Kyrgyzstan is asking neighboring countries for help securing fuel supplies as shortages linked to Russia affect deliveries, according to reports. The country, with a population of about seven million, depends heavily on imported gasoline and currently brings in more than 90% of its fuel from Russia. With Russian gasoline availability tightening, Kyrgyzstan is exploring assistance options from other regional partners to maintain supply and limit disruption. The reports describe the request as a response to reduced Russian fuel shipments and ongoing supply constraints. Kyrgyz officials are seeking additional sources of fuel through neighboring states to keep domestic availability steady while the impact of the Russian shortages continues. The situation is being treated as an urgent logistics and energy security issue given Kyrgyzstan’s strong reliance on Russian imports for gasoline. The reported outreach underscores how disruptions in one supplier country can quickly affect fuel availability in countries that rely on a single dominant import source.