During a working visit to the village of Barpy in the Suzak district of the Jalal-Abad region, Kamchybek Tashiev, Chairman of the State Committee for National Security and Deputy Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers of Kyrgyzstan, met with a large family who had approached him with a request for housing.
The woman reported that she and her husband were raising nine children and that the family didn't own a home. In response, Tashiev sharply questioned the couple, asking why, despite having so many children, they still hadn't secured housing. "Why were they forced to have nine children and yet couldn't buy a house?" he asked.
The head of the family explained that he had previously received a plot of land and begun construction, pouring the foundation, but work had to be stopped because the plot wasn't eligible for transformation. He is 37 years old, and, according to Tashiev, he must independently provide for his children's future. "I have arms and legs, and I'm in good health. Work, build a house. Why are you torturing these poor children? I can't build a house for everyone," the head of the State Committee for National Security emphasized.
Tashiev reminded the family of Kyrgyzstan's mortgage construction program, which will provide housing to more than 70,000 families, and urged the couple to join the waiting list.
Nevertheless, the official ordered assistance. He instructed local authorities to discuss with the akim of the Kara-Suu district the possibility of allocating a plot of land to the family, after which the issue of building a house would be decided.






































