Category Archives: Uncategorised

Georgia condemns Russia on polling stations

SEPT. 19 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Georgian government condemned Russia’s use of polling stations in the breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia for its parliamentary election on Sept. 18. Georgia’s foreign ministry said in a statement that the issuing of Russian passports to people in South Ossetia and Abkhazia breached Georgia’s sovereignty and was illegal.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 297, published on Sept. 23 2016)

 

Berik Imashev: Nazarbayev’s key man

SEPT. 23 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev knows the lynchpin for delivering an ordered succession handover is the Central Election Commission (CEC).

With a trusted loyalist running the CEC — which oversees elections, decides on the eligibility of candidates and approves senators and MPs — Nazarbayev’s chances of delivering a smooth succession are improved.

Kazakhstan’s political class is riven through with different power groups vying for influence. There are rivals to Nazarbayev who are looking for weaknesses to exploit.

Nazarbayev’s appointment of Berik Imashev to head the CEC means that these opponents won’t find any weaknesses there.

Arguably it was the most important appointment in a wider reshuffle earlier his month, although the move of Karim Massimov from PM to head the security services, Dariga Nazarbayeva’s shift into the Senate and Imangali Tasmagambetov’s drift from the defence ministry into the deputy PM’s seat, grabbed the headlines.

Imashev is the definition of an arch-Nazarbayev loyalist. From the late 1990s, the 56-year-old has spent his career serving Nazarbayev, first as one of his advisers and then as deputy speaker of the Senate, deputy chairman of the State Security Council and most recently, from 2012, as justice minister.

It will now be Imashev’s job to ensure that Kazakh elections produce the right results with the right margins of victory that Nazarbayev requires.

And Imashev is well placed to do this. After all, he shares the same interests as Nazarbayev.

Known as a tough, uncompromising operator, Imashev is also married into the First Family. In 2003, his daughter, Aida, married Dariga Nazarbayev’s son Nurali. This makes both Imashev and Dariga, a favourite to succeed her father as president, grandparents to Aida and Nurali’s children. Imashev is, in effect, an extension of the Nazarbayev family.

Imashev’s appointment at the CEC also marks its subjugation as a political tool, although pretensions of independence had always been thin.

Since 2007, Kuandyk Turgankulov, had been head of the CEC. He had spent 11 years effectively training for the post as deputy chairman. By contrast, Imashev has no experience as a CEC official. His appointment is political, and a clever one.

For Nazarbayev securing the loyalty of the CEC was vital. This is now assured.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 297, published on Sept. 23 2016)

Tajik government snoops its citizens

SEPT. 16 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Tajik government admitted for the first time that it had spied on some of some of its citizens by reading their emails and text message. At a conference on freedom of expression and counter- terrorism, a spokesperson from Tajikistan’s Prosecutor-General said that the authorities closely monitor internet messaging systems of certain individuals. Critics said this practice also targets opposition activists.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 297, published on Sept. 23 2016)

Business comment: Tethys Woes

SEPT. 23 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Guernsey-based oil company Tethys Petroleum never seems to catch a break.

This time last year it had just turned down a takeover offer from Amsterdam-based Nostrum Oil & Gas, also focused on Central Asia. But its financial outlook remained uncertain and it was still on the market for investors.

In the last months of 2015, the obscure Kazakh oil company Olisol came forward with a proposal to buy a large share of Tethys in exchange for much-needed cash.

This appeared to be the salvation that Tethys, buffeted by the slump in oil prices, needed. Tethys saluted the prospective deal as a life-saving opportunity.

But then hiccups in Kazakhstan and legal disputes with its partners in Tajikistan began churning up Tethys’ road to stability.

Now it faces legal prosecution in Kazakhstan and an arbitration in Tajikistan, which could turn ugly.

Plus repeated delays in securing funding from Olisol have put investors and managers under severe stress. This can easily be spotted by looking at the company’s stock price, which jumps and falls at every update.

In mid-August, its stock price nearly doubled in one day, reaching a four-month high, after Tethys announced that it had cleared an important regulatory hurdle in its recapitalisation efforts.

Now, Tethys’ stock price has settled back at 1.5p/share, an average it has kept in the second half of 2016, quite far down from the 64p it traded at in March 2012.

But those were the days of high oil prices and big spending. It’s a very different picture now.

With oil prices still hovering at around $45/barrel, the future looks as uncertain as ever for Tethys.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 297, published on Sept. 23 2016)

Mirziyoyev to run to be Uzbek president

SEPT. 16 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Acting President and PM Shavkat Mirziyoyev said he will run in the upcoming Uzbek presidential election, scheduled for Dec. 4, immediately installing himself as the favourite to win.

