In Turkmenistan All dedicated Russian-language schools were closed down, and their students sent to Turkmen schools across the country. The Turkmen government reduced Russian-language instruction to one hour a week, blocked most Russian-language media, and later curtailed access to Russian-language material in the national library.
In Kazakhstan Kazakhstan used Latin letters from 1929 to 1940, after which the country switched to Cyrillic during a Stalinist reform. Before that, the
Arabic script was used there. On September 28, 2017, the Parliament of Kazakhstan held a hearing at which the draft of the new alphabet based on Latin was presented. The alphabet will consist of 25 characters. The project of the alphabet was presented by the director of the Coordination and Methodological Center of Language Development, Erbol Tleshev. According to him, the alphabet was compiled taking into account the language system of the Kazakh language and the opinions of experts. The Director of the Institute of Linguistics, Erden Kazybek, said that each letter of the alphabet will mean one sound and will not include additional graphic characters. On October 27, 2017, president
Nursultan Nazarbayev signed a decree on the translation of the Kazakh alphabet from Cyrillic to Latin. The document, published on October 27, envisages a gradual transition to Latin graphics by 2025. The decree also approved a new alphabet. On February 26, 2018, during a meeting with the Minister of Information and Communications, Dauren Abayev,
President of Kazakhstan Nursultan Nazarbayev ordered to translate the activities of the state authorities exclusively into the Kazakh language. This transition will take place in stages.
In Moldova Moldova was annexed into the USSR as the
Moldavian SSR following the Soviet-German
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact in 1940. Soon after, the language of the country was renamed from "
Romanian" to "
Moldavian" and it ceased being written in the Latin alphabet, changing to Cyrillic. This policy would only be reversed in 1989, after large demonstrations imbued with patriotic feeling. Romanian is an official language in the
Constitution of Moldova since its independence, and it is Moldova's sole official language today. Russian is still in use but not as important as it was in the Soviet era, since it has no special status in the country and its usage as mother tongue has been declining for some time.
In Ukraine after the removal of an
Alexander Pushkin bust in Kyiv Derussification in
Ukraine began in the aftermath of the
Collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, when Ukraine became independent. However, in their first years after independence,
decommunisation, and the creation of a free market
capitalist economy took precedent. However, the processes of derussification and decommunisation are intimately linked, and some key steps were made spontaneously and unsystematically. As of 2022, the decommunisation process is largely complete within Ukraine, and so more energies have been devoted recently to derussification. This process was compounded and accelerated by the escalation in the
Russo-Ukrainian War starting with the
Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Against the background of the invasion, de-Russification began in earnest in Ukraine. Street names were changed and Soviet-Russian monuments were demolished in villages and towns. Changes were made in
Lviv,
Dnipro,
Kyiv and
Kharkiv. In turn,
Ivano-Frankivsk became the first city in Ukraine to be completely free of Russian names. As of April 8, 2022, according to a poll by the sociological group
Rating, 76% of
Ukrainians support the initiative to rename streets and other objects whose names are associated with Russia or the Soviet Union. On 21 April 2023, President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy signed the
Law of Ukraine "On Condemnation and Prohibition of Propaganda of Russian Imperial Policy in Ukraine and Decolonization of Toponymy". This law prohibits toponymy that symbolizes or glorifies
Russia, individuals who carried out aggression against Ukraine (or another country), as well as totalitarian policies and practices related to the
Russian Empire and the
Soviet Union, including Ukrainians living in
Russian-occupied territories. Derussification efforts began with switching the language of official business from Russian to the local
Baltic and
Finnic languages, and restoring traditional nationality and citizenship laws. In parallel with the situation in Ukraine, however, more effort was devoted to
decommunization than to derussification in the early years of independence. Lithuania and Estonia quickly followed suit. While policies have previously been in place to encourage the use of Latvian over Russian in education settings, these rules were inconsistently enforced and schools were not monitored. All public schools in Latvia will use Latvian as the language of education by September 2025. ==See also==