British school caters to children of Kazakh elite
By Olzhas Auyezov
ALMATY (Reuters) - Kazakh businessman Serzhan Zhumashov says some of his friends laughed when he came up with the idea of opening a British school in his home country five years ago.
Last week, some brought their children to the opening of Haileybury Almaty, the first British private school in Central Asia and a concrete sign of the economic prosperity brought to Kazakhstan by oil and gas.
About 300 students and their parents attended the opening ceremony at the school, a stylish glass-and-concrete building in a newly developed area of Kazakhstan's commercial hub Almaty.
"We decided to do it so our children could stay here and at the same time get the education that would allow them to enter any university," said Zhumashov, the chairman of construction firm Capital Partners.
Regular schools, offering tuition mostly in Kazakh or Russian, are free in Kazakhstan but many school buildings are in need of repair and a shortage of space means children have to study in three shifts in some areas.
The graduation certificate that students in the mainstream system receive is only recognized by local universities, so those wanting to study abroad have to arrange exams themselves.
Zhumashov and six other Kazakh businessmen, including Nurzhan Subkhanberdin, the chairman of Kazkommertsbank and Margulan Seisembayev, the key shareholder of Alliance Bank, spent about $100 million (56.5 million pounds) on the project.
Haileybury, a private British school founded in 1862 in Hertford Heath, 20 miles north of central London, was the most enthusiastic of the foreign private schools the group contacted for advice. Its best-known alumnus was Britain's post-war Labour prime minister, Clement Attlee. Continued...
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