Category Archives: Uncategorised

Azerbaijan gears up for parliamentary election

OCT. 30 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijan is gearing up for a parliamentary election this Sunday, a vote tarnished by the withdrawal of Europe’s main democracy monitoring group and by accusations of a clampdown on human rights.

Relations between the West and Azerbaijan have been increasingly strained this year over Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s crackdown on the media and opposition activists. The West has accused him of holding human rights in scant regard; Mr Aliyev has responded by accusing the West of trying to plot a coup.

And in the build up to the election, the row continued to be played out in public.

Nils Muiznieks, the Council of Europe’s human rights commissioner, said civil rights in Azerbaijan were operating under a dark cloud.

“Human rights activists, journalists and national electoral observers have been muzzled using repressive legislation, jailed on trumped-up charges or forced to escape into exile,” he wrote in an opinion article for politico.eu. “Under these circumstances, it is impossible to hold any meaningful debate about the election or to ensure its accountability.”

ODHIR, the organisation that runs Europe’s main vote monitoring operation withdrew its team from Azerbaijan’s election because it said that the Azerbaijani authorities had only agreed to allow it to send half the monitors it needed.

European vote monitors have never judged an election in Azerbaijan to be free and fair and the 125- member parliament is generally viewed as a rubber-stamping operation for President Aliyev.

In 2010, Mr Aliyev’s Yeni Azerbaijan party won 72 seats. Independent MPs, who mainly supported Yeni Azerbaijan won 48 seats, giving Mr Aliyev a massive majority.

More of the same is expected on Sunday.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 254, published on Oct. 30 2015)

Industrial investment slows in Kazakhstan

OCT. 16 2015, ALMATY (The Conway Bulletin) — In an effort to cut spending, Kazakhstan appears to have reduced industrial investments by 23% in the first nine months of the year, the ranking.kz website reported, an indication of the worsening economic turmoil hitting the country.

In Jan.-Sept. 2015, the government invested 220.7b tenge ($797m) in fixed industrial assets, compared to 285b in the same period last year. The sharpest decline was to public utilities.

Last November, Kazakhstan’s President Nursultan Nazarbayev unveiled the Nurly Zhol (bright path), a $24b state programme designed to support industrial and infrastructure projects in the country.

The economic decline, triggered by the fall in oil prices and sanctions on Russia, has hit this ambitious target. Kazakhstan’s officials are beginning to talk more seriously about a prolonged economic decline.

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

 

Problems at Kazakhstan’s Kcell weigh down TeliaSonera profit

OCT. 20 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Swedish telecoms company Telia- Sonera said 2015 profit will be lower than expected due to price competition in Kazakhstan and that it is also struggling to sell its assets in Uzbekistan.

The profit warning will play badly for TeliaSonera which said last month that it wanted to sell its subsidiaries in Eurasia, of which Kcell and Ucell are the biggest.

In Jan.-Sept. 2015, Kcell’s profits fell 13% compared to the same period last year, a drop that Johan Dennelind, TeliaSonera’s CEO, blamed on competition and the government’s decision to let the tenge float free against the US dollar in August.

But Kazakhstan is not TeliaSon- era’s only problem in Central Asia. Marred by corruption allegations, TeliaSonera’s operations in

Uzbekistan have become a dead- weight, dragging the sale of the company’s assets.

“Selling Uzbekistan isn’t an easy task,” Mr Dennelind was quoted as saying in an interview with The Wall Street Journal.

US and Dutch prosecutors are investigating whether TeliaSonera paid bribes to secure mobile licences in Uzbekistan in 2007 and 2008.

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

 

Ex-Kyrgyz President publishes memoirs

OCT. 22 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyzstan’s exiled former President Kurmanbek Bakiyev published an autobiography of his time in office, a move that will irritate the Kyrgyz leadership. Mr Bakiyev presented his book in Belarus, where he fled after a revolution in 2010. Kyrgyzstan has tried unsuccessfully to extradite Mr Bakiyev to face various corruption charges.

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

 

Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan spat

OCT. 16 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – The Turkmen foreign ministry complained to Kazakhstan about a statement made by Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev during a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Astana last week when he alleged that there was fighting on the Turkmen-Afghan border. Media in Afghanistan reported fighting between the Taliban and government forces. Turkmenistan has refuted claims the fighting threatens its borders.

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

 

Georgian PM attacks UNM

OCT. 22 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Georgian PM Irakli Garibashvili accused the opposition UNM of being a criminal gang that didn’t deserve to exist after videos of security officers abusing prisoners during the UNM’s time in office were leaked. The West has accused Mr Garibashvili and the Georgian Dream coalition of pursuing a witch-hunt against the UNM.

