Unlawful emission of over two thousand driver's licenses in Nur-Sultan unveiled
A storm's brewing over the Auto Service Center in our capital. Employees of the Population Servicing Center have been caught red-handed, issuing over two thousand driver's licenses fraudulently. This damning revelation dropped today, courtesy of the Anti-Corruption Agency. As per the word of lead investigator Daniyar Bigaidarov, shared by Almaty.tv, fake medical certificates and auto school completion certificates were the tricks up their sleeves when doling out the licenses.
The price tag for obtaining one of these illicit licenses ranged from 80,000 to 120,000 tenge. As a consequence, the main suspect's been given a two-month detention order, to prevent any further mischief.
"During raids, we snatched 7 school stamps, 479 blank certificates of completion, and fake medical certificates, stamped with No086 and doctors' signatures – but they were lacking personal data," said Daniyar Bigaidarov, the special investigator of the Anti-Corruption Agency of the Republic of Kazakhstan. These license holders could potentially flout traffic rules, putting road users in peril, he added.
Unfortunately, the web doesn't appear to have much on Kazakhstan's driver's license issuance scandals or the Anti-Corruption Agency's investigations, led by Daniyar Bigaidarov. Instead, the search results focus on other matters, such as:
- Labor migration irregularities in EU member states impacting third-country nationals.
- Animal disease control challenges in Central Asia and neighboring regions, specifically, Peste des Petits Ruminants.
- Violations of refugee rights across the globe, without Kazakhstan-specific details.
- Travel advisories (separate from driver's licenses).
For the most accurate, up-to-date information about driving license corruption in Kazakhstan, we recommend checking out recent reports from the Kazakhstan Anti-Corruption Agency or verified local news sources covering Daniyar Bigaidarov's work. The search results suggest a broader spectrum of labor and migration compliance issues in neighboring regions, but they fail to shed light on driving license corruption in Kazakhstan.
- The ongoing investigation into the Autos Service Center in Almaty, Kazakhstan, has revealed that over two thousand fake driver's licenses were issued due to corruption, as reported by the Anti-Corruption Agency.
- Lead investigator Daniyar Bigaidarov, of the Kazakhstan Anti-Corruption Agency, has revealed that the price tag for these illicit licenses ranged from 80,000 to 120,000 tenge.
- Bigaidarov stated that the seized fake documents included school stamps, blank certificates of completion, and fake medical certificates with the code No086 and doctors' signatures, though they lacked personal data.
- With these fake licenses, the license holders could potentially violate traffic rules, posing a danger to other road users, according to Bigaidarov. For detailed information on this incident, news covering Daniyar Bigaidarov's work or recent reports from the Anti-Corruption Agency of Kazakhstan are recommended.
