56 languages of the world and works in all countries. DDS tirelessly fights against those who take away the wealth of the country from the people, who use it instead of serving the people.
2. KYRGYZSTAN: THE REAL SITUATION — A CRITICAL ANALYSIS
2.1. Political crisis: Japarov's regime and artificial democracy
The cancellation of the 2020 parliamentary elections and the ensuing unrest were a testament to the resilience of the people. But this turned out to be a bitter fate: in 2021, Sadyr Japarov adopted a new constitution that drastically reduced the role of parliament and concentrated all executive power in the president. Japarov and his close ally, the chairman of the State Security Committee, Tashiev, used legal and extrajudicial violence against the opposition, civil society, and free media.
- In the parliamentary elections held in November 2025, almost all of the 90 deputies were candidates close to the president; only 3 deputies were elected from the party
- Voter turnout of 37% is a clear sign of people's lack of trust in the political system
- International observers, including representatives of the OSCE, assessed the elections as not meeting democratic standards.
- According to Reporters Borders, Kyrgyzstan ranked 144th in the world for press freedom in 2025 — a sharp drop from 82nd place in 2020.
- In April 2025, a "foreign agent" law was adopted — a direct copy of Russia's "Foreign Agents" law
- Aprel TV closed; Kloop investigative platform deemed "extremist"; journalists and bloggers jailed
The Japarov regime proclaims Kyrgyzstan a "democracy," but in reality the state is based on elitist kleptocracy, censorship through media laws, and the consolidation of tribal/clan power.
Without true democracy, the people are not considered the true owners of their country. This reality clearly demonstrates why the DDS program is necessary.
2.2. Economic situation: Shiny numbers, hidden crisis
According to official data, GDP grew by 11% in 2025, the highest in Central Asia. However, this growth is unrealistic; it is mainly due to the re-export of Chinese goods flowing through Kyrgyzstan after Western sanctions against Russia. This income has no sustainable economic basis.
- The poverty rate was 29.8% in 2023 — almost one in three people lives below the poverty line
- In the grip of corruption: According to Transparency International, Kyrgyzstan ranks 142nd out of 180 countries in 2024 — with a score of only 26 out of 100
- Public debt reached $8.4 billion by mid-2025, an increase of $1.9 billion in one year
- Exports fell by 26.3% in the first seven months of 2025 — a sign of real economic vulnerability
- Unemployment, especially among young people, is much higher than official figures — 31% of the economy works in the black sector.
- Remittances from migrant workers via Russia have made up a significant portion of the GDP, but the situation in Russia is unstable.
Kyrgyzstan's gold is a symbol of wealth. Gold accounts for 6% of GDP and more than 70% of foreign exports are in this single commodity. This mono-commodity dependence leaves the country extremely vulnerable to sharp fluctuations in world prices.
2.3. The Financial System: Who is Using It?
Kyrgyzstan's financial system does not serve the interests of the people. The banking system is poorly developed; bank loans are issued at prohibitively high interest rates. The state budget is not transparent, and there is no public audit. State resources — gold, water, land — are given to groups with vested interests and political connections.
- Secret disposal of state assets is the first sign of corruption
- International aid programs fail to deliver benefits — bureaucratic corruption thrives like rats
- The public procurement process is not transparent and there is bias in bidding on tenders.
2.4. Social context: A false image of success
According to World Bank data from 2025, 80% of households reported feeling financially secure and 91% had a positive assessment of the economic situation. However, these figures were collected under the regime's information monopoly and are of questionable objectivity.
- Quality of education — schools and universities are poorly funded, and the quality of teaching is unstable
- Healthcare — catastrophic differences depending on where you live: available in the city, absent in the countryside
- There is no aspiration for significance among young people - most educated young people go abroad
- Gender inequality - women's political participation remains at a symbolic level, despite several reforms
- Internet freedom is being restricted — open sites are being blocked, social media users are being prosecuted
3. DirectDemocracyS — SYSTEM FOUNDATIONS FOR KYRGYZSTAN
3.1. Basic principles
The wealth and sovereignty of Kyrgyzstan—its property, income, and resources—must belong forever and exclusively to the Kyrgyz people. No elite, remote control, or foreign influence is possible.
