New Sovereign Cloud Capacity in Kyrgyzstan
Hyper App is extending its sovereign cloud infrastructure to Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan — the first step in a regional network that will give Central Asian businesses access to local, compliant, high-performance cloud infrastructure without routing their data through foreign jurisdictions.
Why Kyrgyzstan, and Why Now
Kyrgyzstan's technology sector has grown significantly over the past three years. The country has a disproportionately strong developer community relative to its population, a growing e-commerce market, and an increasingly active fintech sector. What it lacks is local cloud infrastructure that meets enterprise reliability and compliance requirements.
Kyrgyz companies currently have the same choice that Uzbek companies had before Hyper App launched: use foreign cloud (AWS, Azure, or Russian providers), or maintain on-premise hardware. Both options come with meaningful drawbacks — latency, cost, compliance complexity, or all three. We're changing that.
Bishkek Node Specifications
- Location: Tier III equivalent colocation facility in Bishkek, with dual-path connectivity to regional internet exchanges
- Hardware: Lenovo ThinkAgile HX nodes, same specification as our Tashkent primary site — ensuring consistent performance benchmarks across regions
- Availability SLA: 99.99% — slightly lower than our Tashkent 99.999% SLA during the initial phase, stepping up to 99.999% once N+1 redundancy is complete in Q3 2026
- Connectivity: 10Gbps inter-region link to Tashkent, enabling cross-border replication for businesses operating in both markets
- Compliance: Data processed and stored within Kyrgyz Republic borders, aligned with local personal data protection requirements
Services Available at Launch
The Bishkek node launches with Compute (KG-1 region), Block Storage, and Networking (VPC, load balancing, security groups). Managed Databases and Object Storage will be added in Q2 2026, once the initial node cluster has been validated under production load.
Clients who operate in both Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan can use cross-region replication to maintain consistent data across both sites — with data sovereignty preserved in each jurisdiction. This is particularly relevant for regional e-commerce platforms and payment processors who serve customers across Central Asia.
The Bigger Picture
Bishkek is the second point in what we plan to be a five-node Central Asian sovereign cloud fabric. We're in early discussions regarding capacity in Almaty (Kazakhstan) and Dushanbe (Tajikistan), with the long-term goal of providing a unified regional cloud platform where data can move between countries on explicit client instruction — and nowhere else.
The Central Asian market is underserved by global cloud providers. Not because the demand isn't there, but because the per-country market hasn't historically met the threshold for investment from hyperscalers. We're building the infrastructure that global providers won't — because we're from here, and we're staying here.
"Kyrgyz businesses deserve the same quality of infrastructure that companies in Frankfurt or Singapore take for granted. We're making that happen."
How to Get Access
The Bishkek region is available now in limited availability. If you're a Kyrgyz company or operate workloads that would benefit from a KG data centre, contact us to join the early access programme. Early access clients receive a 30% discount on Bishkek compute for the first 12 months.