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30 I Companies & Markets bne October 2020
Kazakhstan headhunts Belarusian IT developers, in vain so far
Almaz Kumenov for Eurasianet
Astate-backed IT development hub in Kazakhstan is hoping to capitalise on the climate of uncertainty in Belarus to poach some fresh talent, but their fishing expeditions have so far yielded nothing.
That Kazakhstan was trying to lure away disgruntled Belarusian specialists at companies coming under pressure from the government to disavow their sympathies for anti- government protestors came to light in an interview this week with Yury Plyashkov, head of Minsk-based company IdeaSoft.
“We got a phone call from Astana Hub. That’s an IT and startup incubator hub. They’re offering free workspaces, no taxes, English law, visas and a community. They suggested we relocate to Kazakhstan,” he said.
Plyashkov was not taken with the suggestion, however.
“I turned them down. I say that the Kazakhstan market does not appeal to us, we are working the States, Europe and Australia.”
Astana Hub cannot be blamed for trying. Although often decried – or praised – as an economy still mired in Soviet-
style practices, Belarus is actually home to an internationally celebrated centre for high-tech development. That success story is being threatened by the political unrest, however. RFE/ RL reported last month that large numbers of tech leaders in Belarus have warned they may pull out of the country unless President Alexander Lukashenko agrees to hold new elections.
One problem for Belarusian IT specialists is just technical. Euro- radio has reported that with protesters using online resources to mobilise, the authorities have responded with periodic interrup- tions to internet provision. (As it happens Kazakhstan routinely suffers the same problem, likewise for political reasons). The unreliability of the internet has proven a headache for software specialists, adding another incentive to leave.
But Astana Hub has had to concede that its headhunting is not going well so far. News website Vlast on September 4 cited a representative for Hub as saying they have landed no pledges from Belarusian companies.
“There are no specific agreements [on the relocation of Belarusian companies] yet, but we are continuing negotiations,” the press service was quoted as saying.
A key deterrent may be that, as Plyashkov indicated, that Kazakhstan’s IT market is mainly inward-focused. As Askar Aytuov, head of Almaty-based seed accelerator DAR Lab, noted in an interview with the Kazakhstan edition of Forbes, local startups, unlike their Western counterparts, tend to focus on how to optimise business, logistical, technical and financial operations at the domestic level.
Almaz Kumenov is an Almaty-based journalist. This article originally appeared on Eurasianet.
Poland tables draft bill that could chase Huawei off the market
bne IntelliNews
Poland’s United Right government has proposed a bill that could put an end to the Chinese IT giant Huawei’s activity on the Polish market.
The draft bill, which amends the incumbent law on the “national system of cybersecurity”, says that providers
of hardware and software need to be vetted for potential influence from non-EU or non-Nato countries. The vetting would include aspects like human rights or the use of personal data.
www.bne.eu
Such requirements would clearly work against China’s Huawei. The European Union is increasingly wary of China’s growing power and influence, with Brussels navigating the dilemma of keeping economic ties with China while confronting Beijing’s well-documented abuse of human rights at the same time.
A provider found to be of “high risk” to Poland’s cybersecurity would face a ban on the use of its products as well as seeing its products already in use withdrawn from the market, the draft bill stipulates.