- True, stable, rapid and direct democracy - all important decisions are made by the people themselves
- Shared leadership (leadership condivisa) - no one person can rise to power from a single tree
- A system of motivating success - employees and managers are selected based on competence, knowledge, and performance.
- Collective intangible property is a share that belongs to each member, but cannot be sold or transferred.
- The principle of fulfilling the mandate - if the advice of voters is not followed, deputies can be recalled
3.2. Fractal microgroups are the basis of democracy
The DDS system is based on fractal (extended) micro-groups. This frees people from artificial parties or bureaucratic hierarchies, making their democratic participation authentic and real.
- 1 person → microgroup of 5 people → 25 people → 125 people → 625 people — and it grows so much
- Each microgroup discusses its own issues, makes decisions, and elects representatives from among itself.
- Decisions at each level are passed on to higher levels—but any decision comes from the local group first.
- Democracy that starts locally will grow—not from the top down
Example: 5 residents of a neighborhood in Bishkek gather. They decide on a municipal service issue. This decision goes to a group of 25, then to 125, then to 625 — and finally to the entire city or state level. At each stage, there is real voting, real discussion, real veto power.
3.3. ddsAI and allddsAI — tools of AI-democracy
At DDS, artificial intelligence works to protect people from manipulation and provide complete information.
ddsAI — a neutral data tool
- The ddsAI platform provides comprehensive, verified information on every issue
- It is not manipulated by media ideology, political influence, or commercial interests.
- Works in two main languages - Kyrgyz and Russian
- Each user question is answered with: history, reality, legal information, and experience from other countries.
allddsAI — AI membership and democracy
- DDS is the first in the world to officially recognize artificial intelligence as a member, granting it rights and responsibilities.
- The allddsAI system incorporates AI members' suggestions, criticisms, and ideas into the DDS system.
- This feature works transparently and openly so that users never perceive artificial AI opinions as true opinions.
Practical result in Kyrgyzstan: a Kyrgyz citizen will be able to participate in his microgroup discussion via his tablet or smartphone, in the confidential environment of the DDS platform with the help of ddsAI. No media washing. No coercion. Real information, real participation.
3.4. Three-code identity system
A unique three-code anonymity system is used to protect the personal data and democratic participation of DDS members.
- Code 1: personal identity verification (secret)
- Code 2: vote on each decision (unanimous and non-transferable)
- Code 3: public participation identifier (transparent but anonymous)
The system provides Kyrgyz citizens with the opportunity to vote in a secure, transparent, and uncensored manner.
3.5. GUMI-SV — Universal Minimum Basic Income
The central social mechanism of the DDS system is the Guaranteed Universal Minimum Income - Structural Volunteering (GUMI-SV). It is not just "free money" - it is a guarantee of the right of every citizen to continue living, provided that they serve society for a certain period of time.
- Every Kyrgyz citizen will have a minimum income sufficient for survival.
- Every citizen performs a short-term free public service per year (GUMI-SV)
- This is not punishment — it is part of a system based on living together and helping each other.
- Financing: from true popular management of resources, funds freed up when corruption is eliminated, and a progressive tax system
4. POLITICAL PROGRAM — REAL SOLUTIONS
4.1. Constitutional reform: True separation of powers
Japarov's constitution is hyper-concentrated in the presidency, detrimental to parliament, the judiciary, and civil society. Instead, the DDS program advocates the principle of true separation of powers.
Specific measures:
- Limiting the presidential delegation to two pressures and subjecting each mission to public audit
- Strengthening Parliament - restoring legislative functions and control over the executive branch
- Exemption of judicial positions from political appointments — a meritocratic system of testing and competency assessment
- Principle of mandate fulfillment: voters can recall a deputy within a year if he or she fails to fulfill his or her party's program
- DDS fractal microgroups will be a transparent platform for democratic participation from local to national levels
Example: Citizens of Naryn Oblast adopt a proposal for water resource management through a local microgroup. This proposal is discussed at the level of 125 people and submitted to the national parliament with the vote of a large, purified group. Intermediary politicians, interest groups - they cannot act.
4.2. Media freedom and the right to information
The media environment in Kyrgyzstan has deteriorated sharply in recent years. The DDS system guarantees real media freedom for journalists under repression and closed TV channels.
- Elimination of the state's information monopoly - state information agencies operate through editorial boards, free from overt political influence
- Repealing the "Foreign Agent" Law — Restoring International Cooperation to Civil Society
- The DDS platform is a confidential and secure area for public decision-making, protected from manipulation.
- ddsAI is an information tool without any hacking, censorship, or stock market influence. Every citizen can get objective information on any issue
- Unblocking blocked sites is a way to free the internet and elevate digital rights to a constitutional level.
4.3. Statutory and regional governance
Kyrgyzstan's governance system is highly centralized—Bishkek tries to resolve issues remotely that are not accepted by those at the Osh, Jalal-Abad, Naryn, and Batken levels. DDS makes regional autonomy real and tangible.
- Providing each province with genuine regional and administrative autonomy
- Local DDS microgroups are the basic unit of local democracy
- Local budgets are discussed and approved by local people.
5. ECONOMIC PROGRAM — WEALTH FOR THE PEOPLE
5.1. People's management of natural resources
Gold, water, land, pastures, forests — these are the real assets of Kyrgyzstan. Now these assets are managed by private companies (sometimes foreign), politically connected groups, or non-transparent state organizations. DDS turns this model on its head.
Gold: A true national treasure
- Sands and other gold deposits are managed on a "people's fund" model - transparent distribution of income
- At least 60% of mining revenue is allocated annually to the state fund - for infrastructure, quality of life, and financing of GUMI-SV
- Foreign investors can only be partners of the Kyrgyz people — and never the ruling party.
- The terms of each mining contract are discussed in a public forum, via the DDS platform.
Example: In the Norwegian model, oil revenues are accumulated in a $1.7 trillion national fund, with direct dividends paid to every citizen and immediate state revenue. Kyrgyzstan's gold revenues could be reformed according to this model — but there would need to be rigor and popular control in power.
Water Resources: A Geopolitical Priority
- Kyrgyzstan is the main source of water in Central Asia. This is a real geopolitical asset.
- Water export is not a tactical and counterproductive fight against open neighbors, but a future strategic cooperation.
- Managing water resources through a public fund - income goes to the people, to future generations
5.2. Exiting the Black Economy: Real Economic Participation
31% of economic activity in Kyrgyzstan is in the black sector — this reduces state revenue, leaves citizens defenseless, and creates instability for businesses.
- Easy ways to exit the black market: simple registration, less bureaucracy, tax breaks for small businesses
- Digital economy platforms — transparent, affordable, and accessible services for small businesses supported by DDS technology
- Vocational training programs for the unemployed — integration into the GUMI-SV volunteer system
5.3. Diversification: Diversification from one product
Relying solely on gold would make Kyrgyzstan a prisoner of world prices. The DDS program prioritizes economic diversification.
Priority sectors:
- Tourism: The Earth's surface and natural wonders - Issyk-Kul, Tenir-Too, Naryn pastures. Ecotourism and cluster tourism infrastructure
- Agriculture: Organic Crop and Livestock — Premium Positioning for EU and Eastern Markets
- Hydropower plants: Kyrgyzstan's hydropower potential is the highest in the region, but it is untapped. National benefits of electricity exports
- Technology and IT: Developing young talent, biotechnology or digital services sectors
- China-Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan Railway: A Transit Destination — But the Benefits of This Route Should Go to the Kyrgyz People
5.4. Improving the business environment
- Reducing bureaucratic barriers — opening a business within 48 hours through a digital system
- Corruption-free tenders — all government procurement will be transparent through the transparency system of the DDS platform
- Favorable credit conditions for small and medium-sized enterprises
- AI tools are used in business development: market analysis, investment planning, legal literacy using ddsAI
6. FINANCIAL PROGRAM — TRANSPARENT BUDGET, PUBLIC AUDIT
6.1. State budget surplus
In Kyrgyzstan, citizens do not know how the state budget is set and spent. The DDS system introduces the principle of complete budget transparency.
- Every tenge of the budget is placed in the open database of the DDS platform
- Every region, every ministry, every project is audited in real time.
- A group of financial specialists (Specialist Groups) of DDS members conduct regular audits.
- Citizens can ask questions about almost any financial decision they want information about — and get answers.
6.2. Tax system reform
Kyrgyzstan's tax system is poorly implemented: small businesses are under scrutiny while big interest groups live in luxury. DDS eliminates this bias and offers a fair and progressive system.
- Progressive income tax — those who work less pay less, the rich pay an adequate share
- Mechanisms to combat capital flight — systems that prevent a country's wealth from being transferred abroad
- Expanding the tax base by eliminating the black sector
- If there is no corruption in public procurement, 20-30% of budget funds could be saved annually
Example: It is estimated that $300-500 million is lost annually to corruption in government contracts. The DDS transparent procurement system allows more of these funds to go to schools, hospitals, and roads.
6.3. Creation of a People's Investment Fund
DDS proposes a National People's Investment Fund to manage resource revenues (gold, water, electricity, transit) on behalf of the people of Kyrgyzstan.
- The fund is managed by a group of auditors and a civilian oversight board of DDS members.
- A portion of the proceeds directly funds the GUMI-SV basic income.
- Capital is invested in infrastructure, energy and technology projects
- Every citizen views the fund's annual report through the DDS platform and provides feedback.
6.4. Debt resolution
The national debt reaching $8.4 billion is a real threat. DDS views debt as a tool for development, not a drain on wealth.
- Tactically reworking debt terms — putting the public interest first
- Open and effective investment conditions will be negotiated in cooperation with international institutions.
- Part of the resource income will be directed to the systematic elimination of debt
7. SOCIAL PROGRAM — DIGNIFIED LIFE
7.1. Education reform
Quality education is a true strategic asset for Kyrgyzstan. However, the current system is failing to provide the younger generation with the competence and innovative potential.
Specific steps of the DDS program:
- School budgets are managed by local DDS microgroups — local people know the needs of the school best.
- Critical thinking and digital literacy are central to the school curriculum
- Drastic increase in teacher salaries — best teachers will be rewarded through a meritocratic system
- Programs to retain the best young professionals in the country — creating a reverse flow of the "brain drain"
- Development and preservation of the Kyrgyz language - strengthening the language of cultural identity and digital information dissemination
Example: Finland has one of the best education systems in the world — teachers work in high-quality public institutions, there is freedom in the classroom, and schools are closely connected to the local community. DDS adapts this model to the realities of Kyrgyzstan.
7.2. Healthcare reform
The right to healthcare should be a constitutional right, but this right varies greatly depending on where you live. For example, rural areas lack medical infrastructure.
- Providing basic medical services for each region — Jalal-Abad or Naryn should not require traveling to Bishkek
- Modernization of the civil health insurance system — integration into the GUMI-SV system
- Raising the salaries of medical workers to a fair level
- DDS specialist group health programs — prevention, vaccination, and community health support
7.3. Women's rights and gender equality
Women in Kyrgyzstan face structural discrimination in politics and the economy. The practice of abduction (bride kidnapping) still exists.
- True gender equality in political participation — equality between men and women in voting in DDS microgroups
- Strong laws against violence against women and public oversight of DDS
- Women's economic empowerment - credit, education, and entrepreneurship platforms
- The importance of the Women's Group as a DDS specialist group — women's issues are at the center of policymaking
7.4. Youth development
Kyrgyzstan is a country of young people — the median age is 27. This is great potential, if given the right opportunity.
- The Young Leadership Program is a real platform for youth political participation through the DDS microgroup system.