UzLiDeP, the party of former President Islam Karimov, nominated Mr Mirziyoyev for the top job.

Mr Mirziyoyev has served as PM since 2003. He was named acting president less than a week after Karimov died of a stroke on Sept. 2.

After the nomination, Mr Mirziyoyev praised Karimov.

“Karimov is our pride. This man brought me up, he was like a father to me,” he said.

The Central Election Commission also said that the National Revival Party nominated Sarvar Otamuradov as a contestant, although he is expected only to play the role of sparring partner.

No Western election observers have judged a vote in Uzbekistan to be either free or fair.

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(News report from Issue No. 297, published on Sept. 23 2016)f

 

Georgia’s court reinstates two parties for election

TBILISI, SEPT. 13 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Indicating just how fraught campaigning in Georgia has become ahead of a parliamentary election next month, a court in Tbilisi reversed an earlier decision by the Central Election Commission which had banned the Industrialist Party and the Our Homeland Party from the vote.

On Sept. 11, Tamar Zhvania, the Commission’s chairwoman, de-registered the two parties for submitting their party lists after the official dead- line had expired.

The Industrialists and Our Homeland appealed the decision and the Tbilisi court said that the Commission would now have to register the two parties for the upcoming parliamentary election on Oct. 8.

Both parties are staunchly pro- Russia and critics of former President Mikheil Saakashvili’s UNM party. Their reinstatement should boost the chances of another Georgian Dream coalition government being voted back into power.

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(News report from Issue No. 296, published on Sept. 16 2016)

 

Inflation to top 10% in Azerbaijan

SEPT. 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Annualised inflation in Azerbaijan remained above 10% in August as the country continued to cope with the price increases linked to the Central Bank’s decision to abandon the currency peg to the US dollar in December, the Statistics Committee said. In Jan.-Aug. 2016 inflation amounted to 10.8%, in annualised terms it was 10.6%.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 296, published on Sept. 16 2016)

 

Ex- Kyrgyz President accuses US

SEPT. 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Ex-Kyrgyz President Askar Akayev lodged accusations of drug smuggling against NATO forces that used the Manas airbase in Kyrgyzstan for their mission in Afghanistan. US forces agreed to lease the Manas airbase in Dec. 2001 and left in June 2014.Mr Akayev served as president of Kyrgyzstan from 1990 to 2005, when he was unseated during a revolution.

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(News report from Issue No. 296, published on Sept. 16 2016)

 

Uyghurs in Kyrgyzstan worry about terrorist

BISHKEK, SEPT. 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — The sizable Uyghur community in Kyrgyzstan’s capital is increasingly worried by being labelled as terrorists after a suicide bomb against the Chinese Embassy this month.

Local state authorities described a suicide bomber as a member of the so-called Islamic Movement of Eastern Turkestan which wants independence for China’s eastern province of Xinjiang. Now local Uyghurs have said that they are worried about the impact the suicide bomb will have on relations with ordinary Kyrgyz.

“Honestly, I did not understand what the reason for this terror act was,” Malika, 23, a Uyghur working in a Bishkek market, told The Bulletin. “It’s bad that people think of Uyghurs as terrorists.”

There are more than 60,000 ethnic Uyghurs living in Kyrgyzstan, most working in trade and business. They are generally well regarded with a reputation for staying out of politics and producing good food. Many Uyghurs work in local bazaars where they sell fabrics from China.

There are also significant Uyghur communities in Kyrgyzstan’s east which borders China and in Kazakhstan.

The Chinese have blamed Uyghurs for a series of attacks in Xinjiang province over the past few years but this is the first attack against a Chinese target in Central Asia.

There have not previously been indicators that the Uyghur community in Central Asia was particularly militant and the suicide attacks appeared to have shocked and surprised them as much as they did the Kyrgyz authorities.

“Why? What is the reason for this attack? All my relatives are talking about it right now,” said Ikhtiyar, 22, with a note of exasperation.

“I do not think that attitudes to Uyghurs will be changed now. Right- minded people understand that terrorism does not have nationality.”

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 296, published on Sept. 16 2016)

 

Azerbaijan releases opposition figure

SEPT. 14 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijani authorities released from prison opposition activist Natig Jafarli, of the Republican Alternative Movement, arrested for financial crimes on Aug. 12. Before his arrest, Mr Jafarli’s organisation had won a grant from the US-based National Democratic Institute. The leader of Republican Alternative, Ilgar Mammadov, remains in prison. He was arrested in 2013 on charges of inciting mass violence. Human rights lobby groups, the US government and the Council of Europe have called repeatedly for his release.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 296, published on Sept. 16 2016)