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

 

Korea-Uzbekistan JV complete giant gas processing plant

OCT. 16 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — Uz-Kor Gas, a joint venture between South Korean and Uzbek companies, has finished building a $3.9b natural gas processing plant in Uzbekistan, a project that will improve commercial and diplomatic ties between the two countries.

Located in the Karakalpakstan region of north-western Uzbekistan, the Ustyurt Gas Chemical Complex will become the biggest petrochemical complex in Europe and Asia. Ustyurt includes a new gas field and a petrochemical plant. Its production will be mostly earmarked for the export market.

Companies from South Korea and Uzbekistan have been working on the project since 2006 through a joint- venture that includes Lotte Chemical, part of the Lotte Group, state-owned Korea Gas and Uzbekistan’s energy company Uzbekneftegaz.

Huh Soo-young, CEO of Lotte Chemical, said production would begin in 2016.

“From extracting liquefied natural gas in the upstream, to cracking and processing LNG into petrochemical products in the downstream, we have successfully built up a vertical integration system,” Mr Huh told the Korea Herald.

The plant will receive around 3.6mn tonnes of liquefied natural gas each year from a field in Surgil, around 100km away from the complex.

Lotte Chemical has predicted it will earn around 1tn won ($890mn) each year from the new project. Mr Huh said the complex would only be profitable as long as energy prices stay at current levels.

“As long as crude oil prices remain above $40, our petrochemical products based on low-cost ethane will remain competitive in the global market,” he said.

Uzbekistan and South Korea have been improving their commercial ties. In May, Uzbek president Islam Karimov used his visit foreign trip after winning re-election to travel to South Korea to close deals worth $7.7b.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

Criticism of Kazakhstan’s draft NGO law builds up

OCT. 21 2015, ASTANA (The Conway Bulletin) — International human rights groups criticised Kazakhstan’s draft bill on NGOs as an attempt to seriously restrict civil society’s activities.

The new bill would hand the government control of foreign grants and also restrict the operational sphere of NGOs.

Dunja Mijatovic, OSCE representative on freedom of the media, said: “Introducing legislation that would put NGOs under strict governmental supervision, including the control of foreign grants, is worrying for civil society actors in general”.

The OSCE is Europe’s intergovernmental democracy watchdog.

The government has said that it needs clearer oversight over how NGOs operate in the country. Its detractors, though, have said it is far too similar to a bill introduced by Russia a few years ago.

Gulmira Birzhanova, a lawyer and expert in national and international media law, who works in the Legal Media Center NGO in Astana, said the bill contradicted basic constitutional rights.

“The proposed legislation violates freedom of assembly as stated in our Constitution,” Ms Birzhanova told the Bulletin in an interview.

Under the new law, the ministry of culture and sports will be in charge of assigning funds, which Ms Birzhanova said would hand it the ultimate control over NGOs’ operations.

“The ministry will act as a central operator that will distribute finances and grants to NGOs no matter if they receive it from the governmental budget or from international sources,” she said. “This creates a thorny situation because NGOs are often engaged in disputes against the government.”

Analysts have said that despite the criticism of the bill, the Kazakh parliament may be looking to turn it into law by the end of the year.

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

 

Germany quits military base in Uzbekistan

OCT. 16 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Germany will close its base in Termez, south Uzbekistan, later this year, marking the final withdrawal of Western military forces from Central Asia, media reported quoting official sources.

With operations in neighbouring Afghanistan winding down, it had only ever been a matter of time before the German base at Termez was closed, although the announcement did come just nine months after Germany said it wanted to extend the lifespan of the base.

The US-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty quoted German military spokesman Dominik Wullers: “Termez right now is just a backup. We are not effectively using it right now, that’s the reason why we are closing it. Some [personnel] will be transferred to Mazar-e Sharif in Afghanistan where we have our base, while others will relocate to Germany.”

The US closed its airbase at Manas outside Bishkek last year and the French military has wound down operations in Dushanbe.

Some Uzbek analysts, though, said the withdrawal of Germany may be linked with Uzbekistan’s demand for a higher fee to rent the base. The Uzbek government had said the rental fee would double to 70m euro in 2016. In 2005, Germany had been paying Uzbekistan only 12.5 euro.

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(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)

 

KazTransOil liquidates Georgian subsidiary

OCT. 16 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) — After a lengthy legal spat, Kazakhstan’s oil pipeline company KazTransOil (KTO) liquidated Batumi Terminals Ltd, its subsidiary in Georgia. Earlier in March, a Georgian court seized Batumi Terminals’ assets on charges that it had abused its monopolistic position. The charges were eventually dropped.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 253, published on Oct. 23 2015)