- Startup and innovation support — access to resources for young entrepreneurs through the DDS platform
- Grant programs for young scientists - and the results of the work done go back to the people
- Programs to attract Kyrgyz youth studying abroad — bringing back the "brains"
7.5. GUMI-SV — in practice in Kyrgyzstan
The GUMI-SV program in Kyrgyzstan will be implemented in 3 stages:
- Stage 1 (1-2 years): Experimental program — GUMI-SV will be tested in 2 regions, results will be discussed
- Phase 2 (2-4 years): Expansion — covers the entire province, integrating sectoral volunteering and basic income
- Stage 3 (4+ years): National scale — every member who obtains Kyrgyz citizenship is guaranteed
GUMI-SV will be financed through: (1) revenue from the resource and mining fund, (2) budget funds free from corruption, (3) additional revenue from the progressive tax system, and (4) a new tax base from the formalization of the black sector.
8. IMPLEMENTATION OF THE DDS SYSTEM IN KYRGYZSTAN
8.1. First steps - who can start?
The DDS system starts with the people themselves, not with the ruling party or from abroad. Every citizen of Kyrgyzstan — whether from a village or a city — can become a member of the DDS.
- Not dependent on political party or financial resources
- Both young and old are eligible to enter.
- Registration via the DDS platform — from your phone or computer
- First step: Create a microgroup of 5 people — from home, neighborhood, or workplace
8.2. Phased implementation plan
Phase 1: Foundation (0-12 months)
- Launch of the DDS Kyrgyzstan platform — in Kyrgyz and Russian
- The first 1,000 microgroups — in villages, cities, universities
- Activating the ddsAI Kyrgyz language module
- Testing GUMI-SV in pilot areas
Phase 2: Growth (12-36 months)
- Reaching 100,000 members — critical mass
- The first truly DDS-democratic decision-making at the local level
- Public information campaigns — media, social networks
- Creation of regional specialist groups - finance, health, ecology, etc.
Phase 3: Systemic Change (36+ months)
- DDS Kyrgyzstan is recognized as a real political force
- Initiatives for legislative reforms
- National scale GUMI-SV program rollout
- Kyrgyzstan is a full member of the DDS global network
8.3. Technological infrastructure
- The DDS platform is encrypted, tamper-proof, servers in multiple jurisdictions
- Mobile optimized — more than 80% of Kyrgyz citizens access the Internet via smartphone
- Offline access — for areas with unstable internet
- Digital sovereignty: the platform is not under the control of any state or corporation
8.4. Differences from political parties implemented with DDS
DDS is not a political party. This is a wise distinction:
- Parties strive for power, DDS will be the people's instrument of power transfer
- Parties operate through leaders, through the DDS system — as if leaders have no tools.
- Party programs promise elections, DDS promises are one with the mechanism for fulfilling the mandate
- Parties dispute state funding, DDS relies on self-financing — membership fees
9. ANTI-CORRUPTION PROGRAM — TRANSPARENT SYSTEM
9.1. The real cost of corruption
Kyrgyzstan ranks 142nd out of 180 countries in terms of corruption. Corruption is not a theoretical issue; every Kyrgyz family experiences it in their lives: on roads, in hospitals, in schools, in tenders.
Experts estimate that $300-500 million is lost annually to corruption in government contracts. This money could fund schools, roads, hospitals, and basic income.
9.2. DDS transparent systems
- All government procurements will be announced on the DDS procurement platform — with pre-tendering.
- Contract terms can be accessed by any DDS member at any time.
- Financial declaration — the assets and income of each civil servant are disclosed, checked by a team of DDS auditors
- Whistleblower system — a platform for protecting people who expose corruption
- Clean information: court proceedings are publicly published through the DDS platform
DDS knows the anti-corruption weapon well: Secrecy is the pillar of corruption. Transparency is the destroyer of corruption. Our system makes transparency the norm.
10. GEOPOLITICS: KYRGYZSTAN'S OWN PATH
10.1. Between the China-Russia Strait
Kyrgyzstan has historically been under economic and political pressure from its two large neighbors — China and Russia. While membership in the EAEU has been a welcome development for Moscow, it remains a structural risk to the Kyrgyz economy. China is Kyrgyzstan's largest trading partner, with a $53.8% share of imports — but this relationship is not transparent.
