According to the information, in 2025, employees of the Akylkatchy Institute conducted a monitoring of living conditions in orphanages in the Chui region. "We checked how children's rights and their living conditions are being respected," noted the press service. "As a result, violations were identified, and recommendations were made for their correction."
During the inspection, it was found that some orphans do not receive the benefits they are entitled to from the state. In particular, a Kyrgyz girl, M. B., born in 2008, has been living in an orphanage with her sister since 2017 after losing their parents. In 2015, she was declared disabled by the medical and social expert commission (MSEC), which provided grounds for the appointment of benefits and monitoring by a psychiatrist with training in an inclusive program.
“However, after the girl was transferred to the orphanage in 2017, the benefit payments were suspended because she did not undergo a repeated examination by the MSEC,” the press service explained. “Since then, for eight years, no steps have been taken to undergo the commission again.”
In response to this situation, the ombudsman of Kyrgyzstan, Jamila Dzhamanbaeva, sent letters to the General Prosecutor's Office and the Ministry of Labor, Social Security, and Migration, urging them to strengthen control over the rights of orphaned children and restore the paid benefits.
As a result of the inspection, the Ministry of Labor took disciplinary measures against the responsible employees, and the benefits for the disabled girl were restored from 2017 until May 1, 2026.
A total of 518,000 soms will be transferred to her deposit account.Photo on the main page: press service of the Ombudsman of the Kyrgyz Republic.