Something that you need to understand about the media in Kazakhstan is that the government pays newspapers, websites and television station to publicise its own policies and achievements ... and pays only those that will print the "good news".
About 75-80% of media organisations in Kazakhstan receive funds via the state order ...
Any media attempting to be independent and that is critical of the government will eventually be closed down, either through charges against them of fraud, or disseminating false information, libel ... anything that the powers that be want to use to shut down discussion ...
Being a journalist in Kazakhstan is a very fraught profession ... as one journalist said recently ... "There is a system of self-censorship. We know from experience what to report, and what not to report.â€
So, purely for amusement, I tend to read the local rag in my city, YK-news (Ust-Kamenogorsk news) and Tengri News ... some of the things printed in there are unbelievable, but the bulk of the population believes them ... often I will pass comment on the more outrageous claims, but my Russian language is not good enough to get into a debate about them.
For actual news, I rely on The Guardian (the UK based newspaper with Australian, UK and US editions), Tages Anzeiger (the daily Zürich newspaper) the BBC website and for an Australian take on news, The Conversation (mostly academic articles from universities covering politics, medicine, social issues).
Eurasianet.org is an interesting read for analysis across the former CCCP-era Central Asian states and the Bulletin of The Atomic Scientists covers areas of my particular interest.
I also subscribe to a number of professional lists and journals that are not really germane to general news.