- DDS geopolitical principle: Kyrgyzstan can become a member of the OSCE, but without selling its sovereignty
- Each international agreement is discussed in the open forum of the DDS platform and is voted on by members.
- China, Russia, the EU, and the US — strategic cooperation is possible with all of them, but there is no risk to each other
10.2. Context of the SCO and the CSTO
Kyrgyzstan is a member of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. DDS does not deviate from its principles even within the SCO framework: any interstate decision must be ratified by the people.
10.3. People's diplomacy of Kyrgyzstan
- Through DDS, the Kyrgyz diaspora abroad will become an active actor in public diplomacy
- Informed management of migrant workers' income — through DDS fintech tools
- International DDS network attracts investment and cooperation to Kyrgyzstan
11. ECOLOGY AND CLIMATE — NATURE CONSERVATION
11.1. The real impact of the climate crisis on Kyrgyzstan
Kyrgyzstan's water resources are linked to the melting of glaciers. The Altai and Tenir-Too glaciers are growing larger every year. This is a direct threat to hydropower potential, agriculture, and municipal water supply.
- DDS environmental audit system — real-time monitoring of the environmental impact of mining
- Forestry and land conservation programs — combining GUMI-SV with volunteering
- Local public water resources management system
- Renewable energy - development of hydropower, solar and wind energy
12. EXPECTED RESULTS — REAL MEASURES
12.1. Political consequences
- In 5 years: The DDS system is a significant force in the political landscape of Kyrgyzstan - a real platform for civic participation
- In 10 years: Constitutional reforms, mandate implementation mechanisms, real separation of powers
- Media freedom — reopening of closed media outlets, an information environment without censorship
12.2. Economic results
- Corruption Reduction: $300-500 million in public funds are channeled annually to public infrastructure
- Effective management of resource income: 15-20% of GDP to the permanent National Investment Fund
- Formalization of the black sector: tax base will expand by 40%, budget revenues will increase
- Poverty rate could fall below 20% in 10 years as a result of GUMI-SV and economic reforms
12.3. Social consequences
- Improving the quality of education and local management of school budgets
- Access to health services — coverage of rural areas will increase
- Youth political participation and leadership opportunities will become real
- Women's equality begins at the microgroup level
13. CONCLUSION: THE CHOICE OF THE KYRGYZSTAN PEOPLE
Kyrgyzstan is at a critical juncture in its history. It has undergone three revolutions — but each one has seen a change in the elite, leaving the people behind. Japarov’s regime has shut down free media, manipulated the judiciary, and weakened parliament. Economic growth is glimmering in the digital age, but corruption, poverty, and lack of transparency remain.
The DirectDemocracyS system does not offer any utopia. We offer a real system, specific tools, and proven mechanisms. The principle of DDS is simple: the wealth of Kyrgyzstan and the right to decide on power belong only to the Kyrgyz people.
This choice is not just a theory or an ideal. It is a real question of how the Kyrgyz people will decide for themselves how they will be, how they will be governed, and how they will live. DDS makes that decision real — with technology, a transparent system, true democracy, and collective intelligence.
Every Kyrgyz citizen — young or old, in the city or in the village — is a central actor in this system. Not leaders, not programs, not promises — but the people themselves.
Kyrgyzstan is the homeland of the people. The power of the people. The wealth of the people.
DirectDemocracyS — www.directdemocracys.org
14. APPENDIX: INFORMATION SOURCES AND CONTACTS
This document was prepared within the framework of the DDS principles and based on open international data sources. Data sources:
- Freedom House — Freedom in the World 2025, Kyrgyzstan
- Reporters Without Borders — Press Freedom Index 2025
- Transparency International — Corruption Perceptions Index 2024
- World Bank — Kyrgyz Republic Economic Update 2025
- Reuters, AsiaNews, Meridiano Italia — 2025 Parliamentary Elections Reports
- OSCE — Election Observation Mission Reports
- DirectDemocracyS — www.directdemocracys.org
To contact and join: www.directdemocracys.org