Alnur Aljapparuly Mussayev (Kazakh: Әлнұр Әлжаппарұлы Мұсаев, Älnūr Äljapparūly Mūsaev; born 4 January 1954; Lugovoye, Lugovsky District, Dzhambul Region, Soviet Union) was the former head of Kazakhstan's National Security Committee (KNB) under the tenure of President Nursultan Nazarbayev. He served from May 1997 to September 1998, then returned for a second term from August 1999 to May 2001 after his predecessor Nurtai Abykayev was sacked in a scandal over the sale of old MiG fighter planes to North Korea.[1][2]

Quick Facts Chairman of the National Security Committee, President ...
Alnur Mussayev
Әлнұр Мұсаев
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Chairman of the National Security Committee
In office
12 May 1997  1 September 1998
PresidentNursultan Nazarbayev
Preceded byDjanisbek Djumanbekov
Succeeded byNurtai Abykayev
In office
9 August 1999  5 May 2001
PresidentNursultan Nazarbayev
Preceded byNurtai Abykayev
Succeeded byMarat Tazhin
Personal details
Born (1954-01-04) 4 January 1954 (age 70)
Lugovoe, Kazakh SSR, Soviet Union
NationalityKazakh
Political partyQKP (until 1991)
Children2
Alma materSatbayev University
Institute of National Security of the Republic of Belarus
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In 2007, Mussayev fled Kazakhstan along with his former deputy Rakhat Aliyev to Vienna, Austria.[3] Mussayev accused the government of widespread corruption and payments of millions of dollars in bribes by western oil companies to President Nazarbayev.[3] The government of Kazakhstan has convicted him of crimes in absentia as a result of his defection.[4]

An attempted kidnapping of Mussayev took place in Vienna in September 2008. The Austrian government declined comment on the perpetrators' origins at the time.[3] In a January 2010 trial, defendant Ildar A., one of three men charged with the kidnap attempt on Mussayev, was found not guilty by an Austrian court. Mussayev described the verdict as "politically motivated" and an "attempt to please Kazakhstan". During the trial, Mussayev claimed not to know Ildar A., but he admitted in press comments soon after that this was not entirely accurate, as he knew the defendant professionally but not personally; he explained the discrepancy by claiming that his oath to Kazakhstan prevented him from revealing this information.[5]

In 2015, Mussayev faced charges for the abduction and murder of two bankers in the Nurbank murder case.[6] The primary suspect in the case, Rakhat Aliyev, was found hanged in his prison cell before the trial began. The trial was one of the most complex in Austrian history with over 60 witnesses.[7] Mussayev was cleared of all charges.